Many Dimensions - Charles Williams (books for 9th graders TXT) 📗
- Author: Charles Williams
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Burnett, if you remember Miss Burnett, remembered you before. Do sit
down.”
“Thank you very much, Lord Arglay,” Oliver said, obeying.
“An extraordinary business, isn’t it?” the Chief Justice went on. “How
goes your end?-whichever is your end. For I’m ashamed to say I am not
quite clear what party you are of, so to speak. Mr. Sheldrake’s, wasn’t
it?”
Oliver crossed his legs. “I represent,” he said gravely, “the people. I
am the autos of their autocratic mouth. I am the sovereign will. I am
…… The solemn tone of his mock proclamation faded, and he ended,
lamely and seriously, “the people.”
Lord Arglay observed the change of tone and looked at him carefully.
“And how do the people come in?” he asked.
Oliver, as best he could, explained. As he began he felt a fool, but
his eyes lit on the strip of black silk across Chloe’s hand—she had
declined to attempt to heal it by the Stone and he derived therefrom a
certain strength. After all, this girl had knocked the Professor over
and attacked Sir Giles; she had thrust herself across the will of that
unpleasant little beast. And Sir Giles had been left with Sheldrake at
the Foreign Office when the rest of them were turned out. And the
people were clamouring for life and health from that Mystery which the
police, on behalf of the American, had pouched.
“I don’t quite see,” Lord Arglay said when he had done, “on what
grounds you asserted so strongly that I disapproved Of the Government.”
“Well, sir,” Oliver said, “I thought you approved of Miss Burnett.”
` “I always approve of Miss Burnett,” Arglay answered. “It would be
temperamentally impossible to me to have a secretary of whom I
disapproved. But approving of Miss Burnett has not, from the beginning,
been necessarily equivalent to disapproving of the Government.”
“But in this case, sir… ?” Oliver suggested.
The Chief Justice shook his head. “No, no,” he said. “In the first
place I don’t know what they are doing; in the second, I neither
approve nor disapprove of governments, but of men and that only
according to the order and decision of the laws. I am a chair, Mr.
Doncaster, not a horse—not even Rosinante.”
“But if Don Quixote came before the chair?” Oliver asked.
“I should think he is very likely to, if he goes on as he is at
present,” Arglay said drily. “But even then-Don Quixote or Don Juan or
the Cid Ruy Diaz the Campeador—it is all one. I have not eyes to see
nor mouth to speak but as the laws shall direct me.”
“But if it is a case beyond any law?” Oliver said.
“There is no case beyond law,” the Chief justice answered. “We may
mistake in the ruling, we may be deceived by outward things and cunning
talk, but there is no dispute between men which cannot be resolved in
equity. And in its nature equity is from those between whom it exists:
it is passion acting in lucidity.”
“Mr. Lindsay,” the maid said, opening the door. Chloe stood up stiftly
and went forward to meet him, and as she did so it seemed to Oliver as
if Arglay’s last phrase took on a sudden human meaning. A vivid
presence passed him, and he found himself gravely reconstructing the
meaning of those words. On a sudden impulse he turned to Lord Arglay.
“Is that what you would call Miss Burnett’s action this morning?” he
asked.
For a moment the Chief Justice frowned; it appeared to him unnecessary
that this Mr. Doncaster should remark on anything Chloe had chosen to
do. But the neatness of the phrase placated him; he looked at Oliver
with cautious but appreciative eyes. “I will admit, at least,” he said,
“that, entirely as a private man, I regard Giles Tumulty as something
very nearly without the law.” He stepped forward to meet Frank.
The half-hour which followed was not one on which Chloe looked back,
for some time, without growing hot. It was largely she felt, Mr.
Doncaster’s fault for arriving so late; it was largely Frank’s for
arriving so soon. He had been dragged from his surveyor’s studies to
take her home, and she didn’t want to go—not until she knew whether
this Mayor was coming. But if she didn’t go at once she must explain,
and how could she explain in front of Mr. Doncaster? And why did Frank
look so dull? And why, in an effort to be conversational, must he ask
her at once if she had hurt her hand? And why was the Chief Justice
displaying a remote intention of leaving her to talk to Frank while he
went back to Mr. Doncaster? She managed to introduce them, in order (by
the exercise of a certain dexterity which she was uneasily conscious
Lord Arglay patiently humoured), to move the conversation—it was no
more lightly done—on to the common subject of Mr. Sheldrake. But it
continually showed signs of breaking into two halves, and at the end of
about a quarter of an hour she began wretchedly to make the first
preparations for departure. She put one or two papers together, she
opened her handbag, and saw within it the white silk handkerchief in
which her Type of the Stone had been wrapped. Under cover of a
monologue of Lord Arglay’s she pushed aside the soft opaqueness and
gazed at the Mystery. Nothing, she thought, had ever looked more feebly
useless, more dull and dead, than that bit of white stone. The flakings
were not gold, they were yellow; they were obviously merely accidental
and it was only a perverse fancy that could see in the black smudges
the tracing of the Divine Name. She put her hand down sharply to cover
it again, and found that her fingers were unwilling to move. Dared she
so, in action, deny the Stone? Thought was multitudinous but action
single. A pushing aside or a ritual veiling?–one it must be. Nobody
could see or know what she did, yet she felt as if an expectancy lay
around, as if something waited, docile but immortal, the consequences
of her choice. “Cowardly fool!” Chloe said to herself and, so
protesting against her own action, drew Lord Arglays handkerchief
ceremonially over the Stone.
