OSTROG
Graham could now take a clearer view
of his position. For a long time yet he wandered,
but after the talk of the old man his discovery of
this Ostrog was clear in his mind as the final inevitable
decision. One thing was evident, those who were
at the headquarters of the revolt had succeeded very
admirably in suppressing the fact of his disappearance.
But every moment he expected to hear the report of
his death or of his recapture by the Council.
Presently a man stopped before him.
“Have you heard?” he said.
“No!” said Graham, starting.
“Near a dozand,” said the man, “a
dozand men!” and hurried on.
A number of men and a girl passed
in the darkness, gesticulating and shouting:
“Capitulated! Given up!” “A
dozand of men.” “Two dozand of men.”
“Ostrog, Hurrah! Ostrog, Hurrah!”
These cries receded, became indistinct.
Other shouting men followed.
For a time his attention was absorbed in the fragments
of speech he heard. He had a doubt whether all
were speaking English. Scraps floated to him,
scraps like Pigeon English, like “nigger”
dialect, blurred and mangled distortions. He dared
accost no one with questions. The impression
the people gave him jarred altogether with his preconceptions
of the struggle and confirmed the old man’s faith
in Ostrog. It was only slowly he could bring
himself to believe that all these people were rejoicing
at the defeat of the Council, that the Council which
had pursued him with such power and vigour was after
all the weaker of the two sides in conflict.
And if that was so, how did it affect him? Several
times he hesitated on the verge of fundamental questions.
Once he turned and walked for a long way after a little
man of rotund inviting outline, but he was unable
to master confidence to address him.
It was only slowly that it came to
him that he might ask for the “wind-vane offices”
whatever the “wind-vane offices” might
be. His first enquiry simply resulted in a direction
to go on towards Westminster. His second led
to the discovery of a short cut in which he was speedily
lost. He was told to leave the ways to which
he had hitherto confined himself—knowing
no other means of transit—and to plunge
down one of the middle staircases into the blackness
of a cross-way. Thereupon came some trivial adventures;
chief of these an ambiguous encounter with a gruff-voiced
invisible creature speaking in a strange dialect that
seemed at first a strange tongue, a thick flow of
speech with the drifting corpses of English Words
therein, the dialect of the latter-day vile.
Then another voice drew near, a girl’s voice
singing, “tralala tralala.” She spoke
to Graham, her English touched with something of the
same quality. She professed to have lost her
sister, she blundered needlessly into him he thought,
caught hold of him and laughed. But a word of
vague remonstrance sent her into the unseen again.
The sounds about him increased.
Stumbling people passed him, speaking excitedly.
“They have surrendered!” “The Council!
Surely not the Council!” “They are saying
so in the Ways.” The passage seemed wider.
Suddenly the wall fell away. He was in a great
space and people were stirring remotely. He inquired
his way of an indistinct figure. “Strike
straight across,” said a woman’s voice.
He left his guiding wall, and in a moment had stumbled
against a little table on which were utensils of glass.
Graham’s eyes, now attuned to darkness, made
out a long vista with tables on either side.
He went down this. At one or two of the tables
he heard a clang of glass and a sound of eating.
There were people then cool enough to dine, or daring
enough to steal a meal in spite of social convulsion
and darkness. Far off and high up he presently
saw a pallid light of a semi-circular shape.
As he approached this, a black edge came up and hid
it. He stumbled at steps and found himself in
a gallery. He heard a sobbing, and found two
scared little girls crouched by a railing. These
children became silent at the near sound of feet.
He tried to console them, but they were very still
until he left them. Then as he receded he could
hear them sobbing again.
Presently he found himself at the
foot of a staircase and near a wide opening.
He saw a dim twilight above this and ascended out of
the blackness into a street of moving ways again.
Along this a disorderly swarm of people marched shouting.
They were singing snatches of the song of the revolt,
most of them out of tune. Here and there torches
flared creating brief hysterical shadows. He
asked his way and was twice puzzled by that same thick
dialect. His third attempt won an answer he could
understand. He was two miles from the wind-vane
offices in Westminster, but the way was easy to follow.
