Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- FAHRENHEIT 451
- by Ray Bradbury
- This one, with gratitude, is for DON CONGDON.
- FAHRENHEIT 451:
- The temperature at which book-paper catches fire and burns
- PARTI
- IT WAS A PLEASURE TO BURN
- IT was a special pleasure to see things eaten, to see things blackened and changed. With the
- brass nozzle in his fists, with this great python spitting its venomous kerosene upon the world,
- the blood pounded in his head, and his hands were the hands of some amazing conductor playing
- all the symphonies of blazing and burning to bring down the tatters and charcoal ruins of history.
- With his symbolic helmet numbered 451 on his stolid head, and his eyes all orange flame with
- the thought of what came next, he flicked the igniter and the house jumped up in a gorging fire
- that burned the evening sky red and yellow and black. He strode in a swarm of fireflies. He
- wanted above all, like the old joke, to shove a marshmallow on a stick in the furnace, while the
- flapping pigeon-winged books died on the porch and lawn of the house. While the books went up
- in sparkling whirls and blew away on a wind turned dark with burning.
- Montag grinned the fierce grin of all men singed and driven back by flame.
- He knew that when he returned to the firehouse, he might wink at himself, a minstrel man, burnt-
- corked, in the mirror. Later, going to sleep, he would feel the fiery smile still gripped by his face
- muscles, in the dark. It never went away, that, smile, it never ever went away, as long as he
- remembered.
- He hung up his black-beetle-coloured helmet and shined it, he hung his flameproof jacket neatly;
- he showered luxuriously, and then, whistling, hands in pockets, walked across the upper floor of
- the fire station and fell down the hole. At the last moment, when disaster seemed positive, he
- pulled his hands from his pockets and broke his fall by grasping the golden pole. He slid to a
- squeaking halt, the heels one inch from the concrete floor downstairs.
- He walked out of the fire station and along the midnight street toward the subway where the
- silent, air-propelled train slid soundlessly down its lubricated flue in the earth and let him out
- with a great puff of warm air an to the cream-tiled escalator rising to the suburb.
- Whistling, he let the escalator waft him into the still night air. He walked toward the comer,
- thinking little at all about nothing in particular. Before he reached the corner, however, he
- slowed as if a wind had sprung up from nowhere, as if someone had called his name.
- The last few nights he had had the most uncertain feelings about the sidewalk just around the
- corner here, moving in the starlight toward his house. He had felt that a moment before his
- making the turn, someone had been there. The air seemed charged with a special calm as if
- someone had waited there, quietly, and only a moment before he came, simply turned to a
- shadow and let him through. Perhaps his nose detected a faint perfume, perhaps the skin on the
- backs of his hands, on his face, felt the temperature rise at this one spot where a person's
- standing might raise the immediate atmosphere ten degrees for an instant. There was no
- understanding it. Each time he made the turn, he saw only the white, unused, buckling sidewalk,
- with perhaps, on one night, something vanishing swiftly across a lawn before he could focus his
- eyes or speak.
- But now, tonight, he slowed almost to a stop. His inner mind, reaching out to turn the corner for
- him, had heard the faintest whisper. Breathing? Or was the atmosphere compressed merely by
- someone standing very quietly there, waiting?
- He turned the corner.
- The autumn leaves blew over the moonlit pavement in such a way as to make the girl who was
- moving there seem fixed to a sliding walk, letting the motion of the wind and the leaves carry her
- forward. Her head was half bent to watch her shoes stir the circling leaves. Her face was slender
- and milk-white, and in it was a kind of gentle hunger that touched over everything with tireless
- curiosity. It was a look, almost, of pale surprise; the dark eyes were so fixed to the world that no
- move escaped them. Her dress was white and it whispered. He almost thought he heard the
- motion of her hands as she walked, and the infinitely small sound now, the white stir of her face
- turning when she discovered she was a moment away from a man who stood in the middle of the
- pavement waiting.
- The trees overhead made a great sound of letting down their dry rain. The girl stopped and
- looked as if she might pull back in surprise, but instead stood regarding Montag with eyes so
- dark and shining and alive, that he felt he had said something quite wonderful. But he knew his
- mouth had only moved to say hello, and then when she seemed hypnotized by the salamander on
- his arm and the phoenix-disc on his chest, he spoke again.
- "Of course," he said, "you're a new neighbour, aren't you?"
- "And you must be"-she raised her eyes from his professional symbols-"the fireman." Her voice
- trailed off.
- "How oddly you say that."
- "I'd-i'd have known it with my eyes shut," she said, slowly.
- "What-the smell of kerosene? My wife always complains," he laughed. "You never wash it off
- completely."
- "No, you don't," she said, in awe.
- He felt she was walking in a circle about him, turning him end for end, shaking him quietly, and
- emptying his pockets, without once moving herself.
- "Kerosene," he said, because the silence had lengthened, "is nothing but perfume to me."
- "Does it seem like that, really?"
- "Of course. Why not?"
- She gave herself time to think of it. "I don't know." She turned to face the sidewalk going toward
- their homes. "Do you mind if I walk back with you? I'm Clarisse McClellan."
- "Clarisse. Guy Montag. Come along. What are you doing out so late wandering around? How
- old are you?"
- They walked in the warm-cool blowing night on the silvered pavement and there was the faintest
- breath of fresh apricots and strawberries in the air, and he looked around and realized this was
- quite impossible, so late in the year.
- There was only the girl walking with him now, her face bright as snow in the moonlight, and he
- knew she was working his questions around, seeking the best answers she could possibly give.
- "Well," she said, "I'm seventeen and I'm crazy. My uncle says the two always go together. When
- people ask your age, he said, always say seventeen and insane. Isn't this a nice time of night to
- walk? I like to smell things and look at things, and sometimes stay up all night, walking, and
- watch the sun rise."
- They walked on again in silence and finally she said, thoughtfully, "You know, I'm not afraid of
- you at all."
- He was surprised. "Why should you be?"
- "So many people are. Afraid of firemen, I mean. But you're just a man, after all..."
- He saw himself in her eyes, suspended in two shining drops of bright water, himself dark and
- tiny, in fine detail, the lines about his mouth, everything there, as if her eyes were two
- miraculous bits of violet amber that might capture and hold him intact. Her face, turned to him
- now, was fragile milk crystal with a soft and constant light in it. It was not the hysterical light of
- electricity but-what? But the strangely comfortable and rare and gently flattering light of the
- candle. One time, when he was a child, in a power-failure, his mother had found and lit a last
- candle and there had been a brief hour of rediscovery, of such illumination that space lost its vast
- dimensions and drew comfortably around them, and they, mother and son, alone, transformed,
- hoping that the power might not come on again too soon ....
- And then Clarisse McClellan said:
- "Do you mind if I ask? How long have you worked at being a fireman?"
- "Since I was twenty, ten years ago."
- "Do you ever read any of the books you bum?"
- He laughed. "That's against the law!"
- "Oh. Of course."
- "It's fine work. Monday bum Millay, Wednesday Whitman, Friday Faulkner, burn 'em to ashes,
- then bum the ashes. That's our official slogan."
- They walked still further and the girl said, "Is it true that long ago firemen put fires out instead of
- going to start them?"
- "No. Houses, have always been fireproof, take my word for it."
- "Strange. I heard once that a long time ago houses used to burn by accident and they needed
- firemen to stop the flames."
- He laughed.
- She glanced quickly over. "Why are you laughing?"
- "I don't know." He started to laugh again and stopped "Why?"
- "You laugh when I haven't been funny and you answer right off. You never stop to think what
- I've asked you."
- He stopped walking, "You are an odd one," he said, looking at her. "Haven't you any respect?"
- "I don't mean to be insulting. It's just, I love to watch people too much, I guess."
- "Well, doesn't this mean anything to you?" He tapped the numerals 451 stitched on his char-
- coloured sleeve.
- "Yes," she whispered. She increased her pace. "Have you ever watched the jet cars racing on the
- boulevards down that way?
- "You're changing the subject!"
- "I sometimes think drivers don't know what grass is, or flowers, because they never see them
- slowly," she said. "If you showed a driver a green blur, Oh yes! he'd say, that's grass! A pink
- blur? That's a rose-garden! White blurs are houses. Brown blurs are cows. My uncle drove
- slowly on a highway once. He drove forty miles an hour and they jailed him for two days. Isn't
- that funny, and sad, too?"
- "You think too many things," said Montag, uneasily.
- "I rarely watch the 'parlour walls' or go to races or Fun Parks. So I've lots of time for crazy
- thoughts, I guess. Have you seen the two-hundred-foot-long billboards in the country beyond
- town? Did you know that once billboards were only twenty feet long? But cars started rushing by
- so quickly they had to stretch the advertising out so it would last."
- "I didn't know that!" Montag laughed abruptly.
- "Bet I know something else you don't. There's dew on the grass in the morning."
- He suddenly couldn't remember if he had known this or not, and it made him quite irritable.
- "And if you look"-she nodded at the sky-"there's a man in the moon."
- He hadn't looked for a long time.
- They walked the rest of the way in silence, hers thoughtful, his a kind of clenching and
- uncomfortable silence in which he shot her accusing glances. When they reached her house all its
- lights were blazing.
- "What's going on?" Montag had rarely seen that many house lights.
- "Oh, just my mother and father and uncle sitting around, talking. It's like being a pedestrian, only
- rarer. My uncle was arrested another time-did I tell you?-for being a pedestrian. Oh, we're most
- peculiar."
- "But what do you talk about?"
- She laughed at this. "Good night!" She started up her walk. Then she seemed to remember
- something and came back to look at him with wonder and curiosity. "Are you happy?" she said.
- "Am I what?" he cried.
- But she was gone-running in the moonlight. Her front door shut gently.
- "Happy! Of all the nonsense."
- He stopped laughing.
- He put his hand into the glove-hole of his front door and let it know his touch. The front door
- slid open.
- Of course I'm happy. What does she think? I'm not? he asked the quiet rooms. He stood looking
- up at the ventilator grille in the hall and suddenly remembered that something lay hidden behind
- the grille, something that seemed to peer down at him now. He moved his eyes quickly away.
- What a strange meeting on a strange night. He remembered nothing like it save one afternoon a
- year ago when he had met an old man in the park and they had talked ....
- Montag shook his head. He looked at a blank wall. The girl's face was there, really quite
- beautiful in memory: astonishing, in fact. She had a very thin face like the dial of a small clock
- seen faintly in a dark room in the middle of a night when you waken to see the time and see the
- clock telling you the hour and the minute and the second, with a white silence and a glowing, all
- certainty and knowing what it has to tell of the night passing swiftly on toward further
- darknesses but moving also toward a new sun.
- "What?" asked Montag of that other self, the subconscious idiot that ran babbling at times, quite
- independent of will, habit, and conscience.
- He glanced back at the wall. How like a mirror, too, her face. Impossible; for how many people
- did you know that refracted your own light to you? People were more often-he searched for a
- simile, found one in his work-torches, blazing away until they whiffed out. How rarely did other
- people's faces take of you and throw back to you your own expression, your own innermost
- trembling thought?
- What incredible power of identification the girl had; she was like the eager watcher of a
- marionette show, anticipating each flicker of an eyelid, each gesture of his hand, each flick of a
- finger, the moment before it began. How long had they walked together? Three minutes? Five?
- Yet how large that time seemed now. How immense a figure she was on the stage before him;
- what a shadow she threw on the wall with her slender body! He felt that if his eye itched, she
- might blink. And if the muscles of his jaws stretched imperceptibly, she would yawn long before
- he would.
- Why, he thought, now that I think of it, she almost seemed to be waiting for me there, in the
- street, so damned late at night ....
- He opened the bedroom door.
- It was like coming into the cold marbled room of a mausoleum after the moon had set. Complete
- darkness, not a hint of the silver world outside, the windows tightly shut, the chamber a tomb-
- world where no sound from the great city could penetrate. The room was not empty.
- He listened.
- The little mosquito-delicate dancing hum in the air, the electrical murmur of a hidden wasp snug
- in its special pink warm nest. The music was almost loud enough so he could follow the tune.
- He felt his smile slide away, melt, fold over, and down on itself like a tallow skin, like the stuff
- of a fantastic candle burning too long and now collapsing and now blown out. Darkness. He was
- not happy. He was not happy. He said the words to himself. He recognized this as the true state
- of affairs. He wore his happiness like a mask and the girl had run off across the lawn with the
- mask and there was no way of going to knock on her door and ask for it back.
- Without turning on the light he imagined how this room would look. His wife stretched on the
- bed, uncovered and cold, like a body displayed on the lid of a tomb, her eyes fixed to the ceiling
- by invisible threads of steel, immovable. And in her ears the little Seashells, the thimble radios
- tamped tight, and an electronic ocean of sound, of music and talk and music and talk coming in,
- coming in on the shore of her unsleeping mind. The room was indeed empty. Every night the
- waves came in and bore her off on their great tides of sound, floating her, wide-eyed, toward
- morning. There had been no night in the last two years that Mildred had not swum that sea, had
- not gladly gone down in it for the third time.
- The room was cold but nonetheless he felt he could not breathe. He did not wish to open the
- curtains and open the french windows, for he did not want the moon to come into the room. So,
- with the feeling of a man who will die in the next hour for lack of air,.he felt his way toward his
- open, separate, and therefore cold bed.
- An instant before his foot hit the object on the floor he knew he would hit such an object. It was
- not unlike the feeling he had experienced before turning the corner and almost knocking the girl
- down. His foot, sending vibrations ahead, received back echoes of the small barrier across its
- path even as the foot swung. His foot kicked. The object gave a dull clink and slid off in
- darkness.
- He stood very straight and listened to the person on the dark bed in the completely featureless
- night. The breath coming out of the nostrils was so faint it stirred only the furthest fringes of life,
- a small leaf, a black feather, a single fibre of hair.
- He still did not want outside light. He pulled out his igniter, felt the salamander etched on its
- silver disc, gave it a flick....
- Two moonstones looked up at him in the light of his small hand-held fire; two pale moonstones
- buried in a creek of clear water over which the life of the world ran, not touching them.
- "Mildred ! "
- Her face was like a snow-covered island upon which rain might fall; but it felt no rain; over
- which clouds might pass their moving shadows, but she felt no shadow. There was only the
- singing of the thimble-wasps in her tamped-shut ears, and her eyes all glass, and breath going in
- and out, softly, faintly, in and out of her nostrils, and her not caring whether it came or went,
- went or came.
- The object he had sent tumbling with his foot now glinted under the edge of his own bed. The
- small crystal bottle of sleeping-tablets which earlier today had been filled with thirty capsules
- and which now lay uncapped and empty in the light of the tiny flare.
- As he stood there the sky over the house screamed. There was a tremendous ripping sound as if
- two giant hands had torn ten thousand miles of black linen down the seam. Montag was cut in
- half. He felt his chest chopped down and split apart. The jet-bombs going over, going over, going
- over, one two, one two, one two, six of them, nine of them, twelve of them, one and one and one
- and another and another and another, did all the screaming for him. He opened his own mouth
- and let their shriek come down and out between his bared teeth. The house shook. The flare went
- out in his hand. The moonstones vanished. He felt his hand plunge toward the telephone.
- The jets were gone. He felt his lips move, brushing the mouthpiece of the phone. "Emergency
- hospital." A terrible whisper.
- He felt that the stars had been pulverized by the sound of the black jets and that in the morning
- the earth would be thought as he stood shivering in the dark, and let his lips go on moving and
- moving.
- They had this machine. They had two machines, really. One of them slid down into your
- stomach like a black cobra down an echoing well looking for all the old water and the old time
- gathered there. It drank up the green matter that flowed to the top in a slow boil. Did it drink of
- the darkness? Did it suck out all the poisons accumulated with the years? It fed in silence with an
- occasional sound of inner suffocation and blind searching. It had an Eye. The impersonal
- operator of the machine could, by wearing a special optical helmet, gaze into the soul of the
- person whom he was pumping out. What did the Eye see? He did not say. He saw but did not see
- what the Eye saw. The entire operation was not unlike the digging of a trench in one's yard. The
- woman on the bed was no more than a hard stratum of marble they had reached. Go on, anyway,
- shove the bore down, slush up the emptiness, if such a thing could be brought out in the throb of
- the suction snake. The operator stood smoking a cigarette. The other machine was working too.
- The other machine was operated by an equally impersonal fellow in non-stainable reddish-brown
- overalls. This machine pumped all of the blood from the body and replaced it with fresh blood
- and serum.
- "Got to clean 'em out both ways," said the operator, standing over the silent woman. "No use
- getting the stomach if you don't clean the blood. Leave that stuff in the blood and the blood hits
- the brain like a mallet, bang, a couple of thousand times and the brain just gives up, just quits."
- "Stop it!" said Montag.
- "I was just sayin'," said the operator.
- "Are you done?" said Montag.
- They shut the machines up tight. "We're done." His anger did not even touch them. They stood
- with the cigarette smoke curling around their noses and into their eyes without making them
- blink or squint. "That's fifty bucks."
- "First, why don't you tell me if she'll be all right?"
- "Sure, she'll be O.K. We got all the mean stuff right in our suitcase here, it can't get at her now.
- As I said, you take out the old and put in the new and you're O.K."
- "Neither of you is an M.D. Why didn't they send an M.D. from Emergency?"
- "Hell! " the operator's cigarette moved on his lips. "We get these cases nine or ten a night. Got so
- many, starting a few years ago, we had the special machines built. With the optical lens, of
- course, that was new; the rest is ancient. You don't need an M.D., case like this; all you need is
- two handymen, clean up the problem in half an hour. Look"-he started for the door-"we gotta go.
- Just had another call on the old ear-thimble. Ten blocks from here. Someone else just jumped off
- the cap of a pillbox. Call if you need us again. Keep her quiet. We got a contra- sedative in her.
- She'll wake up hungry. So long."
- And the men with the cigarettes in their straight-lined mouths, the men with the eyes of puff-
- adders, took up their load of machine and tube, their case of liquid melancholy and the slow dark
- sludge of nameless stuff, and strolled out the door.
- Montag sank down into a chair and looked at this woman. Her eyes were closed now, gently, and
- he put out his hand to feel the warmness of breath on his palm.
- "Mildred," he said, at last.
- There are too many of us, he thought. There are billions of us and that's too many. Nobody
- knows anyone. Strangers come and violate you. Strangers come and cut your heart out. Strangers
- come and take your blood. Good God, who were those men? I never saw them before in my life !
- Half an hour passed.
- The bloodstream in this woman was new and it seemed to have done a new thing to her. Her
- cheeks were very pink and her lips were very fresh and full of colour and they looked soft and
- relaxed. Someone else's blood there. If only someone else's flesh and brain and memory. If only
- they could have taken her mind along to the dry-cleaner's and emptied the pockets and steamed
- and cleansed it and reblocked it and brought it back in the morning. If only . . .
- He got up and put back the curtains and opened the windows wide to let the night air in. It was
- two o'clock in the morning. Was it only an hour ago, Clarisse McClellan in the street, and him
- coming in, and the dark room and his foot kicking the little crystal bottle? Only an hour, but the
- world had melted down and sprung up in a new and colourless form.
- Laughter blew across the moon-coloured lawn from the house of Clarisse and her father and
- mother and the uncle who smiled so quietly and so earnestly. Above all, their laughter was
- relaxed and hearty and not forced in any way, coming from the house that was so brightly lit this
- late at night while all the other houses were kept to themselves in darkness. Montag heard the
- voices talking, talking, talking, giving, talking, weaving, reweaving their hypnotic web.
- Montag moved out through the french windows and crossed the lawn, without even thinking of
- it. He stood outside the talking house in the shadows, thinking he might even tap on their door
- and whisper, "Let me come in. I won't say anything. I just want to listen. What is it you're
- saying?"
- But instead he stood there, very cold, his face a mask of ice, listening to a man's voice (the
- uncle?) moving along at an easy pace:
- "Well, after all, this is the age of the disposable tissue. Blow your nose on a person, wad them,
- flush them away, reach for another, blow, wad, flush. Everyone using everyone else's coattails.
- How are you supposed to root for the home team when you don't even have a programme or
- know the names? For that matter, what colour jerseys are they wearing as they trot out on to the
- field?"
- Montag moved back to his own house, left the window wide, checked Mildred, tucked the covers
- about her carefully, and then lay down with the moonlight on his cheek-bones and on the
- frowning ridges in his brow, with the moonlight distilled in each eye to form a silver cataract
- there.
- One drop of rain. Clarisse. Another drop. Mildred. A third. The uncle. A fourth. The fire tonight.
- One, Clarisse. Two, Mildred. Three, uncle. Four, fire, One, Mildred, two, Clarisse. One, two,
- three, four, five, Clarisse, Mildred, uncle, fire, sleeping-tablets, men, disposable tissue, coat-tails,
- blow, wad, flush, Clarisse, Mildred, uncle, fire, tablets, tissues, blow, wad, flush. One, two,
- three, one, two, three! Rain. The storm. The uncle laughing. Thunder falling downstairs. The
- whole world pouring down. The fire gushing up in a volcano. All rushing on down around in a
- spouting roar and rivering stream toward morning.
- "I don't know anything any more," he said, and let a sleep-lozenge dissolve on his tongue.
- At nine in the morning, Mildred's bed was empty.
- Montag got up quickly, his heart pumping, and ran down the hall and stopped at the kitchen
- door.
- Toast popped out of the silver toaster, was seized by a spidery metal hand that drenched it with
- melted butter.
- Mildred watched the toast delivered to her plate. She had both ears plugged with electronic bees
- that were humming the hour away. She looked up suddenly, saw him, and nodded.
- "You all right?" he asked.
- She was an expert at lip-reading from ten years of apprenticeship at Seashell ear-thimbles. She
- nodded again. She set the toaster clicking away at another piece of bread.
- Montag sat down.
- His wife said, "I don't know why I should be so hungry."
- "You-?"
- "I'm HUNGRY."
- "Last night," he began.
- "Didn't sleep well. Feel terrible," she said. "God, I'm hungry. I can't figure it."
- "Last night-" he said again.
- She watched his lips casually. "What about last night?"
- "Don't you remember?"
- "What? Did we have a wild party or something? Feel like I've a hangover. God, I'm hungry. Who
- was here?"
- "A few people," he said.
- "That's what I thought." She chewed her toast. "Sore stomach, but I'm hungry as all-get-out.
- Hope I didn't do anything foolish at the party."
- "No," he said, quietly.
- The toaster spidered out a piece of buttered bread for him. He held it in his hand, feeling grateful.
- "You don't look so hot yourself," said his wife.
- In the late afternoon it rained and the entire world was dark grey. He stood in the hall of his
- house, putting on his badge with the orange salamander burning across it. He stood looking up at
- the air-conditioning vent in the hall for a long time. His wife in the TV parlour paused long
- enough from reading her script to glance up. "Hey," she said. "The man's THINKING!"
- "Yes," he said. "I wanted to talk to you." He paused. "You took all the pills in your bottle last
- night."
- "Oh, I wouldn't do that," she said, surprised.
- "The bottle was empty."
- "I wouldn't do a thing like that. Why would I do a thing like that?" she asked.
- "Maybe you took two pills and forgot and took two more, and forgot again and took two more,
- and were so dopy you kept right on until you had thirty or forty of them in you."
- "Heck," she said, "what would I want to go and do a silly thing like that for?"
- "I don't know," he said.
- She was quite obviously waiting for him to go. "I didn't do that," she said. "Never in a billion
- years."
- "All right if you say so," he said.
- "That's what the lady said." She turned back to her script.
- "What's on this afternoon?" he asked tiredly.
- She didn't look up from her script again. "Well, this is a play comes on the wall-to-wall circuit in
- ten minutes. They mailed me my part this morning. I sent in some box-tops. They write the script
- with one part missing. It's a new idea. The home-maker, that's me, is the missing part. When it
- comes time for the missing lines, they all look at me out of the three walls and I say the lines:
- Here, for instance, the man says, "What do you think of this whole idea, Helen?' And he looks at
- me sitting here centre stage, see? And I say, I say --" She paused and ran her finger under a line
- in the script. " I think that's fine!' And then they go on with the play until he says, "Do you agree
- to that, Helen!' and I say, "I sure do!' Isn't that fun, Guy?"
- He stood in the hall looking at her.
- "It's sure fun," she said.
- "What's the play about?"
- "I just told you. There are these people named Bob and Ruth and Helen."
- "Oh."
- "It's really fun. It'll be even more fun when we can afford to have the fourth wall installed. How
- long you figure before we save up and get the fourth wall torn out and a fourth wall-TV put in?
- It's only two thousand dollars."
- "That's one-third of my yearly pay."
- "It's only two thousand dollars," she replied. "And I should think you'd consider me sometimes.
- If we had a fourth wall, why it'd be just like this room wasn't ours at all, but all kinds of exotic
- people's rooms. We could do without a few things."
- "We're already doing without a few things to pay for the third wall. It was put in only two
- months ago, remember?"
- "Is that all it was?" She sat looking at him for a long moment. "Well, good-bye, dear." .
- "Good-bye," he said. He stopped and turned around. "Does it have a happy ending?"
- "I haven't read that far."
- He walked over, read the last page, nodded, folded the script, and handed it back to her. He
- walked out of the house into the rain.
- The rain was thinning away and the girl was walking in the centre of the sidewalk with her head
- up and the few drops falling on her face. She smiled when she saw Montag.
- "Hello! "
- He said hello and then said, "What are you up to now?"
- "I'm still crazy. The rain feels good. I love to walk in it.
- "I don't think I'd like that," he said.
- "You might if you tried."
- "I never have."
- She licked her lips. "Rain even tastes good."
- "What do you do, go around trying everything once?" he asked.
- "Sometimes twice." She looked at something in her hand.
- "What've you got there?" he said.
- "I guess it's the last of the dandelions this year. I didn't think I'd find one on the lawn this late.
- Have you ever heard of rubbing it under your chin? Look." She touched her chin with the flower,
- laughing.
- "Why?"
- "If it rubs off, it means I'm in love. Has it?"
- He could hardly do anything else but look.
- "Well?" she said.
- "You're yellow under there."
- "Fine! Let's try YOU now."
- "It won't work for me."
- "Here." Before he could move she had put the dandelion under his chin. He drew back and she
- laughed. "Hold still!"
- She peered under his chin and frowned.
- "Well?" he said.
- "What a shame," she said. "You're not in love with anyone."
- "Yes, I am ! "
- "It doesn't show."
- "I am very much in love! " He tried to conjure up a face to fit the words, but there was no face. "I
- am!"
- "Oh please don't look that way."
- "It's that dandelion," he said. "You've used it all up on yourself. That's why it won't work for
- me."
- "Of course, that must be it. Oh, now I've upset you, I can see I have; I'm sorry, really I am." She
- touched his elbow.
- "No, no," he said, quickly, "I'm all right."
- "I've got to be going, so say you forgive me. I don't want you angry with me."
- "I'm not angry. Upset, yes."
- "I've got to go to see my psychiatrist now. They make me go. I made up things to say. I don't
- know what he thinks of me. He says I'm a regular onion! I keep him busy peeling away the
- layers."
- "I'm inclined to believe you need the psychiatrist," said Montag.
- "You don't mean that."
- He took a breath and let it out and at last said, "No, I don't mean that."
- "The psychiatrist wants to know why I go out and hike around in the forests and watch the birds
- and collect butterflies. I'll show you my collection some day."
- "Good."
- "They want to know what I do with all my time. I tell them that sometimes I just sit and think.
- But I won't tell them what. I've got them running. And sometimes, I tell them, I like to put my
- head back, like this, and let the rain fall into my mouth. It tastes just like wine. Have you ever
- tried it?"
