‘My humble excuses, my lord. I . . .’
The man in grey had moved over to the recorders’ table. He was quite intelligent and observant enough to have uncovered the deception being attempted if he had known of its possibility, but his superior had considered it not merely most unlikely but too unlikely to be regarded, and had spared him the burden of having yet one more would-be fugitive from London to keep an eye open for. After a long look round the waiting group, designed to do little more or less than emphasize his own true mark and their lack of it, the man in grey gave the recorder a tiny nod. At once stamps thudded into ink-pads and on to papers, brief stylus entries were made in prescribed places, the documents were bundled together and handed back to Pastor Williams, the travellers were wished a fair journey, the diplomatic contingent showed their passes, and in a few seconds the post of inspection was behind them all.
Van den Haag betrayed relief at not having had to intervene himself: if needed, ambassadorial authority might have swung matters in the party’s favour, but, men like the man in grey being what they were, it was almost as likely, exercised on behalf of someone as insignificant as an Indian page, to have excited suspicion. ‘Good work, Your Honour,’ he said. ‘It was your reasonable address that did it.’
‘Thank you, Cornelius. I hope there’ll be no further such ordeal. I’m not sure I could suffer it.’
‘Most unlikely, sir, as I told you. The rest should be a formality.’
No more conversation was possible for the time being. They had emerged into the main hall of the station. Here, under the soaring dome of glass and steel, the noise of an arriving train could barely be heard through the noise of humanity—vendors of food, drink or ricordos crying their wares, balladiers rattling their coin-bowls as they sang, touts offering a full range of services, beggars who declared their Englishness by displaying insolence rather than abasement. There were plenty of the last-mentioned to be found on the inner side of the post reserved for the passage of the rich and exalted. Pellew had the bulk and the weight to shove aside even the most importunate, but he would have been at some trouble to hold his party together without the assistance of the railtrack constable and the staff he wielded. At last the struggle was over, the last huckster—a one-eyed woman putting up gaudy china replicas of Whitehall Palace—pushed out of the way, the journey-tabs slotted, and the group admitted to the pavement beside the train.
Departure-bells were already being rung. Abraham went aboard at once to see that the heavy baggage, sent ahead from the Embassy, was all in its place—though nobody had considered what to do if it were not. The others gathered round the steps of the baruch for what would have to be brief farewells. Van den Haag shook hands with Pellew and Williams, then turned to their small companion. Even here and now he dared not behave as he wanted to. All he did was say quietly,
‘Good luck, Elisha. I’ll let your mother know tonight. We’ll meet again—perhaps sooner than you think.’
Almost as he spoke, bells pealed on a higher note than before and the train seemed to shudder all over. The three passengers climbed the steps. The wheels began to turn.
When he could no longer see the van den Haags on the pavement, Joshua Pellew made his way to the cabin and settled heavily in a padded chair by the window. He gave a yawn that ended in a long sigh. For the next hour or more, nothing could happen: no hurry, no anxiety, no decisions. Abraham appeared momentarily and reported that the baggage was complete and safe. The Archpresbyter let his eyes fall shut.
His tour of western Europe had been undertaken at the personal instance of the First Citizen of the Republic, who had excellent reasons for wanting to strengthen the still-precarious ties between their nation and the more powerful of those under the sway of Rome. It had been an arduous enterprise for a man nearing seventy, but an enjoyable and apparently successful one. The funeral of King Stephen III had been a natural and convenient starting-point; a two-day visit to the Prince-Bishop of Durham, the richest man in England and virtually a sovereign ruler within her shores, would have provided a comfortable conclusion. But Pellew had found waiting for him on his arrival at the Principal-Episcopal Palace a tachygram that summoned him urgently to the New Englander Embassy in London. Although no reason was given, he had considered his duty and set off as soon as politeness allowed. His annoyance at being asked, even more urgently, to cut short his stay and smuggle home to safety a runaway English boy, however deserving he might be, had been overtaken by astonishment: was this not excessive even for van den Haag, known as he was in Arnoldstown to be no strict observer of diplomatic nicety? Whether it was or was not, Pellew had found at the end of a few minutes’ talk that he had agreed in principle to do as asked; a reference to his numerous grandchildren had turned the scale, he was not quite sure how. His only objection had concerned the parents involved, or rather not involved. When the boy had said that he knew his mother would want for him what was proposed, that he would swear to it on her own head, Pellew had believed him, and the matter was settled. Since then he had suffered some anxiety, but counted himself compensated in full by the agreeable sensation of helping to give the Romanists a sore nose.