When at last he did approach the district
of the wind-vane offices it seemed to him, from the
cheering processions that came marching along the
Ways, from the tumult of rejoicing, and finally from
the restoration of the lighting of the city, that
the overthrow of the Council must already be accomplished.
And still no news of his absence came to his ears.
The re-illumination of the city came
with startling abruptness. Suddenly he stood
blinking, all about him men halted dazzled, and the
world was incandescent. The light found him already
upon the outskirts of the excited crowds that choked
the ways near the wind-vane offices, and the sense
of visibility and exposure that came with it turned
his colourless intention of joining Ostrog to a keen
anxiety.
For a time he was jostled, obstructed,
and endangered by men hoarse and weary with cheering
his name, some of them bandaged and bloody in his
cause. The frontage of the wind-vane offices was
illuminated by some moving picture, but what it was
he could not see, because in spite of his strenuous
attempts the density of the crowd prevented his approaching
it. From the fragments of speech he caught, he
judged it conveyed news of the fighting about the
Council House. Ignorance and indecision made him
slow and ineffective in his movements. For a
time he could not conceive how he was to get within
the unbroken façade of this place. He made his
way slowly into the midst of this mass of people,
until he realised that the descending staircase of
the central way led to the interior of the buildings.
This gave him a goal, but the crowding in the central
path was so dense that it was long before he could
reach it. And even then he encountered intricate
obstruction, and had an hour of vivid argument first
in this guard room and then in that before he could
get a note taken to the one man of all men who was
most eager to see him. His story was laughed
to scorn at one place, and wiser for that, when at
last he reached a second stairway he professed simply
to have news of extraordinary importance for Ostrog.
What it was he would not say. They sent his note
reluctantly. For a long time he waited in a little
room at the foot of the lift shaft, and thither at
last came Lincoln, eager, apologetic, astonished.
He stopped in the doorway scrutinising Graham, then
rushed forward effusively.
“Yes,” he cried. “It is you.
And you are not dead!”
Graham made a brief explanation.
“My brother is waiting,”
explained Lincoln. “He is alone in the wind-vane
offices. We feared you had been killed in the
theatre. He doubted—and things are
very urgent still in spite of what we are telling them
there—or he would have come to you.”
They ascended a lift, passed along
a narrow passage, crossed a great hall, empty save
for two hurrying messengers, and entered a comparatively
little room, whose only furniture was a long settee
and a large oval disc of cloudy, shifting grey, hung
by cables from the wall. There Lincoln left Graham
for a space, and he remained alone without understanding
the smoky shapes that drove slowly across this disc.
His attention was arrested by a sound
that began abruptly. It was cheering, the frantic
cheering of a vast but very remote crowd, a roaring
exultation. This ended as sharply as it had begun,
like a sound heard between the opening and shutting
of a door. In the outer room was a noise of hurrying
steps and a melodious clinking as if a loose chain
was running over the teeth of a wheel.
Then he heard the voice of a woman,
the rustle of unseen garments. “It is Ostrog!”
he heard her say. A little bell rang fitfully,
and then everything was still again.
Presently came voices, footsteps and
movement without. The footsteps of some one person
detached itself from the other sounds, and drew near,
firm, evenly measured steps. The curtain lifted
slowly. A tall, white-haired man, clad in garments
of cream-coloured silk, appeared, regarding Graham
from under his raised arm.
For a moment the white form remained
holding the curtain, then dropped it and stood before
it. Graham’s first impression was of a very
broad forehead, very pale blue eyes deep sunken under
white brows, an aquiline nose, and a heavily-lined
resolute mouth. The folds of flesh over the eyes,
the drooping of the corners of the mouth contradicted
the upright bearing, and said the man was old.
Graham rose to his feet instinctively, and for a moment
the two men stood in silence, regarding each other.
