
- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said
About this book
Winner of the John W. Campbell Award and a Hugo and Nebula award nominee, Philip K. Dick's Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said is a rollicking chase story that combines altered reality, genetic enhancement, and drug use into a dystopian setting to create one of the most popular and enduring science fiction novels.
"Dick skillfully explores the psychological ramifications of this nightmare."—New York Times Review of Books
Jason Taverner—world-famous talk show host and man-about-town—wakes up one day to find that no one knows who he is—including the vast databases of the totalitarian government. And in a society where lack of identification is a crime, Taverner has no choice but to go on the run with a host of shady characters, including crooked cops and dealers of alien drugs. But do they know more than they are letting on? And just how can a person's identity be erased overnight?
"Dick skillfully explores the psychological ramifications of this nightmare."—New York Times Review of Books
Jason Taverner—world-famous talk show host and man-about-town—wakes up one day to find that no one knows who he is—including the vast databases of the totalitarian government. And in a society where lack of identification is a crime, Taverner has no choice but to go on the run with a host of shady characters, including crooked cops and dealers of alien drugs. But do they know more than they are letting on? And just how can a person's identity be erased overnight?
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Yes, you can access Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said by Philip K. Dick in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
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PART ONE
Flow my tears, fall from your springs!
Exiled forever let me mourn;
Where nightâs black bird her sad infamy sings,
There let me live forlorn.
1
ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1988, the Jason Taverner Show ran thirty seconds short. A technician, watching through the plastic bubble of the control dome, froze the final credit on the video section, then pointed to Jason Taverner, who had started to leave the stage. The technician tapped his wrist, pointed to his mouth.
Into the boom mike Jason said smoothly, âKeep all those cards and V-letters coming in, folks. And stay tuned now for The Adventures of Scotty, Dog Extraordinary.â
The technician smiled; Jason smiled back, and then both the audio and the video clicked off. Their hour-long music and variety program, which held the second highest rating among the yearâs best TV shows, had come to an end. And it had all gone well.
âWhereâd we lose half a minute?â Jason said to his special guest star of the evening, Heather Hart. It puzzled him. He liked to time his own shows.
Heather Hart said, âBaby bunting, itâs all right.â She put her cool hand across his slightly moist forehead, rubbed the perimeter of his sand-colored hair affectionately.
âDo you realize what power you have?â Al Bliss, their business agent, said to Jason, coming up closeâtoo close as alwaysâto him. âThirty million people saw you zip up your fly tonight. Thatâs a record of sorts.â
âI zip up my fly every week,â Jason said. âItâs my trademark. Or donât you catch the show?â
âBut thirty million,â Bliss said, his round, florid face spotted with drops of perspiration. âThink of it. And then thereâs the residuals.â
Jason said crisply, âIâll be dead before the residuals on this show pay off. Thank God.â
âYouâll probably be dead tonight,â Heather said, âwith all those fans of yours packed in outside there. Just waiting to rip you into little tiny squares like so many postage stamps.â
âSome of them are your fans, Miss Hart,â Al Bliss said, in his doglike panting voice.
âGod damn them,â Heather said harshly. âWhy donât they go away? Arenât they breaking some law, loitering or something?â
Jason took hold of her hand and squeezed it forcefully, attracting her frowning attention. He had never understood her dislike for fans; to him they were the lifeblood of his public existence. And to him his public existence, his role as worldwide entertainer, was existence itself, period. âYou shouldnât be an entertainer,â he said to Heather, âfeeling the way you do. Get out of the business. Become a social worker in a forced-labor camp.â
âThereâre people there, too,â Heather said grimly.
Two special police guards shouldered their way up to Jason Taverner and Heather. âWeâve got the corridor as clear as weâre going to get it,â the fatter of the two cops wheezed. âLetâs go now, Mr. Taverner. Before the studio audience can trickle around to the side exits.â He signaled to three other special police guards, who at once advanced toward the hot, packed passageway that led, eventually, to the nocturnal street. And out there the parked Rolls flyship in all its costly splendor, its tail rocket idling throbbingly. Like, Jason thought, a mechanical heart. A heart that beat for him alone, for him the star. Well, by extension, it throbbed in response to the needs of Heather, too.
She deserved it: she had sung well, tonight. Almost as well asâJason grinned inwardly, to himself. Hell, letâs face it, he thought. They donât turn on all those 3-D color TV sets to see the special guest star. There are a thousand special guest stars scattered over the surface of earth, and a few in the Martian colonies.
They turn on, he thought, to see me. And I am always there. Jason Taverner has never and will never disappoint his fans. However Heather may feel about hers.