What they had intended to do to little Hubert Anvil was shocking without being surprising, considered Pellew. All their temporal over-magnificence, all their pharisaism, all their equivocation, all their ruthlessness came from one source: the celibacy of their priesthood. This made it impossible for their hierarchy to understand the family, that most directly God-ordained of all human institutions. It was of no help that that celibacy was always and everywhere broken: a mistress was not a wife and an illegitimate child brought no notion of real fatherhood. And the hierarchy’s blindness meant the laity’s spiritual and moral deprivation. If the Holy Family meant anything . . .
‘We’re about to arrive, Your Honour,’ said Pastor Williams’s gentle voice. ‘Three minutes to Cholderton.’
Soon afterwards, Archpresbyter Pellew and his three companions had reached the centre of what was, the two major cities excepted, the largest mass of buildings and installations in the land. The place was an anchorage, a dockyard, a vast manufactory, a testing-tract, a fuel store, a military headquarters and a considerable market-town rolled into one. No vessel was more prominent there than the RNEA Edgar Allan Poe, the pride of her nation and a worthy memorial to the brilliant young general who had perished at the moment of his victory over the combined invading forces of Louisiana and Mexico in the war of 1848-50. She and her sister ship, the James McNeill Whistler, were the two crack liners on the transatlantic run. They were also the largest vessels ever to have used the anchorage—each was over a thousand feet long—and some controversy had been caused when, at their coming into service in 1973, special berths were erected, even though the New Englander government had agreed to provide most of the money.
Pastor Williams looked up at the great silvery length of Edgar Allan Poe and almost caught his breath. He had travelled in her on the outward journey, but it seemed to him that a thousand crossings in such a craft would not abate his wonder. When his turn came he climbed the gangway and, once past the rail, was possessed by a new sensation, a joyful relief at being home again. The very plainness of the furnishings was a refreshment after all the mannered elaboration he had seen in the previous fortnight; the crew’s voices, careless, almost rough, sounded like a favourite song to one who had had his fill of the clipped, over-precise English accent. When the purser, a solid-looking Calvinan with a windburnt complexion, welcomed the group aboard, Williams astonished him slightly with a spirited handshake.
The sleeping quarters, reserved by tachygram, were more than adequate: a double apartment for the Archpresbyter alone,
Soon afterwards, A another, communicating with it, for Williams and Hubert. Abraham and an anchorage porter brought in the baggage and made their exits. The pastor crossed to the porthole and looked out. Passengers were still coming up the gangway, at the foot of which stood an English soldier with fixed baionetta
and a blue-clad recorder. Neither showed the least interest in the documents proffered them, merely waving their owners on, just as they had done when the Archpresbyter’s party presented themselves.
Williams turned from the porthole. ‘Well, Hubert, we’re safe now.’
‘Altogether safe?’
‘Surely. We stand on New Englander soil. The English or Papal authorities may no more board this aircraft than a ship of ours at sea.’ Williams brought out his pocket-watch, which was a miniature version of the clock Hubert had seen at the Embassy: the squares showed 5 33. ‘We rise off at six o’clock. The time set for our descent at Arnoldstown Port is two tomorrow afternoon, but winds can advance or retard us.’
After a pause, Hubert said, ‘That’s very quick.’ He was sitting on the cot assigned to him with his knees drawn up.
‘The craft can touch 160 miles an hour through the air. But soon, quite soon, that’ll be nothing. Would you like to learn a secret?’
‘Yes, Father.’
‘Pastor. I think I may safely tell you this, since we’ve intrinsically left England. Three years ago, at a place in our State of Waldensia, two scientists, the Smith brothers, launched a flying machine, one that lifts itself by means of wings, not gas.’
‘I understand, Pastor.’
‘It carried only one man and barely touched 90 miles an hour, but that was no more than a beginning. By 1980 a speed of 200 is promised, and more later, much more. Air travel will be transformed.’
