Philip K. Dick
Published: 1954
Categorie(s): Fiction, Science Fiction, Short Stories
Source: http://www.gutenberg.org
"It
is for develop literature not commercial purpose"
About Dick:
Philip Kindred Dick
(December 16, 1928 – March 2, 1982) was an American science fiction novelist,
short story writer, and essayist. Dick explored sociological, political and
metaphysical themes in novels dominated by monopolistic corporations,
authoritarian governments, and altered states. In his later works, Dick's
thematic focus strongly reflected his personal interest in mysticism and
theology. He often drew upon his own life experiences and addressed the nature
of drug use, paranoia and schizophrenia, and mystical experiences in novels such
as A Scanner Darkly and VALIS. The novel The Man in the High Castle bridged the
genres of alternate history and science fiction, earning Dick a Hugo Award for
Best Novel in 1963. Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said, a novel about a
celebrity who awakens in a parallel universe where he is unknown, won the John
W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel in 1975. "I want to write about
people I love, and put them into a fictional world spun out of my own mind, not
the world we actually have, because the world we actually have does not meet my
standards," Dick wrote of these stories. "In my writing I even
question the universe; I wonder out loud if it is real, and I wonder out loud
if all of us are real." In addition to thirty-six novels, Dick wrote
approximately 121 short stories, many of which appeared in science fiction
magazines. Although Dick spent most of his career as a writer in near-poverty,
nine of his stories have been adapted into popular films since his death,
including Blade Runner, Total Recall, A Scanner Darkly and Minority Report. In
2005, Time Magazine named Ubik one of the one hundred greatest English-language
novels published since 1923. In 2007, Dick became the first science fiction
writer to be included in The Library of America series.
Copyright: Please read the legal notice included in this e-book and/or check the
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Note: Strictly for personal use, do not use this file for commercial
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Transcriber's
Note:
This etext was
produced from Fantastic Universe January
1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and typographical errors have
been corrected without note.
That
night at the dinner table he brought it out and set it down beside her
plate. Doris stared at it, her hand to her mouth. "My God, what is
it?" She looked up at him, bright-eyed.
"Well, open
it."
Doris tore the
ribbon and paper from the square package with her sharp nails, her bosom rising
and falling. Larry stood watching her as she lifted the lid. He lit a cigarette
and leaned against the wall.
"A cuckoo
clock!" Doris cried. "A real old cuckoo clock like my mother
had." She turned the clock over and over. "Just like my mother had,
when Pete was still alive." Her eyes sparkled with tears.
"It's made in
Germany," Larry said. After a moment he added, "Carl got it for me
wholesale. He knows some guy in the clock business. Otherwise I wouldn't
have—" He stopped.
Doris made a funny
little sound.
"I mean,
otherwise I wouldn't have been able to afford it." He scowled.
"What's the matter with you? You've got your clock, haven't you? Isn't
that what you want?"
Doris sat holding
onto the clock, her fingers pressed against the brown wood.
"Well,"
Larry said, "what's the matter?"
He watched in
amazement as she leaped up and ran from the room, still clutching the clock. He
shook his head. "Never satisfied. They're all that way. Never get
enough."
He sat down at the
table and finished his meal.
The cuckoo clock
was not very large. It was hand-made, however, and there were countless frets
on it, little indentations and ornaments scored in the soft wood. Doris sat on
the bed drying her eyes and winding the clock. She set the hands by her
wristwatch. Presently she carefully moved the hands to two minutes of ten. She
carried the clock over to the dresser and propped it up.
Then she sat
waiting, her hands twisted together in her lap—waiting for the cuckoo to come
out, for the hour to strike.
As she sat she
thought about Larry and what he had said. And what she had said, too, for that
matter—not that she could be blamed for any of it. After all, she couldn't keep
listening to him forever without defending herself; you had to blow your own
trumpet in the world.
She touched her
handkerchief to her eyes suddenly. Why did he have to say that, about getting
it wholesale? Why did he have to spoil it all? If he felt that way he needn't
have got it in the first place. She clenched her fists. He was so mean, so damn
mean.
But she was glad of
the little clock sitting there ticking to itself, with its funny grilled edges
and the door. Inside the door was the cuckoo, waiting to come out. Was he
listening, his head cocked on one side, listening to hear the clock strike so
that he would know to come out?
Did he sleep
between hours? Well, she would soon see him: she could ask him. And she would
show the clock to Bob. He would love it; Bob loved old things, even old stamps
and buttons. He liked to go with her to the stores. Of course, it was a
little awkward, but Larry had been staying at the
office so much, and that helped. If only Larry didn't call up sometimes to—
There was a whirr.
