"It charms you like a serpent?" asked her companion, leaning forward

with indolent amusement. "You are true woman. You love the glitter.

Would you like to see others?"

"Have you others?" cried Lena. "Oh--oh, I should like to see them!" He

rose, made her a salaam of grace, parted the hedge once more and

disappeared only to return bringing in his hands a curious box of

carven ivory, which he set on the table between them and proceeded to

unlock with a key of quaint device.

Lena gave a cry of rapture and astonishment as the lid fell back. Ram

Juna laid his hand on her arm.

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"Silence!" he commanded, "would it be well that the flippant public who

pass near at hand on the pavement should know that there are such

treasures in this thicket?"

"I did not know that there was so much splendor in the world," whispered

Lena in admiration.

"Rubies--all rubies! They were the stones beloved of my ancestors. This

dangled once on the neck of a maha-ranee, more beautiful than itself,

only, unfortunately, she lost her neck, murdered by a rival queen."

He twisted the string of gems about her arm, bare to the elbow, and Lena

gasped with pleasure.

"Let me add this bracelet--a serpent. See of curious carved gold the

scales, and the eyes again two wicked rubies to beguile men's souls. Yet

it becomes the arm, does it not? Look, at your pleasure, at the rest of

the box."

He pushed the case toward her and Lena began to finger its profuse

contents with occasional sighs of envious delight and glances at her

white flesh enhanced by its ornaments. Ram Juna sat in silence.

"How do you dare to carry such things around with you?" she asked.

"Not much longer," he answered with a shrug. "To me they are delusions

inappropriate. I see that is your thought. Is it not so? What have I to

do with necklaces and rings of princesses? I had forgotten that I had

them, until a chance thought recalled it. I had long since meant to sell

them and give the money to the great cause for which I labor. That is my

treasure, is it not? I shall never take them back to India. I must

hasten to get rid of them, for I purpose to return there at once."

"Why, are you going away?"

"To-morrow I leave this city. My work here is done. It is the last of

work. Hereafter I shall find some solitary spot and end my life in

meditations. And the rubies--I might give them away; but perhaps the

trifle I should receive for them would help the Brothers in their

service. I shall not expect or wish their value."

"Oh, I wish I might buy some of them!"