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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reasoning left out of account were, first, the inclusion of the Prince
Ali among the pursuers of the Stone, and second Chloe’s increasing
determination not to use her Type for her own safety. It was this
omission which proved his conclusion wrong and did actually put her in
peril.
For whatever the Persian Ambassador might diplomatically desire, and
whatever the HaJi Ibrahim might religiously assert, Ali had no
intention at all of relinquishing his efforts—to
recover all the Types if possible, and if not at least one; by the
possession of which he hoped to procure the rest. His first objective
had been Sir Giles. But Sir Giles had made it clear that any attempt to
recover the Type in his possession would mean a multiplication of
Stones which from Ali’s point of view would be not only sacrilegious
but extremely troublesome. He had not for some days been at all clear
where the rest of the Types were. Reginald Montague had apparently had
one, but then—he gathered from the papers—so had Sheldrake; were they
one or two? Ali could not, in his position, afford to make a number of
violent and unsuccessful efforts to recover it or them; the
Ambassador’s modernity and the Hajji’s piety might agree in removing
him to Moscow or having him recalled to Tehran before he achieved what
he wanted, should either of them suspect what was happening. He had not
dared so far to make any effort to excite the temper of the East. But
he had, with the greatest caution, sounded the mind of one of his
friends in the Embassy; he intended to gather about himself a small
group of similar spirits in order that when a convenient time came he
might, if necessary, strike in several directions at once.
Nothing however was further from his mind than that he should be rung
up by Sir Giles Tumulty. It was not the first telephonic conversation
which had proceeded between the Embassy and the English that morning;
the Hajji and Lord Arglay had been talking earlier. The Chief justice
had briefly explained that all was well with Miss Burnett, and had
added that he was still in two minds about going off to Ealing and
quite simply killing Sir Giles.
“What good do you think that would be… in the End?” the Hajji said.
“I haven’t an idea what good it would be in the End,” Lord Arglay
assured him, “but it seems as if it might be a considerable good here
and now. After all, we can’t be expected to put everything off because
of the End or we should just be putting off the End itself At least it
seems so to me, but I’m no metaphysician.”
“What would Miss Burnett desire?” the Hajji asked.
“That’s my only difficulty,” Lord Arglay explained. “I don’t think
she’d like it—and yet I don’t know. Everybody else would be pleased. I
might be hanged but I should be almost certain - to have a memorial
statue somewhere, probably by Epstein. I like Epstein too. Well, I
suppose I shan’t.”
He might however have been almost inclined to turn the only half-fantastic idea into an act if he had overheard Sir Giles a quarter of
an hour later. The whole history of Tumulty’s dealings with the Stone
had roused in him a state of increasing irritation with Lord Arglay and
his secretary. There had been the spying on him, as he chose to call
it, at Birmingham; Arglay’s refusal to investigate the half-hour’s
break; the affray at the Conference; his own impotence to understand
Arglay’s mind; the rescue of Pondon. And now… He was not very
clear what had interfered with his domination of Chloe. He had, after
the usual preliminary attention and concentration, become aware of
looking through Chloe’s eyes much as Arglay had looked through his own.
He had been aware of a feeling for the Chief justice which, since it
certainly wasn’t his own, must be Chloe’s. He had attempted to turn
that emotion into his own desire to use Arglay and then throw him
aside. But he had not reached to the extremer places of Chloe’s own
manner of experience; it—had been but her conscious thought that he
could dominate, working inwards from without. He had so far conquered
that his intention had imposed itself on her as her own, although with
the changed appearance which, in their turn, her physical and mental
desires had wrought in it. But at the time when Lord Arglay had called
upon his friend with the authority to which she was accustomed and
Which she loved, Giles’s will had been swept aside. A darkness fell
upon him; he became aware of the Stone in his hands, it seemed to move
in them and itself to thrust him back. He dropped it suddenly as if
just in time to avoid its growth against him, and took, as he became
again conscious of his outer Surroundings, a few angry steps about the
room. “I don’t know if this is a damned nightmare,” he grunted, “but it
felt as if I was going to be swallowed by the bloody thing. I wonder if
I’m letting the idea of getting back at Arglay and his whore run away
with me. One does, sometimes; and that’s just death to observation. I
wish there was someone else who could tackle, them. And by God,” he
exclaimed, “there is. I suggested it to Birlesmere myself—there’s the
Persian.”
As he thought about it he decided that this, in default of a better,
was the momentary solution. The Prince Ali was probably still anxious
to recover the Stone, and if he happened to kill Chloe or Arglay in the
process so much the better. Anyhow even to lose their Types would
certainly annoy them, and if at the worst Ali or his friends failed or
suffered there was no particular harm done to Sir Giles himself. “Ali
and this screaming peahen can fight it out together,” he said, and
looked up the number of the Persian Embassy.