- "No I--"
- "You HAVE forgiven me, haven't you?"
- "Yes." He thought about it. "Yes, I have. God knows why. You're peculiar, you're aggravating,
- yet you're easy to forgive. You say you're seventeen?"
- "Well-next month."
- "How odd. How strange. And my wife thirty and yet you seem so much older at times. I can't get
- over it."
- "You're peculiar yourself, Mr. Montag. Sometimes I even forget you're a fireman. Now, may I
- make you angry again?"
- "Go ahead."
- "How did it start? How did you get into it? How did you pick your work and how did you
- happen to think to take the job you have? You're not like the others. I've seen a few; I know.
- When I talk, you look at me. When I said something about the moon, you looked at the moon,
- last night. The others would never do that. The others would walk off and leave me talking. Or
- threaten me. No one has time any more for anyone else. You're one of the few who put up with
- me. That's why I think it's so strange you're a fireman, it just doesn't seem right for you,
- somehow."
- He felt his body divide itself into a hotness and a coldness, a softness and a hardness, a trembling
- and a not trembling, the two halves grinding one upon the other.
- "You'd better run on to your appointment," he said.
- And she ran off and left him standing there in the rain. Only after a long time did he move.
- And then, very slowly, as he walked, he tilted his head back in the rain, for just a few moments,
- and opened his mouth....
- The Mechanical Hound slept but did not sleep, lived but did not live in its gently humming,
- gently vibrating, softly illuminated kennel back in a dark corner of the firehouse. The dim light
- of one in the morning, the moonlight from the open sky framed through the great window,
- touched here and there on the brass and the copper and the steel of the faintly trembling beast.
- Light flickered on bits of ruby glass and on sensitive capillary hairs in the nylon-brushed nostrils
- of the creature that quivered gently, gently, gently, its eight legs spidered under it on rubber-
- padded paws.
- Montag slid down the brass pole. He went out to look at the city and the clouds had cleared away
- completely, and he lit a cigarette and came back to bend down and look at the Hound. It was like
- a great bee come home from some field where the honey is full of poison wildness, of insanity
- and nightmare, its body crammed with that over-rich nectar and now it was sleeping the evil out
- of itself.
- "Hello," whispered Montag, fascinated as always with the dead beast, the living beast.
- At night when things got dull, which was every night, the men slid down the brass poles, and set
- the ticking combinations of the olfactory system of the Hound and let loose rats in the firehouse
- area-way, and sometimes chickens, and sometimes cats that would have to be drowned anyway,
- and there would be betting to see which the Hound would seize first. The animals were turned
- loose. Three seconds later the game was done, the rat, cat, or chicken caught half across the
- areaway, gripped in gentling paws while a four-inch hollow steel needle plunged down from the
- proboscis of the Hound to inject massive jolts of morphine or procaine. The pawn was then
- tossed in the incinerator. A new game began.
- Montag stayed upstairs most nights when this went on. There had been a time two years ago
- when he had bet with the best of them, and lost a week's salary and faced Mildred's insane anger,
- which showed itself in veins and blotches. But now at night he lay in his bunk, face turned to the
- wall, listening to whoops of laughter below and the piano-string scurry of rat feet, the violin
- squeaking of mice, and the great shadowing, motioned silence of the Hound leaping out like a
- moth in the raw light, finding, holding its victim, inserting the needle and going back to its
- kennel to die as if a switch had been turned.
- Montag touched the muzzle. .
- The Hound growled.
- Montag jumped back.
- The Hound half rose in its kennel and looked at him with green-blue neon light flickering in its
- suddenly activated eyebulbs. It growled again, a strange rasping combination of electrical sizzle,
- a frying sound, a scraping of metal, a turning of cogs that seemed rusty and ancient with
- suspicion.
- "No, no, boy," said Montag, his heart pounding.
- He saw the silver needle extended upon the air an inch, pull back, extend, pull back. The growl
- simmered in the beast and it looked at him.
- Montag backed up. The Hound took a step from its kennel.
- Montag grabbed the brass pole with one hand. The pole, reacting, slid upward, and took him
- through the ceiling, quietly. He stepped off in the half-lit deck of the upper level. He was
- trembling and his face was green-white. Below, the Hound had sunk back down upon its eight
- incredible insect legs and was humming to itself again, its multi-faceted eyes at peace.
- Montag stood, letting the fears pass, by the drop-hole. Behind him, four men at a card table
- under a green-lidded light in the corner glanced briefly but said nothing. Only the man with the
- Captain's hat and the sign of the Phoenix on his hat, at last, curious, his playing cards in his thin
- hand, talked across the long room.
- "Montag . . . ?"
- "It doesn't like me," said Montag.
- "What, the Hound?" The Captain studied his cards.
- "Come off it. It doesn't like or dislike. It just "functions.' It's like a lesson in ballistics. It has a
- trajectory we decide for it. It follows through. It targets itself, homes itself, and cuts off. It's only
- copper wire, storage batteries, and electricity."
- Montag swallowed. "Its calculators can be set to any combination, so many amino acids, so
- much sulphur, so much butterfat and alkaline. Right?"
- "We all know that."
- "All of those chemical balances and percentages on all of us here in the house are recorded in the
- master file downstairs. It would be easy for someone to set up a partial combination on the
- Hound's 'memory,' a touch of amino acids, perhaps. That would account for what the animal did
- just now. Reacted toward me."
- "Hell," said the Captain.
- "Irritated, but not completely angry. Just enough 'memory' set up in it by someone so it growled
- when I touched it. "
- "Who would do a thing like that?." asked the Captain. "You haven't any enemies here, Guy."
- "None that I know of."
- "We'll have the Hound checked by our technicians tomorrow.
- "This isn't the first time it's threatened me," said Montag. "Last month it happened twice."
- "We'll fix it up. Don't worry"
- But Montag did not move and only stood thinking of the ventilator grille in the hall at home and
- what lay hidden behind the grille. If someone here in the firehouse knew about the ventilator
- then mightn't they "tell" the Hound . . . ?
- The Captain came over to the drop-hole and gave Montag a questioning glance.
- "I was just figuring," said Montag, "what does the Hound think about down there nights? Is it
- coming alive on us, really? It makes me cold."
- "It doesn't think anything we don't want it to think."
- "That's sad," said Montag, quietly, "because all we put into it is hunting and finding and killing.
- What a shame if that's all it can ever know.'"
- Beatty snorted, gently. "Hell! It's a fine bit of craftsmanship, a good rifle that can fetch its own
- target and guarantees the bull's-eye every time."
- "That's why," said Montag. "I wouldn't want to be its next victim.
- "Why? You got a guilty conscience about something?"
- Montag glanced up swiftly.
- Beatty stood there looking at him steadily with his eyes, while his mouth opened and began to
- laugh, very softly.
- One two three four five six seven days. And as many times he came out of the house and Clarisse
- was there somewhere in the world. Once he saw her shaking a walnut tree, once he saw her
- sitting on the lawn knitting a blue sweater, three or four times he found a bouquet of late flowers
- on his porch, or a handful of chestnuts in a little sack, or some autumn leaves neatly pinned to a
- sheet of white paper and thumb-tacked to his door. Every day Clarisse walked him to the corner.
- One day it was raining, the next it was clear, the day after that the wind blew strong, and the day
- after that it was mild and calm, and the day after that calm day was a day like a furnace of
- summer and Clarisse with her face all sunburnt by late afternoon.
- "Why is it," he said, one time, at the subway entrance, "I feel I've known you so many years?"
- "Because I like you," she said, "and I don't want anything from you. And because we know each
- other."
- "You make me feel very old and very much like a father."
- "Now you explain," she said, "why you haven't any daughters like me, if you love children so
- much?"
- "I don't know."
- "You're joking!"
- "I mean-" He stopped and shook his head. "Well, my wife, she . . . she just never wanted any
- children at all."
- The girl stopped smiling. "I'm sorry. I really, thought you were having fun at my expense. I'm a
- fool."
- "No, no," he said. "It was a good question. It's been a long time since anyone cared enough to
- ask. A good question."
- "Let's talk about something else. Have you ever smelled old leaves? Don't they smell like
- cinnamon? Here. Smell."
- "Why, yes, it is like cinnamon in a way."
- She looked at him with her clear dark eyes. "You always seem shocked."
- "It's just I haven't had time--"
- "Did you look at the stretched-out billboards like I told you?"
- "I think so. Yes." He had to laugh.
- "Your laugh sounds much nicer than it did"
- "Does it?"
- "Much more relaxed."
- He felt at ease and comfortable. "Why aren't you in school? I see you every day wandering
- around."
- "Oh, they don't miss me," she said. "I'm anti-social, they say. I don't mix. It's so strange. I'm very
- social indeed. It all depends on what you mean by social, doesn't it? Social to me means talking
- about things like this." She rattled some chestnuts that had fallen off the tree in the front yard.
- "Or talking about how strange the world is. Being with people is nice. But I don't think it's social
- to get a bunch of people together and then not let them talk, do you? An hour of TV class, an
- hour of basketball or baseball or running, another hour of transcription history or painting
- pictures, and more sports, but do you know, we never ask questions, or at least most don't; they
- just run the answers at you, bing, bing, bing, and us sitting there for four more hours of film-
- teacher. That's not social to me at all. It's a lot of funnels and a lot of water poured down the
- spout and out the bottom, and them telling us it's wine when it's not. They run us so ragged by
- the end of the day we can't do anything but go to bed or head for a Fun Park to bully people
- around, break windowpanes in the Window Smasher place or wreck cars in the Car Wrecker
- place with the big steel ball. Or go out in the cars and race on the streets, trying to see how close
- you can get to lamp-posts, playing "chicken' and 'knock hub-caps.' I guess I'm everything they
- say I am, all right. I haven't any friends. That's supposed to prove I'm abnormal. But everyone I
- know is either shouting or dancing around like wild or beating up one another. Do you notice
- how people hurt each other nowadays?"
- "You sound so very old."
- "Sometimes I'm ancient. I'm afraid of children my own age. They kill each other. Did it always
- used to be that way? My uncle says no. Six of my friends have been shot in the last year alone.
- Ten of them died in car wrecks. I'm afraid of them and they don't like me because I'm afraid. My
- uncle says his grandfather remembered when children didn't kill each other. But that was a long
- time ago when they had things different. They believed in responsibility, my uncle says. Do you
- know, I'm responsible. I was spanked when I needed it, years ago. And I do all the shopping and
- house-cleaning by hand.
- "But most of all," she said, "I like to watch people. Sometimes I ride the subway all day and look
- at them and listen to them. I just want to figure out who they are and what they want and where
- they're going. Sometimes I even go to the Fun Parks and ride in the jet cars when they race on
- the edge of town at midnight and the police don't care as long as they're insured. As long as
- everyone has ten thousand insurance everyone's happy. Sometimes I sneak around and listen in
- subways. Or I listen at soda fountains, and do you know what?"
- "What?"
- "People don't talk about anything."
- "Oh, they must!"
- "No, not anything. They name a lot of cars or clothes or swimming-pools mostly and say how
- swell! But they all say the same things and nobody says anything different from anyone else.
- And most of the time in the cafes they have the jokeboxes on and the same jokes most of the
- time, or the musical wall lit and all the coloured patterns running up and down, but it's only
- colour and all abstract. And at the museums, have you ever been? All abstract. That's all there is
- now. My uncle says it was different once. A long time back sometimes pictures said things or
- even showed people. "
- "Your uncle said, your uncle said. Your uncle must be a remarkable man."
- "He is. He certainly is. Well, I've got to be going. Goodbye, Mr. Montag."
- "Good-bye."
- "Good-bye...."
- One two three four five six seven days: the firehouse.
- "Montag, you shin that pole like a bird up a tree."
- Third day.
- "Montag, I see you came in the back door this time. The Hound bother you?"
- "No, no."
- Fourth day.
- "Montag, a funny thing. Heard tell this morning. Fireman in Seattle, purposely set a Mechanical
- Hound to his own chemical complex and let it loose. What kind of suicide would you call that?"
- Five six seven days.
- And then, Clarisse was gone. He didn't know what there was about the afternoon, but it was not
- seeing her somewhere in the world. The lawn was empty, the trees empty, the street empty, and
- while at first he did not even know he missed her or was even looking for her, the fact was that
- by the time he reached the subway, there were vague stirrings of un-ease in him. Something was
- the matter, his routine had been disturbed. A simple routine, true, established in a short few days,
- and yet . . . ? He almost turned back to make the walk again, to give her time to appear. He was
- certain if he tried the same route, everything would work out fine. But it was late, and the arrival
- of his train put a stop to his plan.
- The flutter of cards, motion of hands, of eyelids, the drone of the time-voice in the firehouse
- ceiling "... one thirty- five. Thursday morning, November 4th,... one thirty-six . . . one thirty-
- seven a.m... " The tick of the playing-cards on the greasy table-top, all the sounds came to
- Montag, behind his closed eyes, behind the barrier he had momentarily erected. He could feel the
- firehouse full of glitter and shine and silence, of brass colours, the colours of coins, of gold, of
- silver: The unseen men across the table were sighing on their cards, waiting.
- ". . .one forty-five..." The voice-clock mourned out the cold hour of a cold morning of a still
- colder year.
- "What's wrong, Montag?"
- Montag opened his eyes.
- A radio hummed somewhere. "... war may be declared any hour. This country stands ready to
- defend its--"
- The firehouse trembled as a great flight of jet planes whistled a single note across the black
- morning sky.
- Montag blinked. Beatty was looking at him as if he were a museum statue. At any moment,
- Beatty might rise and walk about him, touching, exploring his guilt and self-consciousness.
- Guilt? What guilt was that?
- "Your play, Montag."
- Montag looked at these men whose faces were sunburnt by a thousand real and ten thousand
- imaginary fires, whose work flushed their cheeks and fevered their eyes. These men who looked
- steadily into their platinum igniter flames as they lit their eternally burning black pipes. They and
- their charcoal hair and soot-coloured brows and bluish-ash-smeared cheeks where they had
- shaven close; but their heritage showed. Montag started up, his mouth opened. Had he ever seen
- a fireman that didn't have black hair, black brows, a fiery face, and a blue-steel shaved but
- unshaved look? These men were all mirror-images of himself! Were all firemen picked then for
- their looks as well as their proclivities? The colour of cinders and ash about them, and the
- continual smell of burning from their pipes. Captain Beatty there, rising in thunderheads of
- tobacco smoke. Beatty opening a fresh tobacco packet, crumpling the cellophane into a sound of
- fire.
- Montag looked at the cards in his own hands. "I-I've been thinking. About the fire last week.
- About the man whose library we fixed. What happened to him?"
- "They took him screaming off to the asylum"
- "He. wasn't insane."
- Beatty arranged his cards quietly. "Any man's insane who thinks he can fool the Government and
- us." "
- "I've tried to imagine," said Montag, "just how it would feel. I mean to have firemen burn our
- houses and our books."
- "We haven't any books."
- "But if we did have some."
- "You got some?"
- Beatty blinked slowly.
- "No." Montag gazed beyond them to the wall with the typed lists of a million forbidden books.
- Their names leapt in fire, burning down the years under his axe and his hose which sprayed not
- water but kerosene. "No. " But in his mind, a cool wind started up and blew out of the ventilator
- grille at home, softly, softly, chilling his face. And, again, he saw himself in a green park talking
- to an old man, a very old man, and the wind from the park was cold, too.
- Montag hesitated, "Was-was it always like this? The firehouse, our work? I mean, well, once
- upon a time..."
- "Once upon a time!" Beatty said. "What kind of talk is THAT?"
- Fool, thought Montag to himself, you'll give it away. At the last fire, a book of fairy tales, he'd
- glanced at a single line. "I mean," he said, "in the old days, before homes were completely
- fireproofed " Suddenly it seemed a much younger voice was speaking for him. He opened his
- mouth and it was Clarisse McClellan saying, "Didn't firemen prevent fires rather than stoke them
- up and get them going?"
- "That's rich!" Stoneman and Black drew forth their rulebooks, which also contained brief
- histories of the Firemen of America, and laid them out where Montag, though long familiar with
- them, might read:
- "Established, 1790, to burn English-influenced books in the Colonies. First Fireman: Benjamin
- Franklin."
- RULE 1 . Answer the alarm swiftly.
- 2. Start the fire swiftly.
- 3. Burn everything.
- 4. Report back to firehouse immediately.
- 5. Stand alert for other alarms.
- Everyone watched Montag. He did not move.
- The alarm sounded.
- The bell in the ceiling kicked itself two hundred times. Suddenly there were four empty chairs.
- The cards fell in a flurry of snow. The brass pole shivered. The men were gone.
- Montag sat in his chair. Below, the orange dragon coughed into life.
- Montag slid down the pole like a man in a dream.
- The Mechanical Hound leapt up in its kennel, its eyes all green flame.
- "Montag, you forgot your helmet!"
- He seized it off the wall behind him, ran, leapt, and they were off, the night wind hammering
- about their siren scream and their mighty metal thunder !
- It was a flaking three-storey house in the ancient part of the city, a century old if it was a day, but
- like all houses it had been given a thin fireproof plastic sheath many years ago, and this
- preservative shell seemed to be the only thing holding it in the sky.
- "Here we are !"
- The engine slammed to a stop. Beatty, Stoneman, and Black ran up the sidewalk, suddenly
- odious and fat in the plump fireproof slickers. Montag followed.
- They crashed the front door and grabbed at a woman, though she was not running, she was not
- trying to escape. She was only standing, weaving from side to side, her eyes fixed upon a
- nothingness in the wall as if they had struck her a terrible blow upon the head. Her tongue was
- moving in her mouth, and her eyes seemed to be trying to remember something, and then they
- remembered and her tongue moved again:
- " 'Play the man, Master Ridley; we shall this day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England,
- as I trust shall never be put out.' "
- "Enough of that!" said Beatty. "Where are they?"
- He slapped her face with amazing objectivity and repeated the question. The old woman's eyes
- came to a focus upon Beatty. "You know where they are or you wouldn't be here," she said.
- Stoneman held out the telephone alarm card with the complaint signed in telephone duplicate on
- the back
- "Have reason to suspect attic; 11 No. Elm, City. ? E. B."
- "That would be Mrs. Blake, my neighbour;" said the woman, reading the initials.
- "All right, men, let's get 'em!"
- Next thing they were up in musty blackness, swinging silver hatchets at doors that were, after all,
- unlocked, tumbling through like boys all rollick and shout. "Hey! " A fountain of books sprang
- down upon Montag as he climbed shuddering up the sheer stair-well. How inconvenient! Always
- before it had been like snuffing a candle. The police went first and adhesive-taped the victim's
- mouth and bandaged him off into their glittering beetle cars, so when you arrived you found an
- empty house. You weren't hurting anyone, you were hurting only things ! And since things really
- couldn't be hurt, since things felt nothing, and things don't scream or whimper, as this woman
- might begin to scream and cry out, there was nothing to tease your conscience later. You were
- simply cleaning up. Janitorial work, essentially. Everything to its proper place. Quick with the
- kerosene! Who's got a match!
- But now, tonight, someone had slipped. This woman was spoiling the ritual. The men were
- making too much noise, laughing, joking to cover her terrible accusing silence below. She made
- the empty rooms roar with accusation and shake down a fine dust of guilt that was sucked in
- their nostrils as they plunged about. It was neither cricket nor correct. Montag felt an immense
- irritation. She shouldn't be here, on top of everything!
- Books bombarded his shoulders, his arms, his upturned face A book alighted, almost obediently,
- like a white pigeon, in his hands, wings fluttering. In the dim, wavering light, a page hung.open
- and it was like a snowy feather, the words delicately painted thereon. In all the rush and fervour,
- Montag had only an instant to read a line, but it blazed in his mind for the next minute as if
- stamped there with fiery steel. "Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine." He dropped
- the book. Immediately, another fell into his arms.
- "Montag, up here! "
- Montag's hand closed like a mouth, crushed the book with wild devotion, with an insanity of
- mindlessness to his chest. The men above were hurling shovelfuls of magazines into the dusty
- air. They fell like slaughtered birds and the woman stood below, like a small girl, among the
- bodies.
- Montag had done nothing. His hand had done it all, his hand, with a brain of its own, with a
- conscience and a curiosity in each trembling finger, had turned thief.. Now, it plunged the book
- back under his arm, pressed it tight to sweating armpit, rushed out empty, with a magician's
- flourish! Look here! Innocent! Look!
- He gazed, shaken, at that white hand. He held it way out, as if he were far-sighted. He held it
- close, as if he were blind.
- "Montag! "
- He jerked about.
- "Don't stand there, idiot!"
- The books lay like great mounds of fishes left to dry. The men danced and slipped and fell over
- them. Titles glittered their golden eyes, falling, gone.
- "Kerosene! They pumped the cold fluid from the numbered 451 tanks strapped to their shoulders.
- They coated each book, they pumped rooms full of it.
- They hurried downstairs, Montag staggered after them in the kerosene fumes.
- "Come on, woman!"
- The woman knelt among the books, touching the drenched leather and cardboard, reading the gilt
- titles with her fingers while her eyes accused Montag.
- "You can't ever have my books," she said.
- "You know the law," said Beatty. "Where's your common sense? None of those books agree with
- each other. You've been locked up here for years with a regular damned Tower of Babel. Snap
- out of it! The people in those books never lived. Come on now! "
- She shook her head.
- "The whole house is going up;" said Beatty,
- The men walked clumsily to the door. They glanced back at Montag, who stood near the woman.
- "You're not leaving her here?" he protested.
- "She won't come."
- "Force her, then!"
- Beatty raised his hand in which was concealed the igniter. "We're due back at the house. Besides,
- these fanatics always try suicide; the pattern's familiar."
- Montag placed his hand on the woman's elbow. "You can come with me."
- "No," she said. "Thank you, anyway."
- "I'm counting to ten," said Beatty. "One. Two."
- "Please," said Montag.
- "Go on," said the woman.
- "Three. Four."
- "Here." Montag pulled at the woman.
- The woman replied quietly, "I want to stay here"
- "Five. Six."
- "You can stop counting," she said. She opened the fingers of one hand slightly and in the palm of
- the hand was a single slender object.
- An ordinary kitchen match.
- The sight of it rushed the men out and down away from the house. Captain Beatty, keeping his
- dignity, backed slowly through the front door, his pink face burnt and shiny from a thousand
- fires and night excitements. God, thought Montag, how true! Always at night the alarm comes.
- Never by day! Is it because the fire is prettier by night? More spectacle, a better show? The pink
- face of Beatty now showed the faintest panic in the door. The woman's hand twitched on the
- single matchstick. The fumes of kerosene bloomed up about her. Montag felt the hidden book
- pound like a heart against his chest.
- "Go on," said the woman, and Montag felt himself back away and away out of the door, after
- Beatty, down the steps, across the lawn, where the path of kerosene lay like the track of some
- evil snail.
- On the front porch where she had come to weigh them quietly with her eyes, her quietness a
- condemnation, the woman stood motionless.
- Beatty flicked his fingers to spark the kerosene.
- He was too late. Montag gasped.
- The woman on the porch reached out with contempt for them all, and struck the kitchen match
- against the railing.
- People ran out of houses all down the street.
- They said nothing on their way back to the firehouse. Nobody looked at anyone else. Montag sat
- in the front seat with Beatty and Black. They did not even smoke their pipes. They sat there
- looking out of the front of the great salamander as they turned a corner and went silently on.
- "Master Ridley," said Montag at last.
- "What?" said Beatty.
- "She said, "Master Ridley.' She said some crazy thing when we came in the door. "Play the man,'
- she said, "Master Ridley.' Something, something, something."
- " "We shall this day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England, as I trust shall never be put
- out,'" said Beatty. Stoneman glanced over at the Captain, as did Montag, startled.
- Beatty rubbed his chin. "A man named Latimer said that to a man named Nicholas Ridley, as
- they were being burnt alive at Oxford, for heresy, on October 16, 1555."
- Montag and Stoneman went back to looking at the street as it moved under the engine wheels.
- "I'm full of bits and pieces," said Beatty. "Most fire captains have to be. Sometimes I surprise
- myself. WATCH it, Stoneman ! "
- Stoneman braked the truck.
- "Damn!" said Beatty. "You've gone right by the comer where we turn for the firehouse."
- "Who is it?"
- "Who would it be?" said Montag, leaning back against the closed door in the dark.
- His wife said, at last, "Well, put on the light."
- "I don't want the light."
- "Come to bed."
- He heard her roll impatiently; the bedsprings squealed.
- "Are you drunk?" she said.
- So it was the hand that started it all. He felt one hand and then the other work his coat free and
- let it slump to the floor. He held his pants out into an abyss and let them fall into darkness. His
- hands had been infected, and soon it would be his arms. He could feel the poison working up his
- wrists and into his elbows and his shoulders, and then the jump-over from shoulder-blade to
- shoulder-blade like a spark leaping a gap. His hands were ravenous. And his eyes were
- beginning to feel hunger, as if they must look at something, anything, everything.
- His wife said, "What are you doing?"
- He balanced in space with the book in his sweating cold fingers.
- A minute later she said, "Well, just don't stand there in the middle of the floor."
- He made a small sound.
- "What?" she asked.
- He made more soft sounds. He stumbled towards the bed and shoved the book clumsily under
- the cold pillow. He fell into bed and his wife cried out, startled. He lay far across the room from
- her, on a winter island separated by an empty sea. She talked to him for what seemed a long
- while and she talked about this and she talked about that and it was only words, like the words he
- had heard once in a nursery at a friend's house, a two-year-old child building word patterns,
- talking jargon, making pretty sounds in the air. But Montag said nothing and after a long while
- when he only made the small sounds, he felt her move in the room and come to his bed and stand
- over him and put her hand down to feel his cheek. He knew that when she pulled her hand away
- from his face it was wet.
- Late in the night he looked over at Mildred. She was awake. There was a tiny dance of melody in
- the air, her Seashell was tamped in her ear again and she was listening to far people in far places,
- her eyes wide and staring at the fathoms of blackness above her in the ceiling.
- Wasn't there an old joke about the wife who talked so much on the telephone that her desperate
- husband ran out to the nearest store and telephoned her to ask what was for dinner? Well, then,
- why didn't he buy himself an audio-Seashell broadcasting station and talk to his wife late at
- night, murmur, whisper, shout, scream, yell? But what would he whisper, what would he yell?
- What could he say?
- And suddenly she was so strange he couldn't believe he knew her at all. He was in someone
- else's house, like those other jokes people told of the gentleman, drunk, coming home late at
- night, unlocking the wrong door, entering a wrong room, and bedding with a stranger and getting
- up early and going to work and neither of them the wiser.
- "Millie.... ?" he whispered.
- "What?"
- "I didn't mean to startle you. What I want to know is ...."
- "Well?"
- "When did we meet. And where?"
- "When did we meet for what?" she asked.
- "I mean-originally."
- He knew she must be frowning in the dark.
- He clarified it. "The first time we ever met, where was it, and when?"
- "Why, it was at --"
- She stopped.
- "I don't know," she said.
- He was cold. "Can't you remember?"
- "It's been so long."
- "Only ten years, that's all, only ten!"
- "Don't get excited, I'm trying to think." She laughed an odd little laugh that went up and up.
- "Funny, how funny, not to remember where or when you met your husband or wife."
- He lay massaging his eyes, his brow, and the back of his neck, slowly. He held both hands over
- his eyes and applied a steady pressure there as if to crush memory into place. It was suddenly
- more important than any other thing in a life-time that he knew where he had met Mildred.
- "It doesn't matter," She was up in the bathroom now, and he heard the water running, and the
- swallowing sound she made.
- "No, I guess not," he said.
