Philip K. Dick - The Man in the High Castle

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THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE
by Philip K. Dick
To my wife Tessa and my son Christopher,
with great and awful love
This Berkley book contains the complete
text of the original hardcover edition.
It has been completely reset in a typeface
designed for easy reading, and was printed
from new film.
THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE
A Berkley Book / published by arrangement with
G. P. Putnam's Sons
PRINTING HISTORY
G. P. Putnam's Sons edition published 1962
Berkley Medallion edition / April 1974
Berkley edition / January 1981
Tenth printing / September 1982
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1962 by Philip K. Dick.
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part,
by mimeograph or any other means, without permission.
For information address: G. P. Putnam's Sons,
200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
ISBN: 0-425-05051-3
A BERKLEY BOOK ® TM 757,375
Berkley Books are published by Berkley Publishing Corporation,
200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
The name "BERKLEY" and the stylized "B" with design
are trademarks belonging to Berkley Publishing Corporation.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The version of the I Ching or Book of Changes used and quoted in this novel is the Richard Wilhelm
translation rendered into English by Cary F. Baynes, published by Pantheon Books, Bollingen Series
XIX, 1950, by the Bollingen Foundation, Inc., New York.
The haiku on page 45 is by Yosa Buson, translated by
Harold G. Henderson, from the Anthology of Japanese
Literature, Volume One, compiled and edited by Donald
Keene, Grove Press, 1955, New York.
The waka on page 128 is by Chiyo, translated by Daisetz T. Suzuki, from Zen and Japanese
Culture, by Daisetz T. Suzuki, published by Pantheon Books, Bollingen Series LXIV, 1959, by the
Bollingen Foundation, Inc., New York,
I have made much use of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, A History of Nazi Germany,
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by William L. Shirer, Simon and Schuster, 1960, New York; Hitler, a Study in Tyranny,
byAlanBullock, Harper, 1953, New York; The Goebbels Diaries, 1942-1943, edited and translated by
Louis P. Lochner, Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1948, New York; The Tibetan Book of the Dead,
compiled and edited by W. Y. Evans-Wentz, Oxford University Press, 1960, New York; The Foxes of
the Desert, by Paul Carell, E.P. Dutton & Company, Inc., 1961, New York. And I owe personal thanks
to the eminent Western writer Will Cook for his help with material dealing with historic artifacts
and the U. S. Frontier Period.
1
For a week Mr. R. Childan had been anxiously watching the mail. But the valuable shipment
from the Rocky Mountain States had not arrived. As he opened up his store on Friday morning and
saw only letters on the floor by the mail slot he thought, I'm going to have an angry customer.
Pouring himself a cup of instant tea from the five-cent wall dispenser he got a broom and
began to sweep; soon he had the front of American Artistic Handcrafts Inc. ready for the day, all
spick and span with the cash register full of change, a fresh vase of marigolds, and the radio
playing background music. Outdoors along the sidewalk businessmen hurried toward their offices
along Montgomery Street. Far off, a cable car passed; Childan halted to watch it with pleasure.
Women in their long colorful silk dresses . . . he watched them, too. Then the phone rang. He
turned to answer it.
"Yes," a familiar voice said to his answer. Childan's heart sank. "This is Mr. Tagomi. Did
my Civil War recruiting poster arrive yet, sir? Please recall; you promised it sometime last
week." The fussy, brisk voice, barely polite, barely keeping the code. "Did I not give you a
deposit, sir, Mr. Childan, with that stipulation? This is to be a gift, you see. I explained that.
A client."
"Extensive inquiries," Childan began, "which I've had made at my own expense, Mr. Tagomi,
sir, regarding the promised parcel, which you realize originates outside of this region and is
therefore--"
But Tagomi broke in, "Then it has not arrived."
"No, Mr. Tagomi, sir."
An icy pause.
"I can wait no furthermore," Tagomi said.
"No sir." Childan gazed morosely through the store window at the warm bright day and the
San Francisco office buildings.
"A substitute, then. Your recommendation, Mr. Chil_dan_?" Tagomi deliberately
mispronounced the name; insult within the code that made Childan's ears burn. Place pulled, the
dreadful mortification of their situation. Robert Childan's aspirations and fears and torments
rose up and exposed themselves, swamped him, stopping his tongue. He stammered, his hand sticky on
the phone. The air of his store smelled of the marigolds; the music played on, but he felt as if
he were falling into some distant sea.
"Well . . ." he managed to mutter. "Butter churn. Icecream maker circa 1900." His mind
refused to think. Just when you forgot about it; just when you fool yourself. He was thirty-eight
years old, and he could remember the prewar days, the other times. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the
World's Fair; the former better world. "Could I bring various desirable items out to your business
location?" he mumbled.
An appointment was made for two o'clock. Have to shut store, he knew as he hung up the
phone. No choice. Have to keep goodwill of such customers; business depends on them.
