“GRATITUDE A LIVELY SENSE OF FAVOURS
TO COME”
Most men on suddenly finding themselves
in possession of such enormous wealth would have felt
some elation. Ventimore, as we have seen, was
merely exasperated. And, although this attitude
of his may strike the reader as incomprehensible or
absolutely wrong-headed, he had more reason on his
side than might appear at a first view.
It was undoubtedly the fact that,
with the money these treasures represented, he would
be in a position to convulse the money markets of
Europe and America, bring society to his feet, make
and unmake kingdoms dominate, in short,
the entire world.
“But, then,” as Horace
told himself with a groan, “it wouldn’t
amuse me in the least to convulse money markets.
Do I want to see the smartest people in London grovelling
for anything they think they’re likely to get
out of me? As I should be perfectly well aware
that their homage was not paid to any personal merit
of mine, I could hardly consider it flattering.
And why should I make kingdoms? The only thing
I understand and care about is making houses.
Then, am I likely to be a better hand at dominating
the world than all the others who have tried the experiment?
I doubt it.”
He called to mind all the millionaires
he had ever read or heard of; they didn’t seem
to get much fun out of their riches. The majority
of them were martyrs to dyspepsia. They were
often weighed down by the cares and responsibilities
of their position; the only people who were unable
to obtain an audience of them at any time were their
friends; they lived in a glare of publicity, and every
post brought them hundreds of begging letters, and
a few threats; their children were in constant danger
from kidnappers, and they themselves, after knowing
no rest in life, could not be certain that even their
tombs would be undisturbed. Whether they were
extravagant or thrifty, they were equally maligned,
and, whatever the fortune they left behind them, they
could be absolutely certain that, in a couple of generations,
it would be entirely dissipated.
“And the biggest millionaire
living,” concluded Horace, “is a pauper
compared with me!”
But there was another consideration how
was he to realise all this wealth? He knew enough
about precious stones to be aware that a ruby, for
instance, of the true “pigeon’s blood”
colour and the size of a melon, as most of these rubies
were, would be worth, even when cut, considerably
over a million; but who would buy it?
“I think I see myself,”
he reflected grimly, “calling on some diamond
merchant in Hatton Garden with half a dozen assorted
jewels in a Gladstone bag. If he believed they
were genuine, he’d probably have a fit; but
most likely he’d think I’d invented some
dodge for manufacturing them, and had been fool enough
to overdo the size. Anyhow, he’d want to
know how they came into my possession, and what could
I say? That they were part of a little present
made to me by a Jinnee in grateful acknowledgment
of my having relieved him from a brass bottle in which
he’d been shut up for nearly three thousand years?
Look at it how you will, it’s not convincing.
I fancy I can guess what he’d say. And
what an ass I should look! Then suppose the thing
got into the papers?”
Got into the papers? Why, of
course it would get into the papers. As if it
were possible in these days for a young and hitherto
unemployed architect suddenly to surround himself
with wondrous carpets, and gold vessels, and gigantic
jewels without attracting the notice of some enterprising
journalist. He would be interviewed; the story
of his curiously acquired riches would go the round
of the papers; he would find himself the object of
incredulity, suspicion, ridicule. In imagination
he could already see the headlines on the news-sheets:
BOTTLED BILLIONS
AMAZING ARABESQUES BY AN ARCHITECT
HE SAYS THE JAR CONTAINED A JINNEE
SENSATIONAL STORY
DIVERTING DETAILS
And so on, through every phrase of
alliterative ingenuity. He ground his teeth at
the mere thought of it. Then Sylvia would come
to hear of it, and what would she think?
She would naturally be repelled, as any nice-minded
girl would be, by the idea that her lover was in secret
alliance with a supernatural being. And her father
and mother would they allow her to marry
a man, however rich, whose wealth came from such a
questionable source? No one would believe that
he had not made some unholy bargain before consenting
to set this incarcerated spirit free he,
who had acted in absolute ignorance, who had persistently
declined all reward after realising what he had done!
No, it was too much. Try as he
might to do justice to the Jinnee’s gratitude
and generosity, he could not restrain a bitter resentment
at the utter want of consideration shown in overloading
him with gifts so useless and so compromising.
