THE SOUND OF A TUMULT
Graham’s last impression before
he fainted was of the ringing of bells. He learnt
afterwards that he was insensible, hanging between
life and death, for the better part of an hour.
When he recovered his senses, he was back on his translucent
couch, and there was a stirring warmth at heart and
throat. The dark apparatus, he perceived, had
been removed from his arm, which was bandaged.
The white framework was still about him, but the greenish
transparent substance that had filled it was altogether
gone. A man in a deep violet robe, one of those
who had been on the balcony, was looking keenly into
his face.
Remote but insistent was a clamour
of bells and confused sounds, that suggested to his
mind the picture of a great number of people shouting
together. Something seemed to fall across this
tumult, a door suddenly closed.
Graham moved his head. “What
does this all mean?” he said slowly. “Where
am I?”
He saw the red-haired man who had
been first to discover him. A voice seemed to
be asking what he had said, and was abruptly stilled.
The man in violet answered in a soft
voice, speaking English with a slightly foreign accent,
or so at least it seemed to the Sleeper’s ears.
“You are quite safe. You were brought hither
from where you fell asleep. It is quite safe.
You have been here some time—sleeping.
In a trance.”
He said, something further that Graham
could not hear, and a little phial was handed across
to him. Graham felt a cooling spray, a fragrant
mist played over his forehead for a moment, and his
sense of refreshment increased. He closed his
eyes in satisfaction.
“Better?” asked the man
in violet, as Graham’s eyes reopened. He
was a pleasant-faced man of thirty, perhaps, with
a pointed flaxen beard, and a clasp of gold at the
neck of his violet robe.
“Yes,” said Graham.
“You have been asleep some time.
In a cataleptic trance. You have heard?
Catalepsy? It may seem strange to you at first,
but I can assure you everything is well.”
Graham did not answer, but these words
served their reassuring purpose. His eyes went
from face to face of the three people about him.
They were regarding him strangely. He knew he
ought to be somewhere in Cornwall, but he could not
square these things with that impression.
A matter that had been in his mind
during his last waking moments at Boscastle recurred,
a thing resolved upon and somehow neglected. He
cleared his throat.
“Have you wired my cousin?”
he asked. “E. Warming, 27, Chancery
Lane?”
They were all assiduous to hear.
But he had to repeat it. “What an odd blurr
in his accent!” whispered the red-haired man.
“Wire, sir?” said the young man with the
flaxen beard, evidently puzzled.
“He means send an electric telegram,”
volunteered the third, a pleasant-faced youth of nineteen
or twenty. The flaxen-bearded man gave a cry
of comprehension. “How stupid of me!
You may be sure everything shall be done, sir,”
he said to Graham. “I am afraid it would
be difficult to—wire to your cousin.
He is not in London now. But don’t trouble
about arrangements yet; you have been asleep a very
long time and the important thing is to get over that,
sir.” (Graham concluded the word was sir, but
this man pronounced it “Sire.”)
“Oh!” said Graham, and became quiet.
It was all very puzzling, but apparently
these people in unfamiliar dress knew what they were
about. Yet they were odd and the room was odd.
It seemed he was in some newly established place.
He had a sudden flash of suspicion! Surely this
wasn’t some hall of public exhibition! If
it was he would give Warming a piece of his mind.
But it scarcely had that character. And in a
place of public exhibition he would not have discovered
himself naked.
Then suddenly, quite abruptly, he
realised what had happened. There was no perceptible
interval of suspicion, no dawn to his knowledge.
Abruptly he knew that his trance had lasted for a
vast interval; as if by some processes of thought-reading
he interpreted the awe in the faces that peered into
his. He looked at them strangely, full of intense
emotion. It seemed they read his eyes. He
framed his lips to speak and could not. A queer
impulse to hide his knowledge came into his mind almost
at the moment of his discovery. He looked at
his bare feet, regarding them silently. His impulse
to speak passed. He was trembling exceedingly.
They gave him some pink fluid with
a greenish fluorescence and a meaty taste, and the
assurance of returning strength grew.
“That—that makes
me feel better,” he said hoarsely, and there
were murmurs of respectful approval. He knew
now quite clearly. He made to speak again, and
again he could not.
He pressed his throat and tried a
third time. “How long?” he asked in
a level voice. “How long have I been asleep?”