- He tried to count how many times she swallowed and he thought of the visit from the two zinc-
- oxide-faced men with the cigarettes in their straight-lined mouths and the electronic-eyed snake
- winding down into the layer upon layer of night and stone and stagnant spring water, and he
- wanted to call out to her, how many have you taken TONIGHT! the capsules! how many will
- you take later and not know? and so on, every hour! or maybe not tonight, tomorrow night! And
- me not sleeping, tonight or tomorrow night or any night for a long while; now that this has
- started. And he thought of her lying on the bed with the two technicians standing straight over
- her, not bent with concern, but only standing straight, arms folded. And he remembered thinking
- then that if she died, he was certain he wouldn't cry. For it would be the dying of an unknown, a
- street face, a newspaper image, and it was suddenly so very wrong that he had begun to cry, not
- at death but at the thought of not crying at death, a silly empty man near a silly empty woman,
- while the hungry snake made her still more empty.
- How do you get so empty? he wondered. Who takes it out of you? And that awful flower the
- other day, the dandelion! It had summed up everything, hadn't it? "What a shame! You're not in
- love with anyone ! " And why not?
- Well, wasn't there a wall between him and Mildred, when you came down to it? Literally not just
- one, wall but, so far, three! And expensive, too! And the uncles, the aunts, the cousins, the
- nieces, the nephews, that lived in those walls, the gibbering pack of tree-apes that said nothing,
- nothing, nothing and said it loud, loud, loud. He had taken to calling them relatives from the very
- first. "How's Uncle Louis today?" "Who?" "And Aunt Maude?" The most significant memory he
- had of Mildred, really, was of a little girl in a forest without trees (how odd!) or rather a little girl
- lost on a plateau where there used to be trees (you could feel the memory of their shapes all
- about) sitting in the centre of the "living-room." The living-room; what a good job of labelling
- that was now. No matter when he came in, the walls were always talking to Mildred.
- "Something must be done!I"
- "Yes, something must be done!"
- "Well, let's not stand and talk!"
- "Let's do it! "
- "I'm so mad I could SPIT!"
- What was it all about? Mildred couldn't say. Who was mad at whom? Mildred didn't quite know.
- What were they going to do? Well, said Mildred, wait around and see.
- He had waited around to see.
- A great thunderstorm of sound gushed from the walls. Music bombarded him at such an
- immense volume that his bones were almost shaken from their tendons; he felt his jaw vibrate,
- his eyes wobble in his head. He was a victim of concussion. When it was all over he felt like a
- man who had been thrown from a cliff, whirled in a centrifuge and spat out over a waterfall that
- fell and fell into emptiness and emptiness and never-quite-touched-bottom-never-never-quite-no
- not quite-touched-bottom ... and you fell so fast you didn't touch the sides either ... never ... quite
- . . . touched . anything.
- The thunder faded. The music died.
- "There," said Mildred,
- And it was indeed remarkable. Something had happened. Even though the people in the walls of
- the room had barely moved, and nothing had really been settled, you had the impression that
- someone had turned on a washing-machine or sucked you up in a gigantic vacuum. You drowned
- in music and pure cacophony. He came out of the room sweating and on the point of collapse.
- Behind him, Mildred sat in her chair and the voices went on again:
- "Well, everything will be all right now," said an "aunt."
- "Oh, don't be too sure," said a "cousin."
- "Now, don't get angry!"
- "Who's angry?"
- "YOU are ! "
- "You're mad!"
- "Why should I be mad!"
- "Because!"
- "That's all very well," cried Montag, "but what are they mad about? Who are these people?
- Who's that man and who's that woman? Are they husband and wife, are they divorced, engaged,
- what? Good God, nothing's connected up."
- "They--" said Mildred. "Well, they-they had this fight, you see. They certainly fight a lot. You
- should listen. I think they're married. Yes, they're married. Why?"
- And if it was not the three walls soon to be four walls and the dream complete, then it was the
- open car and Mildred driving a hundred miles an hour across town, he shouting at her and she
- shouting back and both trying to hear what was said, but hearing only the scream of the car. "At
- least keep it down to the minimum !" he yelled: "What?" she cried. "Keep it down to fifty- five,
- the minimum! " he shouted. "The what?" she shrieked. "Speed!" he shouted. And she pushed it
- up to one hundred and five miles an hour and tore the breath from his mouth.
- When they stepped out of the car, she had the Seashells stuffed in her ears.
- Silence. Onlv the wind blowing softlv.
- "Mildred." He stirred in bed.
- He reached over and pulled one of the tiny musical insects out of her ear. "Mildred. Mildred?"
- "Yes." Her voice was faint.
- He felt he was one of the creatures electronically inserted between the slots of the phono-colour
- walls, speaking, but the speech not piercing the crystal barrier. He could only pantomime, hoping
- she would turn his way and see him. They could not touch through the glass.
- 'Mildred, do you know that girl I was telling you about?"
- 'What girl?" She was almost asleep.
- 'The girl next door."
- 'What girl next door?"
- You know, the high-school girl. Clarisse, her name is."
- 'Oh, yes," said his wife.
- 'I haven't seen her for a few days-four days to be exact. Have you seen her?"
- 'No."
- 'I've meant to talk to you about her. Strange."
- 'Oh, I know the one you mean."
- 'I thought you would."
- 'Her," said Mildred in the dark room.
- 'What about her?" asked Montag.
- 'I meant to tell you. Forgot. Forgot."
- 'Tell me now. What is it?"
- 'I think she's gone."
- 'Gone?"
- 'Whole family moved out somewhere. But she's gone for good. I think she's dead."
- 'We couldn't be talking about the same girl."
- 'No. The same girl. McClellan. McClellan, Run over by a car. Four days ago. I'm not sure. But I
- think she's dead. The family moved out anyway. I don't know. But I think she's dead."
- You're not sure of it! "
- 'No, not sure. Pretty sure."
- "Why didn't you tell me sooner?"
- "Forgot."
- "Four days ago!"
- "I forgot all about it."
- "Four days ago," he said, quietly, lying there.
- They lay there in the dark room not moving, either of them. "Good night," she said.
- He heard a faint rustle. Her hands moved. The electric thimble moved like a praying mantis on
- the pillow, touched by her hand. Now it was in her ear again, humming.
- He listened and his wife was singing under her breath.
- Outside the house, a shadow moved, an autumn wind rose up and faded away But there was
- something else in the silence that he heard. It was like a breath exhaled upon the window. It was
- like a faint drift of greenish luminescent smoke, the motion of a single huge October leaf
- blowing across the lawn and away.
- The Hound, he thought. It's out there tonight. It's out there now. If I opened the window . . .
- He did not open the window.
- He had chills and fever in the morning.
- "You can't be sick," said Mildred.
- He closed his eyes over the hotness. "Yes."
- "But you were all right last night."
- "No, I wasn't all right " He heard the "relatives" shouting in the parlour.
- Mildred stood over his bed, curiously. He felt her there, he saw her without opening his eyes, her
- hair burnt by chemicals to a brittle straw, her eyes with a kind of cataract unseen but suspect far
- behind the pupils, the reddened pouting lips, the body as thin as a praying mantis from dieting,
- and her flesh like white bacon. He could remember her no other way.
- "Will you bring me aspirin and water?"
- "You've got to get up," she said. "It's noon. You've slept five hours later than usual."
- "Will you turn the parlour off?" he asked.
- "That's my family."
- "Will you turn it off for a sick man?"
- "I'll turn it down."
- She went out of the room and did nothing to the parlour and came back. "Is that better?"
- "Thanks."
- "That's my favourite programme," she said.
- "What about the aspirin?"
- "You've never been sick before." She went away again.
- "Well, I'm sick now. I'm not going to work tonight. Call Beatty for me."
- "You acted funny last night." She returned, humming.
- "Where's the aspirin?" He glanced at the water-glass she handed him.
- "Oh." She walked to the bathroom again. "Did something happen?"
- "Afire, is all."
- "I had a nice evening," she said, in the bathroom.
- "What doing?"
- "The parlour."
- "What was on?"
- "Programmes."
- "What programmes?"
- "Some of the best ever."
- "Who?".
- "Oh, you know, the bunch."
- "Yes, the bunch, the bunch, the bunch." He pressed at the pain in his eyes and suddenly the
- odour of kerosene made him vomit.
- Mildred came in, humming. She was surprised. "Why'd you do that?"
- He looked with dismay at the floor. "We burned an old woman with her books."
- "It's a good thing the rug's washable." She fetched a mop and worked on it. "I went to Helen's
- last night."
- "Couldn't you get the shows in your own parlour?"
- "Sure, but it's nice visiting."
- She went out into the parlour. He heard her singing.
- "Mildred?" he called.
- She returned, singing, snapping her fingers softly.
- "Aren't you going to ask me about last night?" he said.
- "What about it?"
- "We burned a thousand books. We burned a woman."
- "Well?"
- The parlour was exploding with sound.
- "We burned copies of Dante and Swift and Marcus Aurelius."
- "Wasn't he a European?"
- "Something like that."
- "Wasn't he a radical?"
- "I never read him."
- "He was a radical." Mildred fiddled with the telephone. "You don't expect me to call Captain
- Beatty, do you?"
- "You must! "
- "Don't shout!"
- "I wasn't shouting." He was up in bed, suddenly, enraged and flushed, shaking. The parlour
- roared in the hot air. "I can't call him. I can't tell him I'm sick."
- "Why?"
- Because you're afraid, he thought. A child feigning illness, afraid to call because after a
- moment's discussion, the conversation would run so: "Yes, Captain, I feel better already. I'll be
- in at ten o'clock tonight."
- "You're not sick," said Mildred.
- Montag fell back in bed. He reached under his pillow. The hidden book was still there.
- "Mildred, how would it be if, well, maybe, I quit my job awhile?"
- "You want to give up everything? After all these years of working, because, one night, some
- woman and her books--"
- "You should have seen her, Millie! "
- "She's nothing to me; she shouldn't have had books. It was her responsibility, she should have
- thought of that. I hate her. She's got you going and next thing you know we'll be out, no house,
- no job, nothing."
- "You weren't there, you didn't see," he said. "There must be something in books, things we can't
- imagine, to make a woman stay in a burning house; there must be something there. You don't
- stay for nothing."
- "She was simple-minded."
- "She was as rational as you and I, more so perhaps, and we burned her."
- "That's water under the bridge."
- "No, not water; fire. You ever seen a burned house? It smoulders for days. Well, this fire'll last
- me the rest of my life. God! I've been trying to put it out, in my mind, all night. I'm crazy with
- trying."
- "You should have thought of that before becoming a fireman."
- "Thought! " he said. "Was I given a choice? My grandfather and father were firemen. In my
- sleep, I ran after them."
- The parlour was playing a dance tune.
- "This is the day you go on the early shift," said Mildred. "You should have gone two hours ago. I
- just noticed."
- "It's not just the woman that died," said Montag. "Last night I thought about all the kerosene I've
- used in the past ten years. And I thought about books. And for the first time I realized that a man
- was behind each one of the books. A man had to think them up. A man had to take a long time to
- put them down on paper. And I'd never even thought that thought before." He got out of bed.
- "It took some man a lifetime maybe to put some of his thoughts down, looking around at the
- world and life, and then I came along in two minutes and boom! it's all over."
- "Let me alone," said Mildred. "I didn't do anything."
- "Let you alone! That's all very well, but how can I leave myself alone? We need not to be let
- alone. We need to be really bothered once in a while. How long is it since you were really
- bothered? About something important, about something real?"
- And then he shut up, for he remembered last week and the two white stones staring up at the
- ceiling and the pump-snake with the probing eye and the two soap-faced men with the cigarettes
- moving in their mouths when they talked. But that was another Mildred, that was a Mildred so
- deep inside this one, and so bothered, really bothered, that the two women had never met. He
- turned away.
- Mildred said, "Well, now you've done it. Out front of the house. Look who's here.".
- "I don't care."
- "There's a Phoenix car just driven up and a man in a black shirt with an orange snake stitched on
- his arm coming up the front walk."
- "Captain Beauty?" he said,
- "Captain Beatty."
- Montag did not move, but stood looking into the cold whiteness of the wall immediately before
- him.
- "Go let him in, will you? Tell him I'm sick."
- "Tell him yourself! " She ran a few steps this way, a few steps that, and stopped, eyes wide, when
- the front door speaker called her name, softly, softly, Mrs. Montag, Mrs. Montag, someone here,
- someone here, Mrs. Montag, Mrs. Montag, someone's here. Fading.
- Montag made sure the book was well hidden behind the pillow, climbed slowly back into bed,
- arranged the covers over his knees and across his chest, half-sitting, and after a while Mildred
- moved and went out of the room and Captain Beatty strolled in, his hands in his pockets.
- "Shut the 'relatives' up," said Beatty, looking around at everything except Montag and his wife.
- This time, Mildred ran. The yammering voices stopped yelling in the parlour.
- Captain Beatty sat down in the most comfortable chair with a peaceful look on his ruddy face.
- He took time to prepare and light his brass pipe and puff out a great smoke cloud. "Just thought
- I'd come by and see how the sick man is."
- "How'd you guess?"
- Beatty smiled his smile which showed the candy pinkness of his gums and the tiny candy
- whiteness of his teeth. "I've seen it all. You were going to call for a night off."
- Montag sat in bed.
- "Well," said Beatty, "take the night off!" He examined his eternal matchbox, the lid of which
- said GUARANTEED: ONE MILLION LIGHTS IN THIS IGNITER, and began to strike the
- chemical match abstractedly, blow out, strike, blow out, strike, speak a few words, blow out. He
- looked at the flame. He blew, he looked at the smoke. "When will you be well?"
- "Tomorrow. The next day maybe. First of the week."
- Beatty puffed his pipe. "Every fireman, sooner or later, hits this. They only need understanding,
- to know how the wheels run. Need to know the history of our profession. They don't feed it to
- rookies like they used to. Damn shame." Puff. "Only fire chiefs remember it now." Puff. "I'll let
- you in on it."
- Mildred fidgeted.
- Beatty took a full minute to settle himself in and think back for what he wanted to say.
- "When did it all start, you ask, this job of ours, how did it come about, where, when? Well, I'd
- say it really got started around about a thing called the Civil War. Even though our rule-book
- claims it was founded earlier. The fact is we didn't get along well until photography came into its
- own. Then?motion pictures in the early twentieth century. Radio. Television. Things began to
- have mass."
- Montag sat in bed, not moving.
- "And because they had mass, they became simpler," said Beatty. "Once, books appealed to a few
- people, here, there, everywhere. They could afford to be different. The world was roomy. But
- then the world got full of eyes and elbows and mouths. Double, triple, quadruple population.
- Films and radios, magazines, books levelled down to a sort of paste pudding norm, do you
- follow me?"
- "I think so."
- Beatty peered at the smoke pattern he had put out on the air. "Picture it. Nineteenth-century man
- with his horses, dogs, carts, slow motion. Then, in the twentieth century, speed up your camera.
- Books cut shorter. Condensations, Digests. Tabloids. Everything boils down to the gag, the snap
- ending."
- "Snap ending." Mildred nodded.
- "Classics cut to fit fifteen-minute radio shows, then cut again to fill a two-minute book column,
- winding up at last as a ten- or twelve-line dictionary resume. I exaggerate, of course. The
- dictionaries were for reference. But many were those whose sole knowledge of Hamlet (you
- know the title certainly, Montag; it is probably only a faint rumour of a title to you, Mrs.
- Montag) whose sole knowledge, as I say, of Hamlet was a one-page digest in a book that
- claimed: 'now at least you can read all the classics; keep up with your neighbours.' Do you see?
- Out of the nursery into the college and back to the nursery; there's your intellectual pattern for
- the past five centuries or more."
- Mildred arose and began to move around the room, picking things up and putting them down.
- Beatty ignored her and continued
- "Speed up the film, Montag, quick. Click? Pic? Look, Eye, Now, Flick, Here, There, Swift, Pace,
- Up, Down, In, Out, Why, How, Who, What, Where, Eh? Uh! Bang! Smack! Wallop, Bing,
- Bong, Boom! Digest-digests, digest-digest-digests. Politics? One column, two sentences, a
- headline! Then, in mid-air, all vanishes! Whirl man's mind around about so fast under the
- pumping hands of publishers, exploiters, broadcasters, that the centrifuge flings off all
- unnecessary, time-wasting thought!"
- Mildred smoothed the bedclothes. Montag felt his heart jump and jump again as she patted his
- pillow. Right now she was pulling at his shoulder to try to get him to move so she could take the
- pillow out and fix it nicely and put it back. And perhaps cry out and stare or simply reach down
- her hand and say, "What's this?" and hold up the hidden book with touching innocence.
- "School is shortened, discipline relaxed, philosophies, histories, languages dropped, English and
- spelling gradually neglected, finally almost completely ignored. Life is immediate, the job
- counts, pleasure lies all about after work. Why learn anything save pressing buttons, pulling
- switches, fitting nuts and bolts?"
- "Let me fix your pillow," said Mildred.
- "No! " whispered Montag,
- "The zipper displaces the button and a man lacks just that much time to think while dressing at.
- dawn, a philosophical hour, and thus a melancholy hour."
- Mildred said, "Here."
- "Get away," said Montag.
- "Life becomes one big pratfall, Montag; everything bang; boff, and wow!"
- "Wow," said Mildred, yanking at the pillow.
- "For God's sake, let me be!" cried Montag passionately.
- Beatty opened his eyes wide.
- Mildred's hand had frozen behind the pillow. Her fingers were tracing the book's outline and as
- the shape became familiar her face looked surprised and then stunned. Her mouth opened to ask
- a question . . .
- "Empty the theatres save for clowns and furnish the rooms with glass walls and pretty colours
- running up and down the walls like confetti or blood or sherry or sauterne. You like baseball,
- don't you, Montag?"
- "Baseball's a fine game."
- Now Beatty was almost invisible, a voice somewhere behind a screen of smoke
- "What's this?" asked Mildred, almost with delight. Montag heaved back against her arms.
- "What's this here?"
- "Sit down!" Montag shouted. She jumped away, her hands empty. "We're talking ! "
- Beatty went on as if nothing had happened. "You like bowling, don't you, Montag?"
- "Bowling, yes."
- "And golf?"
- "Golf is a fine game."
- "Basketball?"
- "A fine game.".
- "Billiards, pool? Football?"
- "Fine games, all of them."
- "More sports for everyone, group spirit, fun, and you don't have to think, eh? Organize and
- organize and superorganize super-super sports. More cartoons in books. More pictures. The mind
- drinks less and less. Impatience. Highways full of crowds going somewhere, somewhere,
- somewhere, nowhere. The gasoline refugee. Towns turn into motels, people in nomadic surges
- from place to place, following the moon tides, living tonight in the room where you slept this
- noon and I the night before."
- Mildred went out of the room and slammed the door. The parlour "aunts" began to laugh at the
- parlour "uncles.",
- "Now let's take up the minorities in our civilization, shall we? Bigger the population, the more
- minorities. Don't step on the toes of the dog?lovers, the cat?lovers, doctors, lawyers, merchants,
- chiefs, Mormons, Baptists, Unitarians, second?generation Chinese, Swedes, Italians, Germans,
- Texans, Brooklynites, Irishmen, people from Oregon or Mexico. The people in this book, this
- play, this TV serial are not meant to represent any actual painters, cartographers, mechanics
- anywhere. The bigger your market, Montag, the less you handle controversy, remember that! All
- the minor minor minorities with their navels to be kept clean. Authors, full of evil thoughts, lock
- up your typewriters. They did. Magazines became a nice blend of vanilla tapioca. Books, so the
- damned snobbish critics said, were dishwater. No wonder books stopped selling, the critics said.
- But the public, knowing what it wanted, spinning happily, let the comic ?books survive. And the
- three?dimensional sex?magazines, of course. There you have it, Montag. It didn't come from the
- Government down. There was no dictum, no declaration, no censorship, to start with, no!
- Technology, mass exploitation, and minority pressure carried the trick, thank God. Today, thanks
- to them, you can stay happy all the time, you are allowed to read comics, the good old
- confessions, or trade ?journals."
- "Yes, but what about the firemen, then?" asked Montag.
- "Ah." Beatty leaned forward in the faint mist of smoke from his pipe. "What more easily
- explained and natural? With school turning out more runners, jumpers, racers, tinkerers,
- grabbers, snatchers, fliers, and swimmers instead of examiners, critics, knowers, and imaginative
- creators, the word "intellectual, 1 of course, became the swear word it deserved to be. You always
- dread the unfamiliar. Surely you remember the boy in your own school class who was
- exceptionally 'bright,' did most of the reciting and answering while the others sat like so many
- leaden idols, hating him. And wasn't it this bright boy you selected for beatings and tortures after
- hours? Of course it was. We must all be alike. Not everyone born free and equal, as the
- Constitution says, but everyone made equal. Each man the image of every other; then all are
- happy, for there are no mountains to make them cower, to judge themselves against. So! A book
- is a loaded gun in the house next door. Burn it. Take the shot from the weapon. Breach man's
- mind. Who knows who might be the target of the well?read man? Me? I won't stomach them for
- a minute. And so when houses were finally fireproofed completely, all over the world (you were
- correct in your assumption the other night) there was no longer need of firemen for the old
- purposes. They were given the new job, as custodians of our peace of mind, the focus of our
- understandable and rightful dread of being inferior; official censors, judges, and executors. That's
- you, Montag, and that's me."
- The door to the parlour opened and Mildred stood there looking in at them, looking at Beatty and
- then at Montag. Behind her the walls of the room were flooded with green and yellow and
- orange fireworks sizzling and bursting to some music composed almost completely of
- trap?drums, tom?toms, and cymbals. Her mouth moved and she was saying something but the
- sound covered it.
- Beatty knocked his pipe into the palm of his pink hand, studied the ashes as if they were a
- symbol to be diagnosed and searched for meaning.
- "You must understand that our civilization is so vast that we can't have our minorities upset and
- stirred. Ask yourself, What do we want in this country, above all? People want to be happy, isn't
- that right? Haven't you heard it all your life? I want to be happy, people say. Well, aren't they?
- Don't we keep them moving, don't we give them fun? That's all we live for, isn't it? For pleasure,
- for titillation? And you must admit our culture provides plenty of these."
- "Yes."
- Montag could lip?read what Mildred was saying in the doorway. He tried not to look at her
- mouth, because then Beatty might turn and read what was there, too.
- "Coloured people don't like Little Black Sambo. Burn it. White people don't feel good about
- Uncle Tom's Cabin. Burn it. Someone's written a book on tobacco and cancer of the lungs? The
- cigarette people are weeping? Bum the book. Serenity, Montag. Peace, Montag. Take your fight
- outside. Better yet, into the incinerator. Funerals are unhappy and pagan? Eliminate them, too.
- Five minutes after a person is dead he's on his way to the Big Flue, the Incinerators serviced by
- helicopters all over the country. Ten minutes after death a man's a speck of black dust. Let's not
- quibble over individuals with memoriams. Forget them. Burn them all, burn everything. Fire is
- bright and fire is clean."
- The fireworks died in the parlour behind Mildred. She had stopped talking at the same time; a
- miraculous coincidence. Montag held his breath.
- "There was a girl next door," he said, slowly. "She's gone now, I think, dead. I can't even
- remember her face. But she was different. How?how did she happen?"
- Beatty smiled. "Here or there, that's bound to occur. Clarisse McClellan? We've a record on her
- family. We've watched them carefully. Heredity and environment are funny things. You can't rid
- yourselves of all the odd ducks in just a few years. The home environment can undo a lot you try
- to do at school. That's why we've lowered the kindergarten age year after year until now we're
- almost snatching them from the cradle. We had some false alarms on the McClellans, when they
- lived in Chicago. Never found a book. Uncle had a mixed record; anti?social. The girl? She was
- a time bomb. The family had been feeding her subconscious, I'm sure, from what I saw of her
- school record. She didn't want to know how a thing was done, but why. That can be
- embarrassing. You ask Why to a lot of things and you wind up very unhappy indeed, if you keep
- at it. The poor girl's better off dead."
- "Yes, dead."
- "Luckily, queer ones like her don't happen, often. We know how to nip most of them in the bud,
- early. You can't build a house without nails and wood. If you don't want a house built, hide the
- nails and wood. If you don't want a man unhappy politically, don't give him two sides to a
- question to worry him; give him one. Better yet, give him none. Let him forget there is such a
- thing as war. If the Government is inefficient, top?heavy, and tax?mad, better it be all those than
- that people worry over it. Peace, Montag. Give the people contests they win by remembering the
- words to more popular songs or the names of state capitals or how much corn Iowa grew last
- year. Cram them full of non?combustible data, chock them so damned full of 'facts' they feel
- stuffed, but absolutely "brilliant' with information. Then they'll feel they're thinking, they'll get a
- sense of motion without moving. And they'll be happy, because facts of that sort don't change.
- Don't give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with. That way
- lies melancholy. Any man who can take a TV wall apart and put it back together again, and most
- men can nowadays, is happier than any man who tries to slide ?rule, measure, and equate the
- universe, which just won't be measured or equated without making man feel bestial and lonely. I
- know, I've tried it; to hell with it. So bring on your clubs and parties, your acrobats and
- magicians, your dare-devils, jet cars, motor?cycle helicopters, your sex and heroin, more of
- everything to do with automatic reflex. If the drama is bad, if the film says nothing, if the play is
- hollow, sting me with the theremin, loudly. I'll think I'm responding to the play, when it's only a
- tactile reaction to vibration. But I don't care. I just like solid entertainment."
- Beatty got up. "I must be going. Lecture's over. I hope I've clarified things. The important thing
- for you to remember, Montag, is we're the Happiness Boys, the Dixie Duo, you and I and the
- others. We stand against the small tide of those who want to make everyone unhappy with
- conflicting theory and thought. We have our fingers in the dyke. Hold steady. Don't let the
- torrent of melancholy and drear philosophy drown our world. We depend on you. I don't think
- you realize how important you are, to our happy world as it stands now."
- Beatty shook Montag's limp hand. Montag still sat, as if the house were collapsing about him and
- he could not move, in the bed. Mildred had vanished from the door.
- "One last thing," said Beatty. "At least once in his career, every fireman gets an itch. What do the
- books say, he wonders. Oh, to scratch that itch, eh? Well, Montag, take my word for it, I've had
- to read a few in my time, to know what I was about, and the books say nothing! Nothing you can
- teach or believe. They're about non?existent people, figments of imagination, if they're fiction.
- And if they're non?fiction, it's worse, one professor calling another an idiot, one philosopher
- screaming down another's gullet. All of them running about, putting out the stars and
- extinguishing the sun. You come away lost."
- "Well, then, what if a fireman accidentally, really not, intending anything, takes a book home
- with him?"
- Montag twitched. The open door looked at him with its great vacant eye.
- "A natural error. Curiosity alone," said Beatty. "We don't get over?anxious or mad. We let the
- fireman keep the book twenty ?four hours. If he hasn't burned it by then, we simply come and
- burn it for him."
- "Of course." Montag's mouth was dry.
- "Well, Montag. Will you take another, later shift, today? Will we see you tonight perhaps?"
- "I don't know," said Montag.
- "What?" Beatty looked faintly surprised.
- Montag shut his eyes. "I'll be in later. Maybe."
- "We'd certainly miss you if you didn't show," said Beatty, putting his pipe in his pocket
- thoughtfully.
- I'll never come in again, thought Montag.
- "Get well and keep well," said Beatty.
- He turned and went out through the open door.
- Montag watched through the window as Beatty drove away in his gleaming
- yellow?flame?coloured beetle with the black, char?coloured tyres.