“You are Ostrog?” said Graham.
“I am Ostrog.”
“The Boss?”
“So I am called.”
Graham felt the inconvenience of the
silence. “I have to thank you chiefly,
I understand, for my safety,” he said presently.
“We were afraid you were killed,”
said Ostrog. “Or sent to sleep again—for
ever. We have been doing everything to keep our
secret—the secret of your disappearance.
Where have you been? How did you get here?”
Graham told him briefly.
Ostrog listened in silence.
He smiled faintly. “Do
you know what I was doing when they came to tell me
you had come?”
“How can I guess?”
“Preparing your double.”
“My double?”
“A man as like you as we could
find. We were going to hypnotise him, to save
him the difficulty of acting. It was imperative.
The whole of this revolt depends on the idea that
you are awake, alive, and with us. Even now a
great multitude of people has gathered in the theatre
clamouring to see you. They do not trust….
You know, of course—something of your position?”
“Very little,” said Graham.
“It is like this.”
Ostrog walked a pace or two into the room and turned.
“You are absolute owner,” he said, “of
the world. You are King of the Earth. Your
powers are limited in many intricate ways, but you
are the figure-head, the popular symbol of government.
This White Council, the Council of Trustees as it
is called—”
“I have heard the vague outline of these things.”
“I wondered.”
“I came upon a garrulous old man.”
“I see…. Our masses—the
word comes from your days—you know, of
course, that we still have masses—regard
you as our actual ruler. Just as a great number
of people in your days regarded the Crown as the ruler.
They are discontented—the masses all over
the earth—with the rule of your Trustees.
For the most part it is the old discontent, the old
quarrel of the common man with his commonness—the
misery of work and discipline and unfitness.
But your Trustees have ruled ill. In certain
matters, in the administration of the Labour Companies,
for example, they have been unwise. They have
given endless opportunities. Already we of the
popular party were agitating for reforms—when
your waking came. Came! If it had been contrived
it could not have come more opportunely.”
He smiled. “The public mind, making no allowance
for your years of quiescence, had already hit on the
thought of waking you and appealing to you, and—Flash!”
He indicated the outbreak by a gesture,
and Graham moved his head to show that he understood.
“The Council muddled—quarrelled.
They always do. They could not decide what to
do with you. You know how they imprisoned you?”
“I see. I see. And now—we
win?”
“We win. Indeed we win.
To-night, in five swift hours. Suddenly we struck
everywhere. The wind-vane people, the Labour Company
and its millions, burst the bonds. We got the
pull of the aeroplanes.”
“Yes,” said Graham.
“That was, of course, essential.
Or they could have got away. All the city rose,
every third man almost was in it! All the blue,
all the public services, save only just a few aeronauts
and about half the red police. You were rescued,
and their own police of the ways—not half
of them could be massed at the Council House—have
been broken up, disarmed or killed. All London
is ours—now. Only the Council House
remains.
“Half of those who remain to
them of the red police were lost in that foolish attempt
to recapture you. They lost their heads when they
lost you. They flung all they had at the theatre.
We cut them off from the Council House there.
Truly to-night has been a night of victory. Everywhere
your star has blazed. A day ago—the
White Council ruled as it has ruled for a gross of
years, for a century and a half of years, and then,
with only a little whispering, a covert arming here
and there, suddenly—So!”
“I am very ignorant,”
said Graham. “I suppose—I do
not clearly understand the conditions of this fighting.
If you could explain. Where is the Council?
Where is the fight?”
Ostrog stepped across the room, something
clicked, and suddenly, save for an oval glow, they
were in darkness. For a moment Graham was puzzled.
Then he saw that the cloudy grey disc
had taken depth and colour, had assumed the appearance
of an oval window looking out upon a strange unfamiliar
scene.
At the first glance he was unable
to guess what this scene might be. It was a daylight
scene, the daylight of a wintry day, grey and clear.
