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CHAPTER 9
In the morning he wondered if all that he could call to mind were
part of a waking or a sleeping vision.
He was soon reminded. A chorus of questions greeted him when he
appeared at breakfast. "You certainly had a long talk with the
boss last night," began the American. "We meant to wait up for
you, but we got tired. What sort of a guy is he?"
"Did he say anything about the porters?" asked Mallinson eagerly.
"I hope you mentioned to him about having a missionary stationed
here," said Miss Brinklow.
The bombardment served to raise in Conway his usual defensive
armament. "I'm afraid I'm probably going to disappoint you all,"
he replied, slipping easily into the mood. "I didn't discuss with
him the question of missions; he didn't mention the porters to me
at all; and as for his appearance, I can only say that he's a very
old man who speaks excellent English and is quite intelligent."
Mallinson cut in with irritation: "The main thing to us is whether
he's to be trusted or not. Do you think he means to let us down?"
"He didn't strike me as a dishonorable person."
"Why on earth didn't you worry him about the porters?"
"It didn't occur to me."
Mallinson stared at him incredulously. "I can't understand you,
Conway. You were so damned good in that Baskul affair that I can
hardly believe you're the same man. You seem to have gone all to
pieces."
"I'm sorry."
"No good being sorry. You ought to buck up and look as if you
cared what happens."
"You misunderstand me. I meant that I was sorry to have
disappointed you."
Conway's voice was curt, an intended mask to his feelings, which
were, indeed, so mixed that they could hardly have been guessed by
others. He had slightly surprised himself by the ease with which
he had prevaricated; it was clear that he intended to observe the
High Lama's suggestion and keep the secret. He was also puzzled by
the naturalness with which he was accepting a position which his
companions would certainly and with some justification think
traitorous; as Mallinson had said, it was hardly the sort of thing
to be expected of a hero. Conway felt a sudden half-pitying
fondness for the youth; then he steeled himself by reflecting that
people who hero- worship must be prepared for disillusionments.
Mallinson at Baskul had been far too much the new boy adoring the
handsome games captain, and now the games captain was tottering if
not already fallen from the pedestal. There was always something a
little pathetic in the smashing of an ideal, however false; and
Mallinson's admiration might have been at least a partial solace
for the strain of pretending to be what he was not. But pretense
was impossible anyway. There was a quality in the air of Shangri-
La -- perhaps due to its altitude -- that forbade one the effort of
counterfeit emotion.
He said: "Look here, Mallinson, it's no use harping continually on
Baskul. Of course I was different then -- it was a completely
different situation."
"And a much healthier one in my opinion. At least we knew what we
were up against."
"Murder and rape
-- to be precise. You can call that healthier if
you like."
The youth's voice rose in pitch as he retorted: "Well, I DO call
it healthier -- in one sense. It's something I'd rather face than
all this mystery business." Suddenly he added: "That Chinese
girl, for instance -- how did SHE get here? Did the fellow tell
you?"
"No. Why should he?"
"Well, why shouldn't he? And why shouldn't you ask, if you had any
interest in the matter at all? Is it usual to find a young girl
living with a lot of monks?"
That way of looking at it was one that had scarcely occurred to
Conway before. "This isn't an ordinary monastery," was the best
reply he could give after some thought.
"My God, it isn't!"
There was a silence, for the argument had evidently reached a dead
end. To Conway the history of Lo-Tsen seemed rather far from the
point; the little Manchu lay so quietly in his mind that he hardly
knew she was there. But at the mere mention of her Miss Brinklow
had looked up suddenly from the Tibetan grammar which she was
studying even over the breakfast table (just as if, thought Conway,
with secret meaning, she hadn't all her life for it). Chatter of
girls and monks reminded her of those stories of Indian temples
that men missionaries told their wives, and that the wives passed
on to their unmarried female colleagues. "Of course," she said
between tightened lips, "the morals of this place are quite hideous --
we might have expected that." She turned to Barnard as if
inviting support, but the American only grinned. "I don't suppose
you folks'd value my opinion on a matter of morals," he remarked
dryly. "But I should say myself that quarrels are just as bad.
Since we've gotter be here for some time yet, let's keep our
tempers and make ourselves comfortable."
Conway thought this good advice, but Mallinson was still
unplacated. "I can quite believe you find it more comfortable than
Dartmoor," he said meaningly.
"Dartmoor? Oh, that's your big penitentiary?
-- I get you. Well,
yes, I certainly never did envy the folks in them places. And
there's another thing too -- it don't hurt when you chip me about it.
Thick-skinned and tenderhearted, that's my mixture."
