Many Dimensions - Charles Williams (books for 9th graders TXT) 📗
- Author: Charles Williams
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mostly come to him from his father, as Rivington Court had
come to him from his mother, and Sheldrake’s own addition, had
consisted of several large motor factories and the establishment of an
Atlantic Airways Company to the first, and an entirely unnecessary
though quite beautiful wing to the second. Neither it nor the Atlantic
Airways would probably have come into existence but for Cecilia
Sheldrake, who, having been forestalled in her desire to be the first
woman to fly the Atlantic, had determined that at least most of the
others who did so should do it by her permission. Her husband had
founded the company, as he had built the wing, in order that she might
have everything she wanted to play with, and when he had bought the
Stone from Reginald Montague he had done it with a similar intention in
his mind.
In actual fact it had taken a longer time to persuade Sheldrake to buy
than Reginald had admitted to his uncle. But the surprising chances of
that Friday—the coming of Sir Giles with the Stone, the meeting with
Sheldrake at an unexpected conference on the same morning, the
discovery that the richest man of Idaho, of the States, of the world
(report varied) was a young fellow not quite so old as he himself was—all these had convinced Reginald that what, at a pinch, he would have
been driven to call Providence was on his side, and had given him an
increased audacity. He had caught Sheldrake by mentioning, almost in
one breath, transport, the Lord Chief Justice, and a rare stone, thus
attacking at once through the American’s sense of business, security,
and romance. Certainly there had been a few minutes’ danger when the
Stone was discovered to be no jewel, as jewels are ordinarily known,;
indeed, Reginald had been driven to a rather hasty demonstration,
which, in its turn, startled Sheldrake so greatly as seriously to
endanger the negotiations. Two ideas, however, occurred to the
financier, though he spoke of neither to Reginald; one was motor-cars
and airways, the other was his wife. To protect the one and delight the
other made it the aim of his morning to procure the Stone, and the
eventual seventy-three thousand guineas at which it changed hands was a
lesser matter. Neither of them were ever quite clear how that
particular sum was reached; though Reginald flattered himself that the
guineas made it a far more reputable transaction than if it had been
merely pounds. He had pressed on Sheldrake the advisability of secrecy,
but he had been compelled to admit that a few other Stones of the kind
were in existence—not more than half a dozen. The American had
displayed some curiosity as to their owners, but here the mere facts
enabled Montague to be firm. He admitted that Sir Giles Tumulty had
one; he thought the Chiefjustice had; and he himself—well, of course,
he had kept one, that was reasonable. But he said nothing of his
intention to spend the afternoon creating a few more Stones nor of the
names of buyers which were already floating in his mind. On his side
Sheldrake said nothing of his intention to communicate the mystery at
least to his wife, nor of his anxiety to procure, if he anyhow could,
the other existing examples of it. Equally satisfied, equally
unsatisfied, they parted, and while Reginald went first to his office
and then to Brighton, Sheldrake went straight by car to Rivington
Court.
He waited however till the next day, and till he had, rather nervously,
at a very early hour the next morning, tried a few more minor
experiments, before he spoke of the new treasure. The experiments were
tried cautiously, in a small wood near the house, and were limited to
the crossing of a brook, the passage of a field, and so on, concluding
with the grand finale
of a return to his own room, where he contentedly locked the Stone away
and went to breakfast. It was some time later, not very long before
lunch, while Lord Arglay raged in London, that he took his wife across
the terraces and lawns to a hidden summer-house and revealed the secret
to her.
Cecilia took it with surprising calm—took, indeed, both the secret and
the Stone with a similar calm. She was delighted, she was thrilled, but
with an obscure and egoistical acceptance of things she was not wildly
surprised. If such treasures existed, they did so, both she and her
husband felt, chiefly for Cecilia Sheldrake. Her life had refused her
only one thing—to be the first woman to fly the Atlantic, and Cecilia,
like everyone else, felt that life owed her every sort of gratification
in return for that disappointment. Not that anything could really make
up for it, but other tributes might help her to forget. Even miracles
were reasonable since they happened for her, and Angus, in the depths
of his nature, though his brain moved more slowly, felt that a world
whose chief miracles were the existence of Cecilia and her existence as
his wife might easily throw in a few more to make things pleasant for
her. She did indeed open her eyes a little at the price, but that also
seemed reasonable since it was for her, and she was more ready to risk
extended experiments than her husband had been. Indeed it was she who
made what must up to then have been the longest journey yet taken by
those high means—at least for some centuries—in going direct to her
bedroom in London and returning with a dress she had left behind and
had changed her mind about on the way down the day before. When she had
safely returned—
“Darling, how sweet of you!” she cried to Angus. “I never had anything
like it before..”
“I don’t suppose many people have, or will have,” Angus said, with
justice. “Not many will have the chance.”
“But will anybody?” Cecilia said, a little shocked. “Are there more of
them?”
“Oh, about half a dozen, I gathered,” Angus told her. *‘And I don’t
know who’s going to buy them.”
Cecilia looked depressed. “Where did they come from?” she asked in a
moment.
