Atlas Shrugged


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atlas-shrugged

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 Standing alone in his half-darkened room, Rearden noted that the prospect of going to jail left him
blankly indifferent. He remembered the time when, aged fourteen, faint with hunger, he would not steal
fruit from a sidewalk stand. Now, the possibility of being sent to jail—H this dinner was a felony—meant
no more to him than the possibility of being run over by a truck: an ugly physical accident without any
moral significance.
He thought that he had been made to hide, as a guilty secret, the only business transaction he had
enjoyed in a year's work—and that he was hiding, as a guilty secret, his nights with Dagny, the only hours
that kept him alive. He felt that there was some connection between the two secrets, some essential
connection which he had to discover. He could not grasp it, he could not find the words to name it, but
he felt that the day when he would find them, he would answer every question of his life.
He stood against the wall, his head thrown back, his eyes closed, and thought of Dagny, and then he felt
that no questions could matter to him any longer. He thought that he would see her tonight, almost hating
it, because tomorrow morning seemed so close and then he would have to leave her—he wondered
whether he could remain in town tomorrow, or whether he should leave now, without seeing her, so that
he could wait, so that he could always have it ahead of him: the moment of closing his hands over her
shoulders and looking down at her face. You're going insane, he thought—but he knew that if she were
beside him through every hour of his days, it would still be the same, he would never have enough of it,
he would have to invent some senseless form of torture for himself in order to bear it—he knew he would
see her tonight, and the thought of leaving without it made the pleasure greater, a moment's torture to
underscore his certainty of the hours ahead. He would leave the light on in her living room, he thought,
and hold her across the bed, and see nothing but the curve of the strip of light running from her waist to
her ankle, a single line drawing the whole shape of her long, slim body in the darkness, then he would pull
her head into the light, to see her face, to see it falling back, unresisting, her hair over his arm. her eyes
closed, the face drawn as in a look of pain, her mouth open to him.
He stood at the wall, waiting, to let all the events of the day drop away from him, to feel free, to know
that the next span of time was his.
When the door of his room flew open without warning, he did not quite hear or believe it, at first. He
saw the silhouette of a woman, then of a bellboy who put down a suitcase and vanished. The voice he
heard was Lillian's: "Why, Henry! All alone and in the dark?"
She pressed a light switch by the door. She stood there, fastidiously groomed, wearing a pale beige
traveling suit that looked as if she had traveled under glass; she was smiling and pulling her gloves off with
the air of having reached home.
"Are you in for the evening, dear?" she asked. "Or were you going out?"
He did not know how long a time passed before he answered, "What are you doing here?"
"Why, don't you remember that Jim Taggart invited us to his wedding? It's tonight."
"I didn't intend to go to his wedding."
"Oh, but I did!"
"Why didn't you tell me this morning, before I left?"

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