And he was out the door and into his car
before she could scream.
She ran and stood on the curb as he swung the car about.
"Walter Griff come back here!" she wailed, flinging up her arms.
"Gripp," he corrected her.
"Gripp!" she shouted.
The car whirled away down the silent street, regardless of her stomping
and shrieking. The exhaust from it fluttered the white dress she crumpled
in her plump hands, and the stars shone bright, and the car vanished out
onto the desert and away into blackness.
He drove all night and all day for three nights and days. Once he thought
he saw a car following, and he broke into a shivering sweat and took another
highway, cutting off across the lonely Martian world, past little dead
cities, and he drove and drove for a week and a day, until he had put
ten thousand miles between himself and Marlin Village. Then he pulled
into a small town named Holtville Springs, where there were some tiny
stores he could light up at night and restaurants to sit in, ordering
meals. And he‘s lived there ever since, with two deep freezes packed
with food to last him one hundred years, and enough cigars to last ten
thousand days, and a good bed with a soft mattress.
And when once in a while over the long years the phone rings — he
doesn‘t answer.
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