Standing shakily, he became aware that someone--a couple had entered the store. Young man
and girl, both handsome, well-dressed. Ideal. He calmed himself and moved professionally, easily,
in their direction, smiling. They were bending to scrutinize a counter display, had picked up a
lovely ashtray. Married, he guessed. Live out in City of the Winding Mists, the new exclusive
apartments on Skyline overlooking Belmont.
"Hello," he said, and felt better. They smiled at him without any superiority, only
kindness. His displays--which really were the best of their kind on the Coast--had awed them a
little; he saw that and was grateful. They understood.
"Really excellent pieces, sir," the young man said.
Childan bowed spontaneously.
Their eyes, warm not only with human bond but with the shared enjoyment of the art objects
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he sold, their mutual tastes and satisfactions, remained fixed on him; they were thanking him for
having things like these for them to see, pick up and examine, handle perhaps without even buying.
Yes, he thought, they know what sort of store they are in; this is not tourist trash, not redwood
plaques reading _Muir Woods, Mann County, PSA_, or funny signs or girly rings or postcards or
views of the Bridge. The girl's eyes especially, large, dark. How easily, Childan thought, I could
fall in love with a girl like this. How tragic my life, then; as if it weren't bad enough already.
The stylish black hair, lacquered nails, pierced ears for the long dangling brass handmade
earrings.
"Your earrings," he murmured. "Purchased here, perhaps?"
"No," she said. "At home."
Childan nodded. No contemporary American art; only the past could be represented here, in
a store such as his. "You are here for long?" he asked. "To our San Francisco?"
"I'm stationed here indefinitely," the man said. "With Standard of Living for Unfortunate
Areas Planning Commission of Inquiry." Pride showed on his face. Not the military. Not one of the
gum-chewing boorish draftees with their greedy peasant faces, wandering up Market Street, gaping
at the bawdy shows, the sex movies, the shooting galleries, the cheap nightclubs with photos of
middle-aged blondes holding their nipples between their wrinkled fingers and leering . . . the
honkytonk jazz slums that made up most of the flat part of San Francisco, rickety tin and board
shacks that had sprung up from the ruins even before the last bomb fell. No--this man was of the
elite. Cultured, educated, even more so than Mr. Tagomi, who was after all a high official with
the ranking Trade Mission on the Pacific Coast. Tagomi was an old man. His attitudes had formed in
the War Cabinet days.
"Had you wished American traditional ethnic art objects as a gift?" Childan asked. "Or to
decorate perhaps a new apartment for your stay here?" If the latter . . . his heart picked up.
"An accurate guess," the girl said. "We are starting to decorate. A bit undecided. Do you
think you could inform us?"
"I could arrange to arrive at your apartment, yes," Childan said. "Bringing several hand
cases, I can suggest in context, at your leisure. This, of course, is our speciality." He dropped
his eyes so as to conceal his hope. There might be thousands of dollars involved. "I am getting in
a New England table, maple, all wood-pegged, no nails. Immense beauty and worth. And a mirror from
the time of the 1812 War. And also the aboriginal art: a group of vegetable-dyed goat-hair rugs."
"I myself," the man said, "prefer the art of the cities."
"Yes," Childan said eagerly. "Listen, sir. I have a mural from WPA post-office period,
original, done on board, four sections, depicting Horace Greeley. Priceless collector's item."
"Ah," the man said, his dark eyes flashing.
"And a Victrola cabinet of 1920 made into a liquor cabinet."
"Ah."
"And, sir, listen: _framed signed picture of Jean Harlow_."
The man goggled at him.
"Shall we make arrangements?" Childan said, seizing this correct psychological instant.
From his inner coat pocket he brought his pen, notebook. "I shall take your name and address, sir
and lady."
Afterward, as the couple strolled from his store, Childan stood, hands behind his back,
watching the street. Joy. If all business days were like this . . . but it was more than business,
the success of his store. It was a chance to meet a young Japanese couple socially, on a basis of
acceptance of him as a man rather than him as a _yank_ or, at best, a tradesman who sold art
objects. Yes, these new young people, of the rising generation, who did not remember the days
before the war or even the war itself--they were the hope of the world. Place difference did not
have the significance for them.
It will end, Childan thought. Someday. The very idea of place. Not governed and governing,
but people.
And yet he trembled with fear, imagining himself knocking at their door. He examined his
notes. The Kasouras. Being admitted, no doubt offered tea. Would he do the right thing? Know the
proper act and utterance at each moment? Or would he disgrace himself, like an animal, by some
dismal faux pas?
The girl's name was Betty. Such understanding in her face, he thought. The gentle,
sympathetic eyes. Surely, even in the short time in the store, she had glimpsed his hopes and
defeats.
His hopes-- he felt suddenly dizzy. What aspirations bordering on the insane if not the
suicidal did he have? But it was known, relations between Japanese and _yanks_, although generally
it was between a Japanese man and _yank_ woman. This. . . he quailed at the idea. And she was
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married. He whipped his mind away from the pageant of his involuntary thoughts and began busily
opening the morning's mail.
His hands, he discovered, were still shaking. And then he recalled his two o'clock
appointment with Mr. Tagomi; at that, his hands ceased shaking and his nervousness became
determination. I've got to come up with something acceptable, he said to himself. Where? How?