âYou donât like them,â Jason said as they squirmed and pushed and ducked their way down the steaming, sweat-smelling corridor, âbecause you donât like yourself. You secretly think they have bad taste.â
âTheyâre dumb,â Heather grunted, and cursed quietly as her flat, large hat flopped from her head and disappeared forever within the whaleâs belly of close-pressing fans.
âTheyâre ordinaries,â Jason said, his lips at her ear, partly lost as it was in her great tangle of shiny red hair. The famous cascade of hair so widely and expertly copied in beauty salons throughout Terra.
Heather grated, âDonât say that word.â
âTheyâre ordinaries,â Jason said, âand theyâre morons. Becauseââhe nipped the lobe of her earââbecause thatâs what it means to be an ordinary. Right?â
She sighed. âOh, God, to be in the flyship cruising through the void. Thatâs what I long for: an infinite void. With no human voices, no human smells, no human jaws masticating plastic chewing gum in nine iridescent colors.â
âYou really do hate them,â he said.
âYes.â She nodded briskly. âAnd so do you.â She halted briefly, turning her head to confront him. âYou know your goddamn voice is gone; you know youâre coasting on your glory days, which youâll never see again.â She smiled at him, then. Warmly. âAre we growing old?â she said, above the mumbles and squeaks of the fans. âTogether? Like man and wife?â
Jason said, âSixes donât grow old.â
âOh yes,â Heather said. âOh yes they do.â Reaching upward, she touched his wavy brown hair. âHow long have you been tinting it, dearheart? A year? Three?â
âGet in the flyship,â he said brusquely, maneuvering her ahead of him, out of the building and onto the pavement of Hollywood Boulevard.
âIâll get in,â Heather said, âif youâll sing me a high B natural. Remember when youââ
He thrust her bodily into the flyship, squeezed in after her, turned to help Al Bliss close the door, and then they were up and into the rain-clouded nighttime sky. The great gleaming sky of Los Angeles, as bright as if it were high noon. And thatâs what it is for you and for me, he thought. For the two of us, in all times to come. It will always be as it is now, because we are sixes. Both of us. Whether they know it or not.
And itâs not, he thought grimly, enjoying the bleak humor of it. The knowledge which they together had, the knowledge unshared. Because that was the way it was meant to be. And always had . . . even now after it had all turned out so badly. Badly, at least, in the designersâ eyes. The great pundits who had guessed and guessed wrong. Forty-five beautiful years ago, when the world was young and droplets of rain still clung to the now-gone Japanese cherry trees in Washington, D.C. And the smell of spring that had hovered over the noble experiment. For a short while, anyhow.
âLetâs go to ZĂźrich,â he said aloud.
âIâm too tired,â Heather said. âAnyhow, that place bores me.â
âThe house?â He was incredulous. Heather had picked it out for the two of them, and for years there they had gotten awayâaway especially from the fans that Heather hated so much.
Heather sighed and said, âThe house. The Swiss watches. The bread. The cobblestones. The snow on the hills.â
âMountains,â he said, feeling aggrieved still. âWell, hell,â he said. âIâll go without you.â
âAnd pick up someone else?â
He simply could not understand. âDo you want me to take someone else with me?â he demanded.
âYou and your magnetism. Your charm. You could get any girl in the world into that big brass bed with you. Not that youâre so much once you get there.â
âGod,â he said with disgust. âThat again. Always the same old gripes. And the ones thatâre fantasyâtheyâre the ones you really hang on to.â
Turning to face him, Heather said earnestly, âYou know how you look, even now at the age you are. Youâre beautiful. Thirty million people ogle you an hour a week. Itâs not your singing theyâre interested in . . . itâs your incurable physical beauty.â
âThe same can be said for you,â he said caustically. He felt tired and he yearned for the privacy and seclusion that lay there on the outskirts of ZĂźrich, silently waiting for the two of them to come back once more. And it was as if the house wanted them to stay, not for a night or a week of nights, but forever.
âI donât show my age,â Heather said.
He glanced at her, then studied her. Volumes of red hair, pale skin with a few freckles, a strong roman nose. Deep-set huge violet eyes. She was right; she didnât show her age. Of course she never tapped into the phone-grid transex network, as he did. But in point of fact he did so very little. So he was not hooked, and there had not been, in his case, brain damage or premature aging.
âYouâre a goddamn beautiful-looking person,â he said grudgingly.
âAnd you?â Heather said.
He could not be shaken by this. He knew that he still had his charisma, the force they had inscribed on the chromosomes forty-two years ago. True, his hair had become mostly gray and he did tint it. And a few wrinkles had appeared here and there. Butâ
âAs long as I have my voice,â he said, âIâll be okay. Iâll have what I want. Youâre wrong about meâitâs your six aloofness, your cherished so-called individuality. Okay, if you donât want to fly over to the house in ZĂźrich, where do you want to go? Your place? My place?â
âI want to be married to you,â Heather said. âSo then it wonât be my place versus your place but itâll be our place. And Iâll give up singing and have three children, all of them looking like you.â
âEven the girls?â
Heather said, âTheyâll all be boys.â
Leaning over he kissed her on the nose. She smiled, took his hand, patted it warmly. âWe can go anywhere tonight,â he said to her in a low, firm, controlled, and highly projected voice, almost a father voice; it generally worked well with Heather, whereas nothing else did. Unless, he thought, I walk off.
