War in Heaven by Charles Williams (free children's online books .txt) đ
- Author: Charles Williams
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âThere is a way to delight in horror,â Gregory said.
âThere is no way to delight in the horrible,â Lionel answered. âLet us pray only that immortality is a dream. But I donât suppose it is,â he added coldly.
A silence fell upon them, and Gregory was suddenly conscious that he felt a trifle sick. He felt dizzy; he shut his eyes and leant against the wall to save himself lurching. Lionelâs face, as it looked out over the garden, frightened him; it was like a rock seen very far off. He opened his eyes and studied it again, then he glanced back over his shoulder at Barbara lying on the bed. This was Cully; Adrian was asleep in his room; he had overthrown Barbaraâs mind. And now he was driven against something else, something immovable, something that affected him as if he had found himself suddenly in a deep pit of smooth rock. Lionel, who had been pursuing his own thoughts, began to speak suddenly, in the high voice of incantation with which he was given to quoting poetry,
âWhich way I fly is hell, myself am hell, And in the lowest deep a lower deep Still gaping to devour me opens wide, To which the hell I suffer seems a heaven.â
Gregory stamped his foot, and managed to change it into a mere shifting of position. After all, he wasnât going to quarrel with Lionel just now, though if he had time he would smash him into splinters. A clerk at a brothel!
âWell,â he said, âthereâs just one thing I should like to say. If the doctor doesnât seem much good when he comes, I have been thinking that I know an old man in London whoâs seen some curious things and has funny bits of knowledge. Iâll get him on the telephone to-morrow and ask him to come down. He maynât be any good, but he may.â
âItâs really very kind of you,â Lionel said. âBut how can anyone do anything?â
âWell, we shall see,â Gregory answered cheerfully. âHallo, there is the doctor. And Sir Giles. Shall we go and meet them?â
Sir Giles, who had been out all day on an antiquarian visit, had run into the doctor at the gates. They walked up the drive a little distance apart, and at the door he made to annex Persimmons, who, however, put him aside till he had spoken with the doctor. A new examination of the patient brought no new light. The doctor, who refused to stay for the night, but promised to call again in the morning, went off. Lionel returned to his vigil, and Gregory, having patted him on the shoulder, and said cheerfully, âWell, well, donât despair. Weâll ring up old Manasseh first thing,â went off with Sir Giles to his own room.
âWhatâs the idea?â Tumulty asked. âAnd who is old Manasseh, anyhow?â
âAh, you donât know everyone yet,â Gregory answered in high glee. âPity you werenât here; youâd have liked to see how Mrs. Rackstraw went on. Quite unusual, for an English lady. Unusual for an English doctor, too. Did you think he was a bit bewildered, Tumulty? But youâll meet Manasseh in the morning.â
âComing down, is he?â Sir Giles asked. âWell, thereâs someone else down here too.â
âYes,â Gregory said. âThe masquerading fellow in grey? Now, if you can tell me who he isââ
âI knew youâd go mad,â Sir Giles said, with satisfaction. âWhat fellow in grey? I donât know what hellâs clothes he was wearing, something from his own suburban tape-twister, I expect.â
âWhy suburban?â Gregory asked. âHe didnât look to me like the suburbs. And what did he mean by his name being John?â
âHis name may be Beelzebub,â Sir Giles answered, âbut the man is that lump-cheeked inspector whoâs trying to find out who committed the murder. Heâs down here.â
Gregory stared. âWhat, that?â he said. âWhy, I thought theyâd dropped all that. Thereâs absolutely nothing to showâWhat does he want here?â
âProbably either me or you,â Sir Giles answered. âWell, I told you at the beginning, Persimmons, Iâm going to damn well see to it he doesnât have me. I donât care what insane May dance you get up to, but Iâm not going to be dragged in. If the police are after you, they can have you for all I care. Iâm leaving to-morrow, and Iâm off to Baghdad next week. And, if he asks me anything, I shall tell him.â
âTell him that you told me you were going to ask Rackstraw to have lunch with you, so that the roomââ Gregory began.
âTell him youâve been waking up in the night shrieking âblood, blood,â if itâs necessary,â Sir Giles said. âThe English police are corrupt enough, of course, but the trouble is one doesnât know where theyâre corrupt, and you may hit on the wrong man. Besides, Iâll see that lurching sewer-rat in Hinnom before I spend good money on him.â
âYouâre making a ridiculous fuss,â Gregory said. âYou donât really think heâs got evidence?â
âI donât care a curse,â Sir Giles answered. âYouâre not interesting enough to run any risks for, Persimmons; youâre merely an overgrown hobbledehoy stealing beerâthe drainings in other peopleâs pots. And Iâm not going to have to poison myself for you. And now whoâs this reptile in grey youâre bleating about?â
Gregory had grown used to neglecting half of Sir Gilesâs conversation, but for a moment he remembered Lionelâs remark earlier in the evening, and looked nastily across at the other. However, he pulled himself in, and said carelessly, âOh, a mad fellow we met in the drive. Talked like a clergyman and said he knew seventy kings.â
âOnly seventy?â Sir Giles asked. âNo other introduction?â
âI didnât like him,â Gregory admitted, âand he made Ludding foam at the mouth. But he wasnât doing anything except wander about the drive. He mentioned he was a priest and king himself.â He dropped his voice and came a little nearer. âI wondered at first whether he was anything to do withâthe shop. You know what I mean. But somehow he didnât fit in.â
Sir Giles sat erect. âPriest and king,â he said, half sceptically. âYouâre sure youâre not mad, Persimmons?â He stood up sharply. âAnd his name was John?â he asked intently.
