Many Dimensions by Charles Williams (namjoon book recommendations txt) đź“•
"Will you at least try, sir?" Ali asked.
"Why, no," the Ambassador answered. "No, I do not think I will even try. It is but the word of Hajji Ibrahim here. Had he not known of the treachery of his kinsmen and come to England by the same boat as Giles Tumulty we should have known very little of what had happened, and that vaguely. But as it is, we were warned of what you call the sacrilege, and now you have talked to him, and you are convinced. But what shall I say to the Foreign Minister? No; I do not think I will try."
"You do not believe it," the Hajji said. "You do not believe that this is the Crown of Suleiman or that Allah put a mystery into it when His Permission bestowed it on the King?"
The Ambassador considered. "I have known you a long while," he said thoughtfully, "and I will tell you what I believe. I know that your
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is not the Stone Mr. Sheldrake flung away.”
“Like the poor Indian,” Oliver Doncaster put in, being a little tired
of having no chance to say anything, but no one took any notice except
the Chief Justice who, glancing at Sheldrake, altered Shakespeare into
Pope by murmuring “whose untutored mind.”
“If the Government,” Sir Giles went on, “wish to conduct an inquiry
into the nature of the Stone I shall be happy to assist them by
supplying examples.” He covered the Stone on his knee with both hands
and apparently in some intense effort shut his eyes for a minute or
two. The inquiry looked perplexed and doubtful, and it was Chloe who
suddenly broke the silence by jumping to her feet and running round the
table. Sir Giles, hearing the movement, opened his eyes just as
Palliser thrust his chair back in Chloe’s path, and leapt up in his
turn, throwing as he did so about a dozen Stones, all exactly similar,
on to the table. Everybody jumped up in confusion, as Chloe, still
silent, caught Palliser’s chair with a vicious jerk that unbalanced and
overthrew the Professor, and sprang towards Tumulty. Sir Giles, the
Stone clasped in one hand and his open knife still in the other, met
her with a snarl. “Go to hell,” he said, and slashed out with the knife
as she caught at his wrist.
“Miss Burnett! Miss Burnett!” half the table cried. “Miss Burnett! Sir
Giles!” Lord Birlesmere exclaimed. Mr. Sheldrake, his mouth open in
dismay, caught up two or three of the Stones and looked at them. Lord
Arglay, leaning over the table, struck Doncaster’s shoulder sharply:
“Get that knife away from him,” he said, and himself ran round after
Chloe. Palliser, scrambling to his feet, thrust himself in Doncaster’s
way. “Lord Birlesmere,” he called. “I protest! I demand that you shall
stop this attack.”
“Get out, you-” Sir Giles yelled at Chloe. The knife had shut on her
fingers and blood was on her hand. But her other had already caught
Tumulty’s wrist and was struggling with his for the Stone. Lord
Arglay’s arrival did not seem materially to help her; it was Tumulty,
who, as everyone rushed to do something to end the scuffle, let go of
the Stone, slipped to one side, reached the table, and caught up one or
two of the Types which, to the Chief Justice’s hasty glance, seemed to
cover it. There were by now half a dozen bodies between Chloe and Sir
Giles, who however had only distanced a foe to meet a fidget. Sheldrake
clutched at him. “What are you doing?” he shrieked. “What are you doing
with my stone?”
“Lord Birlesmere,” Sir Giles said, “unless you stop that hellcat of
Arglay’s I’ll ruin everything. I’ll go off and flood the country with
Stones. I can and I will.”
-Lord Birlesmere said passionately, “Miss Burnett, please be quiet.
You’d better go; you’d really better go.”
The Chief Justice gave Chloe a handkerchief. “You attend to Tumulty,
Birlesmere,” he said. “The real proceedings are only just beginning.
All mankind has been searching for this Stone, and now the English
Government has got it.”
Lord Birlesmere came back to the table and stood by Sir Giles. “What
does it mean?” he said.
“I will tell you now,” Tumulty answered. “Anyone who has this Stone can
heal himself of all illnesses, and can move at once through space and
time, and can multiply it by dividing
it as much as he wishes. There will be no need of doctors or nurses or
railways or tubes or trams or taxis or airships or any transport—except
for heavy luggage, and I’m not sure about that—if I scatter this Stone
through the country. How do you like the idea? Look,” he said, “I’ll
show you. Will to be somewhere—in Westminster Abbey.” He thrust one of
the Types into the Foreign Secretary’s hand, who took it, looked at it,
looked at Sir Giles, hesitated, then seemed to concentrate—and suddenly
neither he nor Tumulty were there.
As the others jumped and gaped Arglay said to Chloe, “You can’t do any
more. They have it here. Go back home and wait for me
“I suppose I was a fool,” Chloe said in a low tone. “But I did so hate
to see him sitting there, and know what he was doing. And if I’d
screamed at them no one would have done anything.”
Arglay nodded. “It is clear,” he began, “that here—no, never mind. I’ll
tell you presently. Wait.” He stepped to the table and picked up one of
the Types. Mr. Bruce Cumberland began to say something. Lord Arglay
looked at him and went back to Chloe. “Take this,” he said. “No, take
it. Thrice is he armed, of course, but I would rather you could come to
me.”
“I don’t like to touch it,” Chloe looked at it in a kind of awe.
“To the pure all things are pure, even purity,” Lord Arglay said. “Take
it, child. And keep it near you, for I do not think we know what may
happen, but I think the Stone is on your side.”
“What do you mean?” Chloe asked. “On our side?”
