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    BOOKS BY PHILIP K. DICK
   The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick
   NOVELS
   The Broken Bubble
   Clans of the Alphane Moon
   Confessions of a Crap Artist
   The Cosmic Puppets
   Counter-Clock World
   The Crack in Space
   Deus Irae (with Roger Zelazny)
   The Divine Invasion
   Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
   Dr. Bloodmoney
   Dr. Futurity
   Eye in the Sky
   Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said
   Galactic Pot-Healer
   The Game-Players of Titan
   Gather Yourselves Together
   Lies, Inc.
   The Man in the High Castle
   The Man Who Japed
   Martian Time-Slip
   Mary and the Giant
   A Maze of Death
   Nick and the Glimmung
   Now Wait for Last Year
   Our Friends from Frolix 8
   The Penultimate Truth
   A Scanner Darkly
   The Simulacra
   Solar Lottery
   The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
   Time Out of Joint
   The Transmigration of Timothy Archer
   Ubik
   Ubik: The Screenplay
   VALIS
   Vulcan’s Hammer
   We Can Build You
   The World Jones Made
   The Zap Gun
   First Mariner Books edition 2012
   Copyright © 1994 by the Estate of Philip K. Dick
   except the Afterword © 1994 by Dwight Brown
   All rights reserved
   For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
   www.hmhbooks.com
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
   Dick, Philip K.
   Gather yourselves together / Philip K. Dick.—1st Mariner Books ed.
   p. cm.
   ISBN 978-0-547-57262-8
   I. Title.
   PS3S54.I3G33 2012
   813'.54—dc23 2012005878
   Book design by Melissa Lotfy
   Printed in the United States of America
   DOC 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
   CONTENTS
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Chapter 14
   Chapter 15
   Chapter 16
   Chapter 17
   Chapter 18
   Chapter 19
   Chapter 20
   Epilogue
   Afterword
   1
   IT WAS EARLY summer, and the day was almost over. It had been warm during the afternoon, but now the sun had set and the evening cold was beginning to come in. Carl Fitter walked down the front stairs of the men’s dormitory, carrying a heavy suitcase and a small package tied with brown cord.
   He paused at the foot of the stairs, stairs of rough wood, painted with grey porch paint that had chipped and peeled with age. They had been painted long before Carl had come to work for the Company. He looked back up. The door at the top was sliding shut slowly. As he watched, it closed tight with a bang. He put his suitcase down and made certain that his wallet was buttoned into his pocket in such a way that it could not possibly fall out.
   “That’s the last time I’ll ever be going down those stairs,” he murmured. “The last time. It’ll be good to see the United States again, after so long.”
   The shades behind the windows had been pulled down. The curtains were gone. Boxed up somewhere. He was not the last person to leave the building; there was still the final locking up to do. But that would be done by the workmen, who would see to it that the windows and doors were tightly boarded, protecting the building until the new owners arrived.
   “How miserable it looks. Not that it was ever such an inspiring sight,”
   He picked up his suitcase and continued down the walk. Clouds covered the setting sun, and only its last rays could be seen. The air, as it often does that time of evening, seemed full of little things; a layer of particles coming into existence for the night. He reached the road and stopped.
   In front of him men and women were assembled around two Company cars. There was a large pile of luggage and boxes, and a workman was stacking them in the back of the two cars. Carl made out Ed Forester standing with a piece of paper in his hand. He walked over to him.
   Forester raised his head. “Carl! What’s the matter? I don’t see your name down here.”
   “What?” Carl looked over his shoulder at the list. He could not make out any of the names in the evening gloom.
   “This is a list of the people going with me. But I can’t find your name here. You see it? Most people spot their own names right away.”
   “I don’t see it.”
   “What did they tell you at the office?”
   Carl looked vaguely around at the people standing about, and at the people already inside the two cars.
   “I said, what did they tell you at the office?”
