War in Heaven by Charles Williams (free children's online books .txt) đ
- Author: Charles Williams
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Sir Giles took himself off after breakfast, leaving his small amount of luggage to be sent on. Gregory and Lionel left Ludding to call them if Barbara movedâa nurse was to arrive laterâand went to the telephone in the hall. There, after some trouble, Gregory got through to his desired number and, Lionel gathered, to the unknown Manasseh. He explained the circumstances briefly, urging the other to take the next train to Fardles.
âWhat?â he asked in a moment. âYes, Cullyânear Fardles⊠Well, anything in reason, anything, indeed⊠What? I donât understand⊠Yes, I know you did, but⊠No, but the point is, that I havenât⊠Yes, though I donât know how you knew⊠But I canât⊠Oh, nonsense! ⊠No, but look here, Manasseh, this is serious; the patientâs had some sort of fit or something⊠But you canât mean it⊠Oh, well, I suppose so⊠But, Manasseh⊠But you wouldnât⊠No, stop⊠â
He put the receiver back slowly and turned very gravely to Lionel. âThis is terrible,â he said. âYou know that chalice I had? Well, I knew Manasseh wanted it. He thinks he can cure Mrs. Rackstraw, and he offers to try, if Iâll give him the chalice.â
âOh, well,â Lionel said insincerely, âif he wants thatâI suppose itâs very valuable? Too valuable for me to buy, I mean?â
âMy dear fellow,â Gregory said, âyou should have it without a second thought. Do you suppose I should set a miserable chalice against your wifeâs health? I like and admire her far too much. But I havenât got it. Donât you remember I told you yesterdayâbut weâve been through a good deal since thenâthe Archdeaconâs bolted with it. He insists that it is his, though Colonel Conyers is quite satisfied that it isnât, and I really think the police might be allowed to judge. He and Kenneth Mornington and a neighbour of mine bolted with itâout of my own house, if you please! And now, when Iâd give anything for it, I canât get hold of it.â He stamped his foot in the apparent anger of frustrated desire.
The little violence seemed to break Lionelâs calm. He caught Gregoryâs arm. âBut must your friend have that?â he cried. âWonât anything else in heaven or hell please him? Will he let Babs die in agony because he wants a damned wine-cup? Try him again, try him again!â
Gregory shook his head. âHeâll ring us up in an hour,â he said, âin case we can promise it to him. Thatâll give him time to catch the best morning train to Fardles. But what can I do? I know the Archdeacon and Mornington have taken it to the Dukeâs house. But theyâre all very angry with me, and how can I ask them for it?â He looked up suddenly. âBut what about you?â he said, almost with excitement. âYou know Mornington well enoughâI darenât even speak to him; there was a row about that book yesterday at the office, and he misunderstood something I said. Heâs ratherâwell, quick to take offence, you know. But he knows your wife, and he might be able to influence that Archdeacon; theyâre very thick. Get on the âphone to him and try. Try, try anything to save her now.â
He wheeled round to the telephone and explained what he wanted to the local Exchange; then the two of them waited together. âManassehâs a hard man,â Gregory went on. âIâve known him cure people in a marvellous way for nothing at all, but if heâs asked for anything he never makes any compromise. And he doesnât always succeed, of course, but he does almost always. He works through the mind largelyâthough he knows about certain healing drugs he brought from the East. No English doctor would look at them or him, naturally, but Iâve never known an English doctor succeed where he failed. Understand, Rackstraw, if you can get the Archdeacon to see that heâs wrong, or to give up the chalice without seeing that heâs wrong, itâs yours absolutely. But donât waste time arguing. I know itâs no good my arguing with Manasseh, and I donât think itâs much good your arguing with the Archdeacon. Tell Mornington the whole thing, and get him to see itâs life or deathâor worse than life or death. Beg him to bring it down here at once and weâll have it for Manasseh when he comes. There you are; thank God theyâve been quick.â
In a torrent of passionate appeal Lionel poured out his agony through the absurd little instrument. At the other end Kenneth stood listening and horrified in the Dukeâs study; the Duke himself and the Archdeacon waited a little distance âBut whatâs the matter with Babs?â Kenneth asked. âI donât understand.â
âNobody understands,â Lionel answered desperately. âShe seems to have gone madâshrieking, dancingâI canât tell you. Can you do it? Kenneth, for the sake of your Christ! After all, itâs only a chaliceâ your friend canât want it all that much!â
âYour friend seems to want it all that much,â Kenneth said, and bit his lips with annoyance. âNo, sorry, Lionel, sorry. Look here, hold onâno, of course, you canât hold on. But I must find the Archdeacon and tell him.â He held up a hand to stop the priestâs movement. âTell me, whatâs Babs doing now?â
âLying down with morphia in her to keep her quiet,â Lionel answered. âBut sheâs not quiet, I know sheâs not quiet, sheâs in hell. Oh, hurry, Kenneth, hurry.â
Considerably shaken, Mornington turned from the telephone to the others. âItâs Barbara Rackstraw,â lie said, paused a moment to explain to the Duke, and went on. âGregoryâs been doing something to her, I expect; Lionel doesnât know whatâs the matter, but she seems to have gone mad. And thatâcreature has got a doctor up his sleeve who can put her right, he thinks, but he wants thatââ He nodded at the Graal, which stood exposed in their midst, and went over the situation again at more length to make the problem clear.
