Now Wait For Last Year - Plot Summary

Plot Summary

Set during a war between the 'Starmen (inhabitants of the planet Lilistar) and the reegs, Now Wait for Last Year is the story of Eric Sweetscent, an organ-transplant doctor who gets wrapped up in Earth-Lilistar politics.

At the onset of the story, Sweetscent is the personal org-trans surgeon for Virgil Ackerman, the president of Tijuana Fur & Dye. Using an extraterrestrial amoeba which can imitate the cell-structure of anything it touches, TF&D had been the largest manufacturer of synthetic furs on the planet. But like all major corporations on Earth, TF&D has been requisitioned to produce for the war effort.

Ackerman invites Sweetscent to "Wash-35", a recreation of his boyhood native Washington DC in a simulated 1935 and his vacation getaway on Mars, where he announces an ulterior motive in the retreat. Waiting for them when they arrive is a guest—Gino Molinari, the elected leader of Earth. Known as "the Mole", he is rumored to have the enigmatic ability to come back from the dead, and he has requested the services of Sweetscent. Ackerman gladly passes Sweetscent on to Molinari.

Meanwhile, Sweetscent's wife, Kathy, tries JJ-180, a new hallucinogenic drug which proves to be highly toxic and addictive. The effects of JJ-180 are not clear at first, however, only hours off of it, Kathy finds herself unable to function and violently craving JJ-180 again. She is visited by 'Starmen who claim the reegs invented JJ-180 as a chemical weapon against the 'Starmen and Terrans, also stating that there is no known cure for the drug's addiction and 'That's why we put you on it'. Kathy is now a slave to JJ-180.

The 'Starmen inform Kathy of her husband's new position with Molinari and suspect the latter's possible defection to the reegs. Kathy is promised more JJ-180 if she agrees to spy on her husband for Lilistar. Threatened with deportation, Kathy capitulates and agrees to their terms. Eventually, she takes a second dose of the drug as her ability to function becomes nearly impossible due the effects of the withdrawal. Jumping into a taxi-cab, both she and the cab are plunged back in time to the mid-20th century. As the effects of the drug wear off, they slowly make their way back to the present time, uncertain as to whether the past they visited was their own or an alternate one.

An increasingly paranoid Kathy sets off to visit her husband.

Under his new employer Eric Sweetscent is let in on certain State secrets: Molinari seems to have a psychosomatic condition that mirrors any illness or disease of anyone in his vicinity. The effects of this condition appear to be real, yet the Mole pulls through every time, always returning from the brink of death.

Molinari, like everyone else, has realized that in siding with the 'Starmen Earth has doomed itself to the wrong side of a losing war. However, there does not seem to be any safe way of defecting to the reegs, and Molinari fears that his deteriorating health will not instill confidence in the Terrans should the 'Starmen retaliate, as they are certain to do. Sweetscent is shown footage of a healthier, younger Molinari in uniform and is led to believe that an android look-alike of the President has been created for public appearances, a notion that does not account for the fact that there is at least one other Molinari on the premises, a bullet-ridden corpse that is being preserved for use in the event of certain possible future developments.

Kathy arrives to inform her husband of her addiction, and in an effort to motivate him to find a cure she slips a pill of JJ-180 into his drink. Without enough time to be furious, Eric slips a year into the future of an alternate world where his colleagues inform him that he disappeared the day Kathy came to visit. Sweetscent also witnesses that in the new timeline Earth has sided with the reegs and Lilistar has lost the war.

Upon returning to the present of his own timeline, Sweetscent is eager to present this information to Molinari, who reveals that he too has been taking JJ-180, and that the effect is different for each user. Certain users are sent to the past, while others are sent to the future. Each trip is in an alternate universe, and therefore no one can effectively change their own past or future. However, aside from minor details, events in all observed universes seem to be moving in the same direction, and therefore, information obtained from one alternate world's future will most likely be applicable to another.

In Molinari's case he slips sideways in time under the drug's influence and is able to pull alternate versions of his present self into his own timeline and then keep them there.