Across the picture, and halfway as it seemed between
him and the remoter view, a stout cable of twisted
white wire stretched vertically. Then he perceived
that the rows of great wind-wheels he saw, the wide
intervals, the occasional gulfs of darkness, were
akin to those through which he had fled from the Council
House. He distinguished an orderly file of red
figures marching across an open space between files
of men in black, and realised before Ostrog spoke
that he was looking down on the upper surface of latter-day
London. The overnight snows had gone. He
judged that this mirror was some modern replacement
of the camera obscura, but that matter was not explained
to him. He saw that though the file of red figures
was trotting from left to right, yet they were passing
out of the picture to the left. He wondered momentarily,
and then saw that the picture was passing slowly,
panorama fashion, across the oval.
“In a moment you will see the
fighting,” said Ostrog at his elbow. “Those
fellows in red you notice are prisoners. This
is the roof space of London—all the houses
are practically continuous now. The streets and
public squares are covered in. The gaps and chasms
of your time have disappeared.”
Something out of focus obliterated
half the picture. Its form suggested a man.
There was a gleam of metal, a flash, something that
swept across the oval, as the eyelid of a bird sweeps
across its eye, and the picture was clear again.
And now Graham beheld men running down among the wind-wheels,
pointing weapons from which jetted out little smoky
flashes. They swarmed thicker and thicker to
the right, gesticulating—it might be they
were shouting, but of that the picture told nothing.
They and the wind-wheels passed slowly and steadily
across the field of the mirror.
“Now,” said Ostrog, “comes
the Council House,” and slowly a black edge
crept into view and gathered Graham’s attention.
Soon it was no longer an edge but a cavity, a huge
blackened space amidst the clustering edifices, and
from it thin spires of smoke rose into the pallid winter
sky. Gaunt ruinous masses of the building, mighty
truncated piers and girders, rose dismally out of
this cavernous darkness. And over these vestiges
of some splendid place, countless minute men were
clambering, leaping, swarming.
“This is the Council House,”
said Ostrog. “Their last stronghold.
And the fools wasted enough ammunition to hold out
for a month in blowing up the buildings all about
them—to stop our attack. You heard
the smash? It shattered half the brittle glass
in the city.”
And while he spoke, Graham saw that
beyond this area of ruins, overhanging it and rising
to a great height, was a ragged mass of white building.
This mass had been isolated by the ruthless destruction
of its surroundings. Black gaps marked the passages
the disaster had torn apart; big halls had been slashed
open and the decoration of their interiors showed
dismally in the wintry dawn, and down the jagged walls
hung festoons of divided cables and twisted ends of
lines and metallic rods. And amidst all the vast
details moved little red specks, the red-clothed defenders
of the Council. Every now and then faint flashes
illuminated the bleak shadows. At the first sight
it seemed to Graham that an attack upon this isolated
white building was in progress, but then he perceived
that the party of the revolt was not advancing, but
sheltered amidst the colossal wreckage that encircled
this last ragged stronghold of the red-garbed men,
was keeping up a fitful firing.
And not ten hours ago he had stood
beneath the ventilating fans in a little chamber within
that remote building wondering what was happening
in the world!
Looking more attentively as this warlike
episode moved silently across the centre of the mirror,
Graham saw that the white building was surrounded
on every side by ruins, and Ostrog proceeded to describe
in concise phrases how its defenders had sought by
such destruction to isolate themselves from a storm.
He spoke of the loss of men that huge downfall had
entailed in an indifferent tone. He indicated
an improvised mortuary among the wreckage, showed
ambulances swarming like cheese-mites along a ruinous
groove that had once been a street of moving ways.
He was more interested in pointing out the parts of
the Council House, the distribution of the besiegers.
In a little while the civil contest that had convulsed
London was no longer a mystery to Graham. It was
no tumultuous revolt had occurred that night, no equal
warfare, but a splendidly organised coup d’état.
Ostrog’s grasp of details was astonishing; he
seemed to know the business of even the smallest knot
of black and red specks that crawled amidst these
places.
