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
alcoholflame 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?"