“Some considerable time,”
said the flaxen-bearded man, glancing quickly at the
others.
“How long?”
“A very long time.”
“Yes—yes,”
said Graham, suddenly testy. “But I want—Is
it—it is—some years? Many
years? There was something—I forget
what. I feel—confused. But you—”
He sobbed. “You need not fence with me.
How long—?”
He stopped, breathing irregularly.
He squeezed his eyes with his knuckles and sat waiting
for an answer.
They spoke in undertones.
“Five or six?” he asked faintly.
“More?”
“Very much more than that.”
“More!”
“More.”
He looked at them and it seemed as
though imps were twitching the muscles of his face.
He looked his question.
“Many years,” said the man with the red
beard.
Graham struggled into a sitting position.
He wiped a rheumy tear from his face with a lean hand.
“Many years!” he repeated. He shut
his eyes tight, opened them, and sat looking about
him from one unfamiliar thing to another.
“How many years?” he asked.
“You must be prepared to be surprised.”
“Well?”
“More than a gross of years.”
He was irritated at the strange word. “More
than a what?”
Two of them spoke together. Some
quick remarks that were made about “decimal”
he did not catch.
“How long did you say?”
asked Graham. “How long? Don’t
look like that. Tell me.”
Among the remarks in an undertone,
his ear caught six words: “More than a
couple of centuries.”
“What?” he cried,
turning on the youth who he thought had spoken.
“Who says—? What was that?
A couple of centuries!”
“Yes,” said the man with
the red beard. “Two hundred years.”
Graham repeated the words. He
had been prepared to hear of a vast repose, and yet
these concrete centuries defeated him.
“Two hundred years,” he
said again, with the figure of a great gulf opening
very slowly in his mind; and then, “Oh, but—!”
They said nothing.
“You—did you say—?”
“Two hundred years. Two
centuries of years,” said the man with the red
beard.
There was a pause. Graham looked
at their faces and saw that what he had heard was
indeed true.
“But it can’t be,”
he said querulously. “I am dreaming.
Trances—trances don’t last.
That is not right—this is a joke you have
played upon me! Tell me—some days
ago, perhaps, I was walking along the coast of Cornwall—?”
His voice failed him.
The man with the flaxen beard hesitated.
“I’m not very strong in history, sir,”
he said weakly, and glanced at the others.
“That was it, sir,” said
the youngster. “Boscastle, in the old Duchy
of Cornwall—it’s in the south-west
country beyond the dairy meadows. There is a
house there still. I have been there.”
“Boscastle!” Graham turned
his eyes to the youngster. “That was it—Boscastle.
Little Boscastle. I fell asleep—somewhere
there. I don’t exactly remember. I
don’t exactly remember.”
He pressed his brows and whispered,
“More than two hundred years!”
He began to speak quickly with a twitching
face, but his heart was cold within him. “But
if it is two hundred years, every soul I know,
every human being that ever I saw or spoke to before
I went to sleep, must be dead.”
They did not answer him.
“The Queen and the Royal Family,
her Ministers, Church and State. High and low,
rich and poor, one with another … Is there England
still?”
“That’s a comfort! Is there London?”
“This is London, eh?
And you are my assistant-custodian; assistant-custodian.
And these—? Eh? Assistant-custodians
too!”
He sat with a gaunt stare on his face.
“But why am I here? No! Don’t
talk. Be quiet. Let me—”
He sat silent, rubbed his eyes, and,
uncovering them, found another little glass of pinkish
fluid held towards him. He took the dose.
Directly he had taken it he began to weep naturally
and refreshingly.
Presently he looked at their faces,
suddenly laughed through his tears, a little foolishly.
“But—two—hun—dred—years!”
he said. He grimaced hysterically and covered
his face again.
After a space he grew calm. He
sat up, his hands hanging over his knees in almost
precisely the same attitude in which Isbister had found
him on the cliff at Pentargen. His attention
was attracted by a thick domineering voice, the footsteps
of an advancing personage. “What are you
doing? Why was I not warned? Surely you could
tell? Someone will suffer for this. The
man must be kept quiet. Are the doorways closed?
All the doorways? He must be kept perfectly quiet.
He must not be told. Has he been told anything?”
The man with the fair beard made some
inaudible remark, and Graham looking over his shoulder
saw approaching a short, fat, and thickset beardless
man, with aquiline nose and heavy neck and chin.
