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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and
mind towards Chloe. For the first few moments half a score of ordinary
irrelevant thoughts leapt in his mind. She was efficient, she was
rather good-looking, she was, under the detached patience with which
she
took his dictation, avid of ideas and facts, she was desirous—but of
what Lord Arglay doubted if she knew and was quite certain he did not.
He put the irrelevancies aside, by mere habitual practice, held his
mind
empty and prepared, as if to receive some important answer which could
then be directed to its proper place in the particular order to which
it belonged, allowed the image of Chloe Burnett and the thought of her
home to enter, and shut his mind down on them. The Crown pressed on
his forehead; he involuntarily united the physical consciousness and
the
mental; either received the other. His interior purpose suddenly lost
hold; a dizziness caught him, through which he was aware only of a
dominating attraction—his being yearned, to some power above, around,
within him. The dizziness increased and then was gone; his head ached;
the Stone pressed heavily on it, then more lightly. He found himself
opening his eyes.
He opened them on a strange room, and realized that he was standing by
the door. It was a not too well furnished roon -not, obviously, his
own kind. There were two comfortable armchairs; there was a bookcase;
a
table; another chair; pictures; a little reproduction of the Victory of
Samothrace, a poor Buddha, a vase or two. On the table a box of
cigarettes and a matchbox; some sort of needlework; a book; the Neu
Statesman. Lord Arglay drew a deep breath. So it worked. He walked to
the table, then he went over to the window and looked out. It was the
ordinary suburban street, a few ordinary people—three men, a woman,
four
children. He felt the curtains—they seemed actual. He felt himself
with the same result. He went back to the table and picked up the New
Statesman, then he sat down in one of the comfortable chairs as if to
consider. But as he leant back against the cushions he remembered that
the experiment was only half done; he could consider afterwards. The
immediate thing was to return with the paper; if that were done, all
was
done that could be at the moment. “I wish there were someone here to
speak to,” he thought. “I wonder—I suppose they would see me.” He
thought of going down into the street and asking his way to some
imaginary road, but the difficulty in passing anyone outside Chloe
Burnett’s room occurred to him and he desisted. Return, then. He
gripped the New Statesman tightly, and began to think of Sir Giles
at Ealing. But the notion of introducing Sir Giles offended him; so,
almost as much, did the thought of Reginald Montague, and he was
content at last to make an image, as near as possible, of the room from
which he had ‘Come, with the thought of his secretary attached to it.
“My dear child,” Lord Arglay said unconsciously, and shut his eyes.
When, after a similar play of feeling to that which he had experienced
before, he opened them to see Reginald Montague in front of him there
flashed across his mind the idea that the Crown had somehow muddled
things. But it was gone as he came to himself and recognized that he
had indeed returned. He looked at his watch; the whole episode had
taken exactly five minutes. He sat for a minute, then he got up,
walked across to Chloe and gave her the paper. “Yours, I think, Miss
Burnett? I’m sorry to give you the trouble of carrying it back,” he
said, and wondered whether he had only imagined the look of relief in
her eyes. “Well,” he went on to the other two, “it seems you’re quite
right. I don’t know what happens or how, but if this sort of thing can
go on indefinitely, space doesn’t exist—for purposes of travel.”
“You see it?” Reginald cried out.
“Certainly I see it,” Lord Arglay answered. “It’s a little startling
at first and I want to know several more things, but they can wait.
At the moment I have enough to brood on. But We’re forgetting our
duty. Miss Burnett, wouldn’t you like to try the… to put on the
Crown of Suleiman?”
“No,” said Chloe. “No, thank you, Lord Arglay. Thank you all very
much, but I think I had better go.”
“Go—at once?” Arglay asked, “But give me a few more minutes and we’ll
all go back together.”
“I shouldn’t press Miss Burnett to stop if she wants to go,” Sir Giles
said. “The station is about the fourth turning on the right.”
“Thank you, Sir Giles,” Chloe answered him. “Thank you for showing me
the—the Crown. Good night, Mr. Montague. Good night, Lord Arglay.”
“All right, Giles,” Arglay stopped a movement Tumulty had not made.
“I’ll see Miss Burnett out.” As the room door closed behind them he
took her arm. “Why the rush?” he asked gently.
“I don’t… I don’t really know,” Chloe said. “I’m being rather silly
but I felt I couldn’t stop there just now. It is rather upsetting,
isn’t it? And… O I don’t know. I’m sorry to seem a fool.”
“You are not in the least like a fool,” the Chief Justice said equably.
“And you will tell me tomorrow what the matter is. Are you sure you
are all right now?”
“Quite all right,” Chloe said as he opened the door for her “Yes,
really, Lord Arglay.” She added with a sudden rush of temper, “I don’t
like Sir Giles.”
“I couldn’t,” Arglay smiled at her, “have much use for a secretary who
did like Sir Giles. Or Reginald either, for that matter. A vulture
and
a crow—but that’s between ourselves, Well, if you will go, good night.”
