These are two discoveries of the Fillory and Further novels. (From the Magicians, by Lev Grossman)
One is an excerpt from "The World in the Walls, below. The other is a biography of Plover and the Chatwins, in a world that knows magic.
The World in the Walls: Book I of Fillory and Further
By Christopher Plover
Chapter 1: The Wonderful Clock
Martin Chatwin was not an ordinary boy, but he thought that he was. In
fact he was unusually clever and brave and kind for his age, he just
didn’t know it. Martin thought that he was just an ordinary boy who
lived in a rather nice but otherwise ordinary house in London, with two
nice parents and four nice but occasionally absolutely infuriating
brothers and sisters, and that was the end of it.
I find that this is very often the case. Extraordinary people tend to
think that they’re ordinary, and the reverse is true as well — the world
is filled with people who believe that they are special and unusual,
when in fact they are mediocre in every possible respect. But even
Martin would admit that what happened to him at his Aunt Maude’s house
was out of the ordinary, if you asked him, which I’m sorry to say that
you cannot do. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves — it hasn’t even
happened yet.
When our story begins Martin isn’t living in London. He and the other
Chatwin children-Fiona, Rupert, Helen and Jane-have been sent to
Cornwall to live with their Aunt Maude, who was Mrs. Chatwin’s sister.
Why this should have happened is difficult to explain, and Martin
himself wasn’t at all sure that it had been properly explained to him.
Apparently his father had gone away to fight the Germans at place called
Passchendaele, which he could just about pronounce but not spell, and
why the Germans needed fighting at all in the first place was very
unclear. Meanwhile in his father’s absence his mother had become
exhausted and had gone away to a place in the country that was supposed
to be very quiet and restful, where she could recover in peace.
More than that Martin couldn’t get out of the adults he asked. Even
though they looked at him very kindly and comfortingly, they were very
stingy when it came to giving out actual information, as adults often
are.
The house to which Martin and his siblings had been sent, Aunt Maude’s
house, was in one of those tiny villages in north Cornwall that seem to
exist by accident, tumbled in with huge boulders and rugged hills and
old stone circles erected a long time ago by nobody is precisely sure
who. The house was very grand — three stories tall, with a façade made
of brick and stone, and enormous windows, and endless numbers of
fireplaces and window seats and curving back stairs and other advantages
which the Chatwins’ London house distinctly lacked. Among those
advantages were the sprawling grounds around the house, which included
long straight alles and white gravel paths and dark green pools of
grass.
When I first met the Chatwin children they were arranged around the edge
of a round fountain in back of Maude’s house, collars turned up and
hands thrust in their coat pockets against the icy wind, trying to make
some sense of their new surroundings. It was a chilly afternoon in late
October, and I can only assume they’d been driven outside by that
feeling of boredom and restlessness for the sake of which children will
endure almost any discomfort. My own house was a mile or so away, closer
to the village, and I had come over to make arrangements with Maude
about the hunt next weekend, but she was not at home, and to be
completely honest I was a little out of sorts at having made the trip
for nothing.
The Chatwins were out of sorts too, or maybe it would be more accurate
to say that they were both in and out of sorts at the same time — if
you’ve ever had that happen you’ll know exactly what I mean. They missed
their mother, and they were terribly worried about their father, but
they were also very excited about their new situation — grand old house,
a bare minimum of lessons, a crackle of important events in the air —
and they also felt a bit guilty about feeling so excited, so they
weren’t sure whether they were feeling happy or unhappy or excited or
guilty, and in the end they felt a bit of each all at once.
The eldest Chatwin — who was 11, and who I did not know yet was named
Martin — sized me up warily, as if he thought I might try to deprive him
of his newfound kingdom.
“Who are you?” he said, not entirely politely. His face was sharp with precocious intelligence.
“My name’s Plover,” I replied. “I came to see Maude, but she isn’t here. Who are you?”
“I’m Martin. I’m Maude’s nephew. These are Fiona, Rupert, Helen and
Jane. Jane’s the littlest, she won’t talk to anyone who wears whiskers,
so try not to be offended. Rupes will talk your ears off, but you don’t
have to listen. I never do.” “I see,” I said, and I imagine that I did. I
didn’t feel offended at all. They were a curious little tribe, who’d
obviously spent a lot of time looking after each other. You wouldn’t
ever catch them saying or doing anything openly affectionate, or even
particularly acknowledging one another’s existence, but at the same time
a current of absolute loyalty ran between them, as if even then they
shared some momentous secret.
“When do you suppose your aunt will be at home?” I asked. “I need to
speak with her about the arrangements for the hunt.” (I’m sorry for
repeating myself, but that is what I said, as Martin didn’t know it
yet.)
“We don’t know. No one ever tells us anything. If you like I’ll help you
with the hunt, I’m very good with horses. Everyone says so.” “I don’t,”
his sister Fiona said lightly. “So not everyone does.”
“Martin’s got a big head because he came second at jumping at school,”
Rupert said. “I’m not allowed to jump yet,” he added, as if I’d demanded
clarification on that point. “What’s your horse’s name? Do you do ride a
great deal?”
Little Jane merely regarded her reflection in the water with an air of
melancholy thoughtfulness that seemed beyond her years. The fountain had
absolutely monstrous goldfish swimming in it, and she was so small I
worried that an enterprising fish might seize her by the hand and try to
drag her under. Helen watched Jane watching herself, as if it were on
the tip of her tongue to remind her that vanity was a sin.