- Across the street and down the way the other houses stood with their flat fronts. What was it
- Clarisse had said one afternoon? "No front porches. My uncle says there used to be front
- porches. And people sat there sometimes at night, talking when they wanted to talk, rocking, and
- not talking when they didn't want to talk. Sometimes they just sat there and thought about things,
- turned things over. My uncle says the architects got rid of the front porches because they didn't
- look well. But my uncle says that was merely rationalizing it; the real reason, hidden underneath,
- might be they didn't want people sitting like that, doing nothing, rocking, talking; that was the
- wrong kind of social life. People talked too much. And they had time to think. So they ran off
- with the porches. And the gardens, too. Not many gardens any more to sit around in. And look at
- the furniture. No rocking?chairs any more. They're too comfortable. Get people up and running
- around. My uncle says . . . and . . . my uncle . . . and . . . my uncle ..." Her voice faded.
- Montag turned and looked at his wife, who sat in the middle of the parlour talking to an
- announcer, who in turn was talking to her. "Mrs. Montag," he was saying. This, that and the
- other. "Mrs. Montag?" Something else and still another. The converter attachment, which had
- cost them one hundred dollars, automatically supplied her name whenever the announcer
- addressed his anonymous audience, leaving a blank where the proper syllables could be filled in.
- A special spot?wavex?scrambler also caused his televised image, in the area immediately about
- his lips, to mouth the vowels and consonants beautifully. He was a friend, no doubt of it, a good
- friend. "Mrs. Montag?now look right here."
- Her head turned. Though she quite obviously was not listening.
- Montag said, "It's only a step from not going to work today to not working tomorrow, to not
- working at the firehouse ever again." ,
- "You are going to work tonight, though, aren't you?" said Mildred.
- "I haven't decided. Right now I've got an awful feeling I want to smash things and kill things :'
- "Go take the beetle."
- "No thanks."
- "The keys to the beetle are on the night table. I always like to drive fast when I feel that way.
- You get it up around ninetyfive and you feel wonderful. Sometimes I drive all night and come
- back and you don't know it. It's fun out in the country. You hit rabbits, sometimes you hit dogs.
- Go take the beetle."
- "No, I don't want to, this time. I want to hold on to this funny thing. God, it's gotten big on me. I
- don't know what it is. I'm so damned unhappy, I'm so mad, and I don't know why I feel like I'm
- putting on weight. I feel fat. I feel like I've been saving up a lot of things, and don't know what. I
- might even start reading books."
- "They'd put you in jail, wouldn't they?" She looked at him as if he were behind the glass wall.
- He began to put on his clothes, moving restlessly about the bedroom. "Yes, and it might be a
- good idea. Before I hurt someone. Did you hear Beatty? Did you listen to him? He knows all the
- answers. He's right. Happiness is important. Fun is everything. And yet I kept sitting there saying
- to myself, I'm not happy, I'm not happy."
- "I am." Mildred's mouth beamed. "And proud of it."
- "I'm going to do something," said Montag. "I don't even know what yet, but I'm going to do
- something big."
- "I'm tired of listening to this junk," said Mildred, turning from him to the announcer again
- Montag touched the volume control in the wall and the announcer was speechless.
- "Millie?" He paused. "This is your house as well as mine. I feel it's only fair that I tell you
- something now. I should have told you before, but I wasn't even admitting it to myself. I have
- something I want you to see, something I've put away and hid during the past year, now and
- again, once in a while, I didn't know why, but I did it and I never told you."
- He took hold of a straight ?backed chair and moved it slowly and steadily into the hall near the
- front door and climbed up on it and stood for a moment like a statue on a pedestal, his wife
- standing under him, waiting. Then he reached up and pulled back the grille of the
- air?conditioning system and reached far back inside to the right and moved still another sliding
- sheet of metal and took out a book. Without looking at it he dropped it to the floor. He put his
- hand back up and took out two books and moved his hand down and dropped the two books to
- the floor. He kept moving his hand and dropping books, small ones, fairly large ones, yellow,
- red, green ones. When he was done he looked down upon some twenty books lying at his wife's
- feet.
- "I'm sorry," he said. "I didn't really think. But now it looks as if we're in this together."
- Mildred backed away as if she were suddenly confronted by a pack of mice that had come up out
- of the floor. He could hear her breathing rapidly and her face was paled out and her eyes were
- fastened wide. She said his name over, twice, three times. Then moaning, she ran forward, seized
- a book and ran toward the kitchen incinerator.
- He caught her, shrieking. He held her and she tried to fight away from him, scratching.
- "No, Millie, no! Wait! Stop it, will you? You don't know . . . stop it!" He slapped her face, he
- grabbed her again and shook her.
- She said his name and began to cry.
- "Millie! '" he said. "Listen. Give me a second, will you? We can't do anything. We can't burn
- these. I want to look at them, at least look at them once. Then if what the Captain says is true,
- we'll burn them together, believe me, we'll burn them together. You must help me." He looked
- down into her face and took hold of her chin and held her firmly. He was looking not only at her,
- but for himself and what he must do, in her face. "Whether we like this or not, we're in it. I've
- never asked for much from you in all these years, but I ask it now, I plead for it. We've got to
- start somewhere here, figuring out why we're in such a mess, you and the medicine at night, and
- the car, and me and my work. We're heading right for the cliff, Millie. God, I don't want to go
- over. This isn't going to be easy. We haven't anything to go on, but maybe we can piece it out
- and figure it and help each other. I need you so much right now, I can't tell you. If you love me at
- all you'll put up with this, twenty ?four, forty?eight hours, that's all I ask, then it'll be over. I
- promise, I swear! And if there is something here, just one little thing out of a whole mess of
- things, maybe we can pass it on to someone else."
- She wasn't fighting any more, so he let her go. She sagged away from him and slid down the
- wall, and sat on the floor looking at the books. Her foot touched one and she saw this and pulled
- her foot away.
- "That woman, the other night, Millie, you weren't there. You didn't see her face. And Clarisse.
- You never talked to her. I talked to her. And men like Beatty are afraid of her. I can't understand
- it. Why should they be so afraid of someone like her? But I kept putting her alongside the
- firemen in the house last night, and I suddenly realized I didn't like them at all, and I didn't like
- myself at all any more. And I thought maybe it would be best if the firemen themselves were
- burnt."
- "Guy! "
- The front door voice called softly:
- "Mrs. Montag, Mrs. Montag, someone here, someone here, Mrs. Montag, Mrs. Montag, someone
- here."
- Softly.
- They turned to stare at the door and the books toppled everywhere, everywhere in heaps.
- "Beatty!" said Mildred.
- "It can't be him."
- "He's come back!" she whispered.
- The front door voice called again softly. "Someone here ..."
- "We won't answer." Montag lay back against the wall and then slowly sank to a crouching
- position and began to nudge the books, bewilderedly, with his thumb, his forefinger. He was
- shivering and he wanted above all to shove the books up through the ventilator again, but he
- knew he could not face Beatty again. He crouched and then he sat and the voice of the front door
- spoke again, more insistently. Montag picked a single small volume from the floor. "Where do
- we begin?" He opened the book half?way and peered at it. "We begin by beginning, I guess."
- "He'll come in," said Mildred, "and burn us and the books!"
- The front door voice faded at last. There was a silence. Montag felt the presence of someone
- beyond the door, waiting, listening. Then the footsteps going away down the walk and over the
- lawn.
- "Let's see what this is," said Montag.
- He spoke the words haltingly and with a terrible selfconsciousness. He read a dozen pages here
- and there and came at last to this:
- " "It is computed that eleven thousand persons have at several times suffered death rather than
- submit to break eggs at the smaller end.'"
- Mildred sat across the hall from him. "What does it mean? It doesn't mean anything! The Captain
- was right! "
- "Here now," said Montag. "We'll start over again, at the beginning."
- PART II
- THE SIEVE AND THE SAND
- THEY read the long afternoon through, while the cold November rain fell from the sky upon the
- quiet house. They sat in the hall because the parlour was so empty and grey-looking without its
- walls lit with orange and yellow confetti and sky-rockets and women in gold-mesh dresses and
- men in black velvet pulling one-hundred-pound rabbits from silver hats. The parlour was dead
- and Mildred kept peering in at it with a blank expression as Montag paced the floor and came
- back and squatted down and read a page as many as ten times, aloud.
- " "We cannot tell the precise moment when friendship is formed. As in filling a vessel drop by
- drop, there is at last a drop which makes it run over, so in a series of kindnesses there is at last
- one which makes the heart run over.'"
- Montag sat listening to the rain.
- "Is that what it was in the girl next door? I've tried so hard to figure."
- "She's dead. Let's talk about someone alive, for goodness' sake."
- Montag did not look back at his wife as he went trembling along the hall to the kitchen, where he
- stood a long .time watching the rain hit the windows before he came back down the hall in the
- grey light, waiting for the tremble to subside.
- He opened another book.
- " "That favourite subject, Myself.'"
- He squinted at the wall. " "The favourite subject, Myself.'"
- "I understand that one," said Mildred.
- "But Clarisse's favourite subject wasn't herself. It was everyone else, and me. She was the first
- person in a good many years I've really liked. She was the first person I can remember who
- looked straight at me as if I counted." He lifted the two books. "These men have been dead a
- long time, but I know their words point, one way or another, to Clansse."
- Outside the front door, in the rain, a faint scratching.
- Montag froze. He saw Mildred thrust herself back to the wall and gasp.
- "I shut it off."
- "Someone?the door?why doesn't the door- voice tell us?"
- Under the door-sill, a slow, probing sniff, an exhalation of electric steam.
- Mildred laughed. "It's only a dog, that's what! You want me to shoo him away?"
- "Stay where you are!"
- Silence. The cold rain falling. And the smell of blue electricity blowing under the locked door.
- "Let's get back to work," said Montag quietly.
- Mildred kicked at a book. "Books aren't people. You read and I look around, but there isn't
- anybody!"
- He stared at the parlour that was dead and grey as the waters of an ocean that might teem with
- life if they switched on the electronic sun.
- "Now," said Mildred, "my "family' is people. They tell me things; I laugh, they laugh! And the
- colours ! "
- "Yes, I know."
- "And besides, if Captain Beatty knew about those books?" She thought about it. Her face grew
- amazed and then horrified. "He might come and bum the house and the "family.' That's awful!
- Think of our investment. Why should I read? What for?"
- "What for! Why!" said Montag. "I saw the damnedest snake in the world the other night. It was
- dead but it was alive. It could see but it couldn't see. You want to see that snake. It's at
- Emergency Hospital where they filed a report on all the junk the snake got out of you! Would
- you like to go and check their file? Maybe you'd look under Guy Montag or maybe under Fear or
- War. Would you like to go to that house that burnt last night? And rake ashes for the bones of the
- woman who set fire to her own house! What about Clarisse McClellan, where do we look for
- her? The morgue! Listen!"
- The bombers crossed the sky and crossed the sky over the house, gasping, murmuring, whistling
- like an immense, invisible fan, circling in emptiness.
- "Jesus God," said Montag. "Every hour so many damn things in the sky! How in hell did those
- bombers get up there every single second of our lives ! Why doesn't someone want to talk about
- it? We've started and won two atomic wars since 1960. Is it because we're having so much fun at
- home we've forgotten the world? Is it because we're so rich and the rest of the world's so poor
- and we just don't care if they are? I've heard rumours; the world is starving, but we're well-fed. Is
- it true, the world works hard and we play? Is that why we're hated so much? I've heard the
- rumours about hate, too, once in a long while, over the years. Do you know why? I don't, that's
- sure! Maybe the books can get us half out of the cave. They just might stop us from making the
- same damn insane mistakes ! I don't hear those idiot bastards in your parlour talking about it.
- God, Millie, don't you see? An hour a day, two hours, with these books, and maybe..."
- The telephone rang. Mildred snatched the phone.
- "Ann!" She laughed. "Yes, the White Clown's on tonight!"
- Montag walked to the kitchen and threw the book down. "Montag," he said, "you're really stupid.
- Where do we go from here? Do we turn the books in, forget it?" He opened the book to read over
- Mildred's laughter.
- Poor Millie, he thought. Poor Montag, it's mud to you, too. But where do you get help, where do
- you find a teacher this late?
- Hold on. He shut his eyes. Yes, of course. Again he found himself thinking of the green park a
- year ago. The thought had been with him many times recently, but now he remembered how it
- was that day in the city park when he had seen that old man in the black suit hide something,
- quickly in his coat .
- ... The old man leapt up as if to run. And Montag said, "Wait ! "
- "I haven't done anything! " cried the old man trembling.
- "No one said you did."
- They had sat in the green soft light without saying a word for a moment, and then Montag talked
- about the weather, and then the old man responded with a pale voice. It was a strange quiet
- meeting. The old man admitted to being a retired English professor who had been thrown out
- upon the world forty years ago when the last liberal arts college shut for lack of students and
- patronage. His name was Faber, and when he finally lost his fear of Montag, he talked in a
- cadenced voice, looking at the sky and the trees and the green park, and when an hour had passed
- he said something to Montag and Montag sensed it was a rhymeless poem. Then the old man
- grew even more courageous and said something else and that was a poem, too. Faber held his
- hand over his left coat-pocket and spoke these words gently, and Montag knew if he reached out,
- he might pull a book of poetry from the man's coat. But he did not reach out. His. hands stayed
- on his knees, numbed and useless. "I don't talk things, sir," said Faber. "I talk the meaning of
- things. I sit here and know I'm alive."
- That was all there was to it, really. An hour of monologue, a poem, a comment, and then without
- even acknowledging the fact that Montag was a fireman, Faber with a certain trembling, wrote
- his address on a slip of paper. "For your file," he said, "in case you decide to be angry with me."
- "I'm not angry," Montag said, surprised.
- Mildred shrieked with laughter in the hall.
- Montag went to his bedroom closet and flipped through his file-wallet to the heading: FUTURE
- INVESTIGATIONS (?). Faber's name was there. He hadn't turned it in and he hadn't erased it.
- He dialled the call on a secondary phone. The phone on the far end of the line called Faber's
- name a dozen times before the professor answered in a faint voice. Montag identified himself
- and was met with a lengthy silence. "Yes, Mr. Montag?"
- "Professor Faber, I have a rather odd question to ask. How many copies of the Bible are left in
- this country?"
- "I don't know what you're talking about! "
- "I want to know if there are any copies left at all."
- "This is some sort of a trap! I can't talk to just anyone on the phone!"
- "How many copies of Shakespeare and Plato?"
- "None ! You know as well as I do. None!"
- Faber hung up.
- Montag put down the phone. None. A thing he knew of course from the firehouse listings. But
- somehow he had wanted to hear it from Faber himself.
- In the hall Mildred's face was suffused with excitement. "Well, the ladies are coming over!"
- Montag showed her a book. "This is the Old and New Testament, and-"
- "Don't start that again!"
- "It might be the last copy in this part of the world."
- "You've got to hand it back tonight, don't you know? Captain Beatty knows you've got it, doesn't
- he?"
- "I don't think he knows which book I stole. But how do I choose a substitute? Do I turn in Mr.
- Jefferson? Mr. Thoreau? Which is least valuable? If I pick a substitute and Beatty does know
- which book I stole, he'll guess we've an entire library here!"
- Mildred's mouth twitched. "See what you're doing? You'll ruin us! Who's more important, me or
- that Bible?" She was beginning to shriek now, sitting there like a wax doll melting in its own
- heat.
- He could hear Beatty's voice. "Sit down, Montag. Watch. Delicately, like the petals of a flower.
- Light the first page, light the second page. Each becomes a black butterfly. Beautiful, eh? Light
- the third page from the second and so on, chainsmoking, chapter by chapter, all the silly things
- the words mean, all the false promises, all the second-hand notions and time-worn philosophies."
- There sat Beatty, perspiring gently, the floor littered with swarms of black moths that had died in
- a single storm
- Mildred stopped screaming as quickly as she started. Montag was not listening. "There's only
- one thing to do," he said. "Some time before tonight when I give the book to Beatty, I've got to
- have a duplicate made. "
- "You'll be here for the White Clown tonight, and the ladies coming over?" cried Mildred.
- Montag stopped at the door, with his back turned. "Millie?"
- A silence "What?"
- "Millie? Does the White Clown love you?"
- No answer.
- "Millie, does--" He licked his lips. "Does your "family' love you, love you very much, love you
- with all their heart
- and soul, Millie?"
- He felt her blinking slowly at the back of his neck.
- "Why'd you ask a silly question like that?"
- He felt he wanted to cry, but nothing would happen to his eyes or his mouth.
- "If you see that dog outside," said Mildred, "give him a kick for me."
- He hesitated, listening at the door. He opened it and stepped out.
- The rain had stopped and the sun was setting in the clear sky. The street and the lawn and the
- porch were empty. He let his breath go in a great sigh.
- He slammed the door.
- He was on the subway.
- I'm numb, he thought. When did the numbness really begin in my face? In my body? The night I
- kicked the pill-bottle in the dark, like kicking a buried mine.
- The numbness will go away, he thought. It'll take time, but I'll do it, or Faber will do it for me.
- Someone somewhere will give me back the old face and the old hands the way they were. Even
- the smile, he thought, the old burnt-in smile, that's gone. I'm lost without it.
- The subway fled past him, cream-tile, jet-black, cream-tile, jet-black, numerals and darkness,
- more darkness and the total adding itself.
- Once as a child he had sat upon a yellow dune by the sea in the middle of the blue and hot
- summer day, trying to fill a sieve with sand, because some cruel cousin had said, "Fill this sieve
- and you'll get a dime!" "And the faster he poured, the faster it sifted through with a hot
- whispering. His hands were tired, the sand was boiling, the sieve was empty. Seated there in the
- midst of July, without a sound, he felt the tears move down his cheeks.
- Now as the vacuum-underground rushed him through the dead cellars of town, jolting him, he
- remembered the terrible logic of that sieve, and he looked down and saw that he was carrying the
- Bible open. There were people in the suction train but he held the book in his hands and the silly
- thought came to him, if you read fast and read all, maybe some of the sand will stay in the sieve.
- But he read and the words fell through, and he thought, in a few hours, there will be Beatty, and
- here will be me handing this over, so no phrase must escape me, each line must be memorized. I
- will myself to do it.
- He clenched the book in his fists.
- Trumpets blared.
- "Denham's Dentrifice."
- Shut up, thought Montag. Consider the lilies of the field.
- "Denham's Dentifrice."
- They toil not-
- "Denham's--"
- Consider the lilies of the field, shut up, shut up.
- "Dentifrice ! "
- He tore the book open and flicked the pages and felt them as if he were blind, he picked at the
- shape of the individual letters, not blinking.
- "Denham's. Spelled : D-E.N "
- They toil not, neither do they . . .
- A fierce whisper of hot sand through empty sieve.
- "Denham's does it!"
- Consider the lilies, the lilies, the lilies...
- "Denham's dental detergent."
- "Shut up, shut up, shut up!" It was a plea, a cry so terrible that Montag found himself on his feet,
- the shocked inhabitants of the loud car staring, moving back from this man with the insane,
- gorged face, the gibbering, dry mouth, the flapping book in his fist. The people who had been
- sitting a moment before, tapping their feet to the rhythm of Denham's Dentifrice, Denham's
- Dandy Dental Detergent, Denham's Dentifrice Dentifrice Dentifrice, one two, one two three, one
- two, one two three. The people whose mouths had been faintly twitching the words Dentifrice
- Dentifrice Dentifrice. The train radio vomited upon Montag, in retaliation, a great ton-load of
- music made of tin, copper, silver, chromium, and brass. The people were pounded into
- submission; they did not run, there was no place to run; the great air-train fell down its shaft in
- the earth.
- "Lilies of the field." "Denham's."
- "Lilies, I said!"
- The people stared.
- "Call the guard."
- "The man's off--"
- "Knoll View!"
- The train hissed to its stop.
- "Knoll View! "Aery.
- "Denham's." A whisper.
- Montag's mouth barely moved. "Lilies..."
- The train door whistled open. Montag stood. The door gasped, started shut. Only then .did he
- leap past the other passengers, screaming in his mind, plunge through the slicing door only in
- time. He ran on the white tiles up through the tunnels, ignoring the escalators, because he wanted
- to feel his feet-move, arms swing, lungs clench, unclench, feel his throat go raw with air. A voice
- drifted after him, "Denham's Denham's Denham's," the train hissed like a snake. The train
- vanished in its hole.
- "Who is it?"
- "Montag out here."
- "What do you want?"
- "Let me in."
- "I haven't done anything 1"
- "I'm alone, dammit ! "
- "You swear it?"
- "I swear!"
- The front door opened slowly. Faber peered out, looking very old in the light and very fragile
- and very much afraid. The old man looked as if he had not been out of the house in years. He and
- the white plaster walls inside were much the same. There was white in the flesh of his mouth and
- his cheeks and his hair was white and his eyes had faded, with white in the vague blueness there.
- Then his eyes touched on the book under Montag's arm and he did not look so old any more and
- not quite as fragile. Slowly his fear went.
- "I'm sorry. One has to be careful."
- He looked at the book under Montag's arm and could not stop. "So it's true."
- Montag stepped inside. The door shut.
- "Sit down." Faber backed up, as if he feared the book might vanish if he took his eyes from it.
- Behind him, the door to a bedroom stood open, and in that room a litter of machinery and steel
- tools was strewn upon a desk-top. Montag had only a glimpse, before Faber, seeing Montag's
- attention diverted, turned quickly and shut the bedroom door and stood holding the knob with a
- trembling hand. His gaze returned unsteadily to Montag, who was now seated with the book in
- his lap. "The book-where did you-?"
- "I stole it."
- Faber, for the first time, raised his eyes and looked directly into Montag's face. "You're brave."
- "No," said Montag. "My wife's dying. A friend of mine's already dead. Someone who may have
- been a friend was burnt less than twenty-four hours ago. You're the only one I knew might help
- me. To see. To see. ."
- Faber's hands itched on his knees. "May I?"
- "Sorry." Montag gave him the book.
- "It's been a long time. I'm not a religious man. But it's been a long time." Faber turned the pages,
- stopping here and there to read. "It's as good as I remember. Lord, how they've changed it- in our
- "parlours' these days. Christ is one of the "family' now. I often wonder it God recognizes His own
- son the way we've dressed him up, or is it dressed him down? He's a regular peppermint stick
- now, all sugar-crystal and saccharine when he isn't making veiled references to certain
- commercial products that every worshipper absolutely needs." Faber sniffed the book. "Do you
- know that books smell like nutmeg or some spice from a foreign land? I loved to smell them
- when I was a boy. Lord, there were a lot of lovely books once, before we let them go." Faber
- turned the pages. "Mr. Montag, you are looking at a coward. I saw the way things were going, a
- long time back. I said nothing. I'm one of the innocents who could have spoken up and out when
- no one would listen to the "guilty, 1 but I did not speak and thus became guilty myself. And when
- finally they set the structure to burn the books, using the, firemen, I grunted a few times and
- subsided, for there were no others grunting or yelling with me, by then. Now, it's too late." Faber
- closed the Bible. "Well?suppose you tell me why you came here?"
- "Nobody listens any more. I can't talk to the walls because they're yelling at me. I can't talk to
- my wife; she listens to the walls. I just want someone to hear what I have to say. And maybe if I
- talk long enough, it'll make sense. And I want you to teach me to understand what I read."
- Faber examined Montag's thin, blue-jowled face. "How did you get shaken up? What knocked
- the torch out of your hands?"
- "I don't know. We have everything we need to be happy, but we aren't happy. Something's
- missing. I looked around. The only thing I positively knew was gone was the books I'd burned in
- ten or twelve years. So I thought books might help."
- "You're a hopeless romantic," said Faber. "It would be funny if it were not serious. It's not books
- you need, it's some of the things that once were in books. The same things could be in the
- "parlour families' today. The same infinite detail and awareness could be projected through the
- radios and televisors, but are not. No, no, it's not books at all you're looking for! Take it where
- you can find it, in old phonograph records, old motion pictures, and in old friends; look for it in
- nature and look for it in yourself. Books were only one type of receptacle where we stored a lot
- of things we were afraid we might forget. There is nothing magical in them at all. The magic is
- only in what books say, how they stitched the patches of the universe together into one garment
- for us. Of course you couldn't know this, of course you still can't understand what I mean when I
- say all this. You are intuitively right, that's what counts. Three things are missing.
- "Number one: Do you know why books such as this are so important? Because they have quality.
- And what does the word quality mean? To me it means texture. This book has pores. It has
- features. This book can go under the microscope. You'd find life under the glass, streaming past
- in infinite profusion. The more pores, the more truthfully recorded details of life per square inch
- you can get on a sheet of paper, the more Titerary' you are. That's my definition, anyway. Telling
- detail. Fresh detail. The good writers touch life often. The mediocre ones run a quick hand over
- her. The bad ones rape her and leave her for the flies.
- "So now do you see why books are hated and feared? They show the pores in the face of life.
- The comfortable people want only wax moon faces, poreless, hairless, expressionless. We are
- living in a time when flowers are trying to live on flowers, instead of growing on good rain and
- black loam. Even fireworks, for all their prettiness, come from the chemistry of the earth. Yet
- somehow we think we can grow, feeding on flowers and fireworks, without completing the cycle
- back to reality. Do you know the legend of Hercules and Antaeus, the giant wrestler, whose
- strength was incredible so long as he stood firmly on the earth. But when he was held, rootless,
- in mid-air, by Hercules, he perished easily. If there isn't something in that legend for us today, in
- this city, in our time, then I am completely insane. Well, there we have the first thing I said we
- needed. Quality, texture of information. "
- "And the second?"
- "Leisure."
- "Oh, but we've plenty of off-hours."
- "Off-hours, yes. But time to think? If you're not driving a hundred miles an hour, at a clip where
- you can't think of anything else but the danger, then you're playing some game or sitting in some
- room where you can't argue with the fourwall televisor. Why? The televisor is 'real.' It is
- immediate, it has dimension. It tells you what to think and blasts it in. It must be, right. It seems
- so right. It rushes you on so quickly to its own conclusions your mind hasn't time to protest,
- 'What nonsense!'"
- "Only the 'family' is 'people.'"
- "I beg your pardon?"
- "My wife says books aren't 'real.'"
- "Thank God for that. You can shut them, say, 'Hold on a moment.' You play God to it. But who
- has ever torn himself from the claw that encloses you when you drop a seed in a TV parlour? It
- grows you any shape it wishes ! It is an environment as real as the world. It becomes and is the
- truth. Books can be beaten down with reason. But with all my knowledge and scepticism, I have
- never been able to argue with a one-hundred-piece symphony orchestra, full colour, three
- dimensions, and I being in and part of those incredible parlours. As you see, my parlour is
- nothing but four plaster walls. And here " He held out two small rubber plugs. "For my ears
- when I ride the subway-jets."
- "Denham's Dentifrice; they toil not, neither do they spin," said Montag, eyes shut. "Where do we
- go from here? Would books help us?"
- "Only if the third necessary thing could be given us. Number one, as I said, quality of
- information. Number two: leisure to digest it. And number three: the right to carry out actions
- based on what we learn from the inter-action of the first two. And I hardly think a very old man
- and a fireman turned sour could do much this late in the game..."
- "I can get books."
- "You're running a risk."
- "That's the good part of dying; when you've nothing to lose, you run any risk you want."
- "There, you've said an interesting thing," laughed Faber, "without having read it!"
- "Are things like that in books. But it came off the top of my mind!"
- "All the better. You didn't fancy it up for me or anyone, even yourself."
- Montag leaned forward. "This afternoon I thought that if it turned out that books were worth
- while, we might get a press and print some extra copies--"
- " We?"