The clock shuddered and all at once the door opened. The cuckoo came out,
sliding swiftly. He paused and looked around solemnly, scrutinizing her, the
room, the furniture.
It was the first
time he had seen her, she realized, smiling to herself in pleasure. She stood
up, coming toward him shyly. "Go on," she said. "I'm
waiting."
The cuckoo opened
his bill. He whirred and chirped, quickly, rhythmically. Then, after a moment
of contemplation, he retired. And the door snapped shut.
She was delighted.
She clapped her hands and spun in a little circle. He was marvelous, perfect!
And the way he had looked around, studying her, sizing her up. He liked her;
she was certain of it. And she, of course, loved him at once, completely. He
was just what she had hoped would come out of the little door.
Doris went to the
clock. She bent over the little door, her lips close to the wood. "Do you
hear me?" she whispered. "I think you're the most wonderful cuckoo in
the world." She paused, embarrassed. "I hope you'll like it
here."
Then she went
downstairs again, slowly, her head high.
Larry and the
cuckoo clock really never got along well from the start. Doris said it was
because he didn't wind it right, and it didn't like being only half-wound all
the time. Larry turned the job of winding over to her; the cuckoo came out
every quarter hour and ran the spring down without remorse, and someone had to
be ever after it, winding it up again.
Doris did her best,
but she forgot a good deal of the time. Then Larry would throw his newspaper
down with an elaborate weary motion and stand up. He would go into the
dining-room where the clock was mounted on the wall over the fireplace. He
would take the clock down and making sure that he had his thumb over the little
door, he would wind it up.
"Why do you
put your thumb over the door?" Doris asked once.
"You're
supposed to."
She raised an
eyebrow. "Are you sure? I wonder if it isn't that you don't want him to
come out while you're standing so close."
"Why
not?"
"Maybe you're
afraid of him."
Larry laughed. He
put the clock back on the wall and gingerly removed his thumb. When Doris
wasn't looking he examined his thumb.
There was still a
trace of the nick cut out of the soft part of it. Who—or what—had pecked at
him?
One Saturday
morning, when Larry was down at the office working over some important special
accounts, Bob Chambers came to the front porch and rang the bell.
Doris was taking a
quick shower. She dried herself and slipped into her robe. When she opened the
door Bob stepped inside, grinning.
"Hi," he
said, looking around.
"It's all
right. Larry's at the office."
"Fine."
Bob gazed at her slim legs below the hem of the robe. "How nice you look
today."
She laughed.
"Be careful! Maybe I shouldn't let you in after all."
They looked at one
another, half amused half frightened. Presently Bob said, "If you want,
I'll—"
"No, for God's
sake." She caught hold of his sleeve. "Just get out of the doorway so
I can close it. Mrs. Peters across the street, you know."
She closed the
door. "And I want to show you something," she said. "You haven't
seen it."
He was interested.
"An antique? Or what?"
She took his arm,
leading him toward the dining-room. "You'll love it, Bobby." She
stopped, wide-eyed. "I hope you will. You must; you must love it. It means
so much to me—he means so much."
"He?" Bob
frowned. "Who is he?"
Doris laughed.
"You're jealous! Come on." A moment later they stood before the
clock, looking up at it. "He'll come out in a few minutes. Wait until you
see him. I know you two will get along just fine."
"What does
Larry think of him?"
"They don't
like each other. Sometimes when Larry's here he won't come out. Larry gets mad
if he doesn't come out on time. He says—"
"Says
what?"
Doris looked down.
"He always says he's been robbed, even if he did get it wholesale."
She brightened. "But I know he won't come out because he doesn't like
Larry. When I'm here alone he comes right out for me, every fifteen minutes,
even though he really only has to come out on the hour."
She gazed up at the
clock. "He comes out for me because he wants to. We talk; I tell him
things. Of course, I'd like to have him upstairs in my room, but it wouldn't be
right."
There was the sound
of footsteps on the front porch. They looked at each other, horrified.
Larry pushed the
front door open, grunting. He set his briefcase down and took off his hat. Then
he saw Bob for the first time.
"Chambers. I'll
be damned." His eyes narrowed. "What are you doing here?" He
came into the dining-room. Doris drew her robe about her helplessly, backing
away.
"I—" Bob
began. "That is, we—" He broke off, glancing at Doris. Suddenly the
clock began to whirr. The cuckoo came rushing out, bursting into sound. Larry
moved toward him.