Conway glanced at him in appreciation, and at Mallinson with some
hint of reproof; but then abruptly he had the feeling that they
were all acting on a vast stage, of whose background only he
himself was conscious; and such knowledge, so incommunicable, made
him suddenly want to be alone. He nodded to them and went out into
the courtyard. In sight of Karakal misgivings faded, and qualms
about his three companions were lost in an uncanny acceptance of
the new world that lay so far beyond their guesses. There came a
time, he realized, when the strangeness of everything made it
increasingly difficult to realize the strangeness of anything; when
one took things for granted merely because astonishment would have
been as tedious for oneself as for others. Thus far had he
progressed at Shangri-La, and he remembered that he had attained a
similar though far less pleasant equanimity during his years at the
War.
He needed equanimity, if only to accommodate himself to the double
life he was compelled to lead. Thenceforward, with his fellow
exiles, he lived in a world conditioned by the arrival of porters
and a return to India; at all other times the horizon lifted like a
curtain; time expanded and space contracted and the name Blue Moon
took on a symbolic meaning, as if the future, so delicately
plausible, were of a kind that might happen once in a blue moon
only. Sometimes he wondered which of his two lives were the more
real, but the problem was not pressing; and again he was reminded
of the War, for during heavy bombardments he had had the same
comforting sensation that he had many lives, only one of which
could be claimed by death.
Chang, of course, now talked to him completely without reserve, and
they had many conversations about the rule and routine of the
lamasery. Conway learned that during his first five years he would
live a normal life, without any special regimen; this was always
done, as Chang said, "to enable the body to accustom itself to the
altitude, and also to give time for the dispersal of mental and
emotional regrets."
Conway remarked with a smile: "I suppose you're certain, then,
that no human affection can outlast a five-year absence?"
"It can, undoubtedly," replied the Chinese, "but only as a
fragrance whose melancholy we may enjoy."
After the probationary five years, Chang went on to explain, the
process of retarding age would begin, and if successful, might give
Conway half a century or so at the apparent age of forty -- which was
not a bad time of life at which to remain stationary.
"What about yourself?" Conway asked. "How did it work out in your
case?"
"Ah, my dear sir, I was lucky enough to arrive when I was quite
young -- only twenty-two. I was a soldier, though you might not have
thought it; I had command of troops operating against brigand
tribes in the year 1855. I was making what I should have called a
reconnaissance if I had ever returned to my superior officers to
tell the tale, but in plain truth I had lost my way in the
mountains, and of my men only seven out of over a hundred survived
the rigors of the climate. When at last I was rescued and brought
to Shangri-La I was so ill that extreme youth and virility alone
could have saved me."
"Twenty-two," echoed Conway, performing the calculation. "So
you're now ninety-seven?"
"Yes. Very soon, if the lamas give their consent, I shall receive
full initiation."
"I see. You have to wait for the round figure?"
"No, we are not restricted by any definite age limit, but a century
is generally considered to be an age beyond which the passions and
moods of ordinary life are likely to have disappeared."
"I should certainly think so. And what happens afterwards? How
long do you expect to carry on?"
"There is reason to hope that I shall enter lamahood with such
prospects as Shangri-La has made possible. In years, perhaps
another century or more."
Conway nodded. "I
don't know whether I ought to congratulate you --
you seem to have been granted the best of both worlds, a long and
pleasant youth behind you, and an equally long and pleasant old age
ahead. When did you begin to grow old in appearance?"
"When I was over seventy. That is often the case, though I think I
may still claim to look younger than my years."
"Decidedly. And suppose you were to leave the valley now, what
would happen?"
"Death, if I remained away for more than a very few days."
"The atmosphere, then, is essential?"
"There is only one valley of Blue Moon, and those who expect to
find another are asking too much of nature."
"Well, what would have happened if you had left the valley, say,
thirty years ago, during your prolonged youth?"
Chang answered: "Probably I should have died even then. In any
case, I should have acquired very quickly the full appearance of my
actual age. We had a curious example of that some years ago,
though there had been several others before. One of our number had
left the valley to look out for a party of travelers who we had
heard might be approaching. This man, a Russian, had arrived here
originally in the prime of life, and had taken to our ways so well
that at nearly eighty he did not look more than half as old. He
should have been absent no longer than a week (which would not have
mattered), but unfortunately he was taken prisoner by nomad tribes
and carried away some distance. We suspected an accident and gave
him up for lost. Three months later, however, he returned to us,
having made his escape. But he was a very different man. Every
year of his age was in his face and behavior, and he died shortly
afterwards, as an old man dies."
Conway made no remark for some time. They were talking in the
library, and during most of the narrative he had been gazing
through a window towards the pass that led to the outer world; a
little wisp of cloud had drifted across the ridge. "A rather grim
story, Chang," he commented at length. "It gives one the feeling
that Time is like some balked monster, waiting outside the valley
to pounce on the slackers who have managed to evade him longer than
they should."