“I haven’t an idea,” Lord Arglay answered. “But I think so. Now go. Go
to Lancaster Gate and wait for me. Go before the Foreign Secretary and
that Gadarene swine return.” He took her to the door, and as he
returned was met by Mr. Bruce Cumberland.
“Has Miss Burnett gone?” the secretary said. “I don’t know whether Lord
Birlesmere might not want her not to go before-”
“My dear Mr. Cumberland,” the Chief justice said, “your certainties are
as mixed as your negatives. Hasn’t Lord Birlesmere been asking her to
go in every kind of voice? And now I’ve urged her to, just to please
him. And you’re still not happy. How difficult you diplomats are!”
“Yes,But she took one of the Stones,” Bruce Cumberland protested —
“Well,” Lord Arglay said, sitting down leisurely, “I can easily make
you another—ten, twenty more. At least, I can’t, because I don’t want
to annoy Suleiman ben Daood—on whom be the Peace! as my friend the
Hajji would say. If it belongs to him. But you can make them for
yourself. What a time Giles is, showing Birlesmere the tombs in
Westminster Abbey!”
Bruce Cumberland gave up the argument and they waited in silence for
the return of the others. When this took place Sir Giles, with a glance
round the room and a triumphant grin at Arglay, flung himself into a
chair. Lord Birlesmere stood leaning on the table for some time. Then
he said: “I think, gentlemen, there is nothing more that can profitably
be done now. I am very much obliged to all of you.” He paused, bowed,
added something in a low voice to Mr. Sheldrake, and sat down. The
American did the same thing. Lord Arglay watched thoughtfully till the
others had withdrawn and Lord Birlesmere was looking at him restlessly.
He considered for a moment the three opposite him, and said quietly.
“No, Birlesmere; you’re like Salisbury, you’re backing the wrong horse.
And if Mr. Sheldrake wants to get his seventy thousand pounds restored
I think that he’s riding the wrong way. As for you, Tumulty, I don’t
think you know where you’re riding.” He got up and strolled slowly to
the door.
The important conference now began. That Sir Giles was a member of it
was due largely to the importance he seemed to have as the origin and
scientific investigator of the Stone rather than to any actual need of
him. But his impatience Prevented a good deal of time being lost in an
international wrangle, since neither Birlesmere nor Sheldrake wished
more Types to exist than could be helped, while Tumulty was entirely
reckless. All that he wanted was opportunity to inVestigate the
qualities of the Stone, without exposing himself to any serious risk of
unexpected results; and this he saw a
chance of obtaining by an understanding with the Government. But to
both of the others the monopoly of the Stone was rapidly becoming a
matter of the first importance, and under pressure from Sir Giles
something very like the first draft of a new Anglo-American treaty was
reached in half an hour or so. Sheldrake had vague personal and semi-official relations with the President, and promised to bring the whole
thing privately to his notice. With instruments of this nature at their
disposal, and a judicious use of them, he and the Foreign Secretary saw
infinite possibilities of developing power. Only one thing stood in
their way, and it was this hindrance they were anxious for Sir Giles to
remove. At present the successful use of the Stone depended entirely on
the individual will. But for purposes of national control, it was
necessary that the controllers should be able to move masses of men
without the masses having a choice. It was clear that no army which had
been supplied with Types of the Stone could be relied on. Mutiny might
be dangerous but transit of this sort would be safe and easy. For the
first time in history the weakest thing was on a level, was indeed
better off, than the strongest. Besides, as Sir Giles with a certain
glee pointed out, in war nothing but mortal wounds would be any use;
others could be healed at once, and wars would become interminable. It
was Lord Birlesmere who asked whether, if the Stone could heal so
easily, it could also repair wastage; that is, prove a substitute for
food. “But then,” he added, startled, “it would practically confer
immortality. The world would in time become over-crowded; you would be
adding without taking away.”
“You might,” Sir Giles said, “use it as the perfect contraceptive.”
Mr. Sheldrake looked down his nose. The conversation seemed to him to
be becoming obscene.
“Under control,” Lord Birlesmere said thoughtfully, “always, always
under control. We must find out what it can do; you must, Sir Giles.”
“I ask nothing better,” Sir Giles said. “But you Puritans
have always made such a fuss about vivisection, let alone human,
vivisection. “
“No one,” Lord Birlesmere exclaimed, “is suggesting vivisection. There
is a difference between harmless experiments and vivisection.”
“I can have living bodies?” Sir Giles asked.
“Well, there are prisons—and workhouses—and hospitals—and barracks,”
Birlesmere answered slowly. “Judiciously, of course. I mean, a careful
investigation of the possibilities.” He was distracted by Mr.
Sheldrake’s clamour for a licensed monopoly of the Stone for use in
transit.
It took longer to satisfy the American than the scientist. Lord
Birlesmere was perfectly willing to give up bodies to experiment, so
far as he could, but he was very reluctant to interfere with the right
of any citizen into whose possession the Stone might come, to use it as
he chose. Yet nothing else, it was clear, would be of any use.
The possession of the Stone would have to be made illegal. And
therefore the Types would have to be recovered. Of such Types, besides
those on the table, there were at least fourProfessor Palliser had one
(“I’ll answer for him,” Sir Giles said), Reginald Montague (“and you
can deal with him,” he added, “frightening him will do it”), Lord
Arglay, and Miss Burnett.
They looked at each other. It might be rather a difficult thing to
persuade the Chiefjustice to give up anything he had a right to possess
and an interest in keeping.
“What about a secret Order in Council?” Sheldrake soared to new heights
of romanticism.
“I don’t know the legal aspect,” Birlesmere muttered. “And he probably
would.
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