He stretched a huge black arm across
the luminous picture, and showed the room whence Graham
had escaped, and across the chasm of ruins the course
of his flight. Graham recognised the gulf across
which the gutter ran, and the wind-wheels where he
had crouched from the flying machine. The rest
of his path had succumbed to the explosion. He
looked again at the Council House, and it was already
half hidden, and on the right a hillside with a cluster
of domes and pinnacles, hazy, dim and distant, was
gliding into view.
“And the Council is really overthrown?”
he said.
“Overthrown,” said Ostrog.
“And I—. Is it indeed true that
I—?”
“You are Master of the World.”
“But that white flag—”
“That is the flag of the Council—the
flag of the Rule of the World. It will fall.
The fight is over. Their attack on the theatre
was their last frantic struggle. They have only
a thousand men or so, and some of these men will be
disloyal. They have little ammunition. And
we are reviving the ancient arts. We are casting
guns.”
“But—help. Is this city the
world?”
“Practically this is all they
have left to them of their empire. Abroad the
cities have either revolted with us or wait the issue.
Your awakening has perplexed them, paralysed them.”
“But haven’t the Council
flying machines? Why is there no fighting with
them?”
“They had. But the greater
part of the aeronauts were in the revolt with us.
They wouldn’t take the risk of fighting on our
side, but they would not stir against us. We
had to get a pull with the aeronauts. Quite
half were with us, and the others knew it. Directly
they knew you had got away, those looking for you
dropped. We killed the man who shot at you—an
hour ago. And we occupied the flying stages at
the outset in every city we could, and so stopped
and captured the greater aeroplanes, and as for the
little flying machines that turned out—for
some did—we kept up too straight and steady
a fire for them to get near the Council House.
If they dropped they couldn’t rise again, because
there’s no clear space about there for them
to get up. Several we have smashed, several others
have dropped and surrendered, the rest have gone off
to the Continent to find a friendly city if they can
before their fuel runs out. Most of these men
were only too glad to be taken prisoner and kept out
of harm’s way. Upsetting in a flying machine
isn’t a very attractive prospect. There’s
no chance for the Council that way. Its days are
done.”
He laughed and turned to the oval
reflection again to show Graham what he meant by flying
stages. Even the four nearer ones were remote
and obscured by a thin morning haze. But Graham
could perceive they were very vast structures, judged
even by the standard of the things about them.
And then as these dim shapes passed
to the left there came again the sight of the expanse
across which the disarmed men in red had been marching.
And then the black ruins, and then again the beleaguered
white fastness of the Council. It appeared no
longer a ghostly pile, but glowing amber in the sunlight,
for a cloud shadow had passed. About it the pigmy
struggle still hung in suspense, but now the red defenders
were no longer firing.
So, in a dusky stillness, the man
from the nineteenth century saw the closing scene
of the great revolt, the forcible establishment of
his rule. With a quality of startling discovery
it came to him that this was his world, and not that
other he had left behind; that this was no spectacle
to culminate and cease; that in this world lay whatever
life was still before him, lay all his duties and
dangers and responsibilities. He turned with
fresh questions. Ostrog began to answer them,
and then broke off abruptly. “But these
things I must explain more fully later. At present
there are—duties. The people are coming
by the moving ways towards this ward from every part
of the city—the markets and theatres are
densely crowded. You are just in time for them.
They are clamouring to see you. And abroad they
want to see you. Paris, New York, Chicago, Denver,
Capri—thousands of cities are up and in
a tumult, undecided, and clamouring to see you.
They have clamoured that you should be awakened for
years, and now it is done they will scarcely believe—”
“But surely—I can’t go …”
Ostrog answered from the other side
of the room, and the picture on the oval disc paled
and vanished as the light jerked back again. “There
are kineto-telephoto-graphs,” he said.
“As you bow to the people here—all
over the world myriads of myriads of people, packed
and still in darkened halls, will see you also.
In black and white, of course—not like this.