"SLACKERS?" queried Chang. His knowledge of English was extremely
good, but sometimes a colloquialism proved unfamiliar.
"'Slacker,'" explained Conway, "is a slang word meaning a lazy
fellow, a good-for-nothing. I wasn't, of course, using it
seriously."
Chang bowed his thanks for the information. He took a keen
interest in languages and liked to weigh a new word philosophically.
"It is significant," he said after a pause, "that the English
regard slackness as a vice. We, on the other hand, should vastly
prefer it to tension. Is there not too much tension in the world
at present, and might it not be better if more people were
slackers?"
"I'm inclined to agree with you," Conway answered with solemn
amusement.
During the course of a week or so after the interview with the High
Lama, Conway met several others of his future colleagues. Chang
was neither eager nor reluctant to make the introductions, and
Conway sensed a new and, to him, rather attractive atmosphere in
which urgency did not clamor nor postponement disappoint.
"Indeed," as Chang explained, "some of the lamas may not meet you
for a considerable time -- perhaps years -- but you must not be
surprised at that. They are prepared to make your acquaintance
when it may so happen, and their avoidance of hurry does not imply
any degree of unwillingness." Conway, who had often had similar
feelings when calling on new arrivals at foreign consulates,
thought it a very intelligible attitude.
The meetings he did have, however, were quite successful, and
conversation with men thrice his age held none of the social
embarrassments that might have obtruded in London or Delhi. His
first encounter was with a genial German named Meister, who had
entered the lamasery during the 'eighties, as the survivor of an
exploring party. He spoke English well, though with an accent. A
day or two later a second introduction took place, and Conway
enjoyed his first talk with the man whom the High Lama had
particularly mentioned -- Alphonse Briac, a wiry, small-statured
Frenchman who did not look especially old, though he announced
himself as a pupil of Chopin. Conway thought that both he
and the German would prove agreeable company. Already he was
subconsciously analyzing, and after a few further meetings he
reached one or two general conclusions; he perceived that though
the lamas he met had individual differences, they all possessed
that quality for which agelessness was not an outstandingly good
name, but the only one he could think of. Moreover, they were all
endowed with a calm intelligence which pleasantly overflowed into
measured and well-balanced opinions. Conway could give an exact
response to that kind of approach, and he was aware that they
realized it and were gratified. He found them quite as easy to get
on with as any other group of cultured people he might have met,
though there was often a sense of oddity in hearing reminiscences
so distant and apparently so casual. One white-haired and
benevolent-looking person, for instance, asked Conway, after a
little conversation, if he were interested in the Brontės. Conway
said he was, to some extent, and the other replied: "You see, when
I was a curate in the West Riding during the 'forties, I once
visited Haworth and stayed at the Parsonage. Since coming here
I've made a study of the whole Brontė problem -- indeed, I'm writing
a book on the subject. Perhaps you might care to go over it with
me sometime?"
Conway responded cordially, and afterwards, when he and Chang were
left together, commented on the vividness with which the lamas
appeared to recollect their pre-Tibetan lives. Chang answered that
it was all part of the training. "You see, my dear sir, one of the
first steps toward the clarifying of the mind is to obtain a
panorama of one's own past, and that, like any other view, is more
accurate in perspective. When you have been among us long enough
you will find your old life slipping gradually into focus as
through a telescope when the lens is adjusted. Everything will
stand out still and clear, duly proportioned and with its correct
significance. Your new acquaintance, for instance, discerns that
the really big moment of his entire life occurred when he was a
young man visiting a house in which there lived an old parson and
his three daughters."
"So I suppose I shall have to set to work to remember my own big
moments?"
"It will not be an effort. They will come to you."
"I don't know that I shall give them much of a welcome," answered
Conway moodily.
But whatever the past might yield, he was discovering happiness in
the present. When he sat reading in the library, or playing Mozart
in the music room, he often felt the invasion of a deep spiritual
emotion, as if Shangri-La were indeed a living essence, distilled
from the magic of the ages and miraculously preserved against time
and death. His talk with the High Lama recurred memorably at such
moments; he sensed a calm intelligence brooding gently over every
diversion, giving a thousand whispered reassurances to ear and eye.
Thus he would listen while Lo-Tsen marshaled some intricate fugue
rhythm, and wonder what lay behind the faint impersonal smile that
stirred her lips into the likeness of an opening flower. She
talked very little, even though she now knew that Conway could
speak her language; to Mallinson, who liked to visit the music room
sometimes, she was almost dumb. But Conway discerned a charm that
was perfectly expressed by her silences.