No Jinnee however old, however unfamiliar
with the world as it is now had any right
to be such a fool!
And at this, above the ramparts of
sacks and bales, which occupied all the available
space in the room, appeared Mrs. Rapkin’s face.
“I was going to ask you, sir,
before them parcels came,” she began, with a
dry cough of disapproval, “what you would like
in the way of ongtray to-morrow night. I thought
if I could find a sweetbread at all reasonable ”
To Horace surrounded as
he was by incalculable riches sweetbreads
seemed incongruous just then; the transition of thought
was too violent.
“I can’t bother about
that now, Mrs. Rapkin,” he said; “we’ll
settle it to-morrow. I’m too busy.”
“I suppose most of these things
will have to go back, sir, if they’re only sent
on approval like?”
If he only knew where and how he could
send them back! “I I’m
not sure,” he said; “I may have to keep
them.”
“Well, sir, bargain or none,
I wouldn’t have ’em as a gift myself, being
so dirty and fusty; they can’t be no use to anybody,
not to mention there being no room to move with them
blocking up all the place. I’d better tell
Rapkin to carry ’em all upstairs out of people’s
way.”
“Certainly not,” said
Horace, sharply, by no means anxious for the Rapkins
to discover the real nature of his treasures.
“Don’t touch them, either of you.
Leave them exactly as they are, do you understand?”
“As you please, Mr. Ventimore,
sir; only, if they’re not to be interfered with,
I don’t see myself how you’re going to
set your friends down to dinner to-morrow, that’s
all.”
And, indeed, considering that the
table and every available chair, and even the floor,
were heaped so high with valuables that Horace himself
could only just squeeze his way between the piles,
it seemed as if his guests might find themselves inconveniently
cramped.
“It will be all right,”
he said, with an optimism he was very far from feeling;
“we’ll manage somehow leave
it to me.”
Before he left for his office he took
the precaution to baffle any inquisitiveness on the
part of his landlady by locking his sitting-room door
and carrying away the key, but it was in a very different
mood from his former light-hearted confidence that
he sat down to his drawing-board in Great Cloister
Street that morning. He could not concentrate
his mind; his enthusiasm and his ideas had alike deserted
him.
He flung down the dividers he had
been using and pushed away the nest of saucers of
Indian ink and colours in a fit of petulance.
“It’s no good,” he exclaimed aloud;
“I feel a perfect duffer this morning. I
couldn’t even design a decent dog-kennel!”
Even as he spoke he became conscious
of a presence in the room, and, looking round, saw
Fakrash the Jinnee standing at his elbow, smiling
down on him more benevolently than ever, and with a
serene expectation of being warmly welcomed and thanked,
which made Horace rather ashamed of his own inability
to meet it.
“He’s a thoroughly good-natured
old chap,” he thought, self-reproachfully.
“He means well, and I’m a beast not to
feel more glad to see him. And yet, hang it all!
I can’t have him popping in and out of the office
like a rabbit whenever the fancy takes him!”
“Peace be upon thee,”
said Fakrash. “Moderate the trouble of thy
heart, and impart thy difficulties to me.”
“Oh, they’re nothing,
thanks,” said Horace, feeling decidedly embarrassed.
“I got stuck over my work for the moment, and
it worried me a little that’s all.”
“Then thou hast not yet received
the gifts which I commanded should be delivered at
thy dwelling-place?”
“Oh, indeed I have!” replied
Horace; “and and I really don’t
know how to thank you for them.”
“A few trifling presents,”
answered the Jinnee, “and by no means suited
to thy dignity yet the best in my power
to bestow upon thee for the time being.”
“My dear sir, they simply overwhelm
me with their magnificence! They’re beyond
all price, and and I’ve no idea what
to do with such a superabundance.”
“A superfluity of good things
is good,” was the Jinnee’s sententious
reply.
“Not in my particular case.
I I quite feel your goodness and generosity;
but, indeed, as I told you before, it’s really
impossible for me to accept any such reward.”
Fakrash’s brows contracted slightly.
“How sayest thou that it is impossible seeing
that these things are already in thy possession?”
“I know,” said Horace;
“but you won’t be offended if
I speak quite plainly?”
