Many Dimensions by Charles Williams (namjoon book recommendations txt) 📕
"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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“It’s the First Matter,” Sir Giles said. “I told you that was what I
thought it was, and I’m more sure than ever now. It’s that which
becomes everything else.”
“But how does it work?” Palliser asked. “How does all this movement
happen? How does it carry anyone about in space?”
“It doesn’t,” Sir Giles answered immediately. “Can’t you see that it
doesn’t move people about like an aeroplane display. Once you are in
contact and you choose and desire and will, you go into it and come out
again where you have desired because everything is in it, anyhow. Do
try and see further than a wax doll on a Christmas tree can.”
“So that if you were set in contact you might, even if you only partly
knew… ?” Palliser began slowly and stopped.
“I expect so,” Sir Giles said sweetly, “if your hearse of a
mind could only get to the cemetery a bit quicker. What might you?”
“I was thinking of Pondon,” Palliser went on. “That might explain how
it was that he’s… returned?”
“He’s what?” Sir Giles said sharply. “What d’you mean, Palliser? He
hadn’t a Stone, had he?”
“Your brother-in-law must have done it,” Palliser answered, feeling
some pleasure at the connexion. “You know you thought you saw him when
we were trying to get at Pondon the other night and failed. There seems
to have been a paragraph in the paper, but I missed that. But when I
got to Birmingham yesterday morning, he was there. He’d been found in
the laboratory when my demonstrator went in at about ten o’clock. He
was a bit bewildered then, I gathered, so I went round to see him. And
who do you think I found there?”
“Arglay!” Sir Giles exclaimed. “By God, I’ll tear Arglay into bits.”
“Not Arglay,” Palliser went on, “but that girl who was with him—his
secretary. She’d told him some tale and got on his right side, for
there he was talking away to her, and telling her how he couldn’t make
out what had happened. I was rather sorry I’d turned up at first,
though he was quite all right with me—asked me if the vibrations were
all right. You remember we told him some tale about testing etheric
vibrations—on the lines of my Discontinuous Integer?”
“He was damn near being a discontinuous integer himself,”
Sir Giles said snappily. “And what had Arglay’s woman to say about it?”
“I don’t like it,” Palliser answered. “O she didn’t say much, just
cooed at him now and then. But from what he said, while he was doing
his job as usual, he found his hand holding this Stone—and he knew he’d
been holding it, so (as far as I could understand) he took a tighter
grip and said to himself, “This is where I ought to be.” And then he
remembers pitching right over, and there the demonstrator found him.
But that girl and Arglay have had something to do with it, and if
they’re going to interfere continually-”
Sir Giles put up a hand as if for silence, and sat meditating for
several minutes. Then he drew a deep breath and got up. “I’m going to
try something,” he said. “I’ve had enough of this young Hecate mixing
herself up with my affairs because that bestial leprechaun who employs
her tells her to. I’ll give Miss Chloe Burnett something else to do
with her mind, and perhaps with mine. If she can use the Stone so can
other people. Where is it? Go away now, Palliser, and let me try.”
It was perhaps the greatest mistake which Giles Tumulty had ever made
to allow what had been in general a cold, if rather horrible, sincerity
of investigation into remote states of mind to become violently shaken
by a personal hatred of his brother-in-law. He and Arglay had always
mutually despised each other, but until now they had neverbeen in
conflict. The chances of the last few’days however had turned them from
contemptuous acquaintances into definite enemies. Indeed at that
moment, though no one of those connected with the progress of the Stone
and its Types had realized it, the Chief Justice. and his secretary
were becoming the only single-minded adherents it possessed. Lord
Arglay certainly could not be thought to feel any passionate devotion
to it; but he strongly disliked all that he saw and felt of the greed
by which it was surrounded. The Persian Government, the English
GovernMent, the American millionaire and his wife—these he knew; and
there were others he did not know-Merridew and Frank Lindsay; even, in
some sense, though a holier, the Mayor of Rich and the Hajji Ibrahim.
All for good or evil desired to recover the Stone, and use it, and most
of them desired greatly to possess all its Types as well. Doncaster and
Mrs. Pentridge hardly knew enough or were hardly in sufficient contact
with the movements it had caused to make any demand. But Lord Arglay,
at once in contact and detached, at once faithless and believing,
beheld all these things in the light of that fastidious and ironical
goodwill which, outside mystical experience, is the finest and noblest
capacity man has developed in and against the universe. And now this
itself was touched by a warmer consciousness, for as far as might be
within his protection and certainly within his willing friendship,
there was growing the intense secret of Chloe’s devotion to the
Mystery. As if a Joseph with more agnostic irony than tradition usually
allows him sheltered and sustained a Mary of a more tempestuous past
than the Virgin-Mother is believed to have either endured or enjoyed,
so Lord Arglay considered, as far as it was clear to him, his friend’s
progress towards the End of Desire. To that shelter and sustenance she
had eagerly returned from her absence on the Birmingham errand, and she
and her companion were now telling him and the Hajji, who had been
summoned, of the occurrences of that errand.