Once he asked Chang her history, and learned that she came of royal
Manchu stock. "She was betrothed to a prince of Turkestan, and was
traveling to Kashgar to meet him when her carriers lost their way
in the mountains. The whole party would doubtless have perished
but for the customary meeting with our emissaries."
"When did this happen?"
"In 1884. She was eighteen."
"Eighteen THEN?"
Chang bowed. "Yes, we are succeeding very well with her, as you
may judge for yourself. Her progress has been consistently
excellent."
"How did she take things when she first came?"
"She was, perhaps, a little more than averagely reluctant to accept
the situation -- she made no protest, but we were aware that she was
troubled for a time. It was, of course, an unusual occurrence -- to
intercept a young girl on the way to her wedding. . . . We were
all particularly anxious that she should be happy here." Chang
smiled blandly. "I am afraid the excitement of love does not make
for an easy surrender, though the first five years proved ample for
their purpose."
"She was deeply attached, I suppose, to the man she was to have
married?"
"Hardly that, my dear sir, since she had never seen him. It was
the old custom, you know. The excitement of her affections was
entirely impersonal."
Conway nodded, and thought a little tenderly of Lo-Tsen. He
pictured her as she might have been half a century before,
statuesque in her decorated chair as the carriers toiled over the
plateau, her eyes searching the windswept horizons that must have
seemed so harsh after the gardens and lotus pools of the East.
"Poor child!" he said, thinking of such elegance held captive over
the years. Knowledge of her past increased rather than lessened
his content with her stillness and silence; she was like a lovely
cold vase, unadorned save by an escaping ray.
He was also content, though less ecstatically, when Briac talked to
him of Chopin, and played the familiar melodies with much
brilliance. It appeared that the Frenchman knew several Chopin
compositions that had never been published, and as he had written
them down, Conway devoted pleasant hours to memorizing them
himself. He found a certain piquancy in the reflection that
neither Cortot nor Pachmann had been so fortunate. Nor were
Briac's recollections at an end; his memory continually refreshed
him with some little scrap of tune that the composer had thrown off
or improvised on some occasion; he took them all down on paper as
they came into his head, and some were very delightful fragments.
"Briac," Chang explained, "has not long been initiated, so you must
make allowances if he talks a great deal about Chopin. The younger
lamas are naturally preoccupied with the past; it is a necessary
step to envisaging the future."
"Which is, I take it, the job of the older ones?"
"Yes. The High Lama, for instance, spends almost his entire life
in clairvoyant meditation."
Conway pondered a moment and then said: "By the way, when do you
suppose I shall see him again?"
"Doubtless at the end of the first five years, my dear sir."
But in that confident prophecy Chang was wrong, for less than a
month after his arrival at Shangri-La Conway received a second
summons to that torrid upper room. Chang had told him that the
High Lama never left his apartments, and that their heated
atmosphere was necessary for his bodily existence; and Conway,
being thus prepared, found the change less disconcerting than
before. Indeed, he breathed easily as soon as he had made his bow
and been granted the faintest answering liveliness of the sunken
eyes. He felt kinship with the mind beyond them, and though he
knew that this second interview following so soon upon the first
was an unprecedented honor, he was not in the least nervous or
weighed down with solemnity. Age was to him no more an obsessing
factor than rank or color; he had never felt debarred from liking
people because they were too young or too old. He held the High
Lama in most cordial respect, but he did not see why their social
relations should be anything less than urbane.
They exchanged the usual courtesies, and Conway answered many
polite questions. He said he was finding the life very agreeable
and had already made friendships.
"And you have kept our secrets from your three companions?"
"Yes, up to now. It has proved awkward for me at times, but
probably less so than if I had told them."
"Just as I surmised; you have acted as you thought best. And the
awkwardness, after all, is only temporary. Chang tells me he
thinks that two of them will give little trouble."
"I daresay that is so."
"And the third?"
Conway replied: "Mallinson is an excitable youth
-- he's pretty keen
to get back."
"You like him?"
"Yes, I like him very much."
At this point the tea bowls were brought in, and talk became less
serious between sips of the scented liquid. It was an apt
convention, enabling the verbal flow to acquire a touch of that
almost frivolous fragrance, and Conway was responsive. When the
High Lama asked him whether Shangri-La was not unique in his
experience, and if the Western world could offer anything in the
least like it, he answered with a smile: "Well, yes -- to be quite
frank, it reminds me very slightly of Oxford, where I used to
lecture. The scenery there is not so good, but the subjects of
study are often just as impractical, and though even the oldest of
the dons is not quite so old, they appear to age in a somewhat
similar way."
"You have a sense of humor, my dear Conway," replied the High Lama,
"for which we shall all be grateful during the years to come."
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