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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Lord Arglay would probably know a good deal about it. I might consult
the Law Officers—but even then—and Miss Burnett too. Being his
secretary makes it so awkward….”
There was a prolonged silence. Then Sir Giles said suddenly: “What
about this foreign Power of yours?”
“What about it?” Birlesmere asked in surprise.
“Persia, wasn’t it?” Sir Giles said. “I had some carpet-weaver of
theirs to dinner to find out about the Stone. And if they burgled me—and I’m almost sure they didvvhat about a neat little burglary at
Lancaster Gate? And at—where does that girl live?”
Birlesmere shook his head. “It means them getting the Stone,” he
objected, “and I’d much rather Arglay had it. Well, I’ll think about
it. Perhaps a friendly appeal-”
Sir Giles made a peculiar noise and rather reluctantly abandoned the
subject. He disliked any Types being in Arglay’s and Chloe’s
possession, but his dislike was not strong enough to urge him to
extreme action. But as, a little later, a temporary agreement having
been arrived at, he left the Foreign Office, it occurred to him that if
the Stone had shown his own action to the Chief justice, it could be
used also to discover what was in Arglay’s mind, and to suggest other
modes of action. With this idea possessing him he rejoined Palliser,
who was staying at Ealing.
THE ACTION OF LORD ARGLAY
Lord Arglay, insisting on writing some business letters after lunch,
insisted also that Chloe should wait his convenience and rest until he
was ready for her. It was consequently not until after tea that he lit
one of his very occasional cigars, and standing in front of the
fireplace said: “And now, Miss Burnett, what do you make of it?”
“I feel an awful ass,” Chloe told him, “going for Sir Giles like that.
But I couldn’t think of anything sane to do—I was so angry.”
“The wrath of the Lamb,” Arglay said. “But I didn’t mean about
yourself; you saved the Lord Chief Justice throwing an inkstand at
Giles, which would have been more scandalous, but perhaps more
effective, if I had hit him. It might even have killed him. I really
meant—about the situation. Suppress, if you can, your righteous
supernatural anger with him, and tell me why you hate him so.”
“I don’t hate him,” Chloe said. “I only want to stop him doing anything
at all with the Stone. He oughtn’t to have it.”
“So far as we know, he bought it,” Lord Arglay pointed out.
“But it isn’t his,” Chloe pleaded, “not really.”
“Mrs. Sheldrake used much the same argument to convince me that all the
Types ought to be her husband’s,” Arglay answered. “Only she said, they
are his, really. Try and be masculine and rational. Why isn’t it his?”
Chloe made an obviously intense effort. “I think I hate the way he
looks at it,” she said. “He doesn’t care about it, only about the way
it works. He doesn’t care about Suleiman—or Charlemagne—or… He only
wants to see what it will do.”
“And being an incurable romantic,” Arglay said, “you hate him being
merely utilitarian. Well, I don’t suppose anyone else, for a thousand
years or so, has barked their knuckles for the sake of Suleiman the
King. I should think you were the first of the English to do it. Still—it’s hardly reason enough for your disliking Giles quite so much.”
Chloe went on looking for reasons. “He doesn’t care about it a bit,”
she protested. “He throws it about as if it were of no importance at
all. And he doesn’t care how much he cuts it up.”
“And why do we care?” Lord Arglay asked.
Chloe smiled. “I don’t know,” she said, “I don’t know a bit, but I do.
Don’t you know?”
The Chief Justice frowned at his cigar. “I will offer you two
alternatives,” he said. “First, we are both disgracefully sentimental.
We wallow in tradition. And when a traditional thing appears to produce
unusual results we can’t help being affected. Giles is stronger-minded.
Suleiman and our lord the Prophet leave him unmoved. J’y suis, j’y
reste, and so on. I hate being less efficient than Giles, but I fear
it, I promise you I fear it.” He shook his head despairingly.
“And the other alternative?” Chloe said.
“The other? O the other is that we’re right in being affected,” Lord
Arglay answered, “that amid all this mess of myths and tangle of
traditions and… and… febrifuge of fables, there is something
extreme and terrible. And if so, Giles had better be careful.”
“Which do you believe?” Chloe asked.
“My dear girl, I haven’t a notion,” the Chief Justice told her. “I
don’t see a little bit how we can decide. It’s a question -let’s be
perfectly frank—of which we want to believe.”
“Which do you then?” Chloe persisted.
“I don’t want to believe either. I hate being foolish and I dislike
being pious,” Arglay said. “Do you choose first. How will you know and
receive the Stone?”
“He said it was the End of Desire,” Chloe murmured.
“And shall that be romance or truth for you?” Arglay asked. “Make up
your mind and tell me, child; what will you have the Stone to be?”
“I would have it to be the End of Desire indeed,” Chloe said. “I would
have it to be something very strong andsatisfying. I am afraid of it
but I—don’t laugh—I love it.”