This information did not arouse the wonder or enthusiasm Williams had expected. It was in a seemingly listless tone that Hubert said, ‘Where’s Abraham?’
‘About his affairs, I reckon. Why do you ask?’
‘Oh . . . no reason, Pastor. He seems a good man. A very kind man.’
‘Indeed he is a good man and a kind man, for an Indian.’
‘Your indulgence—I don’t understand.’
‘We expect less from him,’ said Pastor Williams, settling his compact, middle-sized frame on his own cot. ‘You see, Hubert, God created the Indians and ourselves for two different purposes and in two different ways, and he proclaimed this by making them a different colour from us. This is something everyone must accept. When you come to New England, you must accept it, so let me expound it now.’ He paused and put the tips of his fingers together. ‘Consider that I speak out of my proper knowledge. The Indian . . . is a child in many ways, very often a virtuous child, but still a child. His mind is less capable to be developed than yours or mine, because his brain is smaller, as our scientists have proved. To mingle with him truly is impossible, and no good can come of trying to. That’s why, under God’s guidance, we in New England have a design we call separateness: each kind keeps to itself as far as possible, which isn’t always easy, because the fairer Indian will constantly try to pass as one of us—they’re not all as dark as the colour you wear. Oh, by the by, we’ll have that walnut-juice off your face any time. His Honour will open to the Captain that you . . .’
Williams’s melodious voice died away. What he had just been saying had led him to do more than merely glance in Hubert’s direction, and what he saw made him hurry across the apartment and look more closely. There were streaks of damp among the dye on the forehead and upper lip, and the mouth was clenched tight.
‘What is it, child?’
‘Please fetch . . . Samuel here.’ Hubert spoke as if the muscles of his throat were strained.
‘Samuel?’
‘I mean Abraham. Please fetch him to me.’
‘Hubert, what is it?’
‘Oh, Father—Pastor, I’ve such a pain, such a dismal pain.’
‘What pain? Where?’
‘I think it started while we prepared at the Embassy. It’s in my . . . there,’ gasped Hubert, gesturing at the base of his abdomen.
‘Let me take a look.’
‘No, Pastor, you shouldn’t, it’s not your . . .’
‘My dear, I’m a minister of Jesus and I have children of my own. Lie down straight. Yes, my son has eleven years, more than you, and he’s a little taller, but he doesn’t talk as well as you do. Raise yourself. I don’t think children in New England are as well instructed as they are in your country. Not all our preceptors are . . . Well, Hubert, you cover yourself now and try to rest while I go to the dispensary and fetch you an opiate.’
Pastor Williams walked at a measured pace across the thick carpet to the door that led to the Archpresbyter’s apartment. When there was no reply to his knock, he went in and slid the door shut behind him. The dark, heavily-panelled room, its walls hung with excellent coloured photograms of urban and rural New England, was empty. So was the small cubicle, enclosed with fogged glass, that held the sluice and commodation. Williams went out into the passage and broke into a run. The main hall at the head of the gangway was crowded with late arrivals and departing baggage-men. The Archpresbyter was not there, nor, as it proved, in the conversazione-room, the gallery or any other public place on that deck. At last Williams remembered, chided himself for his slowness of wit and hurried to the elevator. Soon a steel cage was carrying him and others up a steel tube that ran between the massive tanks of helium to the top of the envelope. Here was the observation-lounge, its curved ceiling made of a single sheet of glass by a process unknown, or never practised, outside New England. For the amusement and possible edification of passengers, two fair-sized and several smaller telescopes were available, together with star-maps, appropriate chairs, and curtaining-systems to exclude unwanted interior light. On the voyage out, Archpresbyter Pellew had spent most of the hours of darkness gazing at the heavens, and had more than once returned to the room when, as now, there was nothing to be seen from it but daytime sky. It was under this roof that he heard Williams’s stammered report.
Within three minutes, they and the ship’s surgeon, a fair-haired young man with a slow Cranmerian voice and quick eyes, were standing round the cot where Hubert lay. While left alone he had managed to wipe off most of the dye from his face and hands. He was sweating freely now. The surgeon inspected the reddened swelling with its hard and soft regions, asked a couple of questions, spoke some words of reassurance, and took the two clergymen off with him into the next-door apartment, where he immediately pulled the bell and motioned to the others to sit down.