- "You and I"
- "Oh, no ! " Faber sat up.
- "But let me tell you my plan?"
- "If you insist on telling me, I must ask you to leave."
- "But aren't you interested?"
- "Not if you start talking the sort of talk that might get me burnt for my trouble. The only way I
- could possibly listen to you would be if somehow the fireman structure itself could be burnt.
- Now if you suggest that we print extra books and arrange to have them hidden in firemen's
- houses all over the country, so that seeds of suspicion would be sown among these arsonists,
- bravo, I'd say!"
- "Plant the books, turn in an alarm, and see the firemen's houses bum, is that what you mean?"
- Faber raised his brows and looked at Montag as if he were seeing a new man. "I was joking."
- "If you thought it would be a plan worth trying, I'd have to take your word it would help."
- "You can't guarantee things like that! After all, when we had all the books we needed, we still
- insisted on finding the highest cliff to jump off. But we do need a breather. We do need
- knowledge. And perhaps in a thousand years we might pick smaller cliffs to jump off. The books
- are to remind us what asses and fools we are. They're Caesar's praetorian guard, whispering as
- the parade roars down the avenue, "Remember, Caesar, thou art mortal.' Most of us can't rush
- around, talking to everyone, know all the cities of the world, we haven't time, money or that
- many friends. The things you're looking for, Montag, are in the world, but the only way the
- average chap will ever see ninety-nine per cent of them is in a book. Don't ask for guarantees.
- And don't look to be saved in any one thing, person, machine, or library. Do your own bit of
- saving, and if you drown, at least die knowing you were headed for shore."
- Faber got up and began to pace the room.
- "Well?" asked Montag.
- "You're absolutely serious?"
- "Absolutely."
- "It's an insidious plan, if I do say so myself." Faber glanced nervously at his bedroom door. "To
- see the firehouses burn across the land, destroyed as hotbeds of treason. The salamander devours
- his tail! Ho, God! "
- "I've a list of firemen's residences everywhere. With some sort of underground "
- "Can't trust people, that's the dirty part. You and I and who else will set the fires?"
- "Aren't there professors like yourself, former writers, historians, linguists . . .?"
- "Dead or ancient."
- "The older the better; they'll go unnoticed. You know dozens, admit it ! "
- "Oh, there are many actors alone who haven't acted Pirandello or Shaw or Shakespeare for years
- because their plays are too aware of the world. We could use their anger. And we could use the
- honest rage of those historians who haven't written a line for forty years. True, we might form
- classes in thinking and reading."
- "Yes! "
- "But that would just nibble the edges. The whole culture's shot through. The skeleton needs
- melting and re-shaping. Good God, it isn't as simple as just picking up a book you laid down half
- a century ago. Remember, the firemen are rarely necessary. The public itself stopped reading of
- its own accord. You firemen provide a circus now and then at which buildings are set off and
- crowds gather for the pretty blaze, but it's a small sideshow indeed, and hardly necessary to keep
- things in line. So few want to be rebels any more. And out of those few, most, like myself, scare
- easily. Can you dance faster than the White Clown, shout louder than "Mr. Gimmick' and the
- parlour "families'? If you can, you'll win your way, Montag. In any event, you're a fool. People
- are having fun"
- "Committing suicide! Murdering!"
- A bomber flight had been moving east all the time they talked, and only now did the two men
- stop and listen, feeling the great jet sound tremble inside themselves.
- "Patience, Montag. Let the war turn off the "families.' Our civilization is flinging itself to pieces.
- Stand back from the centrifuge."
- "There has to be someone ready when it blows up."
- "What? Men quoting Milton? Saying, I remember Sophocles? Reminding the survivors that man
- has his good side, too? They will only gather up their stones to hurl at each other. Montag, go
- home. Go to bed. Why waste your final hours racing about your cage denying you're a squirrel?"
- "Then you don't care any more?"
- "I care so much I'm sick."
- "And you won't help me?"
- "Good night, good night."
- Montag's hands picked up the Bible. He saw what his hands had done and he looked surprised.
- "Would you like to own this?"
- Faber said, "I'd give my right arm."
- Montag stood there and waited for the next thing to happen. His hands, by themselves, like two
- men working together, began to rip the pages from the book. The hands tore the flyleaf and then
- the first and then the second page.
- "Idiot, what're you doing!" Faber sprang up, as if he had been struck. He fell, against Montag.
- Montag warded him off and let his hands continue. Six more pages fell to the floor. He picked
- them up and wadded the paper under Faber's gaze.
- "Don't, oh, don't ! " said the old man.
- "Who can stop me? I'm a fireman. I can bum you! "
- The old man stood looking at him. "You wouldn't."
- "I could ! "
- "The book. Don't tear it any more." Faber sank into a chair, his face very white, his mouth
- trembling. "Don't make me feel any more tired. What do you want?"
- "I need you to teach me."
- "All right, all right."
- Montag put the book down. He began to unwad the crumpled paper and flatten it out as the old
- man watched tiredly.
- Faber shook his head as if he were waking up.
- "Montag, have you some money?"
- "Some. Four, five hundred dollars. Why?"
- "Bring it. I know a man who printed our college paper half a century ago. That was the year I
- came to class at the start of the new semester and found only one student to sign up for Drama
- from Aeschylus to O'Neill. You see? How like a beautiful statue of ice it was, melting in the sun.
- I remember the newspapers dying like huge moths. No one wanted them back. No one missed
- them. And the Government, seeing how advantageous it was to have people reading only about
- passionate lips and the fist in the stomach, circled the situation with your fire-eaters. So, Montag,
- there's this unemployed printer. We might start a few books, and wait on the war to break the
- pattern and give us the push we need. A few bombs and the "families' in the walls of all the
- houses, like harlequin rats, will shut up! In silence, our stage-whisper might carry."
- They both stood looking at the book on the table.
- "I've tried to remember," said Montag. "But, hell, it's gone when I turn my head. God, how I
- want something to say to the Captain. He's read enough so he has all the answers, or seems to
- have. His voice is like butter. I'm afraid he'll talk me back the way I was. Only a week ago,
- pumping a kerosene hose, I thought: God, what fun!"
- The old man nodded. "Those who don't build must burn. It's as old as history and juvenile
- delinquents."
- "So that's what I am."
- "There's some of it in all of us."
- Montag moved towards the front door. "Can you help me in any way tonight, with the Fire
- Captain? I need an umbrella to keep off the rain. I'm so damned afraid I'll drown if he gets me
- again. "
- The old man said nothing, but glanced once more nervously, at his bedroom. Montag caught the
- glance. "Well?"
- The old man took a deep breath, held it, and let it out. He took another, eyes closed, his mouth
- tight, and at last exhaled. "Montag..."
- The old man turned at last and said, "Come along. I would actually have let you walk right out of
- my house. I am a cowardly old fool."
- Faber opened the bedroom door and led Montag into a small chamber where stood a table upon
- which a number of metal tools lay among a welter of microscopic wire-hairs, tiny coils, bobbins,
- and crystals.
- "What's this?" asked Montag.
- "Proof of my terrible cowardice. I've lived alone so many years, throwing images on walls with
- my imagination. Fiddling with electronics, radio-transmission, has been my hobby. My
- cowardice is of such a passion, complementing the revolutionary spirit that lives in its shadow, I
- was forced to design this."
- He picked up a small green-metal object no larger than a .22 bullet.
- "I paid for all this-how? Playing the stock-market, of course, the last refuge in the world for the
- dangerous intellectual out of a job. Well, I played the market and built all this and I've waited.
- I've waited, trembling, half a lifetime for someone to speak to me. I dared speak to no one. That
- day in the park when we sat together, I knew that some day you might drop by, with fire or
- friendship, it was hard to guess. I've had this little item ready for months. But I almost let you go,
- I'm that afraid!"
- "It looks like a Seashell radio."
- "And something more! It listens! If you put it in your ear, Montag, I can sit comfortably home,
- warming my frightened bones, and hear and analyse the firemen's world, find its weaknesses,
- without danger. I'm the Queen Bee, safe in the hive. You will be the drone, the travelling ear.
- Eventually, I could put out ears into all parts of the city, with various men, listening and
- evaluating. If the drones die, I'm still safe at home, tending my fright with a maximum of
- comfort and a minimum of chance. See how safe I play it, how contemptible I am?"
- Montag placed the green bullet in his ear. The old man inserted a similar object in his own ear
- and moved his lips.
- "Montag! "
- The voice was in Montag's head.
- "I hear you!"
- The old man laughed. "You're coming over fine, too!" Faber whispered, but the voice in
- Montag's head was clear. "Go to the firehouse when it's time. I'll be with you. Let's listen to this
- Captain Beatty together. He could be one of us. God knows. I'll give you things to say. We'll
- give him a good show. Do you hate me for this electronic cowardice of mine? Here I am sending
- you out into the night, while I stay behind the lines with my damned ears listening for you to get
- your head chopped off."
- "We all do what we do," said Montag. He put the Bible in the old man's hands. "Here. I'll chance
- turning in a substitute. Tomorrow--"
- "I'll see the unemployed printer, yes; that much I can do."
- "Good night, Professor."
- "Not good night. I'll be with you the rest of the night, a vinegar gnat tickling your ear when you
- need me. But good night and good luck, anyway. "
- The door opened and shut. Montag was in the dark street again, looking at the world.
- You could feel the war getting ready in the sky that night. The way the clouds moved aside and
- came back, and the way the stars looked, a million of them swimming between the clouds, like
- the enemy discs, and the feeling that the sky might fall upon the city and turn it to chalk dust, and
- the moon go up in red fire; that was how the night felt.
- Montag walked from the subway with the money in his pocket (he had visited the bank which
- was open all night and every night with robot tellers in attendance) and as he walked he was
- listening to the Seashell radio in one car... "We have mobilized a million men. Quick victory is
- ours if the war comes .. .." Music flooded over the voice quickly and it was gone.
- "Ten million men mobilized," Faber's voice whispered in his other ear. "But say one million. It's
- happier."
- "Faber?"
- "Yes?"
- "I'm not thinking. I'm just doing like I'm told, like always. You said get the money and I got it. I
- didn't really think of it myself. When do I start working things out on my own?"
- "You've started already, by saying what you just said. You'll have to take me on faith."
- "I took the others on faith ! "
- "Yes, and look where we're headed. You'll have to travel blind for a while. Here's my arm to
- hold on to."
- "I don't want to change sides and just be told what to do. There's no reason to change if I do
- that."
- "You're wise already!"
- Montag felt his feet moving him on the sidewalk.toward his house. "Keep talking."
- "Would you like me to read? I'll read so you can remember. I go to bed only five hours a night.
- Nothing to do. So if you like; I'll read you to sleep nights. They say you retain knowledge even
- when you're sleeping, if someone whispers it in your ear."
- "Yes."
- "Here." Far away across town in the night, the faintest whisper of a turned page. "The Book of
- Job."
- The moon rose in the sky as Montag walked, his lips moving just a trifle.
- He was eating a light supper at nine in the evening when the front door cried out in the hall and
- Mildred ran from the parlour like a native fleeing an eruption of Vesuvius. Mrs. Phelps and Mrs.
- Bowles came through the front door and vanished into the volcano's mouth with martinis in their
- hands: Montag stopped eating. They were like a monstrous crystal chandelier tinkling in a
- thousand chimes, he saw their Cheshire Cat smiles burning through the walls of the house, and
- now they were screaming at each other above the din. Montag found himself at the parlour door
- with his food still in his mouth.
- "Doesn't everyone look nice!"
- "Nice."
- "You look fine, Millie! "
- "Fine."
- "Everyone looks swell."
- "Swell!
- "Montag stood watching them.
- "Patience," whispered Faber.
- "I shouldn't be here," whispered Montag, almost to himself. "I should be on my way back to you
- with the money!" "Tomorrow's time enough. Careful!"
- "Isn't this show wonderful?" cried Mildred. "Wonderful!"
- On one wall a woman smiled and drank orange juice simultaneously. How does she do both at
- once, thought Montag, insanely. In the other walls an X-ray of the same woman revealed the
- contracting journey of the refreshing beverage on its way to her delightful stomach! Abruptly the
- room took off on a rocket flight into the clouds, it plunged into a lime-green sea where blue fish
- ate red and yellow fish. A minute later, Three White Cartoon Clowns chopped off each other's
- limbs to the accompaniment of immense incoming tides of laughter. Two minutes more and the
- room whipped out of town to the jet cars wildly circling an arena, bashing and backing up and
- bashing each other again. Montag saw a number of bodies fly in the air.
- "Millie, did you see that?"
- "I saw it, I saw it! "
- Montag reached inside the parlour wall and pulled the main switch. The images drained away, as
- if the water had been let out from a gigantic crystal bowl of hysterical fish.
- The three women turned slowly and looked with unconcealed irritation and then dislike at
- Montag.
- "When do you suppose the war will start?" he said. "I notice your husbands aren't here tonight?"
- "Oh, they come and go, come and go," said Mrs. Phelps. "In again out again Finnegan, the Army
- called Pete yesterday. He'll be back next week. The Army said so. Quick war. Forty-eight hours
- they said, and everyone home. That's what the Army said. Quick war. Pete was called yesterday
- and they said he'd be, back next week. Quick..."
- The three women fidgeted and looked nervously at the empty mud-coloured walls.
- "I'm not worried," said Mrs. Phelps. "I'll let Pete do all the worrying." She giggled. "I'll let old
- Pete do all the worrying. Not me. I'm not worried. "
- "Yes," said Millie. "Let old Pete do the worrying."
- "It's always someone else's husband dies, they say."
- "I've heard that, too. I've never known any dead man killed in a war. Killed jumping off
- buildings, yes, like Gloria's husband last week, but from wars? No."
- "Not from wars," said Mrs. Phelps. "Anyway, Pete and I always said, no tears, nothing like that.
- It's our third marriage each and we're independent. Be independent, we always said. He said, if I
- get killed off, you just go right ahead and don't cry, but get married again, and don't think of me."
- "That reminds me," said Mildred. "Did you see that Clara Dove five-minute romance last night
- in your wall? Well, it was all about this woman who--"
- Montag said nothing but stood looking at the women's faces as he had once looked at the faces of
- saints in a strange church he had entered when he was a child. The faces of those enamelled
- creatures meant nothing to him, though he talked to them and stood in that church for a long
- time, trying to be of that religion, trying to know what that religion was, trying to get enough of
- the raw incense and special dust of the place into his lungs and thus into his blood to feel touched
- and concerned by the meaning of the colourful men and women with the porcelain eyes and the
- blood-ruby lips. But there was nothing, nothing; it was a stroll through another store, and his
- currency strange and unusable there, and his passion cold, even when he touched the wood and
- plaster and clay. So it was now, in his own parlour, with these women twisting in their chairs
- under his gaze, lighting cigarettes, blowing smoke, touching their sun-fired hair and examining
- their blazing fingernails as if they had caught fire from his look. Their faces grew haunted with
- silence. They leaned forward at the sound of Montag's swallowing his final bite of food. They
- listened to his feverish breathing. The three empty walls of the room were like the pale brows of
- sleeping giants now, empty of dreams. Montag felt that if you touched these three staring brows
- you would feel a fine salt sweat on your finger-tips. The perspiration gathered with the silence
- and the sub-audible trembling around and about and in the women who were burning with
- tension. Any moment they might hiss a long sputtering hiss and explode.
- Montag moved his lips.
- "Let's talk."
- The women jerked and stared.
- "How're your children, Mrs. Phelps?" he asked.
- "You know I haven't any! No one in his right mind, the Good Lord knows; would have
- children!" said Mrs. Phelps, not quite sure why she was angry with this man.
- "I wouldn't say that," said Mrs. Bowles. "I've had two children by Caesarian section. No use
- going through all that agony for a baby. The world must reproduce, you know, the race must go
- on. Besides, they sometimes look just like you, and that's nice. Two Caesarians tamed the trick,
- yes, sir. Oh, my doctor said, Caesarians aren't necessary; you've got the, hips for it, everything's
- normal, but I insisted."
- "Caesarians or not, children are ruinous; you're out of your mind," said Mrs. Phelps.
- "I plunk the children in school nine days out of ten. I put up with them when they come home
- three days a month; it's not bad at all. You heave them into the 'parlour' and turn the switch. It's
- like washing clothes; stuff laundry in and slam the lid." Mrs. Bowles tittered. "They'd just as
- soon kick as kiss me. Thank God, I can kick back! "
- The women showed their tongues, laughing.
- Mildred sat a moment and then, seeing that Montag was still in the doorway, clapped her hands.
- "Let's talk politics, to please Guy!"
- "Sounds fine," said Mrs. Bowles. "I voted last election, same as everyone, and I laid it on the line
- for President Noble. I think he's one of the nicest-looking men who ever became president."
- "Oh, but the man they ran against him!"
- "He wasn't much, was he? Kind of small and homely and he didn't shave too close or comb his
- hair very well. "
- "What possessed the 'Outs' to run him? You just don't go running a little short man like that
- against a tall man. Besides -he mumbled. Half the time I couldn't hear a word he said. And the
- words I did hear I didn't understand!"
- "Fat, too, and didn't dress to hide it. No wonder the landslide was for Winston Noble. Even their
- names helped. Compare Winston Noble to Hubert Hoag for ten seconds and you can almost
- figure the results."
- "Damn it!" cried Montag. "What do you know about Hoag and Noble?"
- "Why, they were right in that parlour wall, not six months ago. One was always picking his nose;
- it drove me wild. "
- "Well, Mr. Montag," said Mrs. Phelps, "do you want us to vote for a man like that?"
- Mildred beamed. "You just run away from the door, Guy, and don't make us nervous."
- But Montag was gone and back in a moment with a book in his hand.
- "Guy!"
- "Damn it all, damn it all, damn it!"
- "What've you got there; isn't that a book? I thought that all special training these days was done
- by film." Mrs. Phelps blinked. "You reading up on fireman theory?"
- "Theory, hell," said Montag. "It's poetry."
- "Montag." A whisper.
- "Leave me alone! " Montag felt himself turning in a great circling roar and buzz and hum.
- "Montag, hold on, don't..."
- "Did you hear them, did you hear these monsters talking about monsters? Oh God, the way they
- jabber about people and their own children and themselves and the way they talk about their
- husbands and the way they talk about war, dammit, I stand here and I can't believe it!"
- "I didn't say a single word about any war, I'll have you know," said Mrs, Phelps.
- "As for poetry, I hate it," said Mrs. Bowles.
- "Have you ever read any?"
- "Montag," Faber's voice scraped away at him. "You'll ruin everything. Shut up, you fool!"
- "All three women were on their feet.
- "Sit down!"
- They sat.
- "I'm going home," quavered Mrs. Bowles.
- "Montag, Montag, please, in the name of God, what are you up to?" pleaded Faber.
- "Why don't you just read us one of those poems from your little book," Mrs. Phelps nodded. "I
- think that'd he very interesting."
- "That's not right," wailed Mrs. Bowles. "We can't do that!"
- "Well, look at Mr. Montag, he wants to, I know he does. And if we listen nice, Mr. Montag will
- be happy and then maybe we can go on and do something else." She glanced nervously at the
- long emptiness of the walls enclosing them.
- "Montag, go through with this and I'll cut off, I'll leave." The beetle jabbed his ear. "What good
- is this, what'll you prove?"
- "Scare hell out of them, that's what, scare the living daylights out!"
- Mildred looked at the empty air. "Now Guy, just who are you talking to?"
- A silver needle pierced his brain. "Montag, listen, only one way out, play it as a joke, cover up,
- pretend you aren't mad at all. Then-walk to your wall-incinerator, and throw the book in!"
- Mildred had already anticipated this in a quavery voice. "Ladies, once a year, every fireman's
- allowed to bring one book home, from the old days, to show his family how silly it all was, how
- nervous that sort of thing can make you, how crazy. Guy's surprise tonight is to read you one
- sample to show how mixed-up things were, so none of us will ever have to bother our little old
- heads about that junk again, isn't that right, darling?"
- He crushed the book in his fists. "Say "yes."'
- His mouth moved like Faber's.
- "Yes."
- Mildred snatched the book with a laugh. "Here! Read this one. No, I take it back. Here's that real
- funny one you read out loud today. Ladies, you won't understand a word. It goes umpty-tumpty-
- ump. Go ahead, Guy, that page, dear."
- He looked at the opened page.
- A fly stirred its wings softly in his ear. "Read."
- "What's the title, dear?"
- "Dover Beach." His mouth was numb.
- "Now read in a nice clear voice and go slow."
- The room was blazing hot, he was all fire, he was all coldness; they sat in the middle of an empty
- desert with three chairs and him standing, swaying, and him waiting for Mrs. Phelps to stop
- straightening her dress hem and Mrs. Bowles to take her fingers away from her hair. Then he
- began to read in a low, stumbling voice that grew firmer as he progressed from line to line, and
- his voice went out across the desert, into the whiteness, and around the three sitting women there
- in the great hot emptiness:
- "The Sea of Faith
- Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore
- Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled.
- But now I only hear
- Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,
- Retreating, to the breath
- Of the night- wind, down the vast edges drear
- And naked shingles of the world.'"
- The chairs creaked under the three women. Montag finished it out:
- "Ah, love, let us be true
- To one another! for the world, which seems
- To lie before us like a land of dreams,
- So various, so beautiful, so new,
- Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
- Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
- And we are here as on a darkling plain
- Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
- Where ignorant armies clash by night.'"
- Mrs. Phelps was crying.
- The others in the middle of the desert watched her crying grow very loud as her face squeezed
- itself out of shape. They sat, not touching her, bewildered by her display. She sobbed
- uncontrollably. Montag himself was stunned and shaken.
- "Sh, sh," said Mildred. "You're all right, Clara, now, Clara, snap out of it! Clara, what's wrong?"
- "I-I,", sobbed Mrs. Phelps, "don't know, don't know, I just don't know, oh oh..."
- Mrs. Bowles stood up and glared at Montag. "You see? I knew it, that's what I wanted to prove! I
- knew it would happen! I've always said, poetry and tears, poetry and suicide and crying and
- awful feelings, poetry and sickness; all that mush! Now I've had it proved to me. You're nasty,
- Mr. Montag, you're nasty! "
- Faber said, "Now..."
- Montag felt himself turn and walk to the wall-slot and drop the book in through the brass notch
- to the waiting flames.
- "Silly words, silly words, silly awful hurting words," said Mrs. Bowles. "Why do people want to
- hurt people? Not enough hurt in the world, you've got to tease people with stuff like that ! "
- "Clara, now, Clara," begged Mildred, pulling her arm. "Come on, let's be cheery, you turn the
- "family' on, now. Go ahead. Let's laugh and be happy, now, stop crying, we'll have a party!"
- "No," said Mrs. Bowles. "I'm trotting right straight home. You want to visit my house and
- "family,' well and good. But I won't come in this fireman's crazy house again in my lifetime! "
- "Go home." Montag fixed his eyes upon her, quietly. "Go home and think of your first husband
- divorced and your second husband killed in a jet and your third husband blowing his brains out,
- go home and think of the dozen abortions you've had, go home and think of that and your damn
- Caesarian sections, too, and your children who hate your guts! Go home and think how it all
- happened and what did you ever do to stop it? Go home, go home!" he yelled. "Before I knock
- you down and kick you out of the door!"
- Doors slammed and the house was empty. Montag stood alone in the winter weather, with the
- parlour walls the colour of dirty snow.
- In the bathroom, water ran. He heard Mildred shake the sleeping tablets into her hand.
- "Fool, Montag, fool, fool, oh God you silly fool..."
- "Shut up!" He pulled the green bullet from his ear and jammed it into his pocket.
- It sizzled faintly. "... fool . . . fool ..."
- He searched the house and found the books where Mildred had stacked them behind the
- refrigerator. Some were missing and he knew that she had started on her own slow process of
- dispersing the dynamite in her house, stick by stick. But he was not angry now, only exhausted
- and bewildered with himself. He carried the books into the backyard and hid them in the bushes
- near the alley fence. For tonight only, he thought, in case she decides to do any more burning.
- He went back through the house. "Mildred?" He called at the door of the darkened bedroom.
- There was no sound.
- Outside, crossing the lawn, on his way to work, he tried not to see how completely dark and
- deserted Clarisse McClellan's house was ....
- On the way downtown he was so completely alone with his terrible error that he felt the
- necessity for the strange warmness and goodness that came from a familiar and gentle voice
- speaking in the night. Already, in a few short hours, it seemed that he had known Faber a
- lifetime. Now he knew that he was two people, that he was above all Montag, who knew
- nothing, who did not even know himself a fool, but only suspected it. And he knew that he was
- also the old man who talked to him and talked to him as the train was sucked from one end of the
- night city to the other on one long sickening gasp of motion. In the days to follow, and in the
- nights when there was no moon and in the nights when there was a very bright moon shining on
- the earth, the old man would go on with this talking and this talking, drop by drop, stone by
- stone, flake by flake. His mind would well over at last and he would not be Montag any more,
- this the old man told him, assured him, promised him. He would be Montag-plus-Faber, fire plus
- water, and then, one day, after everything had mixed and simmered and worked away in silence,
- there would be neither fire nor water, but wine. Out of two separate and opposite things, a third.
- And one day he would look back upon the fool and know the fool. Even now he could feel the
- start of the long journey, the leave-taking, the going away from the self he had been.
- It was good listening to the beetle hum, the sleepy mosquito buzz and delicate filigree murmur of
- the old man's voice at first scolding him and then consoling him in the late hour of night as he
- emerged from the steaming subway toward the firehouse world.
- "Pity, Montag, pity. Don't haggle and nag them; you were so recently one o f them yourself.
- They are so confident that they will run on for ever. But they won't run on. They don't know that
- this is all one huge big blazing meteor that makes a pretty fire in space, but that some day it'll
- have to hit. They see only the blaze, the pretty fire, as you saw it.
- "Montag, old men who stay at home, afraid, tending their peanut-brittle bones, have no right to
- criticize. Yet you almost killed things at the start. Watch it! I'm with you, remember that. I
- understand how it happened. I must admit that your blind raging invigorated me. God, how
- young I felt! But now-I want you to feel old, I want a little of my cowardice to be distilled in you
- tonight. The next few hours, when you see Captain Beatty, tiptoe round him, let me hear him for
- you, let me feel the situation out. Survival is our ticket. Forget the poor, silly women ...."
- "I made them unhappier than they have been in years, Ithink," said Montag. "It shocked me to
- see Mrs. Phelps cry. Maybe they're right, maybe it's best not to face things, to run, have fun. I
- don't know. I feel guilty--"
- "No, you mustn't! If there were no war, if there was peace in the world, I'd say fine, have fun!
- But, Montag, you mustn't go back to being just a fireman. All isn't well with the world."
- Montag perspired.
- "Montag, you listening?"
- "My feet," said Montag. "I can't move them. I feel so damn silly. My feet won't move!"
- "Listen. Easy now," said the old man gently. "I know, I know. You're afraid of making mistakes.
- Don't be. Mistakes can be profited by. Man, when I was young I shoved my ignorance in
- people's faces. They beat me with sticks. By the time I was forty my blunt instrument had been
- honed to a fine cutting point for me. If you hide your ignorance, no one will hit you and you'll
- never learn. Now, pick up your feet, into the firehouse with you! We're twins, we're not alone
- any more, we're not separated out in different parlours, with no contact between. If you need help
- when Beatty pries at you, I'll be sitting right here in your eardrum making notes!"
- Montag felt his right foot, then his left foot, move.
- "Old man," he said, "stay with me."