And you will hear their shouts reinforcing the shouting
in the hall.
“And there is an optical contrivance
we shall use,” said Ostrog, “used by some
of the posturers and women dancers. It may be
novel to you. You stand in a very bright light,
and they see not you but a magnified image of you
thrown on a screen—so that even the furtherest
man in the remotest gallery can, if he chooses, count
your eyelashes.”
Graham clutched desperately at one
of the questions in his mind. “What is
the population of London?” he said.
“Eight and twaindy myriads.”
“Eight and what?”
“More than thirty-three millions.”
These figures went beyond Graham’s imagination.
“You will be expected to say
something,” said Ostrog. “Not what
you used to call a Speech, but what our people call
a word—just one sentence, six or seven
words. Something formal. If I might suggest—’I
have awakened and my heart is with you.’
That is the sort of thing they want.”
“What was that?” asked Graham.
“‘I am awakened and my
heart is with you.’ And bow—bow
royally. But first we must get you black robes—for
black is your colour. Do you mind? And then
they will disperse to their homes.”
Graham hesitated. “I am in your hands,”
he said.
Ostrog was clearly of that opinion.
He thought for a moment, turned to the curtain and
called brief directions to some unseen attendants.
Almost immediately a black robe, the very fellow of
the black robe Graham had worn in the theatre, was
brought. And as he threw it about his shoulders
there came from the room without the shrilling of a
high-pitched bell. Ostrog turned in interrogation
to the attendant, then suddenly seemed to change his
mind, pulled the curtain aside and disappeared.
For a moment Graham stood with the
deferential attendant listening to Ostrog’s
retreating steps. There was a sound of quick question
and answer and of men running. The curtain was
snatched back and Ostrog reappeared, his massive face
glowing with excitement. He crossed the room in
a stride, clicked the room into darkness, gripped
Graham’s arm and pointed to the mirror.
“Even as we turned away,” he said.
Graham saw his index finger, black
and colossal, above the mirrored Council House.
For a moment he did not understand. And then he
perceived that the flagstaff that had carried the
white banner was bare.
“Do you mean—?” he began.
“The Council has surrendered. Its rule
is at an end for evermore.”
“Look!” and Ostrog pointed
to a coil of black that crept in little jerks up the
vacant flagstaff, unfolding as it rose.
The oval picture paled as Lincoln pulled the curtain
aside and entered.
“They are clamorous,” he said.
Ostrog kept his grip of Graham’s arm.
“We have raised the people,”
he said. “We have given them arms.
For to-day at least their wishes must be law.”
Lincoln held the curtain open for Graham and Ostrog
to pass through….
On his way to the markets Graham had
a transitory glance of a long narrow white-walled
room in which men in the universal blue canvas were
carrying covered things like biers, and about which
men in medical purple hurried to and fro. From
this room came groans and wailing. He had an impression
of an empty blood-stained couch, of men on other couches,
bandaged and blood-stained. It was just a glimpse
from a railed footway and then a buttress hid the
place and they were going on towards the markets….
The roar of the multitude was near
now: it leapt to thunder. And, arresting
his attention, a fluttering of black banners, the waving
of blue canvas and brown rags, and the swarming vastness
of the theatre near the public markets came into view
down a long passage. The picture opened out.
He perceived they were entering the great theatre of
his first appearance, the great theatre he had last
seen as a chequer-work of glare and blackness in his
flight from the red police. This time he entered
it along a gallery at a level high above the stage.
The place was now brilliantly lit again. His
eyes sought the gangway up which he had fled, but
he could not tell it from among its dozens of fellows;
nor could he see anything of the smashed seats, deflated
cushions, and such like traces of the fight because
of the density of the people. Except the stage
the whole place was closely packed. Looking down
the effect was a vast area of stippled pink, each
dot a still upturned face regarding him. At his
appearance with Ostrog the cheering died away, the
singing died away, a common interest stilled and unified
the disorder. It seemed as though every individual
of those myriads was watching him.