‘We have fourteen minutes before rise-off, which should be quite enough,’ said the surgeon, writing on a tablet as he talked. ‘The boy must leave the ship and be taken to a hospital aground here. I’ll see to it. He needs an action I haven’t the skill to perform. One of his testicles has become turned over and its blood-provision thereby cut off. Maybe both are affected—I can’t tell for sure. This occurs now and then among those of his age, it seems by chance, or as if by chance. And suddenly, as in this case. Enter.’ The uniformed man who had been told to do so did so, was given two leaves of manuscript and some spoken instructions, and withdrew. ‘Someone with the necessary deftness must try to reverse what has happened and restore the blood-provision. Otherwise the organ, or organs, will die.’
‘And that would mean . . .’ said Joshua Pellew.
‘Possible removal.’
‘What are the chances?’
‘I can’t tell.’
‘Can’t we delay till we reach Arnoldstown?’
‘No, Your Honour,’ said the surgeon.
‘We shall be there in twenty hours.’
‘One hour may be too long, sir. To save the organ, at any rate.’
‘Surgeon, there are reasons of great import why the boy should remain aboard. Diplomatic reasons.’
‘I’m sorry, Your Honour, but I can’t be persuaded by any other reasons than surgical ones, and those are quite plain. Hubert, isn’t it? Well, Hubert’s health is in serious danger, maybe his life. For all I know, infection is possible. But my predictions can’t be expert. Any more than my deftness. Whatever the event, Hubert must go aground immediately.’
The Archpresbyter looked at his chaplain, who had bee
n thinking hard, and who now said,
‘Your Honour: go to the Captain and tell him we have a stowaway here whom of course neither of us has ever seen before. Tell him the truth if you wish, but that must be the public tale. When the stowaway goes aground to have his sickness relieved, I go with him, out of simple Christian charity, to be of comfort. I’ll join you by the next aircraft, or as soon as I can.’
‘I mustn’t let you do it, Al. The English constabulary will attach you.’
‘On what inculpation? Once Hubert’s sanction from the Embassy is destroyed, there’s no link between him and any of us, none they can prove. And he’ll be back in their hands—their task will be done. Now you must give me leave, sir. I have to get myself and my baggage out of this ship.’
As Williams spoke, motors fore and aft set up their deep throbbing, bells were rung and voices began to be heard repeating, ‘All visitors aground.’ Hubert was given an opiate by the surgeon, taken from the aircraft on a litter, put into a hospital express that had been standing by for casual needs, and driven off with Williams beside him. Before the vehicle had gone more than a hundred yards, Edgar Allan Poe was slowly standing up from her berth, and, by the time the hospital had been reached, she was already distant, half a mile above the western edge of Salisbury Plain and still ascending and accelerating. Williams watched her, his eyes screwed up against the sun, till her course brought her more directly between it and him, and he could no longer see her at all. Then he turned and followed the attendants who were carrying Hubert into the contingency department of the hospital.
Chapter Six
Four days later, though he himself was not at all clear about how long it had been, Hubert awoke from a vague dream of disappointment, of having failed to meet somebody because of a mistake about the place or time. It was the latest of several or many of the same sort, hard to distinguish now from equally vague recollections of comings and goings at his bedside, of being taken from where he was and brought back, of finding himself in another room where bright lights were reflected off metal. But other things were less obscure. Two officials had wanted him to tell them how he had come to be aboard the aircraft, putting their questions in soft voices but over and over again; as Pastor Williams had instructed him before the opiate was administered, Hubert had answered that he had made his way on his own with assistance from a succession of strangers, and that he could remember very little more. Very little? How much? Nothing. How much? Nothing. Father Dilke’s curiosity about such points had been easier to satisfy, or to silence, and their talk had shifted to the state of affairs at the Chapel, including the prosperity of Decuman and the others that persisted despite certain understood considerations. Anthony would of course be told the truth in full (or rather that part of it he did not already know at first hand) as soon as possible, but the opportunity had yet to arise, because so far Hubert had seen him only in the company of their parents, and they must not hear any of the truth, not until these events were finished and done with, if then.