“Good night,” Chloe said, took a step forward, and looked back
suddenly.
“You aren’t going to try it again yourself.?”
“Not I,” Lord Arglay said. “I’m going to talk to them a little and
then
go. No more aerial flights to-day. Till tomorrow then.” He watched
her out of the gate and well along the street before he returned to the
others.
He discovered then that Reginald had not been wasting his time.
Anxious to lay hands as soon as possible on some of the colossal
fortune
that seemed to be waiting, the young man had extracted permission from
Sir Giles to make an effort to remove a small chip from the Stone, and
had been away to bring a chisel and hammer from the tool-box. Arglay
looked at Tumulty.
“You’re sure it won’t damage it?” he asked.
“They all say it won’t,” Sir Giles answered. “The fellow I had it from
and Ali Khan who was here the other night and the manuscripts and all.
The manuscripts are rather hush-hush about it all—damnably veiled
and hinting. ‘The division is accomplished yet the Stone is unchanged,
and the virtues are neither here nor there but allwhere’—that kind
of thing. They rather suggest that people who get the bits had better
look out, but that’s Reginald’s business—and his covey of company-promoters. He’d better have a clause in the agreement about not
being responsible for any damage to life or limb, but it’s not my
affair. I don’t care what happens to them.”
“Who is this Ali Khan?” Arglay asked, watching Reginald arrange the
Stone conveniently.
“A fellow from the Persian Embassy,” Sir Giles told him. “He was on to
me almost as soon as I reached England, wanting to buy it back. So I
had him out here to talk to him about it, but he couldn’t tell me
anything I didn’t know or guess already. “
Reginald struck the chisel with the hammer, and almost fell forward
on to the table. For, unexpectedly, since the Stone had been hard
enough to the touch, it yielded instantaneously to the blow, and, as
Reginald straightened himself with an oath, they saw, lying on the
table by the side of the Crown, a second Stone apparently the same in
all respects as the first.
“Good God!” Lord Arglay exclaimed, while Reginald gazed open-mouthed
at the result of his work, and Sir Giles broke into a cackle of high
laughter. But they all gathered round the table to stare.
Except that one Stone was in the Crown and the other not they could not
find any difference. There was the same milky colour, flaked here and
there with gold, the same jet-black markings which might be letters and
might be only accidental colouring, the same size, the same apparent
hardness.
“‘The division is accomplished yet the Stone is unchanged’”, Lord
Arglay
quoted at last, looking at his brother-in-law. “It is, too. This is
all very curious.”
Tumulty had thrust Reginald aside and was peering at the two Stones.
After a minute, “Try it again, Reginald,” he said -“the new one, not
the old. Come round here, Arglay.” He caught the Chief Justice by the
arm and brought him round the table. “There,” he said, “now watch.”
He himself, while Lord Arglay leant forward over the table, moved a
step
or two off and squatted down on his heels, so that his eyes were on a
level with the Stone. “Now slowly, Reginald, slowly.”
Montague adjusted it, set the chisel on it, raised the hammer, and
struck, but this time with less force. The watchers saw the chisel
move
down through the Stone which seemed to divide easily before it and fall
asunder on both sides. Sir Giles scrambled to his feet and he and Lord
Arglay leaned breathlessly forward. There on the table, exactly alike,
lay two Stones, each a faithful replica of its original in the Crown.
Montague put the chisel and hammer down and stepped back. “I say,” he
said,.“I don’t like this. Stones don’t grow out of one another in
this way. It’s… it’s uncanny.”
“Stones don’t carry you five miles through the air,usually,” Arglay
said
drily. “I think you’re straining at a gnat. Still…” The perfect
ease with which the Stone had recreated itself, a ghastly feeling of
its capacity to go on producing copies of itself to infinity, the
insane simplicity, the grotesque finality, of the result, weighed on
his
mind, and he fell silent.
Sir Giles, alert and eager, picked them up. “Just a moment,” he said,
“let me weigh them.”
He went to a corner of the room where a small balance stood in a glass
case, and put one of the Stones on the scales. For a minute he
stared at it, then he looked over his shoulder at the Chief Justice.
“I say, Arglay,” he cried, “it doesn’t weigh anything.”
“Doesn’t weigh-” Lord Arglay went across to him. The Stone lay in the
middle of the scale, which remained perfectly poised, balanced against
its fellow, apparently unweighted by what it bore.
“But-” Arglay said, “but-But it does weigh…. I mean I can feel
its pressure if I hold it. Very light, but definite.”
“Well, there you are,” Giles said. “Look at it.” With the tweezers he
picked up a gramme weight and dropped it on the other scale, which
immediately sank gently under it.
“There,” he said, “the balances are all right. ltjust doesn’t weigh.”
He
took up the Stone and they returned to the table, where all three stood
staring at the marvel, until Sir Giles grew impatient.
“We look like Hottentots staring at an aeroplane,” he said. “Reginald,
you baboon-headed cockatoo, show a little gratitude. Here instead of a
mere chip you can give every one of your degenerate Jew millionaires a
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