- The Mechanical Hound was gone. Its kennel was empty and the firehouse stood all about in
- plaster silence and the orange Salamander slept with its kerosene in its belly and the firethrowers
- crossed upon its flanks and Montag came in through the silence and touched the brass pole and
- slid up in the dark air, looking back at the deserted kennel, his heart beating, pausing, beating.
- Faber was a grey moth asleep in his ear, for the moment.
- Beatty stood near the drop-hole waiting, but with his back turned as if he were not waiting.
- "Well," he said to the men playing cards, "here comes a very strange beast which in all tongues is
- called a fool."
- He put his hand to one side, palm up, for a gift. Montag put the book in it. Without even glancing
- at the title, Beatty tossed the book into the trash-basket and lit a cigarette. ""Who are a little wise,
- the best fools be.' Welcome back, Montag. I hope you'll be staying, with us, now that your fever
- is done and your sickness over. Sit in for a hand of poker?"
- They sat and the cards were dealt. In Beatty's sight, Montag felt the guilt of his hands. His
- fingers were like ferrets that had done some evil and now never rested, always stirred and picked
- and hid in pockets, moving from under Beatty's alcohol-flame stare. If Beatty so much as
- breathed on them, Montag felt that his hands might wither, turn over on their sides, and never be
- shocked to life again; they would be buried the rest of his life in his coat-sleeves, forgotten. For
- these were the hands that had acted on their own, no part of him, here was where the conscience
- first manifested itself to snatch books, dart off with job and Ruth and Willie Shakespeare, and
- now, in the firehouse, these hands seemed gloved with blood.
- Twice in half an hour, Montag had to rise from the game and go to the latrine to wash his hands.
- When he came back he hid his hands under the table.
- Beatty laughed. "Let's have your hands in sight, Montag.
- Not that we don't trust you, understand, but--"
- They all laughed.
- "Well," said Beatty, "the crisis is past and all is well, the sheep returns to the fold. We're all
- sheep who have strayed at times. Truth is truth, to the end of reckoning, we've cried. They are
- never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts, we've shouted to ourselves. "Sweet food
- of sweetly uttered knowledge,' Sir Philip Sidney said. But on the other hand: "Words are like
- leaves and where they most abound, Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found.' Alexander
- Pope. What do you think of that?"
- "I don't know."
- "Careful," whispered Faber, living in another world, far away.
- "Or this? 'A little learning is a dangerous thing. Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring; There
- shallow draughts intoxicate the brain, and drinking largely sobers us again.' Pope. Same Essay.
- Where does that put you?"
- Montag bit his lip.
- "I'll tell you," said Beatty, smiling at his cards. "That made you for a little while a drunkard.
- Read a few lines and off you go over the cliff. Bang, you're ready to blow up the world, chop off
- heads, knock down women and children, destroy authority. I know, I've been through it all."
- "I'm all right," said Montag, nervously.
- "Stop blushing. I'm not needling, really I'm not. Do you know, I had a dream an hour ago. I lay
- down for a cat-nap and in this dream you and I, Montag, got into a furious debate on books. You
- towered with rage, yelled quotes at me. I calmly parried every thrust. Power, I said, And you,
- quoting Dr. Johnson, said "Knowledge is more than equivalent to force!' And I said, "Well, Dr.
- Johnson also said, dear boy, that "He is no wise man that will quit a certainty for an
- uncertainty.'" Stick with the fireman, Montag. All else is dreary chaos!"
- "Don't listen," whispered Faber. "He's trying to confuse. He's slippery. Watch out!"
- Beatty chuckled. "And you said, quoting, "Truth will come to light, murder will not be hid long!'
- And I cried in good humour, 'Oh God, he speaks only of his horse!' And "The Devil can cite
- Scripture for his purpose.' And you yelled, 'This age thinks better of a gilded fool, than of a
- threadbare saint in wisdom's school!' And I whispered gently, 'The dignity of truth is lost with
- much protesting.' And you screamed, 'Carcasses bleed at the sight of the murderer!' And I said,
- patting your hand, 'What, do I give you trench mouth?' And you shrieked, 'Knowledge is power!'
- and A dwarf on a giant's shoulders of the furthest of the two!' and I summed my side up with
- rare serenity in, 'The folly of mistaking a metaphor for a proof, a torrent of verbiage for a spring
- of capital truths, and oneself as an oracle, is inborn in us, Mr. Valery once said.'"
- Montag's head whirled sickeningly. He felt beaten unmercifully on brow, eyes, nose, lips, chin,
- on shoulders, on upflailing arms. He wanted to yell, "No! shut up, you're confusing things, stop
- it!" Beatty's graceful fingers thrust out to seize his wrist.
- "God, what a pulse! I've got you going, have I, Montag. Jesus God, your pulse sounds like the
- day after the war. Everything but sirens and bells! Shall I talk some more? I like your look of
- panic. Swahili, Indian, English Lit., I speak them all. A kind of excellent dumb discourse,
- Willie!"
- "Montag, hold on! " The moth brushed Montag's ear. "He's muddying the waters!"
- "Oh, you were scared silly," said Beatty, "for I was doing a terrible thing in using the very books
- you clung to, to rebut you on every hand, on every point! What traitors books can be! You think
- they're backing you up, and they turn on you. Others can use them, too, and there you are, lost in
- the middle of the moor, in a great welter of nouns and verbs and adjectives. And at the very end
- of my dream, along I came with the Salamander and said, Going my way? And you got in and
- we drove back to the firehouse in beatific silence, all -dwindled away to peace." Beatty let
- Montag's wrist go, let the hand slump limply on the table. "All's well that is well in the end."
- Silence. Montag sat like a carved white stone. The echo of the final hammer on his skull died
- slowly away into the black cavern where Faber waited for the echoes to subside. And then when
- the startled dust had settled down about Montag's mind, Faber began, softly, "All right, he's had
- his say. You must take it in. I'll say my say, too, in the next few hours. And you'll take it in. And
- you'll try to judge them and make your decision as to which way to jump, or fall. But I want it to
- be your decision, not mine, and not the Captain's. But remember that the Captain belongs to the
- most dangerous enemy of truth and freedom, the solid unmoving cattle of the majority. Oh, God,
- the terrible tyranny of the majority. We all have our harps to play. And it's up to you now to
- know with which ear you'll listen."
- Montag opened his mouth to answer Faber and was saved this error in the presence of others
- when the station bell rang. The alarm-voice in the ceiling chanted. There was a tacking-tacking
- sound as the alarm-report telephone typed out the address across the room. Captain Beatty, his
- poker cards in one pink hand, walked with exaggerated slowness to the phone and ripped out the
- address when the report was finished. He glanced perfunctorily at it, and shoved it in his pocket.
- He came back and sat down. The others looked at him.
- "It can wait exactly forty seconds while I take all the money away from you," said Beatty,
- happily.
- Montag put his cards down.
- "Tired, Montag? Going out of this game?"
- "Yes."
- "Hold on. Well, come to think of it, we can finish this hand later. Just leave your cards face down
- and hustle the equipment. On the double now." And Beatty rose up again. "Montag, you don't
- look well? I'd hate to think you were coming down with another fever..."
- "I'll be all right."
- "You'll be fine. This is a special case. Come on, jump for it!"
- They leaped into the air and clutched the brass pole as if it were the last vantage point above a
- tidal wave passing below, and then the brass pole, to their dismay slid them down into darkness,
- into the blast and cough and suction of the gaseous dragon roaring to life!
- "Hey !"
- They rounded a corner in thunder and siren, with concussion of tyres, with scream of rubber,
- with a shift of kerosene bulk in the glittery brass tank, like the food in the stomach of a giant;
- with Montag's fingers jolting off the silver rail, swinging into cold space, with the wind tearing
- his hair back from his head, with the wind whistling in his teeth, and him all the while thinking
- of the women, the chaff women in his parlour tonight, with the kernels blown out from under
- them by a neon wind, and his silly damned reading of a book to them. How like trying to put out
- fires with water-pistols, how senseless and insane. One rage turned in for another. One anger
- displacing another. When would he stop being entirely mad and be quiet, be very quiet indeed?
- "Here we go!"
- Montag looked up. Beatty never drove, but he was driving tonight, slamming the Salamander
- around corners, leaning forward high on the driver's throne, his massive black slicker flapping
- out behind so that he seemed a great black bat flying above the engine, over the brass numbers,
- taking the full wind.
- "Here we go to keep the world happy, Montag !"
- Beatty's pink, phosphorescent cheeks glimmered in the high darkness, and he was smiling
- furiously.
- "Here we are!"
- The Salamander boomed to a halt, throwing men off in slips and clumsy hops. Montag stood
- fixing his raw eyes to the cold bright rail under his clenched fingers.
- I can't do it, he thought. How can I go at this new assignment, how can I go on burning things? I
- can't go in this place.
- Beatty, smelling of the wind through which he had rushed, was at Montag's elbow. "All right,
- Montag?"
- The men ran like cripples in their clumsy boots, as quietly as spiders.
- At last Montag raised his eyes and turned. Beatty was watching his face.
- "Something the matter, Montag?"
- "Why," said Montag slowly, "we've stopped in front of my house."
- PART III
- BURNING BRIGHT
- LIGHTS flicked on and house-doors opened all down the street, to watch the carnival set up.
- Montag and Beatty stared, one with dry satisfaction, the other with disbelief, at the house before
- them, this main ring in which torches would be juggled and fire eaten.
- "Well," said Beatty, "now you did it. Old Montag wanted to fly near the sun and now that he's
- burnt his damn wings, he wonders why. Didn't I hint enough when I sent the Hound around your
- place?"
- Montag's face was entirely numb and featureless; he felt his head turn like a stone carving to the
- dark place next door, set in its bright borders of flowers.
- Beatty snorted. "Oh, no! You weren't fooled by that little idiot's routine, now, were you?
- Flowers, butterflies, leaves, sunsets, oh, hell! It's all in her file. I'll be damned. I've hit the
- bullseye. Look at the sick look on your face. A few grass-blades and the quarters of the moon.
- What trash. What good did she ever do with all that?"
- Montag sat on the cold fender of the Dragon, moving his head half an inch to the left, half an
- inch to the right, left, right, left right, left ....
- "She saw everything. She didn't do anything to anyone. She just let them alone."
- "Alone, hell ! She chewed around you, didn't she? One of those damn do-gooders with their
- shocked, holier-than-thou silences, their one talent making others feel guilty. God damn, they
- rise like the midnight sun to sweat you in your bed!"
- The front door opened; Mildred came down the steps, running, one suitcase held with a dream-
- like clenching rigidity in her fist, as a beetle-taxi hissed to the curb.
- "Mildred! "
- She ran past with her body stiff, her face floured with powder, her mouth gone, without lipstick.
- "Mildred, you didn't put in the alarm!"
- She shoved the valise in the waiting beetle, climbed in, and sat mumbling, "Poor family, poor
- family, oh everything gone, everything, everything gone now ...."
- Beatty grabbed Montag's shoulder as the beetle blasted away and hit seventy miles an hour, far
- down the street, gone.
- There was a crash like the falling parts of a dream fashioned out of warped glass, mirrors, and
- crystal prisms. Montag drifted about as if still another incomprehensible storm had turned him, to
- see Stoneman and Black wielding axes, shattering window-panes to provide cross-ventilation.
- The brush of a death's-head moth against a cold black screen. "Montag, this is Faber. Do you
- hear me? What is happening
- "This is happening to me," said Montag.
- "What a dreadful surprise," said Beatty. "For everyone nowadays knows, absolutely is certain,
- that nothing will ever happen to me. Others die, I go on. There are no consequences and no
- responsibilities. Except that there are. But let's not talk about them, eh? By the time the
- consequences catch up with you, it's too late, isn't it, Montag?"
- "Montag, can you get away, run?" asked Faber.
- Montag walked but did not feel his feet touch the cement and then the night grasses. Beatty
- flicked his igniter nearby and the small orange flame drew his fascinated gaze.
- "What is there about fire that's so lovely? No matter what age we are, what draws us to it?"
- Beatty blew out the flame and lit it again. "It's perpetual motion; the thing man wanted to invent
- but never did. Or almost perpetual motion. If you let it go on, it'd burn our lifetimes out. What is
- fire? It's a mystery. Scientists give us gobbledegook about friction and molecules. But they don't
- really know. Its real beauty is that it destroys responsibility and consequences. A problem gets
- too burdensome, then into the furnace with it. Now, Montag, you're a burden. And fire will lift
- you off my shoulders, clean, quick, sure; nothing to rot later. Antibiotic, aesthetic, practical."
- Montag stood looking in now at this queer house, made strange by the hour of the night, by
- murmuring neighbour voices, by littered glass, and there on the floor, their covers torn off and
- spilled out like swan-feathers, the incredible books that looked so silly and really not worth
- bothering with, for these were nothing but black type and yellowed paper, and ravelled binding.
- Mildred, of course. She must have watched him hide the books in the garden and brought them
- back in. Mildred. Mildred.
- "I want you to do this job all by your lonesome, Montag. Not with kerosene and a match, but
- piecework, with a flamethrower. Your house, your clean-up."
- "Montag, can't you run, get away!"
- "No!" cried Montag helplessly. "The Hound! Because of the Hound!"
- Faber heard, and Beatty, thinking it was meant for him, heard. "Yes, the Hound's somewhere
- about the neighbourhood, so don't try anything. Ready?"
- "Ready." Montag snapped the safety-catch on the flamethrower.
- "Fire!"
- A great nuzzling gout of flame leapt out to lap at the books and knock them against the wall. He
- stepped into the bedroom and fired twice and the twin beds went up in a great simmering
- whisper, with more heat and passion and light than he would have supposed them to contain. He
- burnt the bedroom walls and the cosmetics chest because he wanted to change everything, the
- chairs, the tables, and in the dining-room the silverware and plastic dishes, everything that
- showed that he had lived here in this empty house with a strange woman who would forget him
- tomorrow, who had gone and quite forgotten him already, listening to her Seashell radio pour in
- on her and in on her as she rode across town, alone. And as before, it was good to burn, he felt
- himself gush out in the fire, snatch, rend, rip in half with flame, and put away the senseless
- problem. If there was no solution, well then now there was no problem, either. Fire was best for
- everything!
- "The books, Montag!"
- The books leapt and danced like roasted birds, their wings ablaze with red and yellow feathers.
- And then he came to the parlour where the great idiot monsters lay asleep with their white
- thoughts and their snowy dreams. And he shot a bolt at each of the three blank walls and the
- vacuum hissed out at him. The emptiness made an even emptier whistle, a senseless scream. He
- tried to think about the vacuum upon which the nothingness had performed, but he could not. He
- held his breath so the vacuum could not get into his lungs. He cut off its terrible emptiness, drew
- back, and gave the entire room a gift of one huge bright yellow flower of burning. The fire-proof
- plastic sheath on everything was cut wide and the house began to shudder with flame.
- "When you're quite finished," said Beatty behind him. "You're under arrest."
- The house fell in red coals and black ash. It bedded itself down in sleepy pink-grey cinders and a
- smoke plume blew over it, rising and waving slowly back and forth in the sky. It was three-thirty
- in the morning. The crowd drew back into the houses; the great tents of the circus had slumped
- into charcoal and rubble and the show was well over.
- Montag stood with the flame-thrower in his limp hands, great islands of perspiration drenching
- his armpits, his face smeared with soot. The other firemen waited behind him, in the darkness,
- their faces illuminated faintly by the smouldering foundation.
- Montag started to speak twice and then finally managed to put his thought together.
- "Was it my wife turned in the alarm?"
- Beatty nodded. "But her friends turned in an alarm earlier, that I let ride. One way or the other,
- you'd have got it. It was pretty silly, quoting poetry around free and easy like that. It was the act
- of a silly damn snob. Give a man a few lines of verse and he thinks he's the Lord of all Creation.
- You think you can walk on water with your books. Well, the world can get by just fine without
- them. Look where they got you, in slime up to your lip. If I stir the slime with my little finger,
- you'll drown ! "
- Montag could not move. A great earthquake had come with fire and levelled the house and
- Mildred was under there somewhere and his entire life under there and he could not move. The
- earthquake was still shaking and falling and shivering inside him and he stood there, his knees
- half-bent under the great load of tiredness and bewilderment and outrage, letting Beatty hit him
- without raising a hand.
- "Montag, you idiot, Montag, you damn fool; why did you really do it?"
- Montag did not hear, he was far away, he was running with his mind, he was gone, leaving this
- dead soot-covered body to sway in front of another raving fool.
- "Montag, get out of there! " said Faber.
- Montag listened.
- Beatty struck him a blow on the head that sent him reeling back. The green bullet in which
- Faber's voice whispered and cried, fell to the sidewalk. Beatty snatched it up, grinning. He held it
- half in, half out of his ear.
- Montag heard the distant voice calling, "Montag, you all right?"
- Beatty switched the green bullet off and thrust it in his pocket. "Well?so there's more here than I
- thought. I saw you tilt your head, listening. First I thought you had a Seashell. But when you
- turned clever later, I wondered. We'll trace this and drop it on your friend."
- "No! " said Montag.
- He twitched the safety catch on the flame-thrower. Beatty glanced instantly at Montag's fingers
- and his eyes widened the faintest bit. Montag saw the surprise there and himself glanced to his
- hands to see what new thing they had done. Thinking back later he could never decide whether
- the hands or Beatty's reaction to the hands gave him the final push toward murder. The last
- rolling thunder of the avalanche stoned down about his ears, not touching him.
- Beatty grinned his most charming grin. "Well, that's one way to get an audience. Hold a gun on a
- man and force him to listen to your speech. Speech away. What'll it be this time? Why don't you
- belch Shakespeare at me, you fumbling snob? "There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats, for I
- am arm'd so strong in honesty that they pass by me as an idle wind, which I respect not!' How's
- that? Go ahead now, you second-hand litterateur, pull the trigger." He took one step toward
- Montag.
- Montag only said, "We never burned right..."
- "Hand it over, Guy," said Beatty with a fixed smile.
- And then he was a shrieking blaze, a jumping, sprawling, gibbering mannikin, no longer human
- or known, all writhing flame on the lawn as Montag shot one continuous pulse of liquid fire on
- him. There was a hiss like a great mouthful of spittle banging a redhot stove, a bubbling and
- frothing as if salt had been poured over a monstrous black snail to cause a terrible liquefaction
- and a boiling over of yellow foam. Montag shut his eyes, shouted, shouted, and fought to get his
- hands at his ears to clamp and to cut away the sound. Beatty flopped over and over and over, and
- at last twisted in on himself like a charred wax doll and lay silent.
- The other two firemen did not move.
- Montag kept his sickness down long enough to aim the flame-thrower. "Turn around!"
- They turned, their faces like blanched meat, streaming sweat; he beat their heads, knocking off
- their helmets and bringing them down on themselves. They fell and lay without moving.
- The blowing of a single autumn leaf.
- He turned and the Mechanical Hound was there.
- It was half across the lawn, coming from the shadows, moving with such drifting ease that it was
- like a single solid cloud of black-grey smoke blown at him in silence.
- It made a single last leap into the air, coming down at Montag from a good three feet over his
- head, its spidered legs reaching, the procaine needle snapping out its single angry tooth. Montag
- caught it with a bloom of fire, a single wondrous blossom that curled in petals of yellow and blue
- and orange about the metal dog, clad it in a new covering as it slammed into Montag and threw
- him ten feet back against the bole of a tree, taking the flame-gun with him. He felt it scrabble and
- seize his leg and stab the needle in for a moment before the fire snapped the Hound up in the air,
- burst its metal bones at the joints, and blew out its interior in the single flushing of red colour
- like a skyrocket fastened to the street. Montag lay watching the dead-alive thing fiddle the air
- and die. Even now it seemed to want to get back at him and finish the injection which was now
- working through the flesh of his leg. He felt all of the mingled relief and horror at having pulled
- back only in time to have just his knee slammed by the fender of a car hurtling by at ninety miles
- an hour. He was afraid to
- get up, afraid he might not be able to gain his feet at all, with an anaesthetized leg. A numbness
- in a numbness hollowed into a numbness....
- And now...?
- The street empty, the house burnt like an ancient bit of stage-scenery, the other homes dark, the
- Hound here, Beatty there, the three other firemen another place, and the Salamander . . . ? He
- gazed at the immense engine. That would have to go, too.
- Well, he thought, let's see how badly off you are. On your feet now. Easy, easy . . . there.
- He stood and he had only one leg. The other was like a chunk of burnt pine-log he was carrying
- along as a penance for some obscure sin. When he put his weight on it, a shower of silver
- needles gushed up the length of the calf and went off in the knee. He wept. Come on ! Come on,
- you, you can't stay here!
- A few house-lights were going on again down the street, whether from the incidents just passed,
- or because of the abnormal silence following the fight, Montag did not know. He hobbled around
- the ruins, seizing at his bad leg when it lagged, talking and whimpering and shouting directions
- at it and cursing it and pleading with it to work for him now when it was vital. He heard a
- number of people crying out in the darkness and shouting. He reached the back yard and the
- alley. Beatty, he thought, you're not a problem now. You always said, don't face a problem, bum
- it. Well, now I've done both. Good-bye, Captain.
- And he stumbled along the alley in the dark.
- A shotgun blast went off in his leg every time he put it down and he thought, you're a fool, a
- damn fool, an awful fool, an idiot, an awful idiot, a damn idiot, and a fool, a damn fool; look at
- the mess and where's the mop, look at the mess, and what do you do? Pride, damn it, and temper,
- and you've junked it all, at the very start you vomit on everyone and on yourself. But everything
- at once, but everything one on top of another; Beatty, the women, Mildred, Clarisse, everything.
- No excuse, though, no excuse. A fool, a damn fool, go give yourself up!
- No, we'll save what we can, we'll do what there is left to do. If we have to burn, let's take a few
- more with us. Here!
- He remembered the books and turned back. Just on the off chance.
- He found a few books where he had left them, near the garden fence. Mildred, God bless her, had
- missed a few. Four books still lay hidden where he had put them. Voices were wailing in the
- night and flashbeams swirled about. Other Salamanders were roaring their engines far away, and
- police sirens were cutting their way across town with their sirens.
- Montag took the four remaining books and hopped, jolted, hopped his way down the alley and
- suddenly fell as if his head had been cut off and only his body lay there. Something inside had
- jerked him to a halt and flopped him down. He lay where he had fallen and sobbed, his legs
- folded, his face pressed blindly to the gravel.
- Beatty wanted to die.
- In the middle of the crying Montag knew it for the truth. Beatty had wanted to die. He had just
- stood there, not really trying to save himself, just stood there, joking, needling, thought Montag,
- and the thought was enough to stifle his sobbing and let him pause for air. How strange, strange,
- to want to die so much that you let a man walk around armed and then instead of shutting up and
- staying alive, you go on yelling at people and making fun of them until you get them mad, and
- then ....
- At a distance, running feet.
- Montag sat up. Let's get out of here. Come on, get up, get up, you just can't sit! But he was still
- crying and that had to be finished. It was going away now. He hadn't wanted to kill anyone, not
- even Beatty. His flesh gripped him and shrank as if it had been plunged in acid. He gagged. He
- saw Beatty, a torch, not moving, fluttering out on the grass. He bit at his knuckles. I'm sorry, I'm
- sorry, oh God, sorry ....
- He tried to piece it all together, to go back to the normal pattern of life a few short days ago
- before the sieve and the sand, Denham's Dentifrice, moth-voices, fireflies, the alarms and
- excursions, too much for a few short days, too much, indeed, for a lifetime.
- Feet ran in the far end of the alley.
- "Get up!" he told himself. "Damn it, get up!" he said to the leg, and stood. The pains were spikes
- driven in the kneecap and then only darning needles and then only common, ordinary safety pins,
- and after he had dragged along fifty more hops and jumps, filling his hand with slivers from the
- board fence, the prickling was like someone blowing a spray of scalding water on that leg. And
- the leg was at last his own leg again. He had been afraid that running might break the loose
- ankle. Now, sucking all the night into his open mouth, and blowing it out pale, with all the
- blackness left heavily inside himself, he set out in a steady jogging pace. He carried the books in
- his hands.
- He thought of Faber.
- Faber was back there in the steaming lump of tar that had no name or identity now. He had burnt
- Faber, too. He felt so suddenly shocked by this that he felt Faber was really dead, baked like a
- roach in that small green capsule shoved and lost in the pocket of a man who was now nothing
- but a frame skeleton strung with asphalt tendons.
- You must remember, burn them or they'll burn you, he thought. Right now it's as simple as that.
- He searched his pockets, the money was there, and in his other pocket he found the usual
- Seashell upon which the city was talking to itself in the cold black morning.
- "Police Alert. Wanted: Fugitive in city. Has committed murder and crimes against the State.
- Name: Guy Montag. Occupation: Fireman. Last seen ..."
- He ran steadily for six blocks, in the alley, and then the alley opened out on to a wide empty
- thoroughfare ten lanes wide. It seemed like a boatless river frozen there in the raw light of the
- high white arc-lamps; you could drown trying to cross it, he felt; it was too wide, it was too open.
- It was a vast stage without scenery, inviting him to run across, easily seen in the blazing
- illumination, easily caught, easily shot down.
- The Seashell hummed in his ear.
- "... watch for a man running ... watch for the running man . . . watch for a man alone, on foot . . .
- watch..."
- Montag pulled back into the shadows. Directly ahead lay a gas station, a great chunk of porcelain
- snow shining there, and two silver beetles pulling in to fill up. Now he must be clean and
- presentable if he wished, to walk, not run, stroll calmly across that wide boulevard. It would give
- him an extra margin of safety if he washed up and combed his hair before he went on his way to
- get where . . . ?
- Yes, he thought, where am I running?
- Nowhere. There was nowhere to go, no friend to turn to, really. Except Faber. And then he
- realized that he was indeed, running toward Faber's house, instinctively. But Faber couldn't hide
- him; it would be suicide even to try. But he knew that he would go to see Faber anyway, for a
- few short minutes. Faber's would be the place where he might refuel his fast draining belief in
- his own ability to survive. He just wanted to know that there was a man like Faber in the world.
- He wanted to see the man alive and not burned back there like a body shelled in another body.
- And some of the money must be left with Faber, of course, to be spent after Montag ran on his
- way. Perhaps he could make the open country and live on or near the rivers and near the
- highways, in the fields and hills.
- A great whirling whisper made him look to the sky.
- The police helicopters were rising so far away that it seemed someone had blown the grey head
- off a dry dandelion flower. Two dozen of them flurried, wavering, indecisive, three miles off,
- like butterflies puzzled by autumn, and then they were plummeting down to land, one by one,
- here, there, softly kneading the streets where, turned back to beetles, they shrieked along the
- boulevards or, as suddenly, leapt back into the sir, continuing their search.
- And here was the gas station, its attendants busy now with customers. Approaching from the
- rear, Montag entered the men's washroom. Through the aluminium wall he heard a radio voice
- saying, "War has been declared." The gas was being pumped outside. The men in the beetles
- were talking and the attendants were talking about the engines, the gas, the money owed. Montag
- stood trying to make himself feel the shock of the quiet statement from the radio, but nothing
- would happen. The war would have to wait for him to come to it in his personal file, an hour,
- two hours from now.
- He washed his hands and face and towelled himself dry, making little sound. He came out of the
- washroom and shut the door carefully and walked into the darkness and at last stood again on the
- edge of the empty boulevard.
- There it lay, a game for him to win, a vast bowling alley in the cool morning. The boulevard was
- as clean as the surface of an arena two minutes before the appearance of certain unnamed victims
- and certain unknown killers. The air over and above the vast concrete river trembled with the
- warmth of Montag' s body alone; it was incredible how he felt his temperature could cause the
- whole immediate world to vibrate. He was a phosphorescent target; he knew it, he felt it. And
- now he must begin his little walk.