She feared that. Sometimes in their quarrels, especially at the house in ZĂźrich, where no one could hear them or interfere, he had seen the fear on her face. The idea of being alone appalled her; he knew it; she knew it; the fear was part of the reality of their joint life. Not their public life; for them, as genuinely professional entertainers, there they had complete, rational control: however angry and estranged they became they would function together in the big worshiping world of viewers, letter writers, noisy fans. Even outright hatred could not change that.
But there could be no hate between them anyhow. They had too much in common. They got so damn much from each other. Even mere physical contact, such as this, sitting together in the Rolls skyfly, made them happy. For as long, anyhow, as it lasted.
Reaching into the inner pocket of his custom-tailored genuine silk suitâone of perhaps ten in the whole worldâhe brought out a wad of government-certified bills. A great number of them, compressed into a fat little bundle.
âYou shouldnât carry so much cash on you,â Heather said naggingly, in the tone he disliked so much: the opinionated-mother tone.
Jason said, âWith thisââhe displayed the package of billsâ âwe can buy our way into anyââ
âIf some unregistered student who has sneaked across from a campus burrow just last night doesnât chop your hand off at the wrist and run away with it, both your hand and your flashy money. You always have been flashy. Flashy and loud. Look at your tie. Look at it!â She had raised her voice, now; she seemed genuinely angry.
âLife is short,â Jason said. âAnd prosperity even shorter.â But he placed the package of bills back in his inside coat pocket, smoothed away at the lump it created in his otherwise perfect suit. âI wanted to buy you something with it,â he said. Actually the idea had just come to him now; what he had planned to do with the money was something a little different: he intended to take it to Las Vegas, to the blackjack tables. As a six he couldâand didâalways win at blackjack; he had the edge over everyone, even the dealer. Even, he thought sleekly, the pit boss.
âYouâre lying,â Heather said. âYou didnât intend to get me anything; you never do, youâre so selfish and always thinking about yourself. Thatâs screwing money; youâre going to buy some big-chested blonde and go to bed together with her. Probably at our place in ZĂźrich, which, you realize, I havenât seen for four months now. I might as well be pregnant.â
It struck him as odd that she would say that, out of all the possible retorts that might flow up into her conscious, talking mind. But there was a good deal about Heather that he did not understand; with him, as with her fans, she kept many things about her private.
But, over the years, he had learned a lot about her. He knew, for example, that in 1982 she had had an abortion, a well-kept secret, too. He knew that at one time she had been illegally married to a student commune leader, and that for one year she had lived in the rabbit warrens of Columbia University, along with all the smelly, bearded students kept subsurface lifelong by the pols and the nats. The police and the national guard, who ringed every campus, keeping the students from creeping across to society like so many black rats swarming out of a leaky ship.
And he knew that one year ago she had been busted for possession of drugs. Only her wealthy and powerful family had been able to buy her out of that one: her money and her charisma and fame hadnât worked when confrontation time with the police came.
Heather had been scarred a little by all that had overtaken her, but, he knew, she was all right now. Like all sixes she had enormous recuperative ability. It had been carefully built into each of them. Along with much, much else. Even he, at forty-two years, didnât know them all. And a lot had happened to him, too. Mostly in the form of dead bodies, the remains of other entertainers he had trampled on his long climb to the top.
âThese âflashyâ tiesââ he began, but then the skyflyâs phone rang. He took it, said hello. Probably it was Al Bliss with the ratings on tonightâs show.
But it was not. A girlâs voice came to him, penetrating sharply, stridently into his ear. âJason?â the girl said loudly.
âYeah,â he said. Cupping the mouthpiece of the phone he said to Heather, âItâs Marilyn Mason. Why the hell did I give her my skyfly number?â
âWho the hell is Marilyn Mason?â Heather asked.
âIâll tell you later.â He uncupped the phone. âYes, dear; this is Jason for real, in the true reincarnated flesh. What is it? You sound terrible. Are they evicting you again?â He winked at Heather and grinned wryly.
âGet rid of her,â Heather said.
Again cupping the mouthpiece of the phone he said to her, âI will; Iâm t...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Contents
- Copyright
- Dedication
- PART ONE
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- PART TWO
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- 18
- 19
- 20
- PART THREE
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- 25
- 26
- 27
- PART FOUR
- Epilogue
- About the Author