   Carl shook his head slowly. He set down his things and carried the list over under one of the car headlights. He studied the list silently. His name was really not on it. He turned it over, but there was nothing on the back, only the Company letterhead. He gave the list back.
   “Is this the last group?” he asked.
   “Yes, except for the truckload of workmen. The truck will be leaving tomorrow or the next day.” Forester paused. “Of course, it’s possible—”
   “What’s possible?”
   Forester rubbed his nose thoughtfully. “Carl, maybe you’re one of those who’s supposed to stay behind, until they get here. Why don’t you go over to the office and see if you can find the main traffic sheet?”
   “But I thought the people had been notified who—”
   “Oh, well.” Forester shrugged. “Don’t you know the Company by this time?”
   “But I don’t want to stay here! I’ve already written home. My stuff is all packed. I’m all ready to go.”
   “It’s only for a week or so. Go on over to the office and see. I’ll hold the cars up for a few minutes. Hurry back if you’re supposed to leave with us. Otherwise, wave to me from the porch.”
   Carl began to gather up his things again. “I can’t understand it. I’m all packed. There certainly must be some mistake about this.”
   “It’s six o’clock, Mister Forester,” the workman called. “We’re all loaded up.”
   “Good.” Forester looked at his watch.
   “Am I supposed to get in now?” one of the women asked.
   “Get in. We have to catch up with the main group at the other side of the mountains. So we have to leave right on time.”
   “Goodbye, Forester.” Carl put out his hand. “I’ll run over to the office and see what the story is.”
   “We won’t drive off until you come back, or we see you wave. Good luck.”
   Carl hurried off along the gravel path, into the gloom, toward the office building.
   Forester watched him go up the stairs and through the door. After a few minutes he began to get impatient. The cars were loaded and the people were beginning to become uncomfortable and restless.
   “Get your motors started,” he said to the first driver. “We’ll be taking off in a second.”
   He got inside the 
other car and slid behind the driver’s seat. He turned to the people in the back seat.
   “Did any of you notice somebody wave from the office?” They all shook their heads. “Damn him. I wish he’d do something. We can’t sit here forever.”
   “Wait!” a woman said. “There’s someone on the porch now. It’s hard to see.”
   Forester peered out. Was Carl coming? Or was he waving? “He’s waving,” Forester spread himself out behind the wheel, making himself comfortable.
   The other car started up and came abreast. It passed down along the road, its headlights blazing. Forester blinked and pushed his foot down on the starter.
   “Poor kid,” he murmured. The car moved under him. “It’s going to be a long week.”
   He caught up with the other car.
   Standing on the office porch, Carl watched the two cars drive slowly down the road away from the buildings, through the metal gates and out onto the main highway. It was very quiet, except for the sound of workmen somewhere, a long way off, nailing and pounding in the darkness.
   2
   “IT DOESN’T MATTER a bit to me,” Barbara Mahler said. “I’m just a Company minion. I might as well stay here another week.”
   “It might even be over a week. It might be two weeks. We don’t know when they’re coming.”
   “So it’s two weeks. Three, even. I’ve been here two years. I don’t even remember what the United States looks like.”
   Verne could not tell if she were being sarcastic. The girl was standing at the window looking out at the machinery beyond. In the darkening fog of early evening the machinery looked like columns and pillars of ancient buildings that had been ruined by some natural catastrophe, so that nothing remained but these massive and useless supports. They were sprawled hither and yon, some one way, some another. Meaningless, sightless constructions from which everything valuable had already been removed and packed up in crates, stored away somewhere.
   Dimly, the figures of two workmen appeared and passed by the window carrying some metal sections between them. They struggled silently, and disappeared into the darkness.
   Barbara turned away. “What season is it?”
   “Where?”
   “In the United States. What time of year?”
   “I don’t know. Fall? Summer? No, it’s summer here. What does it matter? Is it important?”
   “I suppose not. Did you know there are people in the United States who voluntarily live in San Francisco?”