âHe said so,â Gregory answered. âBut John what?â
Sir Giles walked to the window and looked out, then he came back and looked with increasing doubt at Gregory. âLook here,â he said, âyou take my advice and leave that damned bit of silver gilt trumpery alone. Ludding told me about your all going off after it. You may be up against something funnier than you think, Master Gregory.â
âBut who is he?â Gregory asked impatiently yet anxiously. âWhatâs he got to do with theâthe Graal?â
âIâm not going to tell you,â Sir Giles said flatly. âI never knew any good come of trying to pretend things mightnât be when they might. Iâve heard talesâlies, very likelyâbut tales. Out about Samarcand I heard them and down in Delhi tooâand it wasnât the Dalai Lama either that made the richest man in Bengal give all he had to the temples and become a fakir. I donât believe in God yet, but I wonder sometimes whether men havenât got the idea of God from that fellowâif itâs the same one.â
âWhat have I to do with God?â Gregory said.
âI donât know whether the Graal belongs to him or he belongs to the Graal,â Sir Giles went on, unheeding. âBut you can trace it up to a certain point and you can trace it back from a certain point, and someone had it in between. And if it was he, youâd better go and ask the Archdeacon to pray for youâif he will.â
âWill you tell me who he is?â Gregory asked.
âNo, I wonât,â Sir Giles said. âIâve seen too much to chatter about him. You drop it, while thereâs time.â
âI suppose itâs Jesus Christ come to look for His own property?â Gregory sneered.
âJesus Christ is dead or in heaven or owned by the clergy,â Sir Giles answered. âBut they say this man is what he told youâhe is king and priest and his name is John. They say so. I donât know, and I tell you I funk it.â He looked at the open window again.
âWell, run then,â Gregory said. âBut I and my great lord will know him and meet him.â
âSo you may, for me,â Sir Giles answered, and with no more words disappeared to his own room.
The child Adrian slept long and peacefully, and only his angel, in another state of the created universe, knew what his dreams were. But, except for him and the servants, the night was, for those in Cully, empty of sleep. Lionel lay on the couch that had been hastily made up, watching and listening for any movement from his wife. How far she slept none could tell. She lay motionless, but Lionel doubted, when he was near her, whether it were more than a superimposed and compulsory immobility. Her eyes were shut, but her breath trembled as if some interior haste shook it, and every now and then there issued from her lips a faint and barely perceptible moan, faint but profound. Lionel brooded over this companion of his way, torn apart into the depths of some jungle whose terror he could not begin to conceive. He himself would have been, to however small an extent, prepared; but that Barbara, with her innocent concentration on window-curtains and the novels of Mr. Wodehouse and Adrianâs meals, should be plunged into it, was a fatality against which even his pessimism felt the temptation to rebel.
Not far from his room Sir Giles also lay wakeful, considering episodes and adventures of his past. Brutal with himself no less than with others, he did not attempt to hide from himself that the new arrivals in the village caused him some anxiety. He had known, in his exploration of that zone of madness which encloses humanity, certain events which had been referred by those who had spoken of them to a mysterious power whose habitation was unknown and whose interference was deadly. Once indeed, in a midnight assembly in Beyrout, he had, he thought, dimly seen him; there had been panic and death, and in the midst of the shrinking and alarmed magicians a half-visible presence, clouded and angry and destructive. At the time he had thought that he also had been affected by a general hallucination, but he knew that hallucination was a word which, in these things, meant no more than that certain things seemed to be. Whether they were or not⊠he promised himself again to leave England as soon as possible, and to leave Cully certainly to-morrow.
Gregory, after some consideration, had dismissed Sir Gilesâs warnings as, on the whole, silly. Things were going very well; by the next night he hoped that both the Graal and Adrian would be, for a while, in his hands or those of his friends. Of all those who lay awake under those midnight stars he was the only one who had a naturally religious spirit; to him only the unknown beyond manâs life presented itself as alive with hierarchical presences arrayed in rising orders to the central throne. To him alone sacraments were living realities; the ointment and the Black Mass, the ritual and order of worship. He beyond any of them demanded a response from the darkness; a rush of ardent faith believed that it came; and in full dependence on that faith acted and influenced his circumstances. Prayer was natural to him as it was not to Sir Giles or Lionel, or, indeed,
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