Very thick black and slightly sloping eyebrows that
almost met over his nose and overhung deep grey eyes,
gave his face an oddly formidable expression.
He scowled momentarily at Graham and then his regard
returned to the man with the flaxen beard. “These
others,” he said in a voice of extreme irritation.
“You had better go.”
“Go?” said the red-bearded man.
“Certainly—go now. But see the
doorways are closed as you go.”
The two men addressed turned obediently,
after one reluctant glance at Graham, and instead
of going through the archway as he expected, walked
straight to the dead wall of the apartment opposite
the archway. A long strip of this apparently
solid wall rolled up with a snap, hung over the two
retreating men and fell again, and immediately Graham
was alone with the newcomer and the purple-robed man
with the flaxen beard.
For a space the thickset man took
not the slightest notice of Graham, but proceeded
to interrogate the other—obviously his subordinate—–upon
the treatment of their charge. He spoke clearly,
but in phrases only partially intelligible to Graham.
The awakening seemed not only a matter of surprise
but of consternation and annoyance to him. He
was evidently profoundly excited.
“You must not confuse his mind
by telling him things,” he repeated again and
again. “You must not confuse his mind.”
His questions answered, he turned
quickly and eyed the awakened sleeper with an ambiguous
expression.
“Feel queer?” he asked.
“Very.”
“The world, what you see of it, seems strange
to you?”
“I suppose I have to live in it, strange as
it seems.”
“I suppose so, now.”
“In the first place, hadn’t I better have
some clothes?”
“They—” said
the thickset man and stopped, and the flaxen-bearded
man met his eye and went away. “You will
very speedily have clothes,” said the thickset
man.
“Is it true indeed, that I have been asleep
two hundred—?” asked Graham.
“They have told you that, have
they? Two hundred and three, as a matter of fact.”
Graham accepted the indisputable now
with raised eyebrows and depressed mouth. He
sat silent for a moment, and then asked a question,
“Is there a mill or dynamo near here?”
He did not wait for an answer. “Things have
changed tremendously, I suppose?” he said.
“What is that shouting?” he asked abruptly.
“Nothing,” said the thickset
man impatiently. “It’s people.
You’ll understand better later—perhaps.
As you say, things have changed.” He spoke
shortly, his brows were knit, and he glanced about
him like a man trying to decide in an emergency.
“We must get you clothes and so forth, at any
rate. Better wait here until they can be procured.
No one will come near you. You want shaving.”
Graham rubbed his chin.
The man with the flaxen beard came
back towards them, turned suddenly, listened for a
moment, lifted his eyebrows at the older man, and hurried
off through the archway towards the balcony. The
tumult of shouting grew louder, and the thickset man
turned and listened also. He cursed suddenly
under his breath, and turned his eyes upon Graham with
an unfriendly expression. It was a surge of many
voices, rising and falling, shouting and screaming,
and once came a sound like blows and sharp cries, and
then a snapping like the crackling of dry sticks.
Graham strained his ears to draw some single thread
of sound from the woven tumult.
Then he perceived, repeated again
and again, a certain formula. For a time he doubted
his ears. But surely these were the words:
“Show us the Sleeper! Show us the Sleeper!”
The thickset man rushed suddenly to the archway.
“Wild!” he cried. “How do they
know? Do they know? Or is it guessing?”
There was perhaps an answer.
“I can’t come,”
said the thickset man; “I have him to
see to. But shout from the balcony.”
There was an inaudible reply.
“Say he is not awake. Anything! I
leave it to you.”
He came hurrying back to Graham.
“You must have clothes at once,” he said.
“You cannot stop here—and it will
be impossible to—”
He rushed away, Graham shouting unanswered
questions after him. In a moment he was back.
“I can’t tell you what
is happening. It is too complex to explain.
In a moment you shall have your clothes made.
Yes—in a moment. And then I can take
you away from here. You will find out our troubles
soon enough.”
“But those voices. They were shouting—?”
“Something about the Sleeper—that’s
you. They have some twisted idea. I don’t
know what it is. I know nothing.”
A shrill bell jetted acutely across
the indistinct mingling of remote noises, and this
brusque person sprang to a little group of appliances
in the corner of the room. He listened for a
moment, regarding a ball of crystal, nodded, and said
a few indistinct words; then he walked to the wall
through which the two men had vanished. It rolled
up again like a curtain, and he stood waiting.
