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.