Even the Archdeacon looked serious. The Duke was horrified, yet perplexed. âBut what can we do?â he asked, quite innocently.
âWell,â Kenneth said restrainedly, âLionelâs notion seemed to be that we might give him the Graal.â
âGood God!â the Duke said. âGive him the Graal! Give him thatâwhen we know thatâs what heâs after!â
Kenneth did not answer at once, then he said slowly: âBarbaraâs a nice thing; I donât like to think of Barbara being hurt.â
âBut whatâs a womanâs lifeâwhat are any of our livesâcompared to this?â the Duke cried.
âNo,â Kenneth said, unsatisfied, âno⊠.But Barbara⊠Besides, it isnât her life, itâs her reason.â
âI am the more sorry,â the Duke answered. âBut this thing is more than the whole world.â
Kenneth looked at the Archdeacon. âWell, itâs yours to decide,â he said.
During the previous day it had become evident in Grosvenor Square that a common spiritual concern does not mean a common intellectual agreement. The Duke had risen, the morning after the attack on the Graal, with quite a number of ideas in his mind. The immediate and chief of these had been the removal of the Graal itself to Rome, and its safe custody there. He urged these on his allies at breakfast, and by sheer force of simple confidence in his proposal had very nearly succeeded. The Archdeacon was perfectly ready to admit that Rome, both as a City and a Church, had advantages. It had the habit of relics, the higher way of mind and the lower business organization to deal with them. Rome was as convenient as Westminster, and the Apostolic See more traditional than Canterbury. But he felt that even this relic was not perhaps so important as Rome would inevitably tend to make it. And he felt his own manners concerned. âIt would rather feel like stealing my grandmotherâs lustres from my mother to give to my aunt,â he explained diffidently, noted the Dukeâs sudden stiffening, and went on hastily: âBesides, I am a man under authority. It isnât for me to settle. The Bishop or the Archbishop, I suppose.â
âThe Judicial Committee of the Privy Council is the final voice of authority still, isnât it?â the Duke pointedly asked. âI know Southend is a Jew and one or two others are notorious polygamistsâ unofficially.â
âThe Privy Council, as everybody knows, has no jurisdiction⊠â Mornington began.
âThere we go again,â the Archdeacon complained. âBut, anyhow, so far as the suggestion is concerned, mere movement in space and time isnât likely to achieve much. It couldnât solve the problem, though it might delay it.â
âWell, what do you propose to do?â the Duke asked.
âI donât know that I really thought of doing anything,â the Archdeacon answered. âIt would be quite safe here wouldnât it? Or we might simply put it in a dispatch-case and take it to the Left Luggage office at Paddington or somewhere. No,â he added hastily, âthatâs not quite true. But you staunch churchpeople always make me feel like an atheist. Frankly, I think the Bishop ought to knowâbut heâs away till next week. Soâs the Archbishop. And then there are the police. Itâs all very difficult.â
There certainly were the police. Colonel Conyers made a call that morning; the Assistant Commissioner made a point of having tea with the Duchess, who was the Dukeâs aunt, that afternoon. The Duke was at his most regal (ducal is too insignificant a word) with both. Neither of them were in a position to give wings to a colossal scandal by taking action unless forced to it by Mr. Persimmons, and Mr. Persimmons had returned to Cully, after reiterating to the Colonel his wish that public action should not be taken. To the Assistant Commissioner the Duke intimated that further attacks on the vessel had taken place.
âWhat, burglars?â the other said.
âNot burglars,â the Duke answered darkly. âMore like black magic.â
âReally?â the Assistant Commissioner said, slightly bewildered. âOh, quite, quite. Erâdid anything happen?â
âThey tried to destroy It by willing against It,â the Duke said. âBut by the grace of God they didnât succeed.â
âAh⊠willing,â the other said vaguely. âYes, I know a lot can be done that way. Though Baudouin is rather against it, I believe. Youâyou didnât see anything?â
âI thought I heard someone,â the Duke answered. âAnd the Archdeacon felt It soften in his hands.â
âOh, the Archdeacon!â the Assistant Commissioner said, and left it at that.
The whole day, in short, had been exceedingly unsatisfactory to the allies. The Duke and Mornington, in their respective hours of vigil before the sacred vessel, had endeavoured unconsciously to recapture some of their previous emotion. But the Graal stood like any other chalice, as dull as the furniture about it. Only the Archdeacon, and he much more faintly, was conscious of that steady movement of creation flowing towards and through the narrow channel of its destiny. And now when, on the next morning, he found himself confronted with this need for an unexpected decision he felt that he had not really any doubt what he would do. StillâââWise as serpentsâ,â he said, âLet us be serpentine. Let us go to Cully and see Mrs. Rackstraw, and perhaps meet this very obstinate doctor.â
The Duke looked very troubled. âBut can you even hesitate?â he asked. âIs anything worth such a sacrifice? Isnât it sacrilege and apostasy even to think of it?â
âI do not think of it,â the
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