What? A phone call. Sources. Business ability. Scrape up a fully restored 1929 Ford including
fabric top (black). Grand slam to keep patronage forever. Crated original mint trimotor airmail
plane discovered in barn in Alabama, etc. Produce mummified head of Mr. B. Bill, including flowing
white hair; sensational American artifact. Make my reputation in top connoisseur circles
throughout Pacific, not excluding Home Islands.
To inspire himself, he lit up a marijuana cigarette, excellent Land-O-Smiles brand.
In his room on Hayes Street, Frank Frink lay in bed wondering how to get up. Sun glared
past the blind onto the heap of clothes that had fallen to the floor. His glasses, too. Would he
step on them? Try to get to bathroom by other route, he thought. Crawl or roll. His head ached but
he did not feel sad. Never look back, he decided. Time? The clock on the dresser. Eleven-thirty!
Good grief. But still he lay.
I'm fired, he thought.
Yesterday he had done wrong at the factory. Spouted the wrong kind of talk to Mr. Wyndam-
Matson, who had a dished-in face with Socrates-type nose, diamond ring, gold fly zipper. In other
words, a power. A throne. Frink's thoughts wandered groggily.
Yes, he thought, and now they'll blacklist me; my skill is no use--I have no trade.
Fifteen years' experience. Gone.
And now he would have to appear at the Laborers' Justification Commission for a revision
of his work category. Since he had never been able to make out Wyndam-Matson's relationship to the
_pinocs_--the puppet white government at Sacramento--he could not fathom his ex-employer's power
to sway the real authorities, the Japanese. The LJC was _pinoc_ run. He would be facing four or
five middle-aged plump white faces, on the order of Wyndam-Matson's. If he failed to get
justification there, he would make his way to one of the Import-Export Trade Missions which
operated out of Tokyo, and which had offices throughout California, Oregon, Washington, and the
parts of Nevada included in the Pacific States of America. But if he failed successfully to plead
there . . .
Plans roamed his mind as he lay in bed gazing up at the ancient light fixture in the
ceiling. He could for instance slip across into the Rocky Mountain States. But it was loosely
banded to the PSA, and might extradite him. What about the South? His body recoiled. Ugh. Not
that. As a white man he would have plenty of place, in fact more than he had here in the PSA. But
. . . he did not want that kind of place.
And, worse, the South had a cat's cradle of ties, economic, ideological, and god knew
what, with the Reich. And Frank Frink was a Jew.
His original name was Frank Fink. He had been born on the East Coast, in New York, and in
1941 he had been drafted into the Army of the United States of America, right after the collapse
of Russia. After the Japs had taken Hawaii he had been sent to the West Coast. When the war ended,
there he was, on the Japanese side of the settlement line. And here he was today, fifteen years
later.
In 1947, on Capitulation Day, he had more or less gone berserk. Hating the Japs as he did,
he had vowed revenge; he had buried his Service weapons ten feet underground, in a basement, well-
wrapped and oiled, for the day he and his buddies arose. However, time was the great healer, a
fact he had not taken into account. When he thought of the idea now, the great blood bath, the
purging of the _pinocs_ and their masters, he felt as if were reviewing one of those stained
yearbooks from his high school days, coming upon an account of his boyhood aspirations. Frank
"Goldfish" Fink is going to be a paleontologist and vows to marry Norma Prout. Norma Prout was the
class _schones Mädchen_, and he really had vowed to marry her. That was all so goddam long ago,
like listening to Fred Allen or seeing a W. C. Fields movie. Since 1947 he had probably seen or
talked to six hundred thousand Japanese, and the desire to do violence to any or all of them had
simply never materialized, after the first few months. It just was not relevant any more.
But wait. There was one, a Mr. Oinuro, who had bought control of a great area of rental
property in downtown San Francisco, and who for a time had been Frank's landlord. There was a bad
apple, he thought. A shark who had never made repairs, had partitioned rooms smaller and smaller,
raised rents . . . Omuro had gouged the poor, especially the nearly destitute jobless ex-
servicemen during the depression years of the early 'fifties. However, it had been one of the
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Japanese trade missions which had cut off Omuro's head for his profiteering. And nowadays such a
violation of the harsh, rigid, but just Japanese civil law was unheard of. It was a credit to the
incorruptibility of the Jap occupation officials, especially those who had come in after the War
Cabinet had fallen.
Recalling the rugged, stoic honesty of the Trade Missions, Frink felt reassured. Even
Wyndam-Matson would be waved off like a noisy fly. W-M Corporation owner or not. At least, so he
hoped. I guess I really have faith in this Co-Prosperity Pacific Alliance stuff, he said to
himself. Strange. Looking back to the early days . . . it had seemed such an obvious fake, then.
Empty propaganda. But now.
He rose from the bed and unsteadily made his way to the bathroom. While he washed and
shaved, he listened to the midday news on the radio.
"Let us not deride this effort," the radio was saying as he momentarily shut off the hot
water.