   “Why not?”
   “The fog.” She gestured toward the window.
   Verne nodded. “It bothers you? I’m surprised. You wouldn’t be happier if it went away.”
   “I wouldn’t?”
   “I doubt it. You know what it looks like around here, behind the fog? The city dump. Or someone’s old back yard. This is the back yard of the world. There’s junk stacked up here going back—I don’t know. The Company’s been around a long time.” He reached up and clicked on the overhead light. The office filled with a pale yellow glow.
   “It’s leaving now.”
   “It’s leaving here. But it’s arriving someplace else.”
   “Really?”
   “You’re a funny person. It’s hard to tell what’s going on in your mind. Maybe you’re not thinking at all. At least, not like I conceive it. Women are like that.”
   “Oh, yes.” Barbara walked away from the window. “I’ll tell you what’s on my mind. It’s not our staying that bothers me.”
   “What, then?”
   “It’s their going. All of them pulling out.”
   “What else can they do?”
   “They could put up some kind of a fight.”
   “Four hundred fifty million people are a lot to have to fight. Anyhow, let’s face it. This whole region is Chinese. It doesn’t belong to us. We have no legal claim to it. They’ve voided all contracts of this kind, all over China. As soon as the Revolution was over our goose was cooked. Everybody knew they’d throw out all the foreign business firms. Except maybe the Russians.
   Our days have been numbered since the fall of Shanghai. A lot of other companies are doing just what we’re doing.”
   “I suppose.”
   “We’re lucky. We’re far enough south to get across the mountains into India. That means we’ll at least get out. Some of them in the north haven’t been so lucky.” Verne waved at the calendar on the wall. “1949 is going to go down on the books as a bad year for business. At least, in this part of the world.”
   “The people in Washington could do something.”
   “Maybe. I doubt it. It’s the times. Trends in the great ebb and flow of history. Asia is no place for Western business firms to be hanging around. Anybody with half an eye could see this coming years ago. This stuff was brewing in 1900.”
   “What happened then?”
   “The Boxer Rebellion. The same as this. The start. We won that. But it’s been only a question of time. Let the yuks take over. The Company will have to chalk it up to profit and loss, whether it wants to or not.”
   “Anyhow, we’ll be going back home.”
   “It’ll be good to be out of here. You can feel it in the air. The tension. It’ll be good to get out of it. We’re too damn tired to keep this sort of thing going for long. It’s too much of a drain. We’re personae non gratae. Guests at the wrong party. Somebody else’s party. We’re not wanted. Can’t you feel them all looking at us? We’re in the wrong place.”
   “Is that how you feel?”
   “That’s how we all feel, out here. We’re worn out. Our professional smile is beginning to wear a little thin. It’s time we started edging toward the door.”
   “I don’t like to get pushed.”
   “It’s our own fault. We’re being pushed because we stayed too long. We should have left fifty years ago.”
   Barbara nodded absently. She was not listening to what Verne was saying. She was wandering around the office. “You know, it looks terrible without the curtains.”
   “The curtains?”
   “They’re gone. They took them down. Didn’t you notice?” The office was shabby and bleak. The plaster walls were stained and scarred.
   “I never noticed.” Verne grinned. “Don’t you remember? I never notice things like that.”
   Barbara turned her back to him and gazed out the window again. Outside, as the fog settled down from above, the great columns dissolved and grew even more vague and indistinct in the gloom.
   “Don’t you want to talk?” Verne said.
   She did not answer.
   “The last two cars are leaving about now. Want to go down and say goodbye to the lucky ones?”
   Barbara shook her head. “No. I’m going over to the woman’s dorm and start getting my room back in shape. They just now told me I was staying.”
   “They picked our names at random,” Verne said. “Just luck. Or divine intervention. We stay—they go. Isn’t it nice, you and I together? And one other person. I wonder who. Probably some lumphead.”
   Barbara went outside, down the porch steps.