“Sir Giles Tumulty brought them from the East, Montague said,” Angus
answered. “He’s a traveller and explorer.”
His wife looked at him meditatively. “You don’t think he’d sell them
all?” she asked, “O Angus, if somebody else got hold of them.”
“Well, Sir Giles has,” Sheldrake pointed out.
“O him!” Cecilia said. “I mean somebody else like us.“She sat up
suddenly. “Angus! What about Airways?”
“I know,” Angus said, “I thought the same thing. It might be awkward.
Of course, it’s not so bad because you’d want to be pretty sure of
anyone before you lent them the Stone.”
Cecilia shook her head. “We mayn’t know everything,” she said. “They
may have cheated you. This Mr. Montague didn’t say it was the only
one?”
“Sweetheart, he said it wasn’t,” Angus pointed out.
“Then he has cheated you,” Cecilia said impatiently. “O Angus, we must
put it right. After all, the Airways ought to have control, oughtn’t
they?”
“It may be a little awkward,” Angus answered. “I think one of them is
with the Lord Chief Justice.”
Cecilia opened her eyes. “But I thought judges weren’t supposed to have
financial interests,” she exclaimed. “Isn’t it corruption?… Angus,
they can’t make them, can they?”
“What!” said her husband, startled. “Make them? O no—at least I suppose
not. They came from the East.”
“Yes, but do they make them in the East, or dig them up, or magnetize
them, or something?” Cecilia persisted. “Angus dear, you must see what
I mean. If there was a mine now, how dreadful it would be.”
“Darling, I think you’re getting unnecessarily alarmed,” Sheldrake
protested. “There can’t be a mine—not possibly—not of stones that do
this.”
“Why not?” Cecilia asked.
“Well, could there? It isn’t reasonable,” her husband urged. “Stones
like this must be rare.” But he looked uneasily at it as he spoke.
“Anyhow—it’s near lunchtime—anyhow I think you ought to do something.
Get it forbidden by law or something.”
“But then what about us?” Sheldrake asked.
Cecilia took his arm. “Darling,” she said, “you’re awfully slow. There
could always be a special licence to the Airways.”
“It’d be very difficult to explain to the Home Secretary without
telling him everything, and I don’t know that I want to tell him
everything,” Angus murmured. “Besides, if one licence is granted others
could be, and suppose you got a Labour Government in again?”
Cecilia almost stamped. “I suppose you could buy a monopoly or a
charter or something of that sort for twenty-one years or so?” she
asked plaintively. “Darling Angus, we do want to stop it going further,
don’t we?”
“O rather, yes,” Angus agreed. “It’s the explaining that will be
difficult.”
“It won’t be any more difficult for you than for me to explain to Elsie
how this frock came down here,” his wife said. “Dearest, it’s a lovely
present and I do thank you enormously. But if you could just prevent
anyone else having one, it would be too perfectly sweet! You will try,
won’t you?”
“O I’ll try,” Angus answered, kissing her. “But it’ll take some doing.
There’d have to be an Act, I’m afraid—and if the Lord Chief Justistice
was nasty-”
“He wouldn’t have anything to do with politics though, would he?”
Cecilia asked. “And as a matter of fact he might, if you put it to him
nicely, be willing to sell.”
They returned to the house to lunch.
About the same time a less elaborate lunch was being served in the inn
of the village close by to Chloe Burnett and Frank Lindsay. Chloe had
been half-unwilling to leave London, for fear the Chief Justice should
want her, but a sense of duty, a necessity to recompense Frank for the
unsatisfactory result of the Friday evening, had compelled her to
accept his suggestion; though, for some undefined reason, she had
caused him to take Lancaster Gate on the way. Lord Arglay’s house had
offered no more information than she expected, but the sight of it
enabled her more freely to devote all her energies to making
the day’s amusement a success. She had received with interest and
encouragement Frank’s serious efforts towards culture, although a part
of her mind remotely insisted on comparing his careful answers with
Lord Arglay’s casual completeness. Sir Giles’s epigram on
encyclopedias-“the slums of the mind” -recurred to her, and she went so
far to meet it as to admit that Frank’s information was rather like a
block of model dwellings compared with the tumultuous carelessness of a
country house. The contrast had been suddenly provoked by Frank’s short
lecture in answer to her question-“O by the way, what is a Sufi?”
“It is a Muhammedan sect,” he had answered. “Muhammed, you know, who
was a fanatical monotheist, wrote the Koran, or rather claimed that the
Koran had been delivered to him by Gabriel.” He had gone on, with what
seemed a good many references to Muhammed. Chloe’s intelligence
reminded her that by the phrase “Muhammed was a fanatical monotheist”—he meant what Lord Arglay—or was it the Hajji?- had meant by saying
“Our lord the Prophet arose to proclaim the Unity,” but she found the
one phrase unusually trying after the other. As penance and
compensation she allowed her hand, which lay lightly in Frank’s, to
give it a small squeeze of thanks, and diverted his attention by
saying, “O what a jolly house! “
The lecture had taken place soon after lunch while they were wandering
in the lanes round the village. There was in fact very
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