Having learned the secret to Molinari's alter-aliases as well as confirming the feasibility of an alliance with the reegs, Eric takes a larger dose of JJ-180 which propels him further into the future. While there, he obtains a cure for JJ-180's addiction, an item of wide accessibility in the future, as well as obtaining more information about the possible future of the war in his own timeline. He also gathers information as to the effects of JJ-180 on the brain as he is increasingly worried about Kathy's mental condition. Taking a fraction of a pill so as to not immediately return to his own time, Eric again ends up one year in his own future where the 'Starmen have occupied Earth after learning of the Terrans' defection to the reegs. He is arrested by a 'Star patrol but saved by his future self, who informs him that Ackerman and the rest of the crew at TF&D have taken a stand against Lilistar, using Ackerman's getaway on Mars as their hideout.

Now knowing the general future history of the next few years, Eric returns to his own time where his wife's mental condition is deteriorating every day. He resolves to check her into a clinic and is sent into deep reflection about the nature of their relationship. Feeling that he would be justified, he attempts to arrange an affair with a younger girl at Molinari's recommendation. However, he backs out of it and begins to slip into a deep depression while reflecting on his life. He goes to Mexico to purchase poison with which to commit suicide. Deciding against it at the last second, Eric watches as the 'Starmen begin their invasion of Earth.

Deciding that he is destined to join Ackerman's resistance against the 'Starmen, Eric enters an automated cab bound for TF&D, asking it what it would do if its wife suffered from brain-damage without possibility of recovery (which Eric had confirmed by contacting his future self). After pointing out that robots do not marry, the cab hypothetically concludes that it would stay with her. Life, argues the cab, is made up of a series of circumstances, different for each person. To leave one's wife would be to say that he requires a uniquely easier set of circumstances than what has been provided. That reasoning, to the cab, was an irrational way of thinking.

Eric agrees and decides to stay with his wife despite the challenges presented by her condition, and in the closing paragraph he is thereby commended by the cab for being a 'good man'.

