Atlas Shrugged


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atlas-shrugged

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window of the room that had been her office. She felt as if she were in exile, never to return, as if she
were separated from the building by much more than a sheet of glass, a curtain of rain and the span of a
few months.
She stood, in a room of crumbling plaster, pressed to the windowpane, looking up at the unattainable
form of everything she loved. She did not know the nature of her loneliness. The only words that named it
were: This is not the world I expected.
Once, when she was sixteen, looking at a long stretch of Taggart track, at the rails that converged—like
the lines of a skyscraper—to a single point in the distance, she had told Eddie Willers that she had always
felt as if the rails were held in the hand of a man beyond the horizon—no, not her father or any of the men
in the office—and some day she would meet him.
She shook her head and turned away from the window.
She went back to her desk. She tried to reach for the reports. But suddenly she was slumped across the
desk, her head on her arm. Don't, she thought; but she did not move to rise, it made no difference, there
was no one to see her.
This was a longing she had never permitted herself to acknowledge.
She faced it now. She thought: If emotion is one's response to the things the world has to offer, if she
loved the rails, the building, and more: if she loved her love for them—there was still one response, the
greatest, that she had missed. She thought: To find a feeling that would hold, as their sum, as their final
expression, the purpose of all the things she loved on earth . . . To find a consciousness like her own,
who would be the meaning of her world, as she would be of his . . . No, not Francisco d'Anconia, not
Hank Rearden, not any man she had ever met or admired . . . A man who existed only in her knowledge
of her capacity for an emotion she had never felt, but would have given her life to experience . . . She
twisted herself in a slow, faint movement, her breasts pressed to the desk; she felt the longing in her
muscles, in the nerves of her body.
Is that what you want? Is it as simple as that?—she thought, but knew that it was not simple. There was
some unbreakable link between her love for her work and the desire of her body; as if one gave her the
right to the other, the right and the meaning; as if one were the completion of the other—and the desire
would never be satisfied, except by a being of equal greatness.
Her face pressed to her arm, she moved her head, shaking it slowly hi negation. She would never find it.
Her own thought of what life could be like, was all she would ever have of the world she had wanted.
Only the thought of it—and a few rare moments, like a few lights reflected from it on her way—to know,
to hold, to follow to the end . . .
She raised her head.
On the pavement of the alley, outside her window, she saw the shadow of a man who stood at the door
of her office.
The door was some steps away; she could not see him, or the street light beyond, only his shadow on
the stones of the pavement. He stood perfectly still.
He was so close to the door, like a man about to enter, that she waited to hear him knock. Instead, she
saw the shadow jerk abruptly, as if he were jolted backward, then he turned and walked away. There

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