The Prince was considerably surprised when he was first told that Sir
Giles Tumulty wanted to speak to him, but he condescended to answer.
Sir Giles was obscenely abrupt. On condition that he was left alone he
would give the Persian a chance of recovering something, if All thought
it worth while. Was he to be left alone? The Prince, as abruptly,
agreed. Then at Lancaster Gate and wherever the secretary hibernated,
were Types of the Stone, if they were wanted.
“But why,” the Prince said curiously, “do you tell me this?”
“What in hell’s name does that matter to you?” Sir Giles asked. “I gave
him one when I thought you were after me, just to make you and your
company of date-eaters think a bit. But he annoys me, and I’d rather
you had it.”
The Prince thought, but did not say, that the Foreign Office would
hardly have agreed. Sir Giles had thought of it but he was far too
angry with his brother-in-law to care about all the Foreign Offices in
Europe.
“Well, there you are,” he said. “I suppose you can hire somebody to do
the job.”
“That I will see to,” the Prince said. “If this is true I cannot thank
you, but I will at least ignore you.”
“You’ll do what?” Sir Giles almost yelled, but recovered himself and
slammed down the receiver. “And I hope they assault the girl and
assassinate Arglay,” he thought to himself as he prepared to go out
again to Wandsworth.
The exact measures which the Prince took were, not unnaturally, never
explained. But by the time that Chloe, after an uneventful day,
returned home, they had been carried out. His friend had left London
for Brighton and Reginald Montague. He himself was waiting for night.
Chloe and the Chief Justice had—quite seriously—discussed the
possibility of attempting to recover all the Types and of escaping with
them from England. But neither of them, especially as they grew less
and less inclined to use it—or, as Chloe had said—to dictate to it, had
-been quite prepared to take such extreme measures. Lord Arglay viewed
with a certain hesitation the annexation of Sheldrake’s Type, for which
after all he had paid and from which he was presumably entitled to get
such satisfaction as he legally could. The Mayor of Rich had called to
ask the Chief Justice to draw up a public statement and petition on
behalf of all the sick, and on the first draft of this Lord Arglay,
with a wry smile, had spent some time. Rich, he gathered from the
papers, was still in a state of simmering discontent. Oliver Doncaster
had called, very uncertain of his behaviour in Chloe’s company, and
rather defeated at finding that everything seemed normal. No one
alluded to her remark of the previous night, and the Chief Justice
being in the room all the time there was no opportunity
for him to make the running on the strength of her own behaviour. As,
rather gloomily, he departed, Lord Arglay looked at Chloe. “Of course
he doesn’t appreciate Giles,” he said.
“But what must he think of me?” Chloe asked despairingly.
“I can’t begin to imagine,” Lord Arglay said. “Nor as a matter of fact
can he. You can, but you needn’t at the moment. For I am utterly
convinced that Austin-Austin!-never said ‘Attribuat igitur rex legi,
quod lex attribuit ei, videlicet dominationern et Potestatem. Non est
enim rex ubi dominatur voluntas et non lex.’ Don’t you know the sound
of Bracton’s voice, when you hear it? ‘Therefore let the king attribute
to the law that which the law attributes to him, namely, domination and
power. For where the will rules and not the law is no king.’ You
haven’t checked your references, child, and, as a result, you’ve got
this whole page of quotations wrong.”
Chloe bit her lips, crossed out the attribution, and plunged back into
legal histories.
This unfortunate lapse, the more maddening that it had been a page she
had written out some weeks earlier, and before the Stone had
preoccupied her mind, was annoying her when she returned that night.
For she had rather prided herself on her secretarial efficiency, and
Lord Arglay’s quite pleasant, but quite firm, criticism of it
distressed almost as much as it pleased her. Almost, because she
thought as she took off her hat how much worse it would have been if he
had pretended that, because of their friendship, it didn’t matter. “It
was,” he had said, “no doubt the prophetic soul of your wide world
dreaming on things to come. But don’t let it be dreaming too much about
the law-makers who are gone, will you? Or let us be quite clear when it
is.” Chloe kicked herself again and made some coffee.
The incident however sent her to bed even more certain of the edge of
incapacity and void upon which she dwelt than
she normally was. What with Frank Lindsay being angry with her for one
thing (and even now she wasn’t clear that she had been right), and Lord
Arglay being critical of her for another (and she was quite clear that
she had been hopelessly careless), she seemed to herself a sufficiently
ineffectual creature. It was true she couldn’t much care whether Frank
was angry or not, and didn’t in a sense mind whether Lord Arglay was
displeased or not; if the one didn’t understand, well, she couldn’t
help it, and of the other she would always be secure no matter how
unhappy he might, very properly and rightly, make her. Still, if this
was the result of her emotional and intellectual life—merely to annoy
everybody! She looked at herself in the glass
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