Atlas Shrugged


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atlas-shrugged

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celebration of life that he had wanted to perform—but an act in celebration of the triumph of impotence.
Cherryl unlocked the door and slipped in quietly, almost surreptitiously, as if hoping not to be seen or to
see the place which was her home. The sense of Dagny's presence—of Dagny's world—had supported
her on her way back, but when she entered her own apartment the walls seemed to swallow her again
into the suffocation of a trap.
The apartment was silent; a wedge of light cut across the anteroom from a door left half-open. She
dragged herself mechanically in the direction of her room. Then she stopped.
The open band of light was the door of Jim's study, and on the illuminated strip of its carpet she saw a
woman's hat with a feather stirring faintly in a draft.
She took a step forward. The room was empty, she saw two glasses, one on a table, the other on the
floor, and a woman's purse lying on the seat of an armchair. She stood, in unexacting stupor, until she
heard the muffled drawl of two voices behind the door of Jim's bedroom; she could not distinguish the
words, only the quality of the sounds: Jim's voice had a tone of irritation, the woman's—of contempt.
Then she found herself in her own room, fumbling frantically to lock her door. She had been flung here
by the blind panic of escape, as if it were she who had to hide, she who had to run from the ugliness of
being seen in the act of seeing them—a panic made of revulsion, of pity, of embarrassment, of that mental
chastity which recoils from confronting a man with the unanswerable proof of his evil.
She stood in the middle of her room, unable to grasp what action was now possible to her. Then her
knees gave way, folding gently, she found herself sitting on the floor and she stayed there, staring at the
carpet, shaking.
It was neither anger nor jealousy nor indignation, but the blank horror of dealing with the grotesquely
senseless. It was the knowledge that neither their marriage nor his love for her nor his insistence on
holding her nor his love for that other woman nor this gratuitous adultery had any meaning whatever, that
there was no shred of sense in any of it and no use to grope for explanations. She had always thought of
evil as purposeful, as a means to some end; what she was seeing now was evil for evil's sake.
She did not know how long she had sat there, when she heard their steps and voices, then the sound of
the front door closing. She got up, with no purpose in mind, but impelled by some instinct from the past,
as if acting in a vacuum where honesty was not relevant any longer, but knowing no other way to act.
She met Jim in the anteroom. For a moment, they looked at each other as if neither could believe the
other's reality.
"When did you come back?" he snapped. "How long have you been home?"
"I don't know . . ."
He was looking at her face. "What's the matter with you?"
"Jim, I—" She struggled, gave up and waved her hand toward his bedroom. "Jim, I know."
"What do you know?"
"You were there . . . with a woman."

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