Of one thing however Chloe did not speak. She might have gradually
revealed it to Lord Arglay, but she certainly was not going to mention
it before the Hajji, and as in a way Mr. Doncaster was it or the
occasion of it she could not before him. Chloe had usually found a
fairly long train journey–especially in the first class compartment
Lord Arglay had naturally assumed she would take—in the company of an
intelligent and personable young man who rather obviously admired her,
a very pleasant, and even exciting, method of spending the time. There
was so happy a mixture of the known and the unknown; there was all the
possibility of advance and yet all the suretY
of withdrawal—there was in short such admirable country for campaigning
that she could not very clearly understand why she had today looked at
it without any thought of a campaign. She had thrown out a squadron or
so to check Mr. Doncaster’s early moves, and had with small expenditure
of effort immobilized him. The journeys were ended and there was no
regret. She must, Chloe thought when she became conscious of this, be
terribly excited. But she was not excited. She only wanted to serve the
Stone—and Lord Arglay—as much as Lord Arglay—and the Stone—wanted.
There was a slight doubt in her mind which of them, if it came to a
crisis, was the more important, but it hadn’t come to a crisis and very
likely never would. Once or twice her experience in the operation which
she and the Chief justice had directed occurred to her; with the
suggestion of a possibility that there indeed a choice beyond her
knowledge had been made and a first separation from mortality dutifully
and sadly undergone. It would have seemed to her silly. and pretentious
to put it like that, but when she said to herself: “I don’t think
perhaps I shall care about it so much,” it might have meant much the
same thing, at least to any of the Types of the Stone or to the wisdom
of Suleiman ben Daood, king in Jerusalem.
“We went to the University first,” Doncaster was saying, “but he wasn’t
there, and they didn’t or wouldn’t know anything, so we went to his
house.”
“How did you find it?” the ChiefJustice put in.
“Telephone Directory,” Doncaster said. “That was my idea -I thought in
his position he’d almost have to be on, and he was. But it was Miss
Burnett got us into the house—the usual kind of house; just the thing
you’d expect of him. He lived with his mother, and I thought we could
swear we were journalists; but before I could say anything-” He paused
and looked at Chloe.
“And what did Miss Burnett swear you were?” Lord Arglay
asked.
“I said we were his friends,” Chloe answered, with a simplicity and a
certainty in her voice which-Arglay thoughtwould have opened any doors.
Some new completeness seemed to be growing in her. He permitted himself
to test it with another question.
“And did you also think it was the kind of house You would expect of
him?” he asked, throwing a side glance of humorous apology at
Doncaster.
Chloe frowned a little. “I don’t think I know,” she said, “I mean, I
didn’t expect anything. It was—it was a house, and he and his mother
lived in it. I don’t see what more one could say.”
“It didn’t,” Arglay asked again, “seem to you of any particular kind?”
“It was a very nice house,” Chloe said, “but—no, I didn’t notice
anything else.”
“It had an aspidistra in the window,” Doncaster put in.
“It certainly had,” Chloe agreed, “and a very good aspidistra too. I
admired it.”
Lord Arglay signed to Doncaster to go on—after a slightly perplexed
glance at Chloe, he obeyed.
“So Miss Burnett said, ‘We are his friends,’ and his mother let us in
and took us to the aspidistra, and presently he came in. So we—at least
Miss Burnett—told him she knew all about
it….-”
“Did you?” Arglay interrupted.
“Well, in a way,” Chloe answered. “It seemed as if he thought he had
seen me before; he looked at me so hesitatingly at first. And I said I
knew something of what had happened, and was anxious to know if we
could do anything more to help him. So we… we stammered a little at
one another, and then he broke out. He said he didn’t know what had
happened. He remembered Professor Palliser talking to him about etheric
vibrations, and asking him to test them by wishing—he said wishing—to
be at an earlier point of time, and then he wondered if he had been.”
“He was very muddled about it all,” Doncaster added. “And about what
happened afterwards: he was doing his job in his usual manner and
suddenly he felt as if he were holding on to a post and something was
saying to him, ‘This is the way.’ He couldn’t get nearer than that. And
he saw a kind of photograph in the air.”
“A what?” Lord Arglay exclaimed.
“He didn’t say a photograph,” Chloe cried out. “He said a picture. “
“He said, to be exact, ‘a picture just like a photograph’,” Doncaster
insisted, “of the same room. And it got bigger. But go on, Miss
Burnett.”
“I think he saw them in the Unity,” Chloe said. “He said he felt as if
he’were standing between them, and he didn’t know which he ought to be
in, but it was frightfully important for him to choose rightly. And he
wondered which the Professor and his friends wanted. But then he
thought he saw…” she hesitated…“me in one of them,
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