Many Dimensions - Charles Williams (books for 9th graders TXT) 📗
- Author: Charles Williams
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“O I know it isn’t my money that comes in,” Chloe hastened to say.
“I do realize that, Mr. Montague.”
“It isn’t a question of money—not first of all,” Reginald protested.
“It’s a matter of general interest.”
Chloe said nothing, chiefly because she was a little ashamed of
herself, but the result was almost worse than if she had made another
effort. The commenting silence extended itself for some minutes and
was
broken at last by Lord Arglay’s return.
“Well,” he said, “I’ve been talking to Giles. I’m bound to say he
swears it’s quite right, and sticks to you in every particular,
Reginald. However, he’s asked us to go over to-night and see. Miss
Burnett, can you come?”
“O but, Lord Arglay, ought I to… ” Chloe said doubtfully; and
“I don’t suppose Miss Burnett would find it very interesting,” Reginald
hastily threw in.
“Civilized man,” Lord Arglay said, “is known by the capacity of his
intellect to produce convincing reasons for his emotions. Convincing,
Reginald. Say anything you like, except to suggest that anyone
wouldn’t
be interested in this new interstellar traffic of yours. Besides, I
need my secretary. I shall be out this afternoon and I officially
request her to spend her time looking up all the references to Suleiman
the son of David that she can find. We will all dine here at seven
and
then go to Ealing. That suit you, Miss Burnett? You, Reginald? Right.”
Reginald got up to go. “Well, you won’t finally decide against coming
in until to-night, will you, uncle?” he said. “Goodbye, Nliss Burnett.
Don’t let my uncle persuade you to come if you don’t want to.”
“I won’t,” Chloe said politely, “as I shan’t be able to have a
financial interest. Goodbye, Mr. Montague.”
When Reginald had gone-“And why the scratch, Miss Burnett?” Lord
Arglay asked. “Quite right, of course, but why to-day especially?
Generally you just let Reginald fleet by. Why this unwonted sharpness?”
“I beg your pardon,” Chloe said. “I don’t quite know. It was
impertinent of me. I didn’t mean to be rude to you.”
“Not in the least impertinent,” the Chief Justice answered. “Quite
remarkably relevant. But why to-day?”
“I think it was his talk of the Crown of Suleiman,” Chloe said
reluctantly. “Somehow…”
Arglay shook his head. “I wouldn’t pin much to that. My belief is
still that Giles has been hocussing that young man. But I’m curious to
know why; and anyhow it wouldn’t do me any harm to know as much as you
about the son of David. I can’t think of another fact about him at
present. So you dig out what you can and then clear off and be back by
seven. “
“Are you going out, Lord Arglay?” Chloe asked.
“Certainly not,” the Chief justice said. “I am going to lie in my
deepest armchair and read When Anarchy came to Town, which has an
encouraging picture of the Law Courts being burnt on the cover. Till
seven, then.”
The dinner was largely occupied, much to Reginald’s boredom, by Chloe’s
account of what she had discovered about King Suleiman and Lord
Arglay’s
comments on it. It seemed she had been right in her remembrance that
the Majesty of the King made its journeys accompanied by the Djinn, the
doctors of the law, and the viziers, upon a carpet which accommodated
its size to the King’s needs. But there were also tales of the Crown
and the Stone in the Crown, and (more general) of the Ring by virtue of
which the King understood all languages of men and beasts and Djinn and
governed all created things’ save only the great Archangels
themselves who exist in immediate cognition of the Holy One. “For,”
said Chloe thrilling, “he was one of the four mighty ones-who were
Nimrod and Sheddad the Son of Ad, and Suleiman and Alexander; the first
two being infidels and the Second two True Believers.”
“Alexander?” Arglay said in surprise. “How jolly! Perhaps Giles will
produce the helmet of the divine Alexander too. We shall have a
regular archaeological evening, I expect. Well, come along, Malbrouck
s’en va t’en guerre…… He carried them off to the car.
Sir Giles received the party with an almost Christlike, “What went ye
out
for to see?” air, but he made no demur about producing the Crown for
their examination. The Chief Justice, after examining it, showed it to
Chloe.
“And the markings?” he asked her.
Chloe said nervously, “O you know them, Lord Arglay.”
“I know they are Hebrew,” the Chief justice said, “and I know that Sir
Giles is sneering at me in his heart. But I haven’t an idea what
they are.”
“I suppose you’ve never had a Hebrew Rabbi before you?” Sir Giles said.
“That’s how you judges become educated men, isn’t it? The letters-”
“I asked Miss Burnett, Giles,” Lord Arglay interrupted, and Sir Giles
with a shrug waited.
“They are the four letters of the Tetragrammaton, the Divine Name,”
Chloe said still more nervously. “Yod,
He, Vau, He. I found it out this afternoon,” she said suddenly to Sir
Giles, “in an encyclopedia.”
“Some of us write encyclopedias,” Arglay said, “-that’s you, Giles;
some of us read them—that’s you, Miss Burnett; some of us own them—that’s me; and some of us despise them -that’s you, Reginald.”
“Encyclopedias are like slums,” Giles said, “the rotten homes of
diseased minds. But even Hoxton has to pretend to live, it thinks, and
of course it doesn’t know it stinks.”
