Clifford D. Simak. All flesh is grass

Clifford D. Simak. All flesh is grass

1

When I swung out of the village street onto the main highway, there was

a truck behind me. It was one of those big semi jobs and it was really

rolling. The speed limit was forty-five on that stretch of road, running

through one corner of the village, but at that time in the morning it wasn’t

reasonable to expect that anyone would pay attention to a posted speed.

I wasn’t too concerned with the truck. I’d be stopping a mile or so up

the road at Johnny’s Motor Court to pick up Alf Peterson, who would be

waiting for me, with his fishing tackle ready. And I had other things to

think of, too – principally the phone and wondering who I had talked with on

the phone. There had been three voices and it all was very strange, but I

had the feeling that it may have been one voice, changed most wonderfully to

make three voices, and that I would know that basic voice if I could only

pin it down. And there had been Gerald Sherwood, sitting in his study, with

two walls lined by books, telling me about the blueprints that had formed,

unbidden, in his brain. There had been Stiffy Grant, pleading that I not let

them use the bomb. And there had been, as well, the fifteen hundred dollars.

Just up the road was the Sherwood residence, set atop its hill, with

the house almost blotted out, in the early dawn, by the bulking blackness of

the great oak trees that grew all around the house. Staring at the hill, I

forgot about the phone and Gerald Sherwood in his book-lined study with his

head crammed full of blueprints, and thought instead of Nancy and how I’d

met her once again, after all those years since high school. And I recalled

those days when we had walked hand in hand, with a pride and happiness that

could not come again, that can come but once when the world is young and the

first, fierce love of youth is fresh and wonderful.

The road ahead was clear and wide; the four lanes continued for another

twenty miles or so before they dwindled down to two. There was no one on the

road except myself and the truck, which was coming up behind me and coming

fairly fast.

Watching the headlights in my rear vision mirror, I knew that in just a

little while it would be swinging out to pass me.

I wasn’t driving fast and there was a lot of room for the truck to pass

me, and there was not a thing to hit and then I did hit something.

It was like running into a strong elastic band. There was no thump or

crash. The car began slowing down as if I had put on the brakes. There was

nothing I could see and for a moment I thought that something must have

happened to the car – that the motor had gone haywire or the brakes had

locked, or something of the sort. I took my foot off the accelerator and the

car came to a halt, then started to slide back, faster and faster, for all

the world as if I’d run into that rubber band and now it was snapping back.

I flipped the drive to neutral because I could smell the rubber as the tires

screeched on the road, and as soon as I flipped it over, the car snapped

back so fast that I was thrown against the wheel.

Behind me the horn of the truck blared wildly and tires howled on the

pavement as the driver swung his rig to miss me. The truck made a swishing

sound as it went rushing past and beneath the swishing, I could hear the

rubber of the tires sucking at the roadbed, and the whole thing rumbled as

if it might be angry at me for causing it this trouble. And as it went

rushing past, my car came to a halt, over on the shoulder of the road.

Then the truck hit whatever I had hit. I could hear it when it struck.

It made a little plop. For a single instant, I thought the truck might break

through whatever the barrier might be, for it was heavy and had been going

fast and for a second or so there was no sign that it was slowing down. Then

it began to slow and I could see the wheels of that big job skidding and

humping, so that they seemed to be skipping on the pavement, still moving

forward doggedly, but still not getting through.

It moved ahead for a hundred feet or so beyond the point where I had

stopped. And there the rig came to a halt and began skidding back. It slid

smoothly for a moment, with the tires squealing on the pavement, then it

began to jackknife. The rear end buckled around and came sideways down the

road, heading straight for me.

I had been sitting calmly in the car, not dazed, not even too much

puzzled. It all had happened so fast that there had not been time to work up

much puzzlement. Something strange had happened, certainly, but I think I

had the feeling that in just a little while I’d get it figured out and it

would all come right again.

So I had stayed sitting in the car, absorbed in watching what would

happen to the truck. But when it came sliding back down the road,

jackknifing as it slid, I slapped the handle of the door and shoved it with

my shoulder and rolled out of the seat. I hit the pavement and scrambled to

my feet and ran.

Behind me the tires of the truck were screaming and then there was a

crash of metal, and when I heard the crash, I jumped out on the grassy

shoulder of the road and had a look behind me. The rear end of the truck had

slammed into my car and shoved it in the ditch and now was slowly, almost

majestically, toppling into the ditch itself, right atop my car

‘Hey, there!’ I shouted. It did no good, of course, and I knew it

wouldn’t. The words were just jerked out of me.

The cab of the truck had remained upon the road, but it was canted with

one wheel off the ground. The driver was crawling from the cab.

It was a quiet and peaceful morning. Over in the west some heat

lightning was skipping about the dark horizon. There was that freshness in

the air that you never get except on a summer morning before the sun gets up

and the beat closes down on you. To my right, over in the village, the

street lights were still burning, hanging still and bright, unstirred by any

breeze. It was too nice a morning, I thought, for anything to happen.

There were no cars on the road. There were just the two of us, the

trucker and myself, and his truck in the ditch, squashing down my car. He

came down the road toward me.

He came up to me and stopped, peering at me, his arms hanging at his

side. ‘What the hell is going on?’ he asked. ‘What did we run into?’

‘I don’t know,’ I said.

‘I’m sorry about your car,’ he told me. ‘I’ll report it to the company.

They’ll take care of it.’

He stood, not moving, acting as if he might never move again. ‘Just

like running into nothing,’ he declared. ‘There’s nothing there.’

Then slow anger flared in him.

‘By God,’ he said, ‘I’m going to find out…’

He turned abruptly and went stalking up the highway, heading toward

whatever we had hit. I followed along behind him.

He was grunting like an angry hog.

He went straight up the middle of the road and he hit the barrier, but

by this time he was roaring mad and he wasn’t going to let it stop him, so

he kept ploughing into it and he got a good deal farther than I had expected

that he would. But finally it stopped him and he stood there for a moment,

with his body braced ridiculously against a nothingness, leaning into it,

and with his legs driving like well-oiled pistons in an attempt to drive

himself ahead. In the stillness of the morning I could hear his shoes

chuffing on the pavement.

Then the barrier let him have it. It snapped him back. It was as if a

sudden wind had struck him and was blowing him down the road, tumbling as he

rolled. He finally ended up jammed half underneath the front end of the cab.

I ran over and grabbed him by the ankles and pulled him out and stood

him on his feet. He was bleeding a little from where he’d rubbed along the

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