“Buttons, and yes,” I said, and made my excuses. I really did need to find Maude.
I next saw Martin and his brothers and sisters the following weekend, on
the day of the hunt. I wasn’t planning on going out, and neither was
Maude. She wasn’t mad about hunting, nor was she mad about being a
mother to her sister’s children, but she was exceptionally good at
giving parties, so that’s what she did. She was so good at it that
almost nobody bothered with much actual hunting anymore. Hardly anyone
even wore red. When I arrrived, well-dressed individuals of all
descriptions were posed in flattering attitudes around the first floor
of the house and on the rear terrace.
Maude herself was in full cry and looking very sleek in a black dress
well set off by a single long rope of pearls. The talk was mostly of the
war-not being in it, everybody wanted to look as if they knew what it
was like for those who were, and they wanted everyone else to know they
had very good reasons for not being in it.
As a single man of what might charitably be ruled early middle age, I
was something of an anomaly at the Maude’s parties. But I was not as
much of an anomaly as the five Chatwin children. After the first hour
they were bored of all the grown-up talk, even the grown-up talk that
was intended to interest them, and they had stolen all of the
hors-d’oeuvres that any self-respecting child could plausibly bring him
or herself to eat. So naturally they slipped away up one of the curving
back staircases to see what they could see.
I only learned much later of the adventures that befell them there. Of
course I wasn’t there myself — these are the kinds of adventures
grown-ups cannot go on. But Martin and the other Chatwins told me all
about them later on, and I will tell you exactly what they told me.
Martin had a hobby, one that interested him and bored his younger
siblings so intensely that it sometimes reduced little Jane to tears.
His hobby was clockwork: he loved taking apart and then re-assembling
the mechanisms of watches and clocks and little wind-up toys, though
admittedly he was better at the first half of the operation than the
second. A few days earlier he had encountered a truly stupendous
specimen in a back corridor of one of the upper floors of his aunt’s
house. It was a grandfather clock, a really wonderful timepiece with a
face lavishly adorned with dials and numbers and zodiacal symbols,
designed to keep track not only of the time of day but the months of the
year and the seasons and the phases of the moon and goodness knows what
else. Martin knew what else, and what he didn’t know he was determined
to find out.
While Fiona and Rupert and Helen and Jane looked on, in various states
of near-fatal ennui, Martin stared at the clock, observing the movements
of its hands, until he was confident that he understood what function
each of them was intended to perform. Only then did he gently open the
glass case that covered its face.
“Martin, no,” Fiona said. “You’ll break it.”
“I won’t.”
“You know he won’t, Fi,” Helen said.
“But what if he does? We’ll all be blamed.”
“Martin could knock it over and stamp it to pieces and Aunt Maude
wouldn’t notice,” Rupert said. “I doubt she’s been up here in 10 years. I
don’t think she’s interested in this sort of thing. She probably
doesn’t even know it’s here.”
At that moment, as if to make his case for him, someone downstairs began playing the piano and singing a tipsy chorus.
“Somebody must come up here to wind the thing, anyway,” Fiona said. And
it was true, the clock was ticking and tocking along heartily.
“It’s immaterial,” Martin said, never taking his eye off his quarry. He
had discovered that he could use words like that correctly, and he loved
doing it. “I won’t break it. Bother, I can’t get at the works this
way.”
He closed the glass case and turned his attention to the large wooden
cabinet that made up the body of the clock. But it was locked. He felt
around for a key — in his experience they were generally left on top of
the item in question — but whoever was in charge of winding the clock
had kept the key for him or herself.
While Martin pondered this new setback, silent Jane stole forward.
Removing two pins from her hair, she pushed them in the keyhole of the
cabinet. She spent the next minute quietly manipulating them, pushing
and nudging the hidden tumblers in ways the others couldn’t see. Then
the lock clicked open.
She withdrew again, without a word.
“Thanks, Janey,” Martin muttered, abashed. He had long since learned
that he could never, ever know what to expect from his youngest sister.
Martin thought he knew what to expect from clocks — it was one of the
things he liked most about them. When he opened the door he did the
first thing he always did when he was trying to disassemble a
complicated, expensive, forbidden device: he stopped it, in this case by
taking the pendulum in his hand and preventing it from swinging. Once
he had done so he was surprised for the second time in the span of a
minute: the clock continued to tick along happily, oblivious to the fact
that there was no obvious way it could justify doing so. Now, Martin
liked things that came with explanations, and of late he had been
experiencing a marked shortage of them. But he was not easily daunted.
After all, since the war began he had become, not just the father of his
little family, but for all intents and purposes a widower at the age of
11. A newfangled technique for driving clockwork was not about to stop
him in his tracks. He proceeded — as any English boy in his position
would have done — to stick his head inside the clock.
But now there was another thing that demanded explaining, or three
things to be exact: the gentle breeze that issued from the open cabinet,
and the smell of sweet grass that it carried with it, and the sound of a
whinnying horse and the clash of arms.
I wish now that I could have been there, to tell him to turn back. But I
didn’t know then what I know now, and in any case I was downstairs
playing “I’m Always Chasing Rainbows” on the piano, and not very well at
that. And even if I had told him, no force in this world or any other
could have held Martin back from his destiny at that moment.
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