Read The Genie of Sutton Place Online
Authors: George Selden
The talk ended with Aunt Lucy not wanting to look at meâ“Shall I take care of it, dear?” she said, and “No, thank you,” I answeredâand me not wanting to look at her. Maurice drove her off to a committee meeting somewhere. Aunt Lucy was very big on committees then.
The only thing I could think of to doâbecause I couldn't think of anythingâwas to get Sam washed. I managed to stretch out the bath for an hour. He was covered with eight kinds of smells, so it wasn't too hard. Sam's always seemed to like baths, too, unlike most dogs. Meanwhile, though, as I scrubbed him down and he lifted his forelegs one after the other so I could get him really clean, I was formulating my first plan ⦠I had to plan a lot, last spring.
But before I took him into the kitchen, I stowed away all my stuff in the closet. If Aunt Lucy didn't like my bones and pipes and things, I thought it was best to get them out of her sight.
By now it was getting toward eleven o'clock. Rose was futzing around the sink, just making up work to do, when Sam and I came in. She knew the crunch was on.
“Rose,” I began, “I want to thank you for cleaning up Aunt Lucy's room. It won't happen again.”
“I guess it won't.” Rose was always one for getting things out in the open where you could look at them honestly. “Your aunt told me she was asking you to get him out of the house.”
“I'm glad you happened to bring that up, Rose,” I said, “because I wanted to ask you something. Do you like Sam?”
“Sure I like him, Timâ”
“That's good!” I pressed in fast. “Because I'm giving him to you! For a present. And, also, I thought I might come into your room to visit him now and then.”
For a while Rose didn't say anything. Her face was working, to decide what to say. Then she made up her mind. “Timmy, that is certainly the richest present I've ever been offered, because I know how much Sam means to you. But Miss Farr wants him out of the apartment. I can't keep him with me, as much as I'd dearly love to.” I'd known all along, of course. It was just a wild hope. But wild hopes sometimes pay off. (The wildest one I ever had came later that day.) Rose went on, “Would you like me to ask my friends, if anybodyâ”
“Oh, no. No, thank you, Rose.” I couldn't stand the idea of Sam living with strangers, and maybe so far away that I couldn't go visit him. “I'll work it out.”
In the sticky silence that followed, Maurice came back. It was part of his deal with Aunt Lucy that he got lunchâa big hot lunch, even in summer, he made sure of thatâevery day.
“Modom says she won't be home until evening. She's been made chairman of the Friends of Retired Librarians Committee. It's a very great honor.” He toed Sam disdainfully away from under the table so he could sit down, and his eyes picked me over with a smile. “However, she said that I was to be at the disposal of young Master Farr all afternoon. For anything he might wish.”
“I don't wish anything!” I snapped. “I can do what I have to myself.”
Rose put some space between us by saying, “Hey, Tim, I'm cooking Maurice a cube steakâyou want one, too?”
“No, thank you, Rose,” I said. “I'm going down to Greenwich Village. In a taxi!” Aunt Lucy was making me give my dog away, but she always made sure I had plenty of pocket money.
I went into my bedroom and put on my jacket. When I got back to the kitchen, Maurice's
hot
cube steak was cooking, and Rose was nervously doing her crossword puzzle.
“Say goodbye to Rose, Sam,” I said. He put his paws up in her lap and licked one hand.
“'Bye, Sam,” said Rose and squinted down into her puzzle. “Now will someone please explain to me just what's an eleven-letter word meaning âto dispose of completely'?”
Maurice had the answer: “
EXTERMINATE
!”
4
The Great Day
“What mortal or immortal being craves admittance toâ”
“It's just me, Madame Sosostris,” I called from the front room. She always goes into her spiel when the bell over the front door goes off.
“Hi, Tim!” She came out from the back with her usual clothes on: Levi's, a purple blouse, and the tie-dyed turban. She bent over and hugged and kissed me. “It's always a whiff of ectoplasm to see you, lad!”
“How's business?” I was kind of afraid to start the subject.
“Oh, the junk keeps moving all right. But nothing exciting. Had the Willy sisters in yesterday. And read a palm this morning.”
“Anything interesting in it?”