“Art thou not even as a son
to me, and can I be angered at any words of thine?”
“Well,” said Horace, with
sudden hope, “honestly, then, I would very much
rather if you’re sure you don’t
mind that you would take them all back
again.”
“What? Dost thou demand
that I, Fakrash-el-Aamash, should consent to receive
back the gifts I have bestowed? Are they, then,
of so little value in thy sight?”
“They’re of too much value.
If I took such a reward for for a very
ordinary service, I should never be able to respect
myself again.”
“This is not the reasoning of
an intelligent person,” said the Jinnee, coldly.
“If you think me a fool, I can’t
help it. I’m not an ungrateful fool, at
all events. But I feel very strongly that I can’t
keep these gifts of yours.”
“So thou wouldst have me break
the oath which I swore to reward thee fitly for thy
kind action?”
“But you have rewarded
me already,” said Horace, “by contriving
that a wealthy merchant should engage me to build
him a residence. And forgive my plain
speaking if you truly desire my happiness
(as I am sure you do) you will relieve me of all these
precious gems and merchandise, because, to be frank,
they will not make me happy. On the contrary,
they are making me extremely uncomfortable.”
“In the days of old,”
said Fakrash, “all men pursued wealth; nor could
any amass enough to satisfy his desires. Have
riches, then, become so contemptible in mortal eyes
that thou findest them but an encumbrance? Explain
the matter.”
Horace felt a natural delicacy in
giving his real reasons. “I can’t
answer for other men,” he said. “All
I know is that I’ve never been accustomed to
being rich, and I’d rather get used to it gradually,
and be able to feel that I owed it, as far as possible,
to my own exertions. For, as I needn’t
tell you, Mr. Fakrash, riches alone don’t
make any fellow happy. You must have observed
that they’re apt to well, to land
him in all kinds of messes and worries.... I’m
talking like a confounded copybook,” he thought,
“but I don’t care how priggish I am if
I can only get my way!”
Fakrash was deeply impressed.
“O young man of marvellous moderation!”
he cried. “Thy sentiments are not inferior
to those of the Great Suleyman himself (on whom be
peace!). Yet even he doth not utterly despise
them, for he hath gold and ivory and precious stones
in abundance. Nor hitherto have I ever met a
human being capable of rejecting them when offered.
But, since thou seemest sincere in holding that my
poor and paltry gifts will not advance thy welfare,
and since I would do thee good and not evil be
it even as thou wouldst. For excellently was it
said: ’The worth of a present depends not
on itself, nor on the giver, but on the receiver alone.’”
Horace could hardly believe that he
had really prevailed. “It’s extremely
good of you, sir,” he said, “to take it
so well. And if you could let that caravan
call for them as soon as possible, it would be a great
convenience to me. I mean er the
fact is, I’m expecting a few friends to dine
with me to-morrow, and, as my rooms are rather small
at the best of times, I don’t quite know how
I can manage to entertain them at all unless something
is done.”
“It will be the easiest of actions,”
replied Fakrash; “therefore, have no fear that,
when the time cometh, thou wilt not be able to entertain
thy friends in a fitting manner. And for the caravan,
it shall set out without delay.”
“By Jove, though, I’d
forgotten one thing,” said Horace: “I’ve
locked up the room where your presents are they
won’t be able to get in without the key.”
“Against the servants of the
Jinn neither bolts nor bars can prevail. They
shall enter therein and remove all that they brought
thee, since it is thy desire.”
“Very many thanks,” said
Horace. “And you do really understand
that I’m every bit as grateful as if I could
keep the things? You see, I want all my time
and all my energies to complete the designs for this
building, which,” he added gracefully, “I
should never be in a position to do at all, but for
your assistance.”
“On my arrival,” said
Fakrash, “I heard thee lamenting the difficulties
of the task; wherein do they consist?”
“Oh,” said Horace, “it’s
a little difficult to please all the different people
concerned, and myself too. I want to make something
of it that I shall be proud of, and that will give
me a reputation. It’s a large house, and
there will be a good deal of work in it; but I shall
manage it all right.”
