Divine Invasion by Dick, Philip

“Your name. I know what it means.”

“It’s only a name.”

“No,” he said. “Zina is not your name; Zina is what you are.”

“Tell me what that is,” the girl said, “but tell me very quietly. Because if you know what I am then some of your memory is returning. But be careful; the government listens and watches.”

“Do the magic first,” Emmanuel said.

“They will know; the government will know.”

Going across the room, Emmanuel stopped by a cage with a rabbit in it. “No,” he said. “Not that. Is there another animal here that you could be?”

“Careful, Emmanuel,” Zina said.

46 Philip K. Dick The Divine Invasion

“A bird,” Emmanuel said.

“A cat,” Zina said. “Just a second.” She paused, moved her lips. The cat came in, then, from outside, a gray-striped female. “Shall I be the cat?”

“I want to be the cat,” Emmanuel said.

“The cat will die.”

“Let the cat die.”

“Why?”

“They were created for that.”

Zina said, “Once a calf about to be slaughtered ran to a Rabbi for protection and put its head between the Rabbi’s knees. The Rabbi said, ‘Go! For this you were created,’ meaning, ‘You were created to be slaughtered.’

“And then?” Emmanuel said.

Zina said, “God greatly afflicted the Rabbi for a long time.”

“I understand,” Emmanuel said. “You have taught me. I will not be the cat.”

“Then I will be the cat,” Zina said, “and it will not die because I am not like you.” She bent down, her hands on her knees, to address the cat. Emmanuel watched, and presently the cat came to him and asked to speak to him. He lifted it up and held it in his arms and the cat placed its paw against his face. With its paw it told him that mice were annoying and a bother and yet the cat did not wish to see an end of mice because, as annoying as they were, still there was something about them that was fascinating, more fascinating than annoying; and so the cat sought out mice, although the cat did not respect the mice. The cat wanted there to be mice and yet the cat despised mice.

All this the cat communicated by means of its paw against the boy’s cheek.

“All right,” Emmanuel said.

Zina said, “Do you know where any mice are right now?”

“You are the cat,” Emmanuel said.

“Do you know where any mice are right now?” she repeated.

“You are a kind of mechanism,” Emmanuel said.

“Do you know-”

“You have to find them yourself,” Emmanuel said.

“But you could help me. You could chase them my way. The girl opened her mouth and showed him her teeth. He laughed.

Against his cheek the paw conveyed more thoughts; that Mr. Plaudet was coming into the building. The cat could hear his steps. Put me down, the cat communicated.

Emmanuel set the cat down.

“Are there any mice?” Zina said.

“Stop,” Emmanuel said. “Mr. Plaudet is here.”

“Oh,” Zina said, and nodded.

Entering the room, Mr. Plaudet said, “I see you’ve found Misty, Emmanuel. Isn’t she a nice little animal? Zina, what’s wrong with you? Why are you staring at me?”

Emmanuel laughed; Zina was having trouble disentangling herself from the cat. “Be careful, Mr. Plaudet,” he said. “Zina’ll scratch you.”

“You mean Misty,” Mr. Plaudet said.

“That’s not the kind of brain damage I have,” Emmanuel said. “To-” He broke off; he could feel Zina telling him no.

“He’s not very good at names, Mr. Plaudet,” Zina said. She had managed to separate herself from the cat, now, and Misty, perplexed, walked slowly away. Obviously Misty had not been able to fathom why, all at once, she found herself in two different places.

“Do you remember my name, Emmanuel?” Mr. Plaudet asked.

“Mr. Talk,” Emmanuel said.

“No,” Mr. Plaudet said. He frowned. ” ‘Plaudet’ is German for ‘talk,’ though.”

“I told Emmanuel that,” Zina said. “About your name.”

After Mr. Plaudet left, Emmanuel said to the girl, “Can you summon the bells? For dancing?”

“Of course.” And then she flushed. “That was a trick question.

“But you play tricks. You always play tricks. I’d like to hear the bells, but I don’t want to dance. I’d like to watch the dancing, though.”