Graham lifted his arm and was astonished
to find what strength the restoratives had given him.
He thrust one leg over the side of the couch and then
the other. His head no longer swam. He could
scarcely credit his rapid recovery. He sat feeling
his limbs.
The man with the flaxen beard re-entered
from the archway, and as he did so the cage of a lift
came sliding down in front of the thickset man, and
a lean, grey-bearded man, carrying a roll, and wearing
a tightly-fitting costume of dark green, appeared
therein.
“This is the tailor,”
said the thickset man with an introductory gesture.
“It will never do for you to wear that black.
I cannot understand how it got here. But I shall.
I shall. You will be as rapid as possible?”
he said to the tailor.
The man in green bowed, and, advancing,
seated himself by Graham on the bed. His manner
was calm, but his eyes were full of curiosity.
“You will find the fashions altered, Sire,”
he said. He glanced from under his brows at the
thickset man.
He opened the roller with a quick
movement, and a confusion of brilliant fabrics poured
out over his knees. “You lived, Sire, in
a period essentially cylindrical—the Victorian.
With a tendency to the hemisphere in hats. Circular
curves always. Now—” He flicked
out a little appliance the size and appearance of
a keyless watch, whirled the knob, and behold—a
little figure in white appeared kinetoscope fashion
on the dial, walking and turning. The tailor
caught up a pattern of bluish white satin. “That
is my conception of your immediate treatment,”
he said.
The thickset man came and stood by
the shoulder of Graham.
“We have very little time,” he said.
“Trust me,” said the tailor.
“My machine follows. What do you think
of this?”
“What is that?” asked
the man from the nineteenth century.
“In your days they showed you
a fashion-plate,” said the tailor, “but
this is our modern development. See here.”
The little figure repeated its evolutions, but in
a different costume. “Or this,” and
with a click another small figure in a more voluminous
type of robe marched on to the dial. The tailor
was very quick in his movements, and glanced twice
towards the lift as he did these things.
It rumbled again, and a crop-haired
anemic lad with features of the Chinese type, clad
in coarse pale blue canvas, appeared together with
a complicated machine, which he pushed noiselessly
on little castors into the room. Incontinently
the little kinetoscope was dropped, Graham was invited
to stand in front of the machine and the tailor muttered
some instructions to the crop-haired lad, who answered
in guttural tones and with words Graham did not recognise.
The boy then went to conduct an incomprehensible monologue
in the corner, and the tailor pulled out a number
of slotted arms terminating in little discs, pulling
them out until the discs were flat against the body
of Graham, one at each shoulder blade, one at the
elbows, one at the neck and so forth, so that at last
there were, perhaps, two score of them upon his body
and limbs. At the same time, some other person
entered the room by the lift, behind Graham.
The tailor set moving a mechanism that initiated a
faint-sounding rhythmic movement of parts in the machine,
and in another moment he was knocking up the levers
and Graham was released. The tailor replaced his
cloak of black, and the man with the flaxen beard proffered
him a little glass of some refreshing fluid.
Graham saw over the rim of the glass a pale-faced
young man regarding him with a singular fixity.
The thickset man had been pacing the
room fretfully, and now turned and went through the
archway towards the balcony, from which the noise of
a distant crowd still came in gusts and cadences.
The crop-headed lad handed the tailor a roll of the
bluish satin and the two began fixing this in the
mechanism in a manner reminiscent of a roll of paper
in a nineteenth century printing machine. Then
they ran the entire thing on its easy, noiseless bearings
across the room to a remote corner where a twisted
cable looped rather gracefully from the wall.
They made some connexion and the machine became energetic
and swift.
“What is that doing?”
asked Graham, pointing with the empty glass to the
busy figures and trying to ignore the scrutiny of the
new comer. “Is that—some sort
of force—laid on?”
“Yes,” said the man with the flaxen beard.
“Who is that?” He indicated the
archway behind him.
The man in purple stroked his little
beard, hesitated, and answered in an undertone, “He
is Howard, your chief guardian. You see, Sire—it’s
a little difficult to explain. The Council appoints
a guardian and assistants. This hall has under
certain restrictions been public. In order that
people might satisfy themselves. We have barred
the doorways for the first time. But I think—if
you don’t mind, I will leave him to explain.”