   Barbara walked slowly up the path to the dormitory building and stopped. A small group of workmen were putting a chain on the front door, with a large padlock.
   “Hold on!” she said. “You can put your lock someplace else. This is an exception.”
   “We were only supposed to leave the office building and part of one of the men’s dorms open,” a workman said.
   “Well, I’m not staying in the men’s dorm I’m staying here.”
   “We were told—”
   “I don’t care what you were told. This is my place. I’m staying here.”
   The workmen considered, grouping together.
   “Okay,” the foreman said. They took the lock and chain back off again. “How’s that?”
   “What about the windows? Are you going to take the boards off?”
   The workmen gathered their tools up. “Maybe one of your men can do it. We have a schedule. We have to get out of here th
is evening.”
   “I thought you were going to work through tomorrow.”
   The men laughed. “Are you kidding? There are yuks all around. We don’t want to be here when they move in.”
   “You don’t like them?”
   “They smell like sheep.”
   “That’s what they say about us. Oh, the hell with it. Go on, take off.”
   The workmen disappeared down the path.
   “Yuks couldn’t be any worse.” Barbara went up the steps, inside the great, stark building. Once, it had been clean and white. Now it was grey; water had dripped down from the roof and formed long brown stains on the walls. The window frames were rusty, under the newly nailed boards.
   “But it’s what I have in place of a home. The god damn dirty old place.”
   She looked around, feeling for the light switch in the darkness. Her fingers touched it and she flicked it down. The hall lights came on. Barbara shook her head. The walls were covered with splotches of old scotch tape, from endless posters and notices. One notice alone remained.
   NO SMOKING WITHOUT AUTHORIZED PERMIT
   “Says you” had been pencilled underneath.
   Barbara went on, up to the second floor. The doors leading off the hall were locked. She came to her own door, getting her key from her purse. She unlocked the door and went inside the room, crossing to the lamp. The lamp came on. The room was empty and dismal.
   “My poor little room,” Barbara said. Nothing remained but the iron bed, Company property, and the wood end table with its lamp. The painted floor showed an outline, where the rug had been. Not so much as a single spot of color had been left.
   Barbara sat down on the bed. The springs creaked under her weight. She took a cigarette from her purse and lit it. For a time she sat smoking. But the barren room was too depressing. She got to her feet and walked restlessly back and forth.
   “Christ.”
   At last she went back downstairs. She passed out into the darkness, down the steps, onto the path. By lighting matches she managed to find her way to the place where the baggage had been collected and stacked, by the side of the road. Most of it was gone. The great mound had shrunk to a tiny stack, a few wood crates and three suitcases. She found her own suitcase and pulled it away from the others. It was damp with mildew. And heavy.
   She carried it back along the path, all the way to the women’s dorm.
   

 Valis
Valis The Simulacra
The Simulacra In Milton Lumky Territory
In Milton Lumky Territory Lies, Inc.
