
A solitary figure haunts the same October evening route he’s taken for two decades, his ritual‑bound walk a quiet rebellion against a past that once shattered his career. Dressed in a bowler hat, silk muffler, and rose‑wood cane, he drifts past familiar shops, a silent confectionery clerk, and a snarling dog, all while the town murmurs about inexplicable phenomena on the radio.
Beneath the routine lies a lingering mystery: the professor’s controversial book that cost him his university post, and the whispers of a vanished skyscraper and a disgraced scientist. As the clock on his gold watch betrays an unexpected half‑hour, his steadfast world begins to wobble, hinting that the precise order he has clung to may be about to unravel.
Listeners are invited to follow his measured steps, feeling the crisp autumn air and the subtle tension between habit and the strange events that ripple through the streets, all while wondering whether the man’s disciplined solitude can survive the cracks appearing in his familiar world.
Language
en
Duration
~34 minutes (32K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Greg Weeks, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-08-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1908–1997
A longtime pulp storyteller from Minneapolis, he wrote eerie, fast-moving tales of horror, fantasy, science fiction, and crime that became favorites of magazine readers. His work is remembered for its atmosphere, imagination, and classic weird-fiction feel.
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1904–1988
A quiet giant of science fiction, he wrote humane, thoughtful stories that mixed cosmic ideas with small-town warmth. Best known for classics like City and Way Station, he spent decades imagining futures shaped as much by kindness as by technology.
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