No, we won't, Frink thought bitterly. He knew which particular effort the radio had in
mind. Yet, there was after all something humorous about it, the picture of stolid, grumpy Germans
walking around on Mars, on the red sand where no humans had ever stepped before. Lathering his
jowls, Frink began a chanting satire to himself. _Gott, Herr Kreisleiter. Ist dies vielleicht der
Ort wo man das Konzentrationslager bilden kann? Das Wetter ist so schon. Heiss, aben doch schon_ .
. .
The radio said: "Co-Prosperity Civilization must pause and consider whether in our quest
to provide a balanced equity of mutual duties and responsibilities coupled with remunerations . .
." Typical jargon from the ruling hierarchy, Frink noted. ". . . we have not failed to perceive
the future arena in which the affairs of man will be acted out, be they Nordic, Japanese, Negroid
. . ." On and on it went.
As he dressed, he mulled with pleasure his satire. _The weather is schon, so schon. But
there is nothing to breathe_ . . .
However, it was a fact; the Pacific had done nothing toward colonization of the planets.
It was involved--bogged down, rather--in South America. While the Germans were busy bustling
enormous robot construction systems across space, the Japs were still burning off the jungles in
the interior of Brazil, erecting eight-floor clay apartment houses for ex-headhunters. By the time
the Japs got their first spaceship off the ground the Germans would have the entire solar system
sewed up tight. Back in the quaint old history-book days, the Germans had missed out while the
rest of Europe put the final touches on their colonial empires. However, Frink reflected, they
were not going to be last this time; they had learned.
And then he thought about Africa, and the Nazi experiment there. And his blood stopped in
his veins, hesitated, at last went on.
That huge empty ruin.
The radio said: ". . . we must consider with pride however our emphasis on the fundamental
physical needs of peoples of all place, their subspiritual aspirations which must be . . ."
Frink shut the radio off. Then, calmer, he turned it back on.
Christ on the crapper, he thought. Africa. For the ghosts of dead tribes. Wiped out to
make a land of--what? Who knew? Maybe even the master architects in Berlin did not know. Bunch of
automatons, building and toiling away. Building? Grinding down. Ogres out of a paleontology
exhibit, at their task of making a cup from an enemy's skull, the whole family industriously
scooping out the contents--the raw brains-- first, to eat. Then useful utensils of men's leg
bones. Thrifty, to think not only of eating the people you did not like, but eating them out of
their own skull. The first technicians! Prehistoric man in a sterile white lab coat in some Berlin
university lab, experimenting with uses to which other people's skull, skin, ears, fat could be
put to. Ja, Herr Doktor. A new use for the big toe; see, one can adapt the joint for a quick-
acting cigarette lighter mechanism. Now, if only Herr Krupp can produce it in quantity . . .
It horrified him, this thought: the ancient gigantic cannibal near-man flourishing now,
ruling the world once more. We spent a million years escaping him, Frink thought, and now he's
back. And not merely as the adversary . . . but as the master.
". . . we can deplore," the radio, the voice of the little yellow-bellies from Tokyo was
saying. God, Frink thought; and we called them monkeys, these civilized bandy-legged shrimps who
would no more set up gas ovens than they would melt their wives into sealing wax. ". . . and we
have deplored often in the past the dreadful waste of humans in this fanatical striving which sets
the broader mass of men wholly outside the legal community." They, the Japs, were so strong on
law. ". . . To quote a Western saint familiar to all: 'What profit it a man if he gain the whole
world but in this enterprise lose his soul?'" The radio paused. Frink, tying his tie, also paused.
It was the morning ablution.
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I have to make my pact with them here, he realized. Black-listed or not; it'd be death for
me if I left Japanese-controlled land and showed up in the South or in Europe--anywhere in the
Reich.
I'll have to come to terms with old Wyndam-Matson.
Seated on his bed, a cup of lukewarm tea beside him, Frink got down his copy of the _I
Ching_. From their leather tube he took the forty-nine yarrow stalks. He considered, until he had
his thoughts properly controlled and his questions worked out.
Aloud he said, "How should I approach Wyndam-Matson in order to come to decent terms with
him?" He wrote the question down on the tablet, then began whipping the yarrow stalks from hand to
hand until he had the first line, the beginning. An eight. Half the sixty-four hexagrams
eliminated already. He divided the stalks and obtained the second line. Soon, being so expert, he
had all six lines; the hexagram lay before him, and he did not need to identify it by the chart.
He could recognize it as Hexagram Fifteen. Ch'ien. Modesty. Ah. The low will be raised up, the
high brought down, powerful families humbled; he did not have to refer to the text--he knew it by
heart. A good omen. The oracle was giving him favorable council.
And yet he was a bit disappointed. There was something fatuous about Hexagram Fifteen. Too
goody-goody. _Naturally_ he should be modest. Perhaps there was an idea in it, however. After all,
he had no power over old W-M. He could not compel him to take him back. All he could do was adopt
the point of view of Hexagram Fifteen; this was that sort of moment, when one had to petition, to
hope, to await with faith. Heaven in its time would raise him up to his old job or perhaps even to
something better.