“This is a great undertaking
indeed,” remarked the Jinnee, after he had asked
various by no means unintelligent questions and received
the answers. “But be persuaded that it
shall all turn out most fortunately and thou shalt
obtain great renown. And now,” he concluded,
“I am compelled to take leave of thee, for I
am still without any certain tidings of Suleyman.”
“You mustn’t let me keep
you,” said Horace, who had been on thorns for
some minutes lest Beevor should return and find him
with his mysterious visitor. “You see,”
he added instructively, “so long as you will
neglect your own much more important affairs to look
after mine, you can hardly expect to make much
progress, can you?”
“How excellent is the saying,”
replied the Jinnee: “’The time which
is spent in doing kindnesses, call it not wasted.’”
“Yes, that’s very good,”
said Horace, feeling driven to silence this maxim,
if possible, with one of his own invention. “But
we have a saying too how does it
go? Ah, I remember. ’It is possible
for a kindness to be more inconvenient than an injury.’”
“Marvellously gifted was he
who discovered such a saying!” cried Fakrash.
“I imagine,” said Horace,
“he learnt it from his own experience. By
the way, what place were you thinking of drawing I
mean trying next for Suleyman?”
“I purpose to repair to Nineveh, and inquire
there.”
“Capital,” said Ventimore,
with hearty approval, for he hoped that this would
take the Jinnee some little time. “Wonderful
city, Nineveh, from all I’ve heard though
not quite what it used to be, perhaps. Then there’s
Babylon you might go on there. And
if you shouldn’t hear of him there, why not
strike down into Central Africa, and do that thoroughly?
Or South America; it’s a pity to lose any chance you’ve
never been to South America yet?”
“I have not so much as heard
of such a country, and how should Suleyman be there?”
“Pardon me, I didn’t say
he was there. All I meant to convey was,
that he’s quite as likely to be there as anywhere
else. But if you’re going to Nineveh first,
you’d better lose no more time, for I’ve
always understood that it’s rather an awkward
place to get at though probably you
won’t find it very difficult.”
“I care not,” said Fakrash,
“though the search be long, for in travel there
are five advantages ”
“I know,” interrupted
Horace, “so don’t stop to describe them
now. I should like to see you fairly started,
and you really mustn’t think it necessary to
break off your search again on my account, because,
thanks to you, I shall get on splendidly alone for
the future if you’ll kindly see that
that merchandise is removed.”
“Thine abode shall not be encumbered
with it for another hour,” said the Jinnee.
“O thou judicious one, in whose estimation wealth
is of no value, know that I have never encountered
a mortal who pleased me as thou hast; and moreover,
be assured that such magnanimity as thine shall not
go without a recompense!”
“How often must I tell you,”
said Horace, in a glow of impatience, “that
I am already much more than recompensed? Now,
my kind, generous old friend,” he added, with
an emotion that was not wholly insincere, “the
time has come to bid you farewell for ever.
Let me picture you as revisiting your former haunts,
penetrating to quarters of the globe (for, whether
you are aware of it or not, this earth of ours is
a globe) hitherto unknown to you, refreshing your
mind by foreign travel and the study of mankind but
never, never for a moment losing sight of your main
object, the eventual discovery of and reconciliation
with Suleyman (on whom be peace!). That is the
greatest, the only happiness you can give me now.
Good-bye, and bon voyage!”
“May Allah never deprive thy
friends of thy presence!” returned the Jinnee,
who was apparently touched by this exordium, “for
truly thou art a most excellent young man!”
And stepping back into the fireplace,
he was gone in an instant.
Ventimore sank back in his chair with
a sigh of relief. He had begun to fear that the
Jinnee never would take himself off, but he had gone
at last and for good.
He was half ashamed of himself for
feeling so glad, for Fakrash was a good-natured old
thing enough in his way. Only he would
overdo things: he had no sense of proportion.
“Why,” thought Horace, “if a fellow
expressed a modest wish for a canary in a cage he’s
just the sort of old Jinnee to bring him a whole covey
of rocs in an aviary about ten times the size
of the Crystal Palace. However, he does
understand now that I can’t take anything more
from him, and he isn’t offended either, so that’s
all settled. Now I can set to work and knock off
these plans in peace and quietness.”