Lord Arglay looked at her thoughtfully. Then, “Do you believe in God?”
he asked.
“I suppose so,” Chloe said. “I think I do when I look at the Stone. But
otherwise—I don’t know.”
“Well,” said Lord Arglay, “I will make you a fair proposal -I will if
you will. It’s all perfectly ridiculous, but since I saw those people
this morning I feel I must be with them or against them. So I suppose
I’m against them. Not, mind you, on the evidence. But I refuse to let
you believe in God all by yourself.”
Chloe looked up at him, her eyes shining. “But dare I believe that the
Stone is of God?” she said. “And what do I mean by God—except -..”
she half added and stopped.
“Except-?” Arglay asked, but she silently refused to go on and he said:
“If you will believe this way, then I also will believe. And we will
set ourselves against the world, the flesh, and the devil, and not sit
in the seat of Giles Tumulty. But I would have you be careful there for
I think he hates you.”
“But what can he do?” Chloe asked in astonishment.
“If I have seen his mind, as I believe I did,” Lord Arglay said, “he
may also see yours. Unless the Stone has varying powers. I would have
you consider very closely in what way you may work with the Stone for
God. Also I would have you keep it on you day and night that you may
escape by it if need be. “
“But what need can there be?” Chloe asked.
“Child,” Lord Arglay answered, “it is clear that these men cannot stop
where they are. They must either abandon the
Stone to chance and itself or they must seek to possess it. Now I do
not think it is well that they should wholly possess it, and I think
that you and I should keep our Types while we can. I do not know
whether the Types can be united, but if I were Birlesmere I would
strive for that, and the united Stone would give sole power. If this is
what he does they may attempt anything within or without the Law.
Fortunately,” he added pensively, “the interpretation of the law so
often depends on the Courts. Tomorrow I will talk to the Hajji.”
“But what will you do with it in the end?” Chloe asked.
“Why, that we shall see,” Lord Arglay said. “For the Law is greater
than the Courts, and in the end the Courts shall submit to the Law. But
meanwhile you shall consider how you will follow this God that we have
decided to believe in, who, it seems, may give wisdom through the
Stone. And then we will free Giles’s prisoner in the past.” He paused
and considered Chloe with an anxious protectiveness. “But if you need
me,” he said, “come to me at any hour of the day or night.”
Chloe met his eyes gravely. “I will remember,” she said, “and—and I do
believe in God.”
“In spite of the fact that Giles Tumulty exists, so do I,” Lord Arglay
said, “though in a man of past fifty it’s either an imbecility or a
heroism.”
“And what for a girl of twenty-five?” Chloe asked.
“O in her it’s either a duty or a generosity,” Lord Arglay said, “but
for a secretary it’s a safeguard. One must have something to explain or
counter-balance one’s employer!”…
At Ealing Sir Giles got up in a rage. “Why the hell can’t I find out?”
he asked, throwing one of the Types on the table. The question seemed
reasonable enough. For in their preliminary investigations that
afternoon both he and the Professor had found out all they wanted.
Having worked out what seemed a moderately safe formula they had
experimented first on such minds as Sir Giles’s housekeeper, the
Professor’s old
aunt, Lord Birlesmere, and others. After something of the same
experiences which Lord Arglay had undergone, the results had been
satisfactory enough. Sir Giles, rather to his annoyance, had been
conscious of a strongly marked, if muddled, desire that some malignant
old beast should go to China, mingled with an anxiety whether a girl
called Lizzie should be getting into trouble. The process was similar
in each case. There opened before the eyes of the holder of the Stone
the scene then before the eyes of the subject of the investigation,
there arose within his mind the occupation of the subject’s mind, but in words rather than in ill-defined vision. The presence of the Stone
in the hand remained throughout as a kind of anchor, so that the
connexion with the actual world was never entirely lost, and could at
will be wholly re-established.
But when Sir Giles, rather pleased at being able apparently to get his
own back on the Chief Justice, attempted the most important experiment,
he found the result negligible. He framed the formula; he called up the
consciousness of Arglay; he intensified his will. There appeared
gradually before him the familiar study as seen from in front of the
fireplace; Chloe was sitting in front of him. Sir Giles was aware of
thinking that Arglay had an admirable taste in women, that though of
course this girl was not really intelligent she could probably take the
Chief Justice in. This consciousness went on repeating itself again and
again. He tried to empty his mind, but it was no good. The image of
Chloe occupied it, with a sort of detached irritation, until he
recalled himself in a fit of anger.
“You try, Palliser,” he said shortly. “Arglay can’t be so deMented on
that girl that he can think of nothing elsd. But I’m damned if he seems
to, unless the Stone’s gone wrong.”
The Professor tried, with a little more success. “The Chief Justice,”
he said, “seems to be thinking of protecting God.”
“Of what?” Sir Giles shrieked.
“That was the impression I got,” Palliser said. “A strong wish to
protect and a sense that protection was valueless,
and the idea—the word God recurring. All aimed
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