Arglay was looking at the letters. “The Divine Name,” he said
musingly.
“Yod, He, Vau, He. Umph. Well…. We were going to experiment, weren’t
we?” he added, almost as if recovering himself. “Who begins? Reginald,
suppose you show us.”
“Certainly,” Montague said. “Now look here, uncle, let’s really show
you. tell me something I can bring you from your study.”
“Bring me the pages of manuscript on the small table by the window,”
Arglay answered at once. “The top one is marked Chapter IV.”
Montague nodded and taking the Crown put it on his head; he settled it
comfortably, then taking a step or two backwards sat down in the
nearest convenient chair. Lord Arglay watched him attentively,
occasionally
darting his eyes sideways towards Sir Giles, who—as if bored with the
repetition of a concluded experiment—had turned to the papers on which
he had previously been working. Chloe suddenly caught Arglay’s arm;
he put up his other hand and pressed hers. At once they found
themselves looking at an empty chair. Chloe cried out; Arglay took a
step towards the chair. Sir Giles, looking round, said casually; “I
shouldn’t get in the way; he may be back at any moment, and you might
get a nasty knock.”
“Well, I’m damned,” Lord Arglay said. “It’s all—” he began, looking
at
Chloe, but, impressed by the vivid excitement that possessed her,
ceased
in the middle of the reassuring phrase he had begun. They waited in
silence.
It was only about two or three minutes before, suddenly, they saw
Reginald Montague again in front of them. He sat still for another
minute or two, then he stepped forward and gave the Chief Justice
several pages of manuscript. “Well, uncle?” he asked triumphantly.
Arglay took the papers and looked at them. They were those on which he
had been making notes that afternoon, and he had, he knew, left them on
his table. He turned them over in silence. Chloe released his arm
suddenly and sat down. Sir Giles strolled back to them. “Interesting
exhibit, what?” he said.
The Chief Justice’s mind admitted the apparent fact. It was
impossible, but it had happened. In less than five minutes these
papers
had been brought from Lancaster Gate to Ealing. He loosed the little
sigh which always preceded his giving judgement and nodded. “I don’t
know whether it’s the Crown of Suleiman, Giles,” he said, “or some
fantasia of our own. But it certainly seems to work.”
“What about trying it, uncle?” Reginald said invitingly, removing the
gold circlet from his head and holding it out. “It’s quite simple.
You
just put it on and wish firmly to gowherever you choose.”
“Wishing firmly is a very difficult thing,” Lord Arglay said. “But
if you can I suppose I can.” He took the Crown and looked at Chloe.
“Where shall I go, Miss Burnett?” he asked.
“Somewhere quiet,” Sir Giles interjected. “If you choose the House of
Commons or London Bridge or anything like that you’ll cause a
sensation.
Try your-” he paused a moment, “dining-room,” he added.
“I’d rather go somewhere I didn’t know,” Arglay said.
“Go to my sitting-room, Lord Arglay,” Chloe put in swiftly. “I don’t
suppose you even remember what the address is. Oh—let me think—on the
table is last week’s New Statesman.”
“There isn’t likely to be any other fellow there?” Sir Giles asked.
“No? All right, Arglay. Better sit down; it’s apt to jar you, they
say.
Now—will yourself there.”
Lord Arglay took the Crown in both hands and set it on his head. Chloe
involuntarily compared the motion with Montague’s. Reginald had put it
on with one hand as if he were settling a cap; against his thin form
the Chief Justice’s assured maturity stood like a dark magnificence.
He set on the Crown as if he were accepting a challenge, and sat down
as
if the Chief Justice of England were coming to some high trial, either
of another or of himself. Chloe, used to seeing and hearing him when
his mind played easily with his surroundings, used to the light
courtesy
with which he had always treated her, had rarely seen in him that rich
plenitude of power which seemed to make his office right and natural
to him. Once or twice, when, in dictating his book, he had framed
slowly some difficult and significant paragraph, she had caught a hint
of it, but her attention then had been on her work and his words rather
than his person. She held her breath as she looked, and her eyes met
his. They were fixed on her with a kind of abstract intimacy; she felt
at once more individual to him than ever before and yet as if the
individuality which he discerned was something of which she herself was
not yet conscious. And while she looked back into them, thrilling to
that remote concentration, she found she was looking only at the chair,
and was brought back at once from that separate interaction to the
remembrance of their business. She started with the shock, and both
the men in the room looked at her.
“Don’t be frightened,” Sir Giles said, with an effort controlling his
phrases, and “It’s all right, you know,” Montague added coldly.
“I’m not frightened, thank you,” Chloe said, hating them both with a
sudden intensity, but she knew she lied. She was frightened; she was
frightened of them. The Crown of Suleiman, the strange happenings,
Lord Arglay’s movements -these were what had stirred her emotions and
shaken her, and those shaken emotions were loosed within her in a
sudden
horror, yet of what she did not know. It seemed as if there were two
combinations; one had vanished, and the other she loathed, but to that
she was suddenly abandoned. It -was ridiculous, it was insane. “What
on earth are you afraid of?” she asked herself, “do you think either of
them is going to assault you?” And beyond and despite herself, and as
if
thinking of some assault she could not visualize or imagine she
answered, “Yes, I do.”
Lord Arglay, as he sat down
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