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The Divine Invasion 49

“Some other time,” Zina said. “You do remember something, then. If you know about the dancing.”

“I think I remember. I asked Elias to take me to see my father, where they have him stored. I want to see what he looks like. If I saw him, maybe I’d remember a lot more. I’ve seen pictures of him.”

Zina said, “There’s something you want from me even more than the dancing.”

“I want to know about the time power you have. I want to see you make time stop and then run backward. That’s the best trick of all.”

“I said you should see your father about that.”

“But you can do it,” Emmanuel said. “Right here.”

“I’m not going to. It disturbs too many things. They never line up again. Once they’re out of synch- Well, someday I’ll do it for you. I could take you back to before the collision. But I’m not sure that’s wise because you might have to live it over, and that would make you worse. Your mother was very sick, you know. She probably would not have lived anyhow. And your father will be out of cryonic suspension in four more years.”

“You’re sure?” Emmanuel said excitedly.

“When you’re ten years old you’ll see him. He’s back with your mother right now; he likes to retrotime to when he first met her. She was very sloppy; he had to clean up her dome.”

“What is a ‘dome’?” Emmanuel asked.

“They don’t have them here; that’s for outspace. The colonists. Where you were born. I know Elias told you. Why don’t you listen to him more?”

“He’s a man,” Emmanuel said. “A human being.”

“No he’s not.”

“He was born as a man. And then I-” He paused, and a segment of memory came back to him. “I didn’t want him to die. Did I? So I took him, all at once. When he and-” He tried to think, to frame the word in his mind.

“Elisha,” Zina said.

“They were walking together,” Emmanuel said, “and I took him up, and he sent part of himself back to Elisha. So he never died; Elias, I mean. But that’s not his real name.”

“That’s his Greek name.”

“I do remember some things, then,” Emmanuel said.

“You’ll remember more. You see, you set up a disinhibiting stimulus that would remind you before-well, when the right time came. You’re the only one who knows what the stimulus is. Even Elias doesn’t know it. I don’t know it; you hid it from me, back when you were what you were.”

“I am what I am now,” Emmanuel said.

“Yes, except that you have an impaired memory,” Zina said, pragmatically. “So it isn’t the same.

“I guess not,” the boy said. “I thought you said you could make me remember.”

“There are different kinds of remembering. Elias can make you remember a little, and I can make you remember more; but only your own disinhibiting stimulus can make you be. The word is .. . you have to bend close to me to listen; only you should hear this word. No, I’ll write it.” Zina took a piece of paper from a nearby desk, and a length of chalk, and wrote one word.

HAYAH

Gazing down at the word, Emmanuel felt memory come to him, but only for a nanosecond; at once-almost at once-it departed.

“Hayah,” he said, aloud.

“That is the Divine Tongue,” Zina said.

“Yes,” he said. “I know.” The word was Hebrew, a Hebrew root word. And the Divine Name itself came from that word. He felt a vast and terrible awe; he felt afraid.

“Fear not,” Zina said quietly.

“I am afraid,” Emmanuel said, “because for a moment I remembered.” Knew, he thought, who I am.

But he forgot again. By the time he and the girl had gone outside into the yard he no longer knew. And yet-strange!-he

50 Philip K. Dick

knew that he had known, known and forgotten again almost at once. As if, he thought, I have two minds inside me, one on the surface and the other in the depths. The surface one has been injured but the deep one has not. And yet the deep one can’t speak; it is closed up. Forever? No; there would be the stimulus, one day. His own device.

Probably it was necessary that he not remember. Had he been able to recall into consciousness everything, the basis of it all, then the government would have killed him. There existed two heads of the beast, the religious one, a Cardinal Fulton Statler Harms, and then a scientific one named N. Bulkowsky. But these were phantoms. To Emmanuel the Christian-Islamic Church and the Scientific Legate did not constitute reality. He knew what lay behind them. Elias had told him. But even had Elias not told him he would have known anyhow; he would everywhere and at every time be able to identify the Adversary.

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