“Nah! Might just as well have been the yellow pages. You can't imagine how
dull
some lives are! How's by you, Tim?”
“I have worries, Madame Sosostris.”
“I was wondering about that.” She nodded. “Your face looks like something left over from a raid by a poltergeist. Come on in the kitchenâwe'll thrash it out over a cuppa tea.”
I told her all about it. And just as I was getting down to the nitty-gritty, there came the
second
horrendous crash that day. Sam, of course. He always enjoyed browsing as much as I, or Lorenzo or Madame Sosostris, but he didn't do it as carefully. It was an old Egyptian tray this time, made of bronze, so fortunately it didn't break. But there was this big ugly dent in one corner.
“Don't give it a thought!” said Madame Sosostris. She waved her hand grandly in the air. “Nobody'll know if that dent was made today or two hundred years ago. It adds to the antiquity. I'll jack up the price ten bucks!”
I love Madame S. But my heart felt like a wrung-out dishrag. “It won't work,” I said.
I hadn't even asked her yet, but Madame Sosostris grabbed me by the shoulders and shouted, “Of course Sam can live down here! I know how much that dog means to youâso he means that much to me.”
“He'd wreck the place. All the glassâ”
“The hell with the glass! I'll get rid of the glass. I'll specialize in metal junk. Besides, when I have my breakthrough as a medium, I'm going to give it all up anyway. Sam can't damage the Spirits!”
“Madame Sosostrisâit just won't work.”
She knew it wouldn't, too. “Back to the kitchen. I got a crystal ball last week from the Gypsies' Association of Spain. It turned out to be a dud, but don't give up hope.”
“Oh, Madame Sosostris, this is serious! We can't use a silly thing like a crystalâ” The way to the kitchen led through the séance room, and on the way back I suddenly felt Lorenzo's books all around. It was just as if the whole library had whispered something softly to me. I had been planning to smuggle them up a few at a time to Sutton Place, but “Now,” they seemed to be saying, “
now!
”
“Madame Sosostris,” I said, “you remember Lorenzo's will? His books? He said there were wonders in themâand unexpected assistanceâ”
“I rememberâ”
“Come on. We've got to look through every one!”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
A frantic search began. It took us practically all afternoon. And we did come up with some fascinating stuff before I discovered the spell.
Madame Sosostris found the formula for a love potion and suggested we cook it up and give it to Aunt Lucy, so then she'd love Sam. But it sounded too icky and dangerous to me.
She also turned up a curse Lorenzo had heard from a Tanganyikan witch doctor on his travels in Africa. “âMay baboons bathe in your blighted blood!' Boy, that would certainly freeze the landlord!”
“Madame Sosostris, I don't want to curse anybody,” I said. “Please keep looking for something constructive.”
I was going through the section of books that made up Lorenzo's diary when I found it.
“Here's something. Listen, Madame Sosostris. âLondon, May 14, 1938. Arrived this morning and went immediately to the British Museum, Near Eastern Division. Could not locate the manuscript I desiredâa treatise on certain psychogenic herbs by the court physician of Haroun Al-Raschidâbut did discover most interesting translation, purportedly made by a Dominican friar in 1601, of Al-Hazred's
Necronomicon.
Contains much esoteric information. Especially fascinated by following spell, a verse for conjuring the Slave of the Carpetâwhoever that might be. Upon trial, however, it proved a failure. Perhaps spoken in the original Arabic, its success might be greater.' And here's the spell, Madame Sosostrisâ
Genie formed of earth and sky,
Skin of night, with lunar eye,
Bone of mountain, blood of sea
â
Come hither, Thou, and wait on me!”
Nothing happened.
“Lorenzo was right,” said Madame Sosostris. “It's as much of a fake as the Gypsies' Association of Spain.”
Nothing happened, I mean, outside my head. But
inside
âit was as if a quick wind blew through my brain.
“Where can I find someone who knows Arabic?”
“Oh, Tim, come on! You don't believe that nonsense. It's my crystal ball all over again.”
“Madame Sosostris!âyou
know
how important Lorenzo always said language was. And particularly in spells. Now
where
?”
“Well, at the library. Or the National Museum. They've got a big Near Eastern wing up there. Butâ”
“Can I take this page out of the diary? With just the spell on it?”
“They're your books, Tim.”
“Come on, Sam!” I shouted. “Goodbye, Madame S.! Don't sell the glass!”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The National Museum has always been one of my favorite places. I caught Lorenzo's enthusiasm the first time we went there. I love a spot, like the National or Madame Sosostris's antique shop, where the things of the past that might have died still have a chance.
There are bushes in front of the building, and I told Sam to get in under the leaves and stay thereâand stay away from other dogs, too, because this was a very important day. There was no time for socializing. Then I ran up the big flight of stairs to the entrance. Usually I like to march up solemnlyâit feels formal and funâbut not today.
I asked a guard where I could find an expert in Arabic, of course without telling him whyâno sense wasting time with disbelief. He said the chairman's office of the Near Eastern Division was just down that hall and pointed the way.
But the chairman, when I told him I wanted a spell translated, looked busy and said, “Try Mr. Dickinson. Basement rear, to the left. He's an expert on spells.”
It turned out that Mr. Dickinson wasn't an expert on spellsâas yetâalthough he did know Arabic very well. His field was Near Eastern crockery. I found him in this crazy little room all full of pieces of broken pots and bowls. A lot of them came from a time much earlier than I was after, but they were interesting anyway. It was his job to try to fit the pieces together. I liked him for the patience it must have taken. And I also liked the way his hair, which was fluffy and white, puffed out around his ears.
“Sir,” I began at the door, “I have this spell that I'd like translated into Arabic.”
“Oh, how delightful! A spell.” Naturally he didn't believe it either. “Come in, come in. But I'm afraid that someone's been teasing you. My study is crockery.”
“Oh, that's all right,” I said. “Would you just translate this, please?”
I gave him the page from Lorenzo's diary, and he read the verse over, murmuring, “Charming! Absolutely charming!”
“I'm sorry to bother you,” I said. “But I don't speak Arabic. Just English. And a little bit of Latin.”
“I tell you what,” said Mr. Dickinson. “I'll write this out phonetically. You just have to pronounce the syllables.”
“That will be fine,” I said.
He kind of mumbled and hummed to himself as he worked. Then when he was finished, he said, “Now I'll just read it once aloud toâ”
“
No
! Please.” I took the paper out of his hand. “I'll do that.”
“A very curious incantation,” said Mr. Dickinson. “Might I ask who invented it?”
“A man named Al-Hazred.”
Beneath his puff balls Mr. Dickinson's ears pricked up. “Akbar Al-Hazred? The Master of Magic?”
That wind began to blow through my brain again. Just a little breeze nowâbut growing. “You know him?”
“Akbar Al-Rizna Al-Hazredâ” Mr. Dickinson's voice got kind of teachy, but I didn't mindâ“the Master of Magic, as subsequent sorcerers, warlocks, and alchemists styled him, was a man who lived in the eighth century of our era. And he was reputed to be a great and powerful wizard. Upstairs we have a tapestryâthe Wizard's Tapestry, it's calledâsupposed to have been woven by him, or at least under his command. In fact, we have
two
rooms upstairs containing objects that are supposed to have belonged to him.”
I'd been in one of them, with Lorenzo. The wind started up in my heart nowâstrong. “This is a spell to summon the Slave of the Carpetâhow strange. The Slave of the Carpet.” Mr. Dickinson puckered his forehead at me and was quiet awhile.
I got my voice back into my throat and said, “What's strange about it, sir?”
“Wellâeveryone has always supposed that thisâfabric, shall we say?âwas a tapestry. It's so absolutely gorgeous! But it's barely possible that it might have been a carpet. The coincidence is that in the thing there's woven the figure ofâa genie.”
At that moment I knew. The wind blowing through me had only been hope. But now I was sure. After all, it stood to reason that if the spell was going to work anywhere, it surely would right in front of the carpet. Mr. Dickinson called it “coincidence.” Some people say “fate” or “luck” or “chance.” But there are times when everything fits together, like one of Mr. Dickinson's broken pots. I
knew.
And I was petrified! Because anyone who fools around with the Occult Sciences is asking for trouble. There are lots of things that ought to be kept out. But there was no help for itâI had to go on. And it had to be today.