He had no lines to read, no nines or sixes; it was static. So he was through. It did not
move into a second hexagram.
A new question, then. Setting himself, he said aloud, "Will I ever see Juliana again?"
That was his wife. Or rather his ex-wife. Juliana had divorced him a year ago, and he had
not seen her in months; in fact he did not even know where she lived. Evidently she had left San
Francisco. Perhaps even the PSA. Either their mutual friends had not heard from her or they were
not telling him.
Busily he maneuvered the yarrow stalks, his eyes fixed on the tallies. How many times he
had asked about Juliana, one question or another? Here came the hexagram, brought forth by the
passive chance workings of the vegetable stalks. Random, and yet rooted in the moment in which he
lived, in which his life was bound up with all other lives and particles in the universe. The
necessary hexagram picturing in its pattern of broken and unbroken lines the _situation_. He,
Juliana, the factory on Gough Street, the Trade Missions that ruled, the exploration of the
planets, the billion chemical heaps in Africa that were now not even corpses, the aspirations of
the thousands around him in the shanty warrens of San Francisco, the mad creatures in Berlin with
their calm faces and manic plans--all connected in this moment of casting the yarrow stalks to
select the exact wisdom appropriate in a book begun in the thirtieth century B.C. A book created
by the sages of China over a period of five thousand years, winnowed, perfected, that superb
cosmology--and science--codified before Europe had even learned to do long division.
The hexagram. His heart dropped. Forty-four. Kou. Coming to Meet. Its sobering judgment.
_The maiden is powerful. One should not marry such a maiden_. Again he had gotten it in connection
with Juliana.
_Oy vey_, he thought, settling back. So she was wrong for me; I know that. I didn't ask
that. Why does the oracle have to remind me? A bad fate for me, to have met her and been in love--
be in love--with her.
Juliana--the best-looking woman he had ever married. Soot-black eyebrows and hair; trace
amounts of Spanish blood distributed as pure color, even to her lips. Her rubbery, soundless walk;
she had worn saddle shoes left over from high school. In fact all her clothes had a dilapidated
quality and the definite suggestion of being old and often washed. He and she had been so broke so
long that despite her looks she had had to wear a cotton sweater, cloth zippered jacket, brown
tweed skirt and bobby socks, and she hated him and it because it made her look, she had said, like
a woman who played tennis or (even worse) collected mushrooms in the woods.
But above and beyond everything else, he had originally been drawn by her screwball
expression; for no reason, Juliana greeted strangers with a portentous, nudnik, Mona Lisa smile
that hung them up between responses, whether to say hello or not. And she was so attractive that
more often than not they did say hello, whereupon Juliana glided by. At first he had thought it
was just plain bad eyesight, but finally he had decided that it revealed a deep-dyed otherwise
concealed stupidity at her core. And so finally her borderline flicker of greeting to strangers
had annoyed him, as had her plantlike, silent, I'm-on-a-mysterious-errand way of coming and going.
But even then, toward the end, when they had been fighting so much, he still never saw her as
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anything but a direct, literal invention of God's, dropped into his life for reasons he would
never know. And on that account--a sort of religious intuition or faith about her--he could not
get over having lost her.
She seemed so close right now . . . as if he still had her. That spirit, still busy in his
life, padding through his room in search of--whatever it was Juliana sought. And in his mind
whenever he took up the volumes of the oracle.
Seated on his bed, surrounded by lonely disorder, preparing to go out and begin his day,
Frank Frink wondered who else in the vast complicated city of San Francisco was at this same
moment consulting the oracle. And were they all getting as gloomy advice as he? Was the tenor of
the Moment as adverse for them as it was for him?
2
Mr. Nobusuke Tagomi sat consulting the divine Fifth Book of Confucian wisdom, the Taoist
oracle called for centuries the _I Ching_ or _Book of Changes_. At noon that day, he had begun to
become apprehensive about his appointment with Mr. Childan, which would occur in two more hours.
His suite of offices on the twentieth floor of the Nippon Times Building on Taylor Street
overlooked the Bay. Through the glass wall he could watch ships entering, passing beneath the
Golden Gate Bridge. At this moment a freighter could be seen beyond Alcatraz, but Mr. Tagomi did
not care. Going to the wall he unfastened the cord and lowered the bamboo blinds over the view.
The large central office became darker; he did not have to squint against the glare. Now he could
think more clearly.
It was not within his power, he decided, to please his client. No matter what Mr. Childan
came up with: the client would not be impressed. Let us face that, he had said to himself. But we
can keep him from becoming displeased, at least.
We can refrain from insulting him by a moldy gift.
The client would soon reach San Francisco airport by avenue of the high-place new German
rocket, the Messerschmitt 9-E. Mr. Tagomi had never ridden on such a ship; when he met Mr. Baynes
he would have to take care to appear blasé, no matter how large the rocket turned out to be. Now
to practice. He stood in front of the mirror on the office wall, creating a face of composure,
mildly bored, inspecting his own cold features for any giveaway. Yes, they are very noisy, Mr.