In spite of her delay, she had reluctantly gone, attended by Mr.
Lindsay, before the Mayor of Rich arrived at Lancaster Gate. He was
shown in at once and Oliver, hastily presenting him to the Chief
Justice, said urgently: “Well, what happened?”
The Mayor answered slowly: “I have had to remind the Home Secretary
that the office of Mayor is filled, not by the decision of the
Government, but by the choice of the people.”
“Have you indeed?” Oliver said.
“I had some difficulty in getting to see him,” the Mayor went on, “and
when I did he was bent on assuring me that the matter was being dealt
with. I pressed him to tell me more. I pointed out that I was
responsible for order in the town, and that the effect of maintaining
secrecy would be highly damaging. We had a long discussion and in the
end I was compelled to point out to him that, if no satisfactory
statement were made, I should be driven to place the resources of the
mayoralty at the disposal of any constitutional agitation that might
arise. I was very careful to say ‘constitutional.’ It was then that he
threatened me with removal and I reminded him that the Mayors came by
vote of the Town Council who are chosen by the people.”
THE FIRST REFUSAL OF CHLOE BURNETT
Chloe’s chief regret, when she and Frank got out of her bus at
Highgate, was that there was a quarter of an hour’s walk before them.
She made a half-hearted effort—half-hearted on his account as much as
hers—to persuade him to return at once, but when this failed she
resigned herself to his inevitable desire to discuss the whole matter.
Saturday afternoon’s experience, the Sunday papers, things said that
evening, had made it impossible to keep from him the secret of the
Stone. But, accustomed to him as she was, she seemed to hear in his
voice a hint of anxiety which at first she attributed to his concern
for her.
“It shows you things in your mind?” he said as they turned
a corner.
“Apparently,” Chloe assented. “At least, it showed Lord Arglay Sir
Giles’s mind.”
He was silent for a minute or two. Then: “Tells you things?” he went
on, following his own thoughts.
Chloe considered. “Tells you?” she asked at last.
“Things you mightn’t know—or might have forgotten,” he answered. “It
would make things clear to you, wouldn’t it? If it shows you thoughts.”
“I Suppose it might,” Chloe said, rather vague about what he meant and
a little irritated at her vagueness. There was
another short silence.
“And it can be separated?” Frank said.
“No,” said Chloe firmly, “it can’t. Or only by people like Sir Giles.”
The pause after this began to annoy her; the conversation was going in
spasms like hiccups. “Let’s talk of something else,” she said. “It’s
only a month to the exam., isn’t it? I do hope you’ll get through.”
“I suppose,” he answered lightly, “you wouldn’t like to lend me the
Stone?”
“To-” Chloe stared. “The Stone? Whatever for?”
“Well,” said Frank, “if it shows you things—I mean, if it helps the
mind, the memory or whatever… well, don’t you see—if one could
remember at the right time-” He made a second’s pause and went on
“That’s where an examination’s so unfair; one can’t remember everything
just at the minute and just forgetting one single fact or formula that
one knows perfectly well throws the whole thing out. It isn’t even a
case of wanting to be sure one would remember—because one would
remember if one didn’t forget—I mean, if one wasn’t afraid of
forgetting. It isn’t, in that way, as if there was any unfairness. I
wouldn’t dream of taking an unfair advantage; it wouldn’t really be
doing more than taking an aspirin if one had a headache on the day.
Lots of the fellows have mnemonics—it’d only be feeling that one had a
pretty good system. It isn’t as if-”
“Frank, do stop,” Chloe said. “What is it you want?”
“I’ve just told you,” Frank said. “Would you lend me the Stone just
till after my exam.?”
“No, I wouldn’t,” Chloe answered. “I’m sorry, Frank, but I really
can’t.”
“Well—if you don’t want to part with yours—I quite understand—would you
… make one for me?” Frank asked. “You know how important it is for me
to get through, darling. I don’t know what’ll happen if I muff it.”
“I suppose you’ll go in again,” Chloe said, anger growing within her.
It was only, she warned herself, that Frank didn’t -and, not knowing
all about it, couldn’t—understand. But nobody—nobody—did understand,
she least of all.
“Well—perhaps,” said Frank, defeated by this realism. “But
it’d be much more convenient to get through at once. It might mean a
great deal more than a year later on—it gives one a better chance.”
Chloe made a small effort. “Dear Frank,” she said, “I hate to seem a
pig, but I couldn’t… I couldn’t do that—not with the Stone.”
“But it wouldn’t be unfair,” Frank urged. “Anyone who can manage any
way of remembering things does—short of writing them down. It’s only
just to safeguard the mind against a sort of stage-fright; just a sort
of… of… cooling-mixture.”
“O God,” Chloe said suddenly, “is there no end?”
Frank looked
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