But he had not done much before he
heard sounds in the next room which told him that
Beevor had returned at last. He had been expected
back from the country for the last day or two, and
it was fortunate that he had delayed so long, thought
Ventimore, as he went in to see him and to tell him
the unexpected piece of good fortune that he himself
had met with since they last met. It is needless
to say that, in giving his account, he abstained from
any mention of the brass bottle or the Jinnee, as
unessential elements in his story.
Beevor’s congratulations were
quite as cordial as could be expected, as soon as
he fully understood that no hoax was intended.
“Well, old man,” he said, “I am
glad. I really am, you know. To think of
a prize like that coming to you the very first time!
And you don’t even know how this Mr. Wackerbath
came to hear of you just happened to see
your name up outside and came in, I expect. Why,
I dare say, if I hadn’t chanced to go away as
I did and about a couple of paltry two thousand
pound houses, too! Ah, well, I don’t grudge
you your luck, though it does seem rather
It was worth waiting for; you’ll be cutting me
out before long if you don’t make
a mess of this job. I mean, you know, old chap,
if you don’t go and give your City man a Gothic
castle when what he wants is something with plenty
of plate-glass windows and a Corinthian portico.
That’s the rock I see ahead of you.
You mustn’t mind my giving you a word of warning!”
“Oh no,” said Ventimore;
“but I shan’t give him either a Gothic
castle or plenty of plate-glass. I venture to
think he’ll be pleased with the general idea
as I’m working it out.”
“Let’s hope so,”
said Beevor. “If you get into any difficulty,
you know,” he added, with a touch of patronage,
“just you come to me.”
“Thanks,” said Horace,
“I will. But I’m getting on very fairly
at present.”
“I should rather like to see
what you’ve made of it. I might be able
to give you a wrinkle here and there.”
“It’s awfully good of
you, but I think I’d rather you didn’t
see the plans till they’re quite finished,”
said Horace. The truth was that he was perfectly
aware that the other would not be in sympathy with
his ideas; and Horace, who had just been suffering
from a cold fit of depression about his work, rather
shrank from any kind of criticism.
“Oh, just as you please!”
said Beevor, a little stiffly; “you always were
an obstinate beggar. I’ve had a certain
amount of experience, you know, in my poor little
pottering way, and I thought I might possibly have
saved you a cropper or two. But if you think you
can manage better alone only don’t
get bolted with by one of those architectural hobbies
of yours, that’s all.”
“All right, old fellow.
I’ll ride my hobby on the curb,” said Horace,
laughing, as he went back to his own office, where
he found that all his former certainty and enjoyment
of his work had returned to him, and by the end of
the day he had made so much progress that his designs
needed only a few finishing touches to be complete
enough for his client’s inspection.
Better still, on returning to his
rooms that evening to change before going to Kensington,
he found that the admirable Fakrash had kept his promise every
chest, sack, and bale had been cleared away.
“Them camels come back for the
things this afternoon, sir,” said Mrs. Rapkin,
“and it put me in a fluster at first, for I made
sure you’d locked your door and took the key.
But I must have been mistook leastways,
them Arabs got in somehow. I hope you meant everything
to go back?”
“Quite,” said Horace;
“I saw the the person who sent them
this morning, and told him there was nothing I cared
for enough to keep.”
“And like his impidence sending
you a lot o’ rubbish like that on approval and
on camels, too!” declared Mrs. Rapkin. “I’m
sure I don’t know what them advertising firms
will try next pushing, I call it.”
Now that everything was gone, Horace
felt a little natural regret and doubt whether he
need have been quite so uncompromising in his refusal
of the treasures. “I might have kept some
of those tissues and things for Sylvia,” he
thought; “and she loves pearls. And a prayer-carpet
would have pleased the Professor tremendously.
But no, after all, it wouldn’t have done.
Sylvia couldn’t go about in pearls the size of
new potatoes, and the Professor would only have ragged
me for more reckless extravagance. Besides, if
I’d taken any of the Jinnee’s gifts, he
might keep on pouring more in, till I should be just
where I was before or worse off, really,
because I couldn’t decently refuse them, then.
So it’s best as it is.”
And really, considering his temperament
and the peculiar nature of his position, it is not
easy to see how he could have arrived at any other
conclusion.