Lies, Inc. The Man Who Japed
The Man Who Japed Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick
Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick Gather Yourselves Together
Gather Yourselves Together Beyond the Door
Beyond the Door Our Friends From Frolix 8
Our Friends From Frolix 8 Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford and Other Classic Stories
The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford and Other Classic Stories The Penultimate Truth
The Penultimate Truth Counter-Clock World
Counter-Clock World The Minority Report: 18 Classic Stories
The Minority Report: 18 Classic Stories Now Wait for Last Year
Now Wait for Last Year The Broken Bubble
The Broken Bubble Paycheck
Paycheck Ubik
Ubik Martian Time-Slip
Martian Time-Slip The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick
The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike
The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike Mary and the Giant
Mary and the Giant The Man in the High Castle
The Man in the High Castle Puttering About in a Small Land
Puttering About in a Small Land Confessions of a Crap Artist
Confessions of a Crap Artist Mr. Spaceship by Philip K. Dick, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure
Mr. Spaceship by Philip K. Dick, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure Nick and the Glimmung
Nick and the Glimmung Deus Irae
Deus Irae The Minority Report
The Minority Report The Hanging Stranger
The Hanging Stranger The Variable Man
The Variable Man Voices From the Street
Voices From the Street Second Variety and Other Stories
Second Variety and Other Stories A Scanner Darkly
A Scanner Darkly In Pursuit of Valis
In Pursuit of Valis The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch The Transmigration of Timothy Archer
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer The Crack in Space
The Crack in Space The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 3: Second Variety
The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 3: Second Variety The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 4: The Minority Report
The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 4: The Minority Report The Skull
The Skull Solar Lottery
Solar Lottery Vulcan's Hammer
Vulcan's Hammer The Gun
The Gun The Crystal Crypt
The Crystal Crypt The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 5: The Eye of the Sibyl
The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick 5: The Eye of the Sibyl Mr. Spaceship
Mr. Spaceship The Zap Gun
The Zap Gun Dr. Bloodmoney
Dr. Bloodmoney Beyond Lies the Wub
Beyond Lies the Wub Galactic Pot-Healer
Galactic Pot-Healer The Divine Invasion
The Divine Invasion Radio Free Albemuth
Radio Free Albemuth A Maze of Death
A Maze of Death The Ganymede Takeover
The Ganymede Takeover The Philip K. Dick Reader
The Philip K. Dick Reader The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick
The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Vol. 4:
The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Vol. 4: Tony and the Beetles
Tony and the Beetles The Cosmic Puppets
The Cosmic Puppets The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Vol. 5: The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Stories
The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Vol. 5: The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Stories Clans of the Alphane Moon
Clans of the Alphane Moon Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said The World Jones Made
The World Jones Made Total Recall
Total Recall Eye in the Sky
Eye in the Sky Second Variety
Second Variety Vintage PKD
Vintage PKD A Handful of Darkness
A Handful of Darkness Complete Stories 3 - Second Variety and Other Stories
Complete Stories 3 - Second Variety and Other Stories The Book of Philip K Dick
The Book of Philip K Dick The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (Valis)
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (Valis) Autofac
Autofac Dr. Futurity (1960)
Dr. Futurity (1960) Shell Game
Shell Game The Minority Report and Other Classic Stories
The Minority Report and Other Classic Stories Collected Stories 2 - Second Variety and Other Classic Stories
Collected Stories 2 - Second Variety and Other Classic Stories The Third Time Travel
The Third Time Travel The Game-Players Of Titan
The Game-Players Of Titan World of Chance
World of Chance The Shifting Realities of PK Dick
The Shifting Realities of PK Dick Adjustment Team
Adjustment Team The Demon at Agi Bridge and Other Japanese Tales (Translations from the Asian Classics)
The Demon at Agi Bridge and Other Japanese Tales (Translations from the Asian Classics) Collected Stories 3 - The Father-Thing and Other Classic Stories
Collected Stories 3 - The Father-Thing and Other Classic Stories CANTATA-141
CANTATA-141 The Adjustment Team
The Adjustment Team The Collected Stories of Philip K Dick
The Collected Stories of Philip K Dick Electric Dreams
Electric Dreams Collected Stories 1 - The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford and Other Classic Stories
Collected Stories 1 - The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford and Other Classic Stories Eye in the Sky (1957)
Eye in the Sky (1957) In Milton Lumky Territory (1984)
In Milton Lumky Territory (1984) The VALIS Trilogy
The VALIS Trilogy Paycheck (2003)
Paycheck (2003) The Unteleported Man
The Unteleported Man The Book of Philip K Dick (1973)
The Book of Philip K Dick (1973) Collected Stories 5 - The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Strories
Collected Stories 5 - The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Strories The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Strories
The Eye of the Sibyl and Other Classic Strories The Crack in Space (1966)
The Crack in Space (1966)