Baynes, sir. One cannot read. But then the flight from Stockholm to San Francisco is only forty-
five minutes. Perhaps then a word about German mechanical failures? I suppose you heard the radio.
That crash over Madagascar. I must say, there is something to be said for the old piston planes.
Essential to avoid politics. For he did not know Mr. Baynes' views on leading issues of
the day. Yet they might arise. Mr. Baynes, being Swedish, would be a neutral. Yet he had chosen
Lufthansa rather than SAS. A cautious ploy . . . Mr. Baynes, sir, they say Herr Bormann is quite
ill. That a new Reichs Chancellor will be chosen by the Partei this autumn. Rumor only? So much
secrecy, alas, between Pacific and Reich.
In the folder on his desk, clipping from _New York Times_ of a recent speech by Mr.
Baynes. Mr. Tagomi now studied it critically, bending due to slight failure of correction by his
contact lenses. The speech had to do with need of exploring once more--ninety-eighth time?--for
sources of water on the moon. "We may still solve this heartbreaking dilemma," Mr. Baynes was
quoted. "Our nearest neighbor, and so far the most unrewarding except for military purposes."
_Sic!_ Mr. Tagomi thought, using high-place Latin word. Clue to Mr. Baynes. Looks askance at
merely military. Mr. Tagomi made a mental note.
Touching the intercom button Mr. Tagomi said, "Miss Ephreikian, I would like you to bring
in your tape recorder, please."
The outer office door slid to one side and Miss Ephreikian, today pleasantly adorned with
blue flowers in her hair, appeared.
"Bit of lilac," Mr. Tagomi observed. Once, he had professionally flower-raised back home
on Hokkaido.
Miss Ephreikian, a tall, brown-haired Armenian girl, bowed.
"Ready with Zip-Track Speed Master?" Mr. Tagomi asked.
"Yes, Mr. Tagomi." Miss Ephreikian seated herself, the portable battery-operated tape
recorder ready.
Mr. Tagomi began, "I inquired of the oracle, 'Will the meeting between myself and Mr.
Childan be profitable?' and obtained to my dismay the ominous hexagram The Preponderance of the
Great. The ridgepole is sagging. Too much weight in the middle; all unbalanced. Clearly away from
the Tao." The tape recorder whirred.
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Pausing, Mr. Tagomi reflected.
Miss Ephreikian watched him expectantly. The whirring ceased.
"Have Mr. Ramsey come in for a moment, please," Mr. Tagomi said.
"Yes, Mr. Tagomi." Rising, she put down the tape recorder; her heels tapped as she
departed from the office.
With a large folder of bills-of-lading under his arm, Mr. Ramsey appeared. Young, smiling,
he advanced, wearing the natty U.S. Midwest Plains string tie, checkered shirt and tight beltless
blue jeans considered so high-place among the style-conscious of the day. "Howdy, Mr. Tagomi," he
said. "Right nice day, sir."
Mr. Tagomi bowed.
At that, Mr. Ramsey stiffened abruptly and also bowed.
"I've been consulting the oracle," Mr. Tagomi said, as Miss Ephreikian reseated herself
with her tape recorder. "You understand that Mr. Baynes, who as you know is arriving shortly in
person, holds to the Nordic ideology regarding so-called Oriental culture. I could make the effort
to dazzle him into a better comprehension with authentic works of Chinese scroll art or ceramics
of our Tokugawa Period . . . but it is not our job to convert."
"I see," Mr. Ramsey said; his Caucasian face twisted with painful concentration.
"Therefore we will cater to his prejudice and graft a priceless American artifact to him
instead."
"Yes."
"You, sir, are of American ancestry. Although you have gone to the trouble of darkening
your skin color." He scrutinized Mr. Ramsey.
"A tan achieved by a sun lamp," Mr. Ramsey murmured. "For merely acquiring vitamin D." But
his expression of humiliation gave him away. "I assure you that I retain authentic roots with--"
Mr. Ramsey stumbled over the words. "I have not cut off all ties with--native ethnic patterns."
Mr. Tagomi said to Miss Ephreikian: "Resume, please." Once more the tape recorder whirred.
"In consulting the oracle and obtaining Hexagram Ta Kuo, Twenty-eight, I further received the
unfavorable line Nine in the fifth place. It reads:
A withered poplar puts forth flowers.
An older woman takes a husband.
No blame. No praise.
"This clearly indicates that Mr. Childan will have nothing of worth to offer us at two."
Mr. Tagomi paused. "Let us be candid. I cannot rely on my own judgment regarding American art
objects. That is why a--" He lingered over his choice of terms. "Why you, Mr. Ramsey, who are
shall I say native born, are required. Obviously we must do the best we can."
Mr. Ramsey had no answer. But, despite his efforts to conceal, his features showed hurt,
anger, a frustrated and mute reaction.
"Now," Mr. Tagomi said. "I have further consulted the oracle. For purposes of policy, I
cannot divulge to you, Mr. Ramsey, the question." In other words, his tone meant, you and your
_pinoc_ kind are not entitled to share the important matters which we deal in. "It is sufficient
to say, however, that I received a most provocative response. It has caused me to ponder at
length."