- Three blocks away a few headlights glared. Montag drew a deep breath. His lungs were like
- burning brooms in his chest. His mouth was sucked dry from running. His throat tasted of bloody
- iron and there was rusted steel in his feet.
- What about those lights there? Once you started walking you'd have to gauge how fast those
- beetles could make it down here. Well, how far was it to the other curb? It seemed like a hundred
- yards. Probably not a hundred, but figure for that anyway, figure that with him going very
- slowly, at a nice stroll, it might take as much as thirty seconds, forty seconds to walk all the way.
- The beetles? Once started, they could leave three blocks behind them in about fifteen seconds.
- So, even if halfway across he started to run . . . ?
- He put his right foot out and then his left foot and then his right. He walked on the empty avenue.
- Even if the street were entirely empty, of course, you couldn't be sure of a safe crossing, for a car
- could appear suddenly over the rise four blocks further on and be on and past you before you had
- taken a dozen breaths.
- He decided not to count his steps. He looked neither to left nor right. The light from the overhead
- lamps seemed as bright and revealing as the midday sun and just as hot.
- He listened to the sound of the car picking up speed two blocks away on his right. Its movable
- headlights jerked back and forth suddenly, and caught at Montag.
- Keep going.
- Montag faltered, got a grip on the books, and forced himself not to freeze. Instinctively he took a
- few quick, running steps then talked out loud to himself and pulled up to stroll again. He was
- now half across the street, but the roar from the beetle's engines whined higher as it put on speed.
- The police, of course. They see me. But slow now; slow, quiet, don't turn, don't look, don't seem
- concerned. Walk, that's it, walls, walk.
- The beetle was rushing. The beetle was roaring. The beetle raised its speed. The beetle was
- whining. The beetle was in high thunder. The beetle came skimming. The beetle came in a single
- whistling trajectory, fired from an invisible rifle. It was up to 120 m.p.h. It was up to 130 at least.
- Montag clamped his jaws. The heat of the racing headlights burnt his cheeks, it seemed, and
- jittered his eye-lids and flushed the sour sweat out all over his body.
- He began to shuffle idiotically and talk to himself and then he broke and just ran. He put out his
- legs as far as they would go and down and then far out again and down and back and out and
- down and back. God ! God! He dropped a book, broke pace, almost turned, changed his mind,
- plunged on, yelling in concrete emptiness, the beetle scuttling after its running food, two
- hundred, one hundred feet away, ninety, eighty, seventy, Montag gasping, flailing his hands, legs
- up down out, up down out, closer, closer, hooting, calling, his eyes burnt white now as his head
- jerked about to confront the flashing glare, now the beetle was swallowed in its own light, now it
- was nothing but a torch hurtling upon him; all sound, all blare. Now-almost on top of him !
- He stumbled and fell.
- I'm done! It's over!
- But the falling made a difference. An instant before reaching him the wild beetle cut and
- swerved out. It was gone. Montag lay flat, his head down. Wisps of laughter trailed back to him
- with the blue exhaust from the beetle.
- His right hand was extended above him, flat. Across the extreme tip of his middle finger, he saw
- now as he lifted that hand, a faint sixteenth of an inch of black tread where tyre had touched in
- passing. He looked at that black line with disbelief, getting to his feet.
- That wasn't the police, he thought.
- He looked down the boulevard. It was clear now. A earful of children, all ages, God knew, from
- twelve to sixteen, out
- 124 FAHRENHEIT 451
- whistling, yelling, hurrahing, had seen a man, a very extraordinary sight, a man strolling, a rarity,
- and simply said, "Let's get him," not knowing he was the fugitive Mr. Montag, simply a,number
- of children out for a long night of roaring five or six hundred miles in a few moonlit hours, their
- faces icy with wind, and coming home or not coming at dawn, alive or not alive, that made the
- adventure.
- They would have killed me, thought Montag, swaying, the air still torn and stirring about him in
- dust, touching his bruised cheek. For no reason at all in the world they would have killed me.
- He walked toward the far kerb telling each foot to go and keep going. Somehow he had picked
- up the spilled books; he didn't remember bending or touching them. He kept moving them from
- hand to hand as if they were a poker hand he could not figure.
- I wonder if they were the ones who killed Clarisse?
- He stopped and his mind said it again, very loud.
- I wonder if they were the ones who killed Clarisse!
- He wanted to run after them yelling.
- His eyes watered.
- The thing that had saved him was falling flat. The driver of that car, seeing Montag down,
- instinctively considered the probability that running over a body at that speed might turn the car
- upside down and spill them out. If Montag had remained an upright target. . . ?
- Montag gasped.
- Far down the boulevard, four blocks away, the beetle had slowed, spun about on two wheels, and
- was now racing back, slanting over on the wrong side of the street, picking up speed.
- But Montag was gone, hidden in the safety of the dark alley for which he had set out on a long
- journey, an hour or was it a minute, ago? He stood shivering in the night, looking back out as the
- beetle ran by and skidded back to the centre of the avenue, whirling laughter in the air all about
- it, gone.
- Further on, as Montag moved in darkness, he could see the helicopters falling, falling, like the
- first flakes of snow in the long winter, to come....
- The house was silent.
- Montag approached from the rear, creeping through a thick night-moistened scent of daffodils
- and roses and wet grass. He touched the screen door in back, found it open, slipped in, moved
- across the porch, listening.
- Mrs. Black, are you asleep in there? he thought. This isn't good, but your husband did it to others
- and never asked and never wondered and never worried. And now since you're a fireman's wife,
- it's your house and your turn, for all the houses your husband burned and the people he hurt
- without thinking. .
- The house did not reply.
- He hid the books in the kitchen and moved from the house again to the alley and looked back
- and the house was still dark and quiet, sleeping.
- On his way across town, with the helicopters fluttering like torn bits of paper in the sky, he
- phoned the alarm at a lonely phone booth outside a store that was closed for the night. Then he
- stood in the cold night air, waiting and at a distance he heard the fire sirens start up and run, and
- the Salamanders coming, coming to bum Mr. Black's house while he was away at work, to make
- his wife stand shivering in the morning air while the roof let go and dropped in upon the fire. But
- now, she was still asleep.
- Good night, Mrs. Black, he thought. -
- "Faber! "
- Another rap, a whisper, and a long waiting. Then, after a minute, a small light flickered inside
- Faber's small house. After another pause, the back door opened.
- They stood looking at each other in the half-light, Faber and Montag, as if each did not believe in
- the other's existence. Then Faber moved and put out his hand and grabbed Montag and moved
- him in and sat him down and went back and stood in the door, listening. The sirens were wailing
- off in the morning distance. He came in and shut the door.
- Montag said, "I've been a fool all down the line. I can't stay long. I'm on my way God knows
- where."
- "At least you were a fool about the right things," said Faber. "I thought you were dead. The
- audio-capsule I gave you--"
- "Burnt."
- "I heard the captain talking to you and suddenly there was nothing. I almost came out looking for
- you."
- "The captain's dead. He found the audio-capsule, he heard your voice, he was going to trace it. I
- killed him with the flamethrower."
- Faber sat down and did not speak for a time.
- "My God, how did this happen?" said Montag. "It was only the other night everything was fine
- and the next thing I know I'm drowning. How many times can a man go down and still be alive?
- I can't breathe. There's Beatty dead, and he was my friend once, and there's Millie gone, I
- thought she was my wife, but now I don't know. And the house all burnt. And my job gone and
- myself on the run, and I planted a book in a fireman's house on the way. Good Christ, the things
- I've done in a single week! "
- "You did what you had to do. It was coming on for a long time."
- "Yes, I believe that, if there's nothing else I believe. It saved itself up to happen. I could feel it
- for a long time, I was saving something up, I went around doing one thing and feeling another.
- God, it was all there. It's a wonder it didn't show on me, like fat. And now here I am, messing up
- your life. They might follow me here. "
- "I feel alive for the first time in years," said Faber. "I feel I'm doing what I should have done a
- lifetime ago. For a little while I'm not afraid. Maybe it's because I'm doing the right thing at last.
- Maybe it's because I've done a rash thing and don't want to look the coward to you. I suppose I'll
- have to do even more violent things, exposing myself so I won't fall down on the job and turn
- scared again. What are your plans?"
- "To keep running."
- "You know the war's on?"
- "I heard."
- "God, isn't it funny?" said the old man. "It seems so remote because we have our own troubles."
- "I haven't had time to think." Montag drew out a hundred dollars. "I want this to stay with you,
- use it any way that'll help when I'm gone."
- "But- "
- "I might be dead by noon; use this."
- Faber nodded. "You'd better head for the river if you can, follow along it, and if you can hit the
- old railroad lines going out into the country, follow them. Even though practically everything's
- airborne these days and most of the tracks are abandoned, the rails are still there, rusting. I've
- heard there are still hobo camps all across the country, here and there; walking camps they call
- them, and if you keep walking far enough and keep an eye peeled, they say there's lots of old
- Harvard degrees on the tracks between here and Los Angeles. Most of them are wanted and
- hunted in the cities. They survive, I guess. There aren't many of them, and I guess the
- Government's never considered them a great enough danger to go in and track them down. You
- might hole up with them for a time and get in touch with me in St. Louis, I'm leaving on the five
- a.m. bus this morning, to see a retired printer there, I'm getting out into the open myself, at last.
- The money will be put to good use. Thanks and God bless you. Do you want to sleep a few
- minutes?"
- "I'd better run."
- "Let's check."
- He took Montag quickly into the bedroom and lifted a picture frame aside, revealing a television
- screen the size of a postal card. "I always wanted something very small, something I could talk
- to, something I could blot out with the palm of my hand, if necessary, nothing that could shout
- me down, nothing monstrous big. So, you see." He snapped it on. "Montag," the TV set said, and
- lit up. "M-O-N-T-A-G." The name was spelled out by the voice. "Guy Montag. Still running.
- Police helicopters are up. A new Mechanical Hound has been brought from another district.. ."
- Montag and Faber looked at each other.
- "... Mechanical Hound never fails. Never since its first use in tracking quarry has this incredible
- invention made a mistake. Tonight, this network is proud to have the opportunity to follow the
- Hound by camera helicopter as it starts on its way to the target..."
- Faber poured two glasses of whisky. "We'll need these."
- They drank.
- "... nose so sensitive the Mechanical Hound can remember and identify ten thousand odour-
- indexes on ten thousand men without re-setting! "
- Faber trembled the least bit and looked about at his house, at the walls, the door, the doorknob,
- and the chair where Montag now sat. Montag saw the look. They both looked quickly about the
- house and Montag felt his nostrils dilate and he knew that he was trying to track himself and his
- nose was suddenly good enough to sense the path he had made in the air of the room and the
- sweat of his hand hung from the doorknob, invisible, but as numerous as the jewels of a small
- chandelier, he was everywhere, in and on and about everything, he was a luminous cloud, a ghost
- that made breathing once more impossible. He saw Faber stop up his own breath for fear of
- drawing that ghost into his own body, perhaps, being contaminated with the phantom exhalations
- and odours of a running man.
- "The Mechanical Hound is now landing by helicopter at the site of the Burning!"
- And there on the small screen was the burnt house, and the crowd, and something with a sheet
- over it and out of the sky, fluttering, came the helicopter like a grotesque flower.
- So they must have their game out, thought Montag. The circus must go on, even with war
- beginning within the hour....
- He watched the scene, fascinated, not wanting to move. It seemed so remote and no part of him;
- it was a play apart and separate, wondrous to watch, not without its strange pleasure. That's all
- for me, you thought, that's all taking place just for me, by God.
- If he wished, he could linger here, in comfort, and follow the entire hunt on through its swift,
- phases, down alleys across streets, over empty running avenues, crossing lots and playgrounds,
- with pauses here or there for the necessary commercials, up other alleys to the burning house of
- Mr. and Mrs. Black, and so on finally to this house with Faber and himself seated, drinking,
- while the Electric Hound snuffed down the last trail, silent as a drift of death itself, skidded to a
- halt outside that window there. Then, if he wished, Montag might rise, walk to the window, keep
- one eye on the TV screen, open the window, lean out, look back, and see himself dramatized,
- described, made over, standing there, limned in the bright small television screen from outside, a
- drama to be watched objectively, knowing that in other parlours he was large as life, in full
- colour, dimensionally perfect! And if he kept his eye peeled quickly he would see himself, an
- instant before oblivion, being punctured for the benefit of how many civilian parlour-sitters who
- had been wakened from sleep a few minutes ago by the frantic sirening of their living-room
- walls to come watch the big game, the hunt, the one-man carnival.
- Would he have time for a speech? As the Hound seized him, in view of ten or twenty or thirty
- million people, mightn't he sum up his entire life in the last week in one single phrase or a word
- that would stay with them long after the. Hound had turned, clenching him in its metal-plier
- jaws, and trotted off in darkness, while the camera remained stationary, watching the creature
- dwindle in the distance?a splendid fade-out! What could he say in a single word, a few words,
- that would sear all their faces and wake them up?
- "There," whispered Faber.
- Out of a helicopter glided something that was not machine, not animal, not dead, not alive,
- glowing with a pale green luminosity. It stood near the smoking ruins of Montag's house and the
- men brought his discarded flame-thrower to it and put it down under the muzzle of the Hound.
- There was a whirring, clicking, humming.
- Montag shook his head and got up and drank the rest of his drink. "It's time. I'm sorry about
- this:"
- "About what? Me? My house? I deserve everything. Run, for God's sake. Perhaps I can delay
- them here--"
- "Wait. There's no use your being discovered. When I leave, burn the spread of this bed, that I
- touched. Burn the chair in the living room, in your wall incinerator. Wipe down the furniture
- with alcohol, wipe the door-knobs. Burn the throwrug in the parlour. Turn the air-conditioning
- on full in all the rooms and spray with moth-spray if you have it. Then, turn on your lawn
- sprinklers as high as they'll go and hose off the sidewalks. With any luck at all, we can kill the
- trail in here, anyway..'
- Faber shook his hand. "I'll tend to it. Good luck. If we're both in good health, next week, the
- week after, get in touch. General Delivery, St. Louis. I'm sorry there's no way I can go with you
- this time, by ear-phone. That was good for both of us. But my equipment was limited. You see, I
- never thought I would use it. What a silly old man. No thought there. Stupid, stupid. So I haven't
- another green bullet, the right kind, to put in your head. Go now ! "
- "One last thing. Quick. A suitcase, get it, fill it with your dirtiest clothes, an old suit, the dirtier
- the better, a shirt, some old sneakers and socks . . . . "
- Faber was gone and back in a minute. They sealed the cardboard valise with clear tape. "To keep
- the ancient odour of Mr. Faber in, of course," said Faber sweating at the job.
- Montag doused the exterior of the valise with whisky. "I don't want that Hound picking up two
- odours at once. May I take this whisky. I'll need it later. Christ I hope this works!"
- They shook hands again and, going out of the door, they glanced at the TV. The Hound was on
- its way, followed by hovering helicopter cameras, silently, silently, sniffing the great night wind.
- It was running down the first alley.
- "Good-bye ! "
- And Montag was out the back door lightly, running with the half-empty valise. Behind him he
- heard the lawn-sprinkling system jump up, filling the dark air with rain that fell gently and then
- with a steady pour all about, washing on the sidewalks, and draining into the alley. He carried a
- few drops of this rain with him on his face. He thought he heard the old man call good-bye, but
- he-wasn't certain.
- He ran very fast away from the house, down toward the river.
- Montag ran.
- He could feel the Hound, like autumn, come cold and dry and swift, like a wind that didn't stir
- grass, that didn't jar windows or disturb leaf-shadows on the white sidewalks as it passed. The
- Hound did not touch the world. It carried its silence with it, so you could feel the silence building
- up a pressure behind you all across town. Montag felt the pressure rising, and ran.
- He stopped for breath, on his way to the river, to peer through dimly lit windows of wakened
- houses, and saw the silhouettes of people inside watching their parlour walls and there on the
- walls the Mechanical Hound, a breath of neon vapour, spidered along, here and gone, here and
- gone ! Now at Elm Terrace, Lincoln, Oak, Park, and up the alley toward Faber's house.
- Go past, thought Montag, don't stop, go on, don't turn in!
- On the parlour wall, Faber's house, with its sprinkler system pulsing in the night air.
- The Hound paused, quivering.
- No! Montag held to the window sill. This way! Here!
- The procaine needle flicked out and in, out and in. A single clear drop of the stuff of dreams fell
- from the needle as it vanished in the Hound's muzzle.
- Montag held his breath, like a doubled fist, in his chest.
- The Mechanical Hound turned and plunged away from Faber's house down the alley again.
- Montag snapped his gaze to the sky. The helicopters were closer, a great blowing of insects to a
- single light source.
- With an effort, Montag reminded himself again that this was no fictional episode to be watched
- on his run to the river; it was in actuality his own chess-game he was witnessing, move by move.
- He shouted to give himself the necessary push away from this last house window, and the
- fascinating seance going on in there ! Hell ! and he was away and gone ! The alley, a street, the
- alley, a street, and the smell of the river. Leg out, leg down, leg out and down. Twenty million
- Montags running, soon, if the cameras caught him. Twenty million Montags running, running
- like an ancient flickery Keystone Comedy, cops, robbers, chasers and the chased, hunters and
- hunted, he had seen it a thousand times. Behind him now twenty million silently baying Hounds
- ricocheted across parlours, three-cushion shooting from right wall to centre wall to left wall,
- gone, right wall, centre wall, left wall, gone !
- Montag jammed his Seas hell to his ear.
- "Police suggest entire population in the Elm Terrace area do as follows: Everyone in every house
- in every street open a front or rear door or look from the windows. The fugitive cannot escape if
- everyone in the next minute looks from his house. Ready! "
- Of course! Why hadn't they done it before! Why, in all the years, hadn't this game been tried!
- Everyone up, everyone out! He couldn't be missed! The only man running alone in the night city,
- the only man proving his legs !
- "At the count often now! One! Two!"
- He felt the city rise. Three .
- He felt the city turn to its thousands of doors.
- Faster! Leg up, leg down !
- "Four ! "
- The people sleepwalking in their hallways.
- "Five! "
- He felt their hands on the doorknobs !
- The smell of the river was cool and like a solid rain. His throat was burnt rust and his eyes were
- wept dry with running. He yelled as if this yell would jet him on, fling him the last hundred
- yards.
- "Six, seven, eight ! "
- The doorknobs turned on five thousand doors. "Nine!"
- He ran out away from the last row of houses, on a slope leading down to a solid moving
- blackness. "Ten!"
- The doors opened.
- He imagined thousands on thousands of faces peering into yards, into alleys, and into the sky,
- faces hid by curtains, pale, night-frightened faces, like grey animals peering from electric caves,
- faces with grey colourless eyes, grey tongues and grey thoughts looking out through the numb
- flesh of the face.
- But he was at the river.
- He touched it, just to be sure it was real. He waded in and stripped in darkness to the skin,
- splashed his body, arms, legs, and head with raw liquor; drank it and snuffed some up his nose.
- Then he dressed in Faber's old clothes and shoes. He tossed his own clothing into the river and
- watched it swept away. Then, holding the suitcase, he walked out in the river until there was no
- bottom and he was swept away in the dark.
- He was three hundred yards downstream when the Hound reached the river. Overhead the great
- racketing fans of the helicopters hovered. A storm of light fell upon the river and Montag dived
- under the great illumination as if the sun had broken the clouds. He felt the river pull him further
- on its way, into darkness. Then the lights switched back to the land, the helicopters swerved over
- the city again, as if they had picked up another trail. They were gone. The Hound was gone. Now
- there was only the cold river and Montag floating in a sudden peacefulness, away from the city
- and the lights and the chase, away from everything.
- He felt as if he had left a stage behind and many actors. He felt as if he had left the great seance
- and all the murmuring ghosts. He was moving from an unreality that was frightening into a
- reality that was unreal because it was new.
- The black land slid by and he was going into the country among the hills: For the first time in a
- dozen years the stars were coming out above him, in great processions of wheeling fire. He saw a
- great juggernaut of stars form in the sky and threaten to roll over and crush him.
- He floated on his back when the valise filled and sank; the river was mild and leisurely, going
- away from the people who ate shadows for breakfast and steam for lunch and vapours for supper.
- The river was very real; it held him comfortably and gave him the time at last, the leisure, to
- consider this month, this year, and a lifetime of years. He listened to his heart slow. His thoughts
- stopped rushing with his blood.
- He saw the moon low in the sky now. The moon there, and the light of the moon caused by
- what? By the sun, of course. And what lights the sun? Its own fire. And the sun goes on, day
- after day, burning and burning. The sun and time. The sun and time and burning. Burning. The
- river bobbled him along gently. Burning. The sun and every clock on the earth. It all came
- together and became a single thing in his mind. After a long time of floating on the land and a
- short time of floating in the river he knew why he must never burn again in his life.
- The sun burned every day. It burned Time. The world rushed in a circle and turned on its axis
- and time was busy burning the years and the people anyway, without any help from him. So if he
- burnt things with the firemen, and the sun burnt Time, that meant. that everything burned!
- One of them had to stop burning. The sun wouldn't, certainly. So it looked as if it had to be
- Montag and the people he had worked with until a few short hours ago. Somewhere the saving
- and putting away had to begin again and someone had to do the saving and keeping, one way or
- another, in books, in records, in people's heads, any way at all so long as it was safe, free from
- moths, silver-fish, rust and dry-rot, and men with matches. The world was full of burning of all
- types and sizes. Now the guild of the asbestos-weaver must open shop very soon.
- He felt his heel bump land, touch pebbles and rocks, scrape sand. The river had moved him
- toward shore.
- He looked in at the great black creature without eyes or light, without shape, with only a size that
- went a thousand miles without wanting to stop, with its grass hills and forests that were waiting
- for him.
- He hesitated to leave the comforting flow of the water. He expected the Hound there. Suddenly
- the trees might blow under a great wind of helicopters.
- But there was only the normal autumn wind high up, going by like another river. Why wasn't the
- Hound running? Why had the search veered inland? Montag listened. Nothing. Nothing.
- Millie, he thought. All this country here. Listen to it! Nothing and nothing. So much silence,
- Millie, I wonder how you'd take it? Would you shout Shut up, shut up! Millie, Millie. And he
- was sad.
- Millie was not here and the Hound was not here, but the dry smell of hay blowing from some
- distant field put Montag on the land. He remembered a farm he had visited when he was very
- young, one of the rare times he had discovered that somewhere behind the seven veils of
- unreality, beyond the walls of parlours and beyond the tin moat of the city, cows chewed grass
- and pigs sat in warm ponds at noon and dogs barked after white sheep on a hill.
- Now, the dry smell of hay, the motion of the waters, made him think of sleeping in fresh hay in a
- lonely barn away from the loud highways, behind a quiet farmhouse, and under an ancient
- windmill that whirred like the sound of the passing years overhead. He lay in the high barn loft
- all night, listening to distant animals and insects and trees, the little motions and stirrings.
- During the night, he thought, below the loft, he would hear a sound like feet moving, perhaps. He
- would tense and sit up. The sound would move away, He would lie back and look out of the loft
- window, very late in the night, and see the lights go out in the farmhouse itself, until a very
- young and beautiful woman would sit in an unlit window, braiding her hair. It would be hard to
- see her, but her face would be like the face of the girl so long ago in his past now, so very long
- ago, the girl who had known the weather and never been burned by the fire-flies, the girl who
- had known what dandelions meant rubbed off on your chin. Then, she would be gone from the
- warm window and appear again upstairs in her moon-whitened room. And then, to the sound of
- death, the sound of the jets cutting the sky into two black pieces beyond the horizon, he would lie
- in the loft, hidden and safe, watching those strange new stars over the rim of the earth, fleeing
- from the soft colour of dawn.
- In the morning he would not have needed sleep, for all the warm odours and sights of a complete
- country night would have rested and slept him while his eyes were wide and his mouth, when he
- thought to test it, was half a smile.
- And there at the bottom of the hayloft stair, waiting for him, would be the incredible thing. He
- would step carefully down, in the pink light of early morning, so fully aware of the world that he
- would be afraid, and stand over the small miracle and at last bend to touch it.
- A cool glass of fresh milk, and a few apples and pears laid at the foot of the steps.
- This was all he wanted now. Some sign that the immense world would accept him and give him
- the long time needed to think all the things that must be thought.
- A glass of milk, an apple, a pear.
- He stepped from the river.
- The land rushed at him, a tidal wave. He was crushed by darkness and the look of the country
- and the million odours on a wind that iced his body. He fell back under the breaking curve of
- darkness and sound and smell, his ears roaring. He whirled. The stars poured over his sight like
- flaming meteors. He wanted to plunge in the river again and let it idle him safely on down
- somewhere. This dark land rising was like that day in his childhood, swimming, when from
- nowhere the largest wave in the history of remembering slammed him down in salt mud and
- green darkness, water burning mouth and nose, retching his stomach, screaming! Too much
- water!
- Too much land!
- Out of the black wall before him, a whisper. A shape. In the shape, two eyes. The night looking
- at him. The forest, seeing him.
- The Hound!
- After all the running and rushing and sweating it out and half-drowning, to come this far, work
- this hard, and think yourself safe and sigh with relief and come out on the land at last only to find
- The Hound!
- Montag gave one last agonized shout as if this were too much for any man.
- The shape exploded away. The eyes vanished. The leafpiles flew up in a dry shower.
- Montag was alone in the wilderness.
- A deer. He smelled the heavy musk-like perfume mingled with blood and the gummed
- exhalation of the animal's breath, all cardamon and moss and ragweed odour in this huge night
- where the trees ran at him, pulled away, ran, pulled away, to the pulse of the heart behind his
- eyes.
- There must have been a billion leaves on the land; he waded in them, a dry river smelling of hot
- cloves and warm dust. And the other smells! There was a smell like a cut potato from all the
- land, raw and cold and white from having the moon on it most of the night. There was a smell
- like pickles from a bottle and a smell like parsley on the table at home. There was a faint yellow
- odour like mustard from a jar. There was a smell like carnations from the yard next door. He put
- down his hand and felt a weed rise up like a child brushing him. His fingers smelled of liquorice.
- He stood breathing, and the more he breathed the land in, the more he was filled up with all the
- details of the land. He was not empty. There was more than enough here to fill him. There would
- always be more than enough.
- He walked in the shallow tide of leaves, stumbling.
- And in the middle of the strangeness, a familiarity.
- His foot hit something that rang dully.
- He moved his hand on the ground, a yard this way, a yard that.
- The railroad track.
- The track that came out of the city and rusted across the land, through forests and woods,
- deserted now, by the river.
- Here was the path to wherever he was going. Here was the single familiar thing, the magic charm
- he might need a little while, to touch, to feel beneath his feet, as he moved on into the bramble
- bushes and the lakes of smelling and feeling and touching, among the whispers and the blowing
- down of leaves.
- He walked on the track.
- And he was surprised to learn how certain he suddenly was of a single fact he could not prove.
- Once, long ago, Clarisse had walked here, where he was walking now.
- Half an hour later, cold, and moving carefully on the tracks, fully aware of his entire body, his
- face, his mouth, his eyes stuffed with blackness, his ears stuffed with sound, his legs prickled
- with burrs and nettles, he saw the fire ahead.
- The fire was gone, then back again, like a winking eye. He stopped, afraid he might blow the fire
- out with a single breath. But the fire was there and he approached warily, from a long way off. It
- took the better part of fifteen minutes before he drew very close indeed to it, and then he stood
- looking at it from cover. That small motion, the white and red colour, a strange fire because it
- meant a different thing to him.
- It was not burning; it was warming!