"Shut that din
off," he said. He raised his fist toward the clock. The cuckoo snapped
into silence and retreated. The door closed. "That's better." Larry
studied Doris and Bob, standing mutely together.
"I came over
to look at the clock," Bob said. "Doris told me that it's a rare
antique and that—"
"Nuts. I
bought it myself." Larry walked up to him. "Get out of here." He
turned to Doris. "You too. And take that damn clock with you."
He paused, rubbing
his chin. "No. Leave the clock here. It's mine; I bought it and paid for
it."
In the weeks that
followed after Doris left, Larry and the cuckoo clock got along even worse than
before. For one thing, the cuckoo stayed inside most of the time, sometimes
even at twelve o'clock when he should have been busiest. And if he did come out
at all he usually spoke only once or twice, never the correct number of times.
And there was a sullen, uncooperative note in his voice, a jarring sound that
made Larry uneasy and a little angry.
But he kept the
clock wound, because the house was very still and quiet and it got on his
nerves not to hear someone running around, talking and dropping things. And
even the whirring of a clock sounded good to him.
But he didn't like
the cuckoo at all. And sometimes he spoke to him.
"Listen,"
he said late one night to the closed little door. "I know you can hear me.
I ought to give you back to the Germans—back to the Black Forest." He
paced back and forth. "I wonder what they're doing now, the two of them.
That young punk with his books and his antiques. A man shouldn't be interested
in antiques; that's for women."
He set his jaw.
"Isn't that right?"
The clock said
nothing. Larry walked up in front of it. "Isn't that right?" he
demanded. "Don't you have anything to say?"
He looked at the
face of the clock. It was almost eleven, just a few seconds before the hour.
"All right. I'll wait until eleven. Then I want to hear what you have to
say. You've been pretty quiet the last few weeks since she left."
He grinned wryly.
"Maybe you don't like it here since she's gone." He scowled.
"Well, I paid for you, and you're coming out whether you like it or not.
You hear me?"
Eleven o'clock
came. Far off, at the end of town, the great tower clock boomed sleepily to
itself. But the little door remained shut. Nothing moved. The minute hand
passed on and the cuckoo did not stir. He was someplace inside the clock,
beyond the door, silent and remote.
"All right, if
that's the way you feel," Larry murmured, his lips twisting. "But it
isn't fair. It's your job to come out. We all have to do things we don't
like."
He went unhappily
into the kitchen and opened the great gleaming refrigerator. As he poured
himself a drink he thought about the clock.
There was no doubt
about it—the cuckoo should come out, Doris or no Doris. He had always liked
her, from the very start. They had got along well, the two of them. Probably he
liked Bob too—probably he had seen enough of Bob to get to know him. They would
be quite happy together, Bob and Doris and the cuckoo.
Larry finished his
drink. He opened the drawer at the sink and took out the hammer. He carried it
carefully into the dining-room. The clock was ticking gently to itself on the
wall.
"Look,"
he said, waving the hammer. "You know what I have here? You know what I'm
going to do with it? I'm going to start on you—first." He smiled.
"Birds of a feather, that's what you are—the three of you."
The room was
silent.
"Are you
coming out? Or do I have to come in and get you?"
The clock whirred a
little.
"I hear you in
there. You've got a lot of talking to do, enough for the last three weeks. As I
figure it, you owe me—"
The door opened.
The cuckoo came out fast, straight at him. Larry was looking down, his brow
wrinkled in thought. He glanced up, and the cuckoo caught him squarely in the
eye.
Down he went,
hammer and chair and everything, hitting the floor with a tremendous crash. For
a moment the cuckoo paused, its small body poised rigidly. Then it went back
inside its house. The door snapped tight-shut after it.
The man lay on the
floor, stretched out grotesquely, his head bent over to one side. Nothing moved
or stirred. The room was completely silent, except, of course, for the ticking
of the clock.
"I see,"
Doris said, her face tight. Bob put his arm around her, steadying her.
"Doctor,"
Bob said, "can I ask you something?"
"Of
course," the doctor said.
"Is it very
easy to break your neck, falling from so low a chair? It wasn't very far to
fall. I wonder if it might not have been an accident. Is there any chance it
might have been—"
"Suicide?"
the doctor rubbed his jaw. "I never heard of anyone committing suicide
that way. It was an accident; I'm positive."
"I don't mean
suicide," Bob murmured under his breath, looking up at the clock on the
wall. "I meant something else."
But no one heard
him.
Finish
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