Both Mr. Ramsey and Miss Ephreikian watched him intently.
"It deals with Mr. Baynes," Mr. Tagomi said.
They nodded.
"My question regarding Mr. Baynes produced through the occult workings of the Tao the
Hexagram Sheng, Forty-six. A good judgment. And lines Six at the beginning and Nine in the second
place." His question had been, Will I be able to deal with Mr. Baynes successfully? And the Nine
in the second place had assured him that he would. It read:
If one is sincere,
It furthers one to bring even a small offering.
No blame.
Obviously, Mr. Baynes would be satisfied by whatever gift the ranking Trade Mission
grafted to him through the good offices of Mr. Tagomi. But Mr. Tagomi, in asking the question, had
had a deeper query in the back of his mind, one of which he was barely conscious. As so often, the
oracle had perceived that more fundamental query and; while answering the other, had taken it upon
itself to answer the subliminal one, too.
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"As we know," Mr. Tagomi said, "Mr. Baynes is bringing us detailed account of new
injection molds developed in Sweden. Were we successfully to sign agreement with his firm, we
could no doubt replace many present metals, quite scarce, with plastics."
For years, the Pacific had been trying to get basic assistance in the synthetics field
from the Reich. However, the big German chemical cartels, I. G. Farben in particular, had harbored
their patents; had, in fact, created a world monopoly in plastics, especially in the development
of the polyesters. By this means, Reich trade had kept an edge over Pacific trade, and in
technology the Reich was at least ten years ahead. The interplanetary rockets leaving Festung
Europa consisted mainly of heat-resistant plastics, very light in weight, so hard that they
survived even major meteor impact. The Pacific had nothing of this sort; natural fibers such as
wood were still used, and of course the ubiquitous pot metals. Mr. Tagomi cringed as he thought
about it; he had seen at trade fairs some of the advanced German work, including an all-synthetic
automobile, the D. S. S.--Der Schnelle Spuk-- which sold, in PSA currency, for about six hundred
dollars.
But his underlying question, one which he could never reveal to the _pinocs_ flitting
about Trade Mission offices, had to do with an aspect of Mr. Baynes suggested by the original
coded cable from Tokyo. First of all, coded material was infrequent, and dealt usually with
matters of security, not with trade deals. And the cipher was the metaphor type, utilizing poetic
allusion, which had been adopted to baffle the Reich monitors--who could crack any literal code,
no matter how elaborate. So clearly it was the Reich whom the Tokyo authorities had in mind, not
quasi-disloyal cliques in the Home Islands. The key phrase, "Skim milk in his diet," referred to
_Pinafore_, to the eerie song that expounded the doctrine,". . . Things are seldom what they seem--
Skim milk masquerades as cream." And the _I Ching_, when Mr. Tagomi had consulted it, had
fortified his insight. Its commentary:
Here a strong man is presupposed. It is true he does not
fit in with his environment, inasmuch as he is too
brusque and pays too little attention to form. But as he is
upright in character, he meets with response.
The insight was, simply, that Mr. Baynes was not what he seemed; that his actual purpose
in coming to San Francisco was not to sign a deal for injection molds. That, in fact, Mr. Baynes
was a spy.
But for the life of him, Mr. Tagomi could not figure out what sort of spy, for whom or for
what.
At one-forty that afternoon, Robert Childan with enormous reluctance locked the front door
of American Artistic Handcrafts Inc. He lugged his heavy cases to the curb, hailed a pedecab, and
told the _chink_ to take him to the Nippon Times Building.
The _chink_, gaunt-faced, hunched over and perspiring, gasped a place-conscious
acknowledgment and began loading Mr. Childan's bags aboard. Then, having assisted Mr. Childan
himself into the carpet-lined seat, the _chink_ clicked on the meter, mounted his own seat and
pedaled off along Montgomery Street, among the cars and buses.
The entire day had been spent finding the item for Mr. Tagomi, and Childan's bitterness
and anxiety almost overwhelmed him as he watched the buildings pass. And yet-- triumph. The
separate skill, apart from the rest of him: he had found the right thing, and Mr. Tagomi would be
mollified and his client, whoever he was, would be overjoyed. I always give satisfaction, Childan
thought. To my customers.
He had been able to procure, miraculously, an almost mint copy of Volume One, Number One
of _Tip Top Comics_. 7 Dating from the 'thirties, it was a choice piece of Americana; one of the
first funny books, a prize collectors searched for constantly. Of course, he had other items with
him, to show first. He would lead up gradually to the funny book, which lay well-protected in a
leather case packed in tissue paper at the center of the largest bag.
The radio of the pedecab blared out popular tunes, competing with the radios of other
cabs, cars and buses. Childan did not hear; he was used to it. Nor did he take notice of the
enormous neon signs with their permanent ads obliterating the front of virtually every large
building. After all, he had his own sign; at night it blazed on and off in company with all the
others of the city. What other way did one advertise? One had to be realistic.
In fact, the uproar of radios, traffic noises, the signs and people lulled him. They
blotted out his inner worries. And it was pleasurable to be peddled along by another human being,
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to feel the straining muscles of the _chink_ transmitted in the form of regular vibrations; a sort
of relaxing machine, Childan reflected. To be pulled instead of having to pull. And--to have, if
even for a moment, higher place.
Guiltily, he woke himself. Too much to plan; no time for a midday doze. Was he absolutely
properly dressed to enter the Nippon Times Building? Possibly he would faint in the high-speed
elevator. But he had motion-illness tablets with him, a German compound. The various modes of
address . . . he knew them. Whom to treat politely, whom rudely. Be brusque with the doorman,
elevator operator, receptionist, guide, any janitorial person. Bow to any Japanese, of course,
even if it obliged him to bow hundreds of times. But the _pinocs_. Nebulous area. Bow, but look
straight through them as if they did not exist. Did that cover every situation, then? What about a
visiting foreigner? Germans often could be seen at the Trade Missions, as well as neutrals.
And then, too, he might see a slave.
German or South ships docked at the port of San Francisco all the time, and blacks
occasionally were allowed off for short intervals. Always in groups of fewer than three. And they
could not be out after nightfall; even under Pacific law, they had to obey the curfew. But also
slaves unloaded at the docks, and these lived perpetually ashore, in shacks under the wharves,
above the waterline. None would be in the Trade Mission offices, but if any unloading were taking
place--for instance, should he carry his own bags to Mr. Tagomi's office? Surely not. A slave
would have to be found, even if he had to stand waiting an hour. Even if he missed his
appointment. It was out of the question to let a slave see him carrying something; he had to be
quite careful of that. A mistake of that kind would cost him dearly; he would never have place of
any sort again, among those who saw.
In a way, Childan thought, I would almost enjoy carrying my own bags into the Nippon Times
Building in broad daylight. What a grand gesture. It is not actually illegal; I would not go to
jail. And I would show my real feelings, the side of a man which never comes out in public life.
But . . .
I could do it, he thought, if there weren't those damn black slaves lurking around; I
could endure those above me seeing it, their scorn--after all, they scorn me and humiliate me
every day. But to have those beneath see me, to feel their contempt. Like this _chink_ peddling
away ahead of me. if I hadn't taken a pedecab, if he had seen me trying to _walk_ to a business
appointment . . .
One had to blame the Germans for the situation. Tendency to bite off more than they could
chew. After all, they had barely managed to win the war, and at once they had gone off to conquer
the solar system, while at home they had passed edicts which . . . well, at least the idea was
good. And after all, they had been successful with the Jews and Gypsies and Bible Students. And
the Slavs had been rolled back two thousand years' worth, to their heartland in Asia. Out of
Europe entirely, to everyone's relief. Back to riding yaks and hunting with bow and arrow. And
those great glossy magazines printed in Munich and circulated around to all the libraries and
newsstands . . . one could see the full-page color pictures for oneself: the blue-eyed, blond-
haired Aryan settlers who now industriously tilled, culled, plowed, and so forth in the vast grain
bowl of the world, the Ukraine. Those fellows certainly looked happy. And their farms and cottages
were clean. You didn't see pictures of drunken dull-wilted Poles any more, slouched on sagging
porches or hawking a few sickly turnips at the village market. All a thing of the past, like
rutted dirt roads that once turned to slop in the rainy season, bogging down the carts.
But Africa. They had simply let their enthusiasm get the better of them there, and you had
to admire that, although more thoughtful advice would have cautioned them to perhaps let it wait a
bit until, for instance, Project Farmland had been completed. Now _there_ the Nazis had shown
genius; the artist in them had truly emerged. The Mediterranean Sea bottled up, drained, made into
tillable farmland, through the use of atomic power--what daring! How the sniggerers had been set
back on their heels, for instance certain scoffing merchants along Montgomery Street. And as a
matter of fact, Africa had almost been successful . . . but in a project of that sort, _almost_
was an ominous word to begin to hear. Rosenberg's well-known powerful pamphlet issued in 1958; the
word had first shown up, then. _As to the Final Solution of the African Problem, we have almost
achieved our objectives. Unfortunately, however_--
Still, it had taken two hundred years to dispose of the American aborigines, and Germany
had almost done it in Africa in fifteen years. So no criticism was legitimately in order. Childan
had, in fact, argued it out recently while having lunch with certain of those other merchants.
They expected miracles, evidently, as if the Nazis could remold the world by magic. No, it was
science and technology and that fabulous talent for hard work; the Germans never stopped applying
themselves. And when they did a task, they did it right.
And anyhow, the flights to Mars had distracted world attention from the difficulty in
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file:///F|/rah/Philip%20K.Dick/Dick%20The%20Man%20In%20The%20High%20Castle.txtTHEMANINTHEHIGHCASTLEbyPhilipK.DickTomywifeTessaandmysonChristopher,withgreatandawfulloveThisBerkleybookcontainsthecompletetextoftheoriginalhardcoveredition.Ithasbeencompletelyresetinatypefacedesignedforeasyreading,andwas...

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