“Odd!” said Graham.
“Guardian? Council?” Then turning
his back on the new comer, he asked in an undertone,
“Why is this man glaring at me? Is
he a mesmerist?”
“Mesmerist! He is a capillotomist.”
“Capillotomist!”
“Yes—one of the chief. His yearly
fee is sixdoz lions.”
It sounded sheer nonsense. Graham
snatched at the last phrase with an unsteady mind.
“Sixdoz lions?” he said.
“Didn’t you have lions?
I suppose not. You had the old pounds? They
are our monetary units.”
“But what was that you said—sixdoz?”
“Yes. Six dozen, Sire.
Of course things, even these little things, have altered.
You lived in the days of the decimal system, the Arab
system—tens, and little hundreds and thousands.
We have eleven numerals now. We have single figures
for both ten and eleven, two figures for a dozen,
and a dozen dozen makes a gross, a great hundred, you
know, a dozen gross a dozand, and a dozand dozand
a myriad. Very simple?”
“I suppose so,” said Graham.
“But about this cap—what was it?”
The man with the flaxen beard glanced over his shoulder.
“Here are your clothes!”
he said. Graham turned round sharply and saw the
tailor standing at his elbow smiling, and holding some
palpably new garments over his arm. The crop-headed
boy, by means of one ringer, was impelling the complicated
machine towards the lift by which he had arrived.
Graham stared at the completed suit. “You
don’t mean to say—!”
“Just made,” said the
tailor. He dropped the garments at the feet of
Graham, walked to the bed, on which Graham had so recently
been lying, flung out the translucent mattress, and
turned up the looking-glass. As he did so a furious
bell summoned the thickset man to the corner.
The man with the flaxen beard rushed across to him
and then hurried out by the archway.
The tailor was assisting Graham into
a dark purple combination garment, stockings, vest,
and pants in one, as the thickset man came back from
the corner to meet the man with the flaxen beard returning
from the balcony. They began speaking quickly
in an undertone, their bearing had an unmistakable
quality of anxiety. Over the purple under-garment
came a complex garment of bluish white, and Graham,
was clothed in the fashion once more and saw himself,
sallow-faced, unshaven and shaggy still, but at least
naked no longer, and in some indefinable unprecedented
way graceful.
“I must shave,” he said regarding himself
in the glass.
“In a moment,” said Howard.
The persistent stare ceased.
The young man closed his eyes, reopened them, and
with a lean hand extended, advanced on Graham.
Then he stopped, with his hand slowly gesticulating,
and looked about him.
“A seat,” said Howard
impatiently, and in a moment the flaxen-bearded man
had a chair behind Graham. “Sit down, please,”
said Howard.
Graham hesitated, and in the other
hand of the wild-eyed man he saw the glint of steel.
“Don’t you understand,
Sire?” cried the flaxen-bearded man with hurried
politeness. “He is going to cut your hair.”
“Oh!” cried Graham enlightened. “But
you called him—”
“A capillotomist—precisely!
He is one of the finest artists in the world.”
Graham sat down abruptly. The
flaxen-bearded man disappeared. The capillotomist
came forward, examined Graham’s ears and surveyed
him, felt the back of his head, and would have sat
down again to regard him but for Howard’s audible
impatience. Forthwith with rapid movements and
a succession of deftly handled implements he shaved
Graham’s chin, clipped his moustache, and cut
and arranged his hair. All this he did without
a word, with something of the rapt air of a poet inspired.
And as soon as he had finished Graham was handed a
pair of shoes.
Suddenly a loud voice shouted—it
seemed from a piece of machinery in the corner—“At
once—at once. The people know all over
the city. Work is being stopped. Work is
being stopped. Wait for nothing, but come.”
This shout appeared to perturb Howard
exceedingly. By his gestures it seemed to Graham
that he hesitated between two directions. Abruptly
he went towards the corner where the apparatus stood
about the little crystal ball. As he did so the
undertone of tumultuous shouting from the archway
that had continued during all these occurrences rose
to a mighty sound, roared as if it were sweeping past,
and fell again as if receding swiftly. It drew
Graham after it with an irresistible attraction.
He glanced at the thickset man, and then obeyed his
impulse. In two strides he was down the steps
and in the passage, and in a score he was out upon
the balcony upon which the three men had been standing.