Works of Philip K. Dick
Novels
1950s
  • Gather Yourselves Together
  • Voices from the Street
  • Vulcan's Hammer
  • Dr. Futurity
  • The Cosmic Puppets
  • Solar Lottery
  • Mary and the Giant
  • The World Jones Made
  • Eye in the Sky
  • The Man Who Japed
  • A Time for George Stavros
  • Pilgrim on the Hill
  • The Broken Bubble
  • Puttering About in a Small Land
  • Nicholas and the Higs
  • Time Out of Joint
  • In Milton Lumky Territory
  • Confessions of a Crap Artist
1960s
  • The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike
  • Humpty Dumpty in Oakland
  • The Man in the High Castle
  • We Can Build You
  • Martian Time-Slip
  • Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb
  • The Game-Players of Titan
  • The Simulacra
  • The Crack in Space
  • Now Wait for Last Year
  • Clans of the Alphane Moon
  • The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
  • The Zap Gun
  • The Penultimate Truth
  • Deus Irae
  • The Unteleported Man
  • The Ganymede Takeover
  • Counter-Clock World
  • Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
  • Nick and the Glimmung
  • Ubik
  • Galactic Pot-Healer
  • A Maze of Death
  • Our Friends from Frolix 8
1970s
  • Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said
  • A Scanner Darkly
  • Radio Free Albemuth
1980s
  • VALIS
  • The Divine Invasion
  • The Transmigration of Timothy Archer
  • The Owl in Daylight
Short story collections
1950s
  • A Handful of Darkness
  • The Variable Man
1960s
  • The Preserving Machine
1970s
  • The Book of Philip K. Dick
  • The Best of Philip K. Dick
1980s
  • The Golden Man
  • Robots, Androids, and Mechanical Oddities
  • I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon
  • The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick
  • Beyond Lies the Wub
  • The Dark Haired Girl
  • The Father-Thing
  • Second Variety
1990s
  • The Days of Perky Pat
  • The Little Black Box
  • The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford
  • We Can Remember It for You Wholesale
  • The Minority Report
  • Second Variety
  • The Eye of the Sibyl
  • The Philip K. Dick Reader
2000s
  • Minority Report
  • Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick
  • Paycheck
  • Vintage PKD
Short stories
1950s
  • "Beyond Lies the Wub"
  • "The Gun"
  • "The Skull"
  • "The Little Movement"
  • "The Defenders"
  • "Mr. Spaceship"
  • "Piper in the Woods"
  • "Roog"
  • "The Infinities"
  • "Second Variety"
  • "The World She Wanted"
  • "Colony"
  • "The Cookie Lady"
  • "Impostor"
  • "Martians Come in Clouds"
  • "Paycheck"
  • "The Preserving Machine"
  • "The Cosmic Poachers"
  • "Expendable"
  • "The Indefatigable Frog"
  • "The Commuter"
  • "Out in the Garden"
  • "The Great C"
  • "The King of the Elves"
  • "The Trouble with Bubbles"
  • "The Variable Man"
  • "The Impossible Planet"
  • "Planet for Transients"
  • "Some Kinds of Life"
  • "The Builder"
  • "The Hanging Stranger"
  • "Project: Earth"
  • "The Eyes Have It"
  • "Tony and the Beetles"
  • "Prize Ship"
  • "Beyond the Door"
  • "The Crystal Crypt"
  • "A Present for Pat"
  • "The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford"
  • "The Golden Man"
  • "James P. Crow"
  • "Prominent Author"
  • "Small Town"
  • "Survey Team"
  • "Sales Pitch"
  • "Time Pawn"
  • "Breakfast at Twilight"
  • "The Crawlers"
  • "Of Withered Apples"
  • "Exhibit Piece"
  • "Adjustment Team"
  • "Shell Game"
  • "Meddler"
  • "Souvenir"
  • "A World of Talent"
  • "The Last of the Masters"
  • "Progeny"
  • "Upon the Dull Earth"
  • "The Father-thing"
  • "Strange Eden"
  • "Jon's World"
  • "The Turning Wheel"
  • "Foster, You're Dead!"
  • "Human Is"
  • "War Veteran"
  • "Captive Market"
  • "Nanny"
  • "The Hood Maker"
  • "The Chromium Fence"
  • "Service Call"
  • "A Surface Raid"
  • "The Mold of Yancy"
  • "Autofac"
  • "Psi-man Heal My Child!"
  • "The Minority Report"
  • "To Serve the Master"
  • "Pay for the Printer"
  • "A Glass of Darkness"
  • "The Unreconstructed M"
  • "Misadjustment"
  • "Null-O"
  • "Explorers We"
  • "Recall Mechanism"
  • "Fair Game"
  • "War Game"
1960s
  • "All We Marsmen"
  • "Stand-by"
  • "What'll We Do with Ragland Park?"
  • "The Days of Perky Pat"
  • "If There Were No Benny Cemoli"
  • "Waterspider"
  • "Novelty Act"
  • "Oh, to Be a Blobel!"
  • "The War with the Fnools"
  • "What the Dead Men Say"
  • "Orpheus with Clay Feet"
  • "Cantata 140"
  • "A Game of Unchance"
  • "The Little Black Box"
  • "Precious Artifact"
  • "The Unteleported Man"
  • "Retreat Syndrome"
  • "Project Plowshare"
  • "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale"
  • "Holy Quarrel"
  • "Your Appointment Will Be Yesterday"
  • "Return Match"
  • "Faith of Our Fathers"
  • "Not by Its Cover"
  • "The Story to End All Stories"
  • "The Electric Ant"
  • "A. Lincoln, Simulacrum"
1970s
  • "The Pre-persons"
  • "A Little Something for Us Tempunauts"
  • "The Exit Door Leads In"
1980s
  • "Chains of Air, Web of Aethyr"
  • "Rautavaara's Case"
  • "I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon"
  • "The Alien Mind"
  • "Strange Memories of Death"
  • "Cadbury, the Beaver Who Lacked"
  • "The Day Mr. Computer Fell Out of Its Tree"
  • "The Eye of the Sibyl"
  • "Stability"
  • "Goodbye, Vincent"
Film and television adaptations
1980s
  • Blade Runner
1990s
  • Total Recall
  • Confessions d'un Barjo
  • Screamers
  • Total Recall 2070
2000s
  • Impostor
  • Minority Report
  • Paycheck
  • A Scanner Darkly
  • Next
  • Screamers: The Hunting
2010s
  • Radio Free Albemuth
  • The Adjustment Bureau
  • Total Recall
  • King of the Elves

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