- He saw many hands held to its warmth, hands without arms, hidden in darkness. Above the
- hands, motionless faces that were only moved and tossed and flickered with firelight. He hadn't
- known fire could look this way. He had never thought in his life that it could give as well as take.
- Even its smell was different.
- How long he stood he did not know, but there was a foolish and yet delicious sense of knowing
- himself as an animal come from the forest, drawn by the fire. He was a thing of brush and liquid
- eye, of fur and muzzle and hoof, he was a thing of horn and blood that would smell like autumn
- if you bled it out on the ground. He stood a long long time, listening to the warm crackle of the
- flames.
- There was a silence gathered all about that fire and the silence was in the men's faces, and time
- was there, time enough to sit by this rusting track under the trees, and look at the world and turn
- it over with the eyes, as if it were held to the centre of the bonfire, a piece of steel these men
- were all shaping. It was not only the fire that was different. It was the silence. Montag moved
- toward this special silence that was concerned with all of the world.
- And then the voices began and they were talking, and he could hear nothing of what the voices
- said, but the sound rose and fell quietly and the voices were turning the world over and looking
- at it; the voices knew the land and the trees and the city which lay down the track by the river.
- The voices talked of everything, there was nothing they could not talk about, he knew from the
- very cadence and motion and continual stir of curiosity and wonder in them.
- And then one of the men looked up and saw him, for the first or perhaps the seventh time, and a
- voice called to Montag:
- "All right, you can come out now ! "
- Montag stepped back into the shadows.
- "It's all right," the voice said. "You're welcome here."
- Montag walked slowly toward the fire and the five old men sitting there dressed in dark blue
- denim pants and jackets and dark blue suits. He did not know what to say to them.
- "Sit down," said the man who seemed to be the leader of the small group. "Have some coffee?"
- He watched the dark steaming mixture pour into a collapsible tin cup, which was handed him
- straight off. He sipped it gingerly and felt them looking at him with curiosity. His lips were
- scalded, but that was good. The faces around him were bearded, but the beards were clean, neat,
- and their hands were clean. They had stood up as if to welcome a guest, and now they sat down
- again. Montag sipped. "Thanks," he said. "Thanks very much."
- "You're welcome, Montag. My name's Granger." He held out a small bottle of colourless fluid.
- "Drink this, too. It'll change the chemical index of your perspiration. Half an hour from now
- you'll smell like two other people. With the Hound after you, the best thing is Bottoms up."
- Montag drank the bitter fluid.
- "You'll stink like a bobcat, but that's all right," said Granger.
- "You know my name;" said Montag.
- Granger nodded to a portable battery TV set by the fire.
- "We've watched the chase. Figured you'd wind up south along the river. When we heard you
- plunging around out in the forest like a drunken elk, we didn't hide as we usually do. We figured
- you were in the river, when the helicopter cameras swung back in over the city. Something funny
- there. The chase is still running. The other way, though."
- "The other way?"
- "Let's have a look."
- Granger snapped the portable viewer on. The picture was a nightmare, condensed, easily passed
- from hand to hand, in the forest, all whirring colour and flight. A voice cried:
- "The chase continues north in the city! Police helicopters are converging on Avenue 87 and Elm
- Grove Park!"
- Granger nodded. "They're faking. You threw them off at the river. They can't admit it. They
- know they can hold their audience only so long. The show's got to have a snap ending, quick! If
- they started searching the whole damn river it might take all night. So they're sniffing for a
- scape-goat to end things with a bang. Watch. They'll catch Montag in the next five minutes ! "
- "But how--"
- "Watch."
- The camera, hovering in the belly of a helicopter, now swung down at an empty street.
- "See that?" whispered Granger. "It'll be you; right up at the end of that street is our victim. See
- how our camera is coming in? Building the scene. Suspense. Long shot. Right now, some poor
- fellow is out for a walk. A rarity. An odd one. Don't think the police don't know the habits of
- queer ducks like that, men who walk mornings for the hell of it, or for reasons of insomnia
- Anyway, the police have had him charted for months, years. Never know when that sort of
- information might be handy. And today, it turns out, it's very usable indeed. It saves face. Oh,
- God, look there!"
- The men at the fire bent forward.
- On the screen, a man turned a corner. The Mechanical Hound rushed forward into the viewer,
- suddenly. The helicopter light shot down a dozen brilliant pillars that built a cage all about the
- man.
- A voice cried, "There's Montag ! The search is done!"
- The innocent man stood bewildered, a cigarette burning in his hand. He stared at the Hound, not
- knowing what it was. He probably never knew. He glanced up at the sky and the wailing sirens.
- The cameras rushed down. The Hound leapt up into the air with a rhythm and a sense of timing
- that was incredibly beautiful. Its needle shot out. It was suspended for a moment in their gaze, as
- if to give the vast audience time to appreciate everything, the raw look of the victim's face, the
- empty street, the steel animal a bullet nosing the target.
- "Montag, don't move!" said a voice from the sky.
- The camera fell upon the victim, even as did the Hound. Both reached him simultaneously. The
- victim was seized by Hound and camera in a great spidering, clenching grip. He screamed. He
- screamed. He screamed!
- Blackout.
- Silence.
- Darkness.
- Montag cried out in the silence and turned away.
- Silence.
- And then, after a time of the men sitting around the fire, their faces expressionless, an announcer
- on the dark screen said, "The search is over, Montag is dead; a crime against society has been
- avenged."
- Darkness.
- "We now take you to the Sky Room of the Hotel Lux for a half-hour of Just-Before-Dawn, a
- programme of-"
- Granger turned it off.
- "They didn't show the man's face in focus. Did you notice?
- Even your best friends couldn't tell if it was you. They scrambled it just enough to let the
- imagination take over. Hell," he whispered. "Hell."
- Montag said nothing but now, looking back, sat with his eyes fixed to the blank screen,
- trembling.
- Granger touched Montag's arm. "Welcome back from the dead." Montag nodded. Granger went
- on. "You might as well know all of us, now. This is Fred Clement, former occupant of the
- Thomas Hardy chair at Cambridge in the years before it became an Atomic Engineering School.
- This other is Dr. Simmons from U.C.L.A., a specialist in Ortega y Gasset; Professor West here
- did quite a bit for ethics, an ancient study now, for Columbia University quite some years ago.
- Reverend Padover here gave a few lectures thirty years ago and lost his flock between one
- Sunday and the next for his views. He's been bumming with us some time now. Myself: I wrote a
- book called The Fingers in the Glove; the Proper Relationship between the Individual and
- Society, and here I am! Welcome, Montag! "
- "I don't belong with you," said Montag, at last, slowly. "I've been an idiot all the way."
- "We're used to that. We all made the right kind of mistakes, or we wouldn't be here. When we
- were separate individuals, all we had was rage. I struck a fireman when he came to burn my
- library years ago. I've been running ever since. You want to join us, Montag?"
- "Yes."
- "What have you to offer?"
- "Nothing. I thought I had part of the Book of Ecclesiastes and maybe a little of Revelation, but I
- haven't even that now."
- "The Book of Ecclesiastes would be fine. Where was it?"
- "Here," Montag touched his head.
- "Ah," Granger smiled and nodded.
- "What's wrong? Isn't that all right?" said Montag.
- "Better than all right; perfect!" Granger turned to the Reverend. "Do we have a Book of
- Ecclesiastes?"
- "One. A man named Harris of Youngstown."
- "Montag." Granger took Montag's shoulder firmly. "Walk carefully. Guard your health. If
- anything should happen to Harris, you are the Book of Ecclesiastes. See how important you've
- become in the last minute!"
- "But I've forgotten!"
- "No, nothing's ever lost. We have ways to shake down your clinkers for you."
- "But I've tried to remember!"
- "Don't try. It'll come when we need it. All of us have photographic memories, but spend a
- lifetime learning how to block off the things that are really in there. Simmons here has worked
- on it for twenty years and now we've got the method down to where we can recall anything that's
- been read once. Would you like, some day, Montag, to read Plato's Republic?"
- "Of course!"
- "I am Plato's Republic. Like to read Marcus Aurelius? Mr. Simmons is Marcus."
- "How do you do?" said Mr. Simmons.
- "Hello," said Montag.
- "I want you to meet Jonathan Swift, the author of that evil political book, Gulliver's Travels! And
- this other fellow is Charles Darwin, and-this one is Schopenhauer, and this one is Einstein, and
- this one here at my elbow is Mr. Albert Schweitzer, a very kind philosopher indeed. Here we all
- are, Montag. Aristophanes and Mahatma Gandhi and Gautama Buddha and Confucius and
- Thomas Love Peacock and Thomas Jefferson and Mr. Lincoln, if you please. We are also
- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John."
- Everyone laughed quietly.
- "It can't be," said Montag.
- "It is," replied Granger, smiling. " We're book-burners, too. We read the books and burnt them,
- afraid they'd be found. Micro-filming didn't pay off; we were always travelling, we didn't want to
- bury the film and come back later. Always the chance of discovery. Better to keep it in the old
- heads, where no one can see it or suspect it. We are all bits and pieces of history and literature
- and international law, Byron, Tom Paine, Machiavelli, or Christ, it's here. And the hour is late.
- And the war's begun. And we are out here, and the city is there, all wrapped up in its own coat of
- a thousand colours. What do you think, Montag?"
- "I think I was blind trying to do things my way, planting books in firemen's houses and sending
- in alarms."
- "You did what you had to do. Carried out on a national scale, it might have worked beautifully.
- But our way is simpler and, we think, better. All we want to do is keep the knowledge we think
- we will need, intact and safe. We're not out to incite or anger anyone yet. For if we are destroyed,
- the knowledge is dead, perhaps for good. We are model citizens, in our own special way; we
- walk the old tracks, we lie in the hills at night, and the city people let us be. We're stopped and
- searched occasionally, but there's nothing on our persons to incriminate us. The organization is
- flexible, very loose, and fragmentary. Some of us have had plastic surgery on our faces and
- fingerprints. Right now we have a horrible job; we're waiting for the war to begin and, as
- quickly, end. It's not pleasant, but then we're not in control, we're the odd minority crying in the
- wilderness. When the war's over, perhaps we can be of some use in the world."
- "Do you really think they'll listen then?"
- "If not, we'll just have to wait. We'll pass the books on to our children, by word of mouth, and let
- our children wait, in turn, on the other people. A lot will be lost that way, of course.
- But you can't make people listen. They have to come round in their own time, wondering what
- happened and why the world blew up under them. It can't last."
- "How many of you are there?"
- "Thousands on the roads, the abandoned railtracks, tonight, bums on the outside, libraries inside.
- It wasn't planned, at first. Each man had a book he wanted to remember, and did. Then, over a
- period of twenty years or so, we met each other, travelling, and got the loose network together
- and set out a plan. The most important single thing we had to pound into ourselves was that we
- were not important, we mustn't be pedants; we were not to feel superior to anyone else in the
- world. We're nothing more than dust-jackets for books, of no significance otherwise. Some of us
- live in small towns. Chapter One of Thoreau's Walden in Green River, Chapter Two in Willow
- Farm, Maine. Why, there's one town in Maryland, only twenty-seven people, no bomb'll ever
- touch that town, is the complete essays of a man named Bertrand Russell. Pick up that town,
- almost, and flip the pages, so many pages to a person. And when the war's over, some day, some
- year, the books can be written again, the people will be called in, one by one, to recite what they
- know and we'll set it up in type until another Dark Age, when we might have to do the whole
- damn thing over again. But that's the wonderful thing about man; he never gets so discouraged or
- disgusted that he gives up doing it all over again, because he knows very well it is important and
- worth the doing."
- "What do we do tonight?" asked Montag.
- "Wait," said Granger. "And move downstream a little way, just in case."
- He began throwing dust and dirt on the fire.
- The other men helped, and Montag helped, and there, in the wilderness, the men all moved their
- hands, putting out the fire together.
- They stood by the river in the starlight.
- Montag saw the luminous dial of his waterproof. Five. Five o'clock in the morning. Another year
- ticked by in a single hour, and dawn waiting beyond the far bank of the river.
- "Why do you trust me?" said Montag.
- A man moved in the darkness.
- "The look of you's enough. You haven't seen yourself in a mirror lately. Beyond that, the city has
- never cared so much about us to bother with an elaborate chase like this to find us. A few
- crackpots with verses in their heads can't touch them, and they know it and we know it; everyone
- knows it. So long as the vast population doesn't wander about quoting the Magna Charta and the
- Constitution, it's all right. The firemen were enough to check that, now and then. No, the cities
- don't bother us. And you look like hell."
- They moved along the bank of the river, going south. Montag tried to see the men's faces, the old
- faces he remembered from the firelight, lined and tired. He was looking for a brightness, a
- resolve, a triumph over tomorrow that hardly seemed to be there. Perhaps he had expected their
- faces to burn and glitter with the knowledge they carried, to glow as lanterns glow, with the light
- in them. But all the light had come from the camp fire, and these men had seemed no different
- from any others who had run a long race, searched a long search, seen good things destroyed,
- and now, very late, were gathering to wait for the end of the party and the blowing out of the
- lamps. They weren't at all certain that the things they carried in their heads might make every
- future dawn glow with a purer light, they were sure of nothing save that the books were on file
- behind their quiet eyes, the books were waiting, with their pages uncut, for the customers who
- might come by in later years, some with clean and some with dirty fingers.
- Montag squinted from one face to another as they walked.
- "Don't judge a book by its cover," someone said.
- And they all laughed quietly, moving downstream.
- There was a shriek and the jets from the city were gone overhead long before the men looked up.
- Montag stared back at the city, far down the river, only a faint glow now.
- "My wife's back there."
- "I'm sorry to hear that. The cities won't do well in the next few days," said Granger.
- "It's strange, I don't miss her, it's strange I don't feel much of anything," said Montag. "Even if
- she dies, I realized a moment ago, I don't think I'll feel sad. It isn't right. Something must be
- wrong with me."
- "Listen," said Granger, taking his arm, and walking with him, holding aside the bushes to let him
- pass. "When I was a boy my grandfather died, and he was a sculptor. He was also a very kind
- man who had a lot of love to give the world, and he helped clean up the slum in our town; and he
- made toys for us and he did a million things in his lifetime; he was always busy with his hands.
- And when he died, I suddenly realized I wasn't crying for him at all, but for the things he did. I
- cried because he would never do them again, he would never carve another piece of wood or
- help us raise doves and pigeons in the back yard or play the violin the way he did, or tell us jokes
- the way he did. He was part of us and when he died, all the actions stopped dead and there was
- no one to do them just the way he did. He was individual. He was an important man. I've never
- gotten over his death. Often I think, what wonderful carvings never came to birth because he
- died. How many jokes are missing from the world, and how many homing pigeons untouched by
- his hands. He shaped the world. He did things to the world. The world was bankrupted of ten
- million fine actions the night he passed on."
- Montag walked in silence. "Millie, Millie," he whispered. "Millie."
- "What?"
- "My wife, my wife. Poor Millie, poor Millie. I can't remember anything. I think of her hands but
- I don't see them doing anything at all. They just hang there at her sides or they lie there on her
- lap or there's a cigarette in them, but that's all."
- Montag turned and glanced back.
- What did you give to the city, Montag?
- Ashes.
- What did the others give to each other?
- Nothingness.
- Granger stood looking back with Montag. "Everyone must leave something behind when he dies,
- my grandfather said. A child or a book or a painting or a house or a wall built or a pair of shoes
- made. Or a garden planted. Something your hand touched some way so your soul has somewhere
- to go when you die, and when people look at that tree or that flower you planted, you're there. It
- doesn't matter what you do, he said, so long as you change something from the way it was before
- you touched it into something that's like you after you take your hands away. The difference
- between the man who just cuts lawns and a real gardener is in the touching, he said. The lawn-
- cutter might just as well not have been there at all; the gardener will be there a lifetime."
- Granger moved his hand. "My grandfather showed me some V-2 rocket films once, fifty years
- ago. Have you ever seen the atom-bomb mushroom from two hundred miles up? It's a pinprick,
- it's nothing. With the wilderness all around it.
- "My grandfather ran off the V-2 rocket film a dozen times and then hoped that some day our
- cities would open up and let the green and the land and the wilderness in more, to remind people
- that we're allotted a little space on earth and that we survive in that wilderness that can take back
- what it has given, as easily as blowing its breath on us or sending the sea to tell us we are not so
- big. When we forget how close the wilderness is in the night, my grandpa said, some day it will
- come in and get us, for we will have forgotten how terrible and real it can be. You see?" Granger
- turned to Montag. "Grandfather's been dead for all these years, but if you lifted my skull, by
- God, in the convolutions of my brain you'd find the big ridges of his thumbprint. He touched me.
- As I said earlier, he was a sculptor. 'I hate a Roman named Status Quo!' he said to me. 'Stuff your
- eyes with wonder,' he said, 'live as if you'd drop dead in ten seconds. See the world. It's more
- fantastic than any dream made or paid for in factories. Ask no guarantees, ask for no security,
- there never was such an animal. And if there were, it would be related to the great sloth which
- hangs upside down in a tree all day every day, sleeping its life away. To hell with that,' he said,
- 'shake the tree and knock the great sloth down on his ass.'"
- "Look!" cried Montag.
- And the war began and ended in that instant.
- Later, the men around Montag could not say if they had really seen anything. Perhaps the merest
- flourish of light and motion in the sky. Perhaps the bombs were there, and the jets, ten miles, five
- miles, one mile up, for the merest instant, like grain thrown over the heavens by a great sowing
- hand, and the bombs drifting with dreadful swiftness, yet sudden slowness, down upon the
- morning city they had left behind. The bombardment was to all intents and purposes finished,
- once the jets had sighted their target, alerted their bombardiers at five thousand miles an hour; as
- quick as the whisper of a scythe the war was finished. Once the bomb-release was yanked it was
- over. Now, a full three seconds, all of the time in history, before the bombs struck, the enemy
- ships themselves were gone half around the visible world, like bullets in which a savage islander
- might not believe because they were invisible; yet the heart is suddenly shattered, the body falls
- in separate motions and the blood is astonished to be freed on the air; the brain squanders its few
- precious memories and, puzzled, dies.
- This was not to be believed. It was merely a gesture. Montag saw the flirt of a great metal fist
- over the far city and he knew the scream of the jets that would follow, would say, after the deed,
- disintegrate, leave no stone on another, perish. Die.
- Montag held the bombs in the sky for a single moment, with his mind and his hands reaching
- helplessly up at them. "Run!" he cried to Faber. To Clarisse, "Run!" To Mildred, "Get out, get
- out of there! " But Clarisse, he remembered, was dead. And Faber was out; there in the deep
- valleys of the country somewhere the five a.m. bus was on its way from one desolation to
- another. Though the desolation had not yet arrived, was still in the air, it was certain as man
- could make it. Before the bus had run another fifty yards on the highway, its destination would
- be meaningless, and its point of departure changed from metropolis to junkyard.
- And Mildred . . .
- Get out, run!
- He saw her in her hotel room somewhere now in the halfsecond remaining with the bombs a
- yard, a foot, an inch from her building. He saw her leaning toward the great shimmering walls of
- colour and motion where the family talked and talked and talked to her, where the family prattled
- and chatted and said her name and smiled at her and said nothing of the bomb that was an inch,
- now a half-inch, now a quarter-inch from the top of the hotel. Leaning into the wall as if all of
- the hunger of looking would find the secret of her sleepless unease there. Mildred, leaning
- anxiously, nervously, as if to plunge, drop, fall into that swarming immensity of colour to drown
- in its bright happiness.
- The first bomb struck.
- "Mildred! "
- Perhaps, who would ever know? Perhaps the great broadcasting stations with their beams of
- colour and light and talk and chatter went first into oblivion.
- Montag, falling flat, going down, saw or felt, or imagined he saw or felt the walls go dark in
- Millie's face, heard her screaming, because in the millionth part of time left, she saw her own
- face reflected there, in a mirror instead of a crystal ball, and it was such a wildly empty face, all
- by itself in the room, touching nothing, starved and eating of itself, that at last she recognized it
- as her own and looked quickly up at the ceiling as it and the entire structure of the hotel blasted
- down upon her, carrying her with a million pounds of brick, metal, plaster, and wood, to meet
- other people in the hives below, all on their quick way down to the cellar where the explosion rid
- itself of them in its own unreasonable way.
- I remember. Montag clung to the earth. I remember. Chicago. Chicago, a long time ago. Millie
- and I. That's where we met! I remember now. Chicago. A long time ago.
- The concussion knocked the air across and down the river, turned the men over like dominoes in
- a line, blew the water in lifting sprays, and blew the dust and made the trees above them mourn
- with a great wind passing away south. Montag crushed himself down, squeezing himself small,
- eyes tight. He blinked once. And in that instant saw the city, instead of the bombs, in the air.
- They had displaced each other. For another of those impossible instants the city stood, rebuilt
- and unrecognizable, taller than it had ever hoped or strived to be, taller than man had built it,
- erected at last in gouts of shattered concrete and sparkles of torn metal into a mural hung like a
- reversed avalanche, a million colours, a million oddities, a door where a window should be, a top
- for a bottom, a side for a back, and then the city rolled over and fell down dead.
- Montag, lying there, eyes gritted shut with dust, a fine wet cement of dust in his now shut mouth,
- gasping and crying, now thought again, I remember, I remember, I remember something else.
- What is it? Yes, yes, part of the Ecclesiastes and Revelation. Part of that book, part of it, quick
- now, quick, before it gets away, before the shock wears off, before the wind dies. Book of
- Ecclesiastes. Here. He said it over to himself silently, lying flat to the trembling earth, he said the
- words of it many times and they were perfect without trying and there was no Denham's
- Dentifrice anywhere, it was just the Preacher by himself, standing there in his mind, looking at
- him ....
- "There," said a voice.
- The men lay gasping like fish laid out on the grass. They held to the earth as children hold to
- familiar things, no matter how cold or dead, no matter what has happened or will happen, their
- fingers were clawed into the dirt, and they were all shouting to keep their eardrums from
- bursting, to keep their sanity from bursting, mouths open, Montag shouting with them, a protest
- against the wind that ripped their faces and tore at their lips, making their noses bleed.
- Montag watched the great dust settle and the great silence move down upon their world. And
- lying there it seemed that he saw every single grain of dust and every blade of grass and that he
- heard every cry and shout and whisper going up in the world now. Silence fell down in the
- sifting dust, and all the leisure they might need to look around, to gather the reality of this day
- into their senses.
- Montag looked at the river. We'll go on the river. He looked at the old railroad tracks. Or we'll go
- that way. Or we'll walk on the highways now, and we'll have time to put things into ourselves.
- And some day, after it sets in us a long time, it'll come out of our hands and our mouths. And a
- lot of it will be wrong, but just enough of it will be right. We'll just start walking today and see
- the world and the way the world walks around and talks, the way it really looks. I want to see
- everything now. And while none of it will be me when it goes in, after a while it'll all gather
- together inside and it'll be me. Look at the world out there, my God, my God, look at it out there,
- outside me, out there beyond my face and the only way to really touch it is to put it where it's
- finally me, where it's in the blood, where it pumps around a thousand times ten thousand a day. I
- get hold of it so it'll never run off. I'll hold on to the world tight some day. I've got one finger on
- it now; that's a beginning.
- The wind died.
- The other men lay a while, on the dawn edge of sleep, not yet ready to rise up and begin the day's
- obligations, its fires and foods, its thousand details of putting foot after foot and hand after hand.
- They lay blinking their dusty eyelids. You could hear them breathing fast, then slower, then slow
- Montag sat up.
- He did not move any further, however. The other men did likewise. The sun was touching the
- black horizon with a faint red tip. The air was cold and smelled of a coming rain.
- Silently, Granger arose, felt his arms, and legs, swearing, swearing incessantly under his breath,
- tears dripping from his face. He shuffled down to the river to look upstream.
- "It's flat," he said, a long time later. "City looks like a heap of baking-powder. It's gone." And a
- long time after that. "I wonder how many knew it was coming? I wonder how many were
- surprised?"
- And across the world, thought Montag, how many other cities dead? And here in our country,
- how many? A hundred, a thousand?
- Someone struck a match and touched it to a piece of dry paper taken from their pocket, and
- shoved this under a bit of grass and leaves, and after a while added tiny twigs which were wet
- and sputtered but finally caught, and the fire grew larger in the early morning as the sun came up
- and the men slowly turned from looking up river and were drawn to the fire, awkwardly, with
- nothing to say, and the sun coloured the backs of their necks as they bent down.
- Granger unfolded an oilskin with some bacon in it. "We'll have a bite. Then we'll turn around
- and walk upstream. They'll be needing us up that way."
- Someone produced a small frying-pan and the bacon went into it and the frying-pan was set on
- the fire. After a moment the bacon began to flutter and dance in the pan and the sputter of it
- filled the morning air with its aroma. The men watched this ritual silently.
- Granger looked into the fire. "Phoenix."
- "What?"
- "There was a silly damn bird called a Phoenix back before Christ: every few hundred years he
- built a pyre and burned himself up. He must have been first cousin to Man. But every time he
- burnt himself up he sprang out of the ashes, he got himself born all over again. And it looks like
- we're doing the same thing, over and over, but we've got one damn thing the Phoenix never had.
- We know the damn silly thing we just did. We know all the damn silly things we've done for a
- thousand years, and as long as we know that and always have it around where we can see it,
- some day we'll stop making the goddam funeral pyres and jumping into the middle of them. We
- pick up a few more people that remember, every generation."
- He took the pan off the fire and let the bacon cool and they ate it, slowly, thoughtfully.
- "Now, let's get on upstream," said Granger. "And hold on to one thought: You're not important.
- You're not anything. Some day the load we're carrying with us may help someone. But even
- when we had the books on hand, a long time ago, we didn't use what we got out of them. We
- went right on insulting the dead. We went right on spitting in the graves of all the poor ones who
- died before us. We're going to meet a lot of lonely people in the next week and the next month
- and the next year. And when they ask us what we're doing, you can say, We're remembering.
- That's where we'll win out in the long run. And some day we'll remember so much that we'll
- build the biggest goddam steam-shovel in history and dig the biggest grave of all time and shove
- war in and cover it up. Come on now, we're going to go build a mirror-factory first and put out
- nothing but mirrors for the next year and take a long look in them."
- They finished eating and put out the fire. The day was brightening all about them as if a pink
- lamp had been given more wick. In the trees, the birds that had flown away now came back and
- settled down.
- Montag began walking and after a moment found that the others had fallen in behind him, going
- north. He was surprised, and moved aside to let Granger pass, but Granger looked at him and
- nodded him on. Montag went ahead. He looked at the river and the sky and the rusting track
- going back down to where the farms lay, where the barns stood full of hay, where a lot of people
- had walked by in the night on their way from the city. Later, in a month or six months, and
- certainly not more than a year, he would walk along here again, alone, and keep right on going
- until he caught up with the people.
- But now there was a long morning's walk until noon, and if the men were silent it was because
- there was everything to think about and much to remember. Perhaps later in the morning, when
- the sun was up and had warmed them, they would begin to talk, or just say the things they
- remembered, to be sure they were there, to be absolutely certain that things were safe in them.
- Montag felt the slow stir of words, the slow simmer. And when it came to his turn, what could he
- say, what could he offer on a day like this, to make the trip a little easier? To everything there is
- a season. Yes. A time to break down, and a time to build up. Yes. A time to keep silence and a
- time to speak. Yes, all that. But what else. What else? Something, something . . .
- And on either side of the river was there a tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and
- yielded her fruit every month; And the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.
- Yes, thought Montag, that's the one I'll save for noon. For noon...
- When we reach the city.
- THE END
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment