The Man in the High Castle (24 page)

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Authors: Philip K. Dick

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BOOK: The Man in the High Castle
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All sorts of possibilities. The SD can’t really get this fellow out of the PSA without my active cooperation. If I can only hit on precisely the right twist…
I hate people who go over my head, Freiherr Reiss said to himself. It makes me too damn uncomfortable. It makes me so nervous that I can’t sleep, and when I can’t sleep I can’t do my job. So I owe it to Germany to correct this problem. I’d be a lot more comfortable at night and in the daytime, too, for that matter, if this low-class Bavarian thug were back home writing up reports in some obscure Gau police station.
The trouble is,
there’s not the time
. While I’m trying to decide how to—
The phone rang.
This time Kreuz vom Meere reached out to take it and Consul Reiss did not bar the way. “Hello,” Kreuz vom Meere said into the receiver. A moment of silence as he listened.
Already? Reiss thought.
But the SD chief was holding out the phone. “For you.”
Secretly relaxing with relief, Reiss took the phone.
“It’s some schoolteacher,” Kreuz vom Meere said. “Wants to know if you can give them scenic posters of Austria for their class.”
Toward eleven o’clock in the morning, Robert Childan shut up his store and set off, on foot, for Mr. Paul Kasoura’s business office.
Fortunately, Paul was not busy. He greeted Childan politely and offered him tea.
“I will not bother you long,” Childan said after they had both begun sipping. Paul’s office, although small, was modern and simply furnished. On the wall one single superb print: Mokkei’s Tiger, a late-thirteenth-century masterpiece.
“I’m always happy to see you, Robert,” Paul said, in a tone that held—Childan thought—perhaps a trace of aloofness.
Or perhaps it was his imagination. Childan glanced cautiously over his teacup. The man certainly looked friendly. And yet—Childan sensed a change.
“Your wife,” Childan said, “was disappointed by my crude gift. I possibly insulted. However, with something new and untried, as I explained to you when I grafted it to you, no proper or final evaluation can be made—at least not by someone in the purely business end. Certainly, you and Betty are in a better position to judge than I.”
Paul said, “She was not disappointed, Robert. I did not give the piece of jewelry to her.” Reaching into his desk, he brought out the small white box. “It has not left this office.”
He knows, Childan thought. Smart man. Never even told her. So that’s that. Now, Childan realized, let’s hope he’s not going to rave at me. Some kind of accusation about my trying to seduce his wife.
He could ruin me, Childan said to himself. Carefully he continued sipping his tea, his face impassive.
“Oh?” he said mildly. “Interesting.”
Paul opened the box, brought out the pin and began inspecting it. He held it to the light, turned it over and around.
“I took the liberty of showing this to a number of business acquaintances,” Paul said, “individuals who share my taste for American historic objects or for artifacts of general artistic, esthetic merit.” He eyed Robert Childan. “None of course had ever seen such as this before. As you explained, no such contemporary work hithertofore has been known. I think, too, you informed that you are sole representative.”
“Yes, that is so,” Childan said.
“You wish to hear their reaction?”
Childan bowed.
“These persons,” Paul said, “laughed.”
Childan was silent.
“Yet I, too, laughed behind my hand, invisible to you,” Paul said, “the other day when you appeared and showed me this thing. Naturally to protect your sangfroid, I concealed that amusement; as you no doubt recall, I remained more or less noncommittal in my apparent reaction.”
Childan nodded.
Studying the pin, Paul went on. “One can easily understand this reaction. Here is a piece of metal which has been melted until it has become shapeless. It represents nothing. Nor does it have design, of any intentional sort. It is merely amorphous. One might say, it is mere content, deprived of form.”
Childan nodded.
“Yet,” Paul said, “I have for several days now inspected it, and for no logical reason
I feel a certain emotional fondness
. Why is that? I may ask. I do not even now project into this blob, as in psychological German tests, my own psyche. I still see no shapes or forms. But it somehow partakes of Tao. You see?” He motioned Childan over. “It is balanced. The forces within this piece are stabilized. At rest. So to speak, this object has made its peace with the universe. It has separated from it and hence has managed to come to homeostasis.”
Childan nodded, studied the piece. But Paul had lost him.
“It does not have
wabi,
” Paul said, “nor could it ever. But—” He touched the pin with his nail. “Robert, this object has
wu
.”
“I believe you are right,” Childan said, trying to recall what
wu
was; it was not a Japanese word—it was Chinese. Wisdom, he decided. Or comprehension. Anyhow, it was highly good.
“The hands of the artificer,” Paul said, “had
wu,
and allowed that
wu
to flow into this piece. Possibly he himself knows only that this piece satisfies. It is complete, Robert. By contemplating it, we gain more
wu
ourselves. We experience the tranquillity associated not with art but with holy things. I recall a shrine in Hiroshima wherein a shinbone of some medieval saint could be examined. However, this is an artifact and that was a relic. This is alive in the now, whereas that merely
remained
. By this meditation, conducted by myself at great length since you were last here, I have come to identify the value which this has in opposition to historicity. I am deeply moved, as you may see.”
“Yes,” Childan said.
“To have no historicity, and also no artistic, esthetic worth, and yet to partake of some ethereal value—that is a marvel. Just precisely because this is a miserable, small, worthless-looking blob; that, Robert, contributes to its possessing
wu
. For it is a fact that
wu
is customarily found in least imposing places, as in the Christian aphorism, ‘stones rejected by the builder.’ One experiences awareness of
wu
in such trash as an old stick, or a rusty beer can by the side of the road. However, in those cases, the
wu
is within the viewer. It is a religious experience. Here, an artificer has put
wu
into the object, rather than merely witnessed the
wu
inherent in it.” He glanced up. “Am I making myself clear?”
“Yes,” Childan said.
“In other words, an entire new world is pointed to, by this. The name for it is neither art, for it has no form, nor religion. What is it? I have pondered this pin unceasingly, yet cannot fathom it. We evidently lack the word for an object like this. So you are right, Robert. It is authentically a new thing on the face of the world.”
Authentic, Childan thought. Yes, it certainly is. I catch that notion. But as to the rest—
“Having meditated to this avail,” Paul continued, “I next called back in here the selfsame business acquaintances. I took it upon myself, as I have done with you just now, to deliver an expostulation devoid of tact. This subject carries authority which compels an abandonment of propriety, so great is the necessity of delivering the awareness itself. I required that these individuals listen.”
Childan knew that for a Japanese such as Paul to force his ideas on other persons was an almost incredible situation.
“The result,” Paul said, “was sanguine. They were able to adopt under such duress my viewpoint; they perceived what I had delineated. So it was worth it. Having done that, I rested. Nothing more, Robert. I am exhausted.” He laid the pin back in the box. “Responsibility with me has ended. Discharged.” He pushed the box to Childan.
“Sir, it’s yours,” Childan said, feeling apprehensive; the situation did not fit any model he had ever experienced. A high-placed Japanese lauding to the skies a gift grafted to him—and then returning it. Childan felt his knees wobble. He did not have any idea what to do; he stood plucking at his sleeve, his face flushing.
Calmly, even harshly, Paul said, “Robert, you must face reality with more courage.”
Blanching, Childan stammered, “I’m confused by—”
Paul stood up, facing him. “Take heed. The task is yours. You are the sole agent for this piece and others of its ilk. Also you are a professional. Withdraw for a period into isolation. Meditate, possibly consult the
Book of Changes
. Then study your window displays, your ads, your system of merchandising.”
Childan gaped at him.
“You will see your way,” Paul said. “How you must go about putting these objects over in a big fashion.”
Childan felt stunned. The man’s telling me I’m
obliged
to assume moral responsibility for the Edfrank jewelry! Crackpot neurotic Japanese world view: nothing less than number-one spiritual and business relationship with the jewelry tolerable in the eyes of Paul Kasoura.
And the worst part of it was that Paul certainly spoke with authority, right out of dead center of Japanese culture and tradition.
Obligation, he thought bitterly. It could stick with him the rest of his life, once incurred. Right to the grave itself. Paul had—to his own satisfaction, anyhow—discharged his. But Childan’s; ah, that regrettably had the earmark of being unending.
They’re out of their minds, Childan said to himself. Example: they won’t help a hurt man up from the gutter due to the obligation it imposes. What do you call that? I say that’s typical; just what you’d expect from a race that when told to duplicate a British destroyer managed even to copy the patches on the boiler as well as—
Paul was eying him intently. Fortunately, long habit had caused Childan to suppress any show of authentic feelings automatically. He assumed a bland, sober expression, persona that correctly matched the nature of the situation. He could sense it there, the mask.
This is dreadful, Childan realized. A catastrophe. Better Paul had thought I was trying to seduce his wife.
Betty. There was no chance now that she would see the piece, that his original plan would come off.
Wu
was incompatible with sexuality; it was, as Paul said, solemn and holy, like a relic.
“I gave each of these individuals one of your cards,” Paul said.
“Pardon?” Childan said, preoccupied.
“Your business cards. So that they could come in and inspect other examples.”
“I see,” Childan said.
“There is one more thing,” Paul said. “One of these individuals wishes to discuss this entire subject with you at his location. I have written out his name and address.” Paul handed Childan a folded square of paper. “He wants his business colleagues to hear.” Paul added, “He is an importer. He imports and exports on a mass basis. Especially to South America. Radios, cameras, binoculars, tape recorders, the like.”
Childan gazed down at the paper.
“He deals, of course, in immense quantity,” Paul said. “Perhaps tens of thousands of each item. His company controls various enterprises that manufacture for him at low overhead, all located in the Orient where there is cheaper labor.”
“Why is he—” Childan began.
Paul said, “Pieces such as this…” He picked up the pin once more, briefly. Closing the lid, he returned the box to Childan. “…can be mass-produced. Either in base metal or plastic. From a mold. In any quantity desired.”
After a time Childan said, “What about
wu
? Will that remain in the pieces?”
Paul said nothing.
“You advise me to see him?” Childan said.
“Yes,” Paul said.
“Why?”
“Charms,” Paul said.
Childan stared.
“Good-luck charms. To be worn. By relatively poor people. A line of amulets to be peddled all over Latin America and the Orient. Most of the masses still believe in magic, you know. Spells. Potions. It’s a big business, I am told.” Paul’s face was wooden, his voice toneless.
“It sounds,” Childan said slowly, “as if there would be a good deal of money in it.”
Paul nodded.
“Was this your idea?” Childan said.
“No,” Paul said. He was silent, then.
Your employer, Childan thought. You showed the piece to your superior, who knows this importer. Your superior—or some influential person over your head, someone who has power over you, someone rich and big—contacted this importer.
That’s why you’re giving it back to me, Childan realized. You want no part of this. But you know what I know: that I will go to this address and see this man. I have to. I have no choice. I will lease the designs, or sell them on a percentage basis; some deal will be made between me and this party.
Clearly out of your hands. Entirely. Bad taste on your part to presume to stop me or argue with me.

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