Home Random Page


CATEGORIES:

BiologyChemistryConstructionCultureEcologyEconomyElectronicsFinanceGeographyHistoryInformaticsLawMathematicsMechanicsMedicineOtherPedagogyPhilosophyPhysicsPolicyPsychologySociologySportTourism






THE SIGN OF THE DOLLAR 6 page

 

She was staring at the tall, distinguished figure of his companion: it was Hugh Akston.

 

It was Hugh Akston who spoke first, bowing to her with a courteous smile of welcome. "Miss Taggart, this is the first time anyone has ever proved me wrong, I didn't know—when I told you you'd never find him —that the next time I saw you, you would be in his arms."

 

"In whose arms?"

 

"Why, the inventor of the motor."

 

She gasped, closing her eyes; this was one connection she knew she should have made. When she opened her eyes, she was looking at Galt, He was smiling, family, derisively, as if he knew fully what this meant to her.

 

"It would have served you right if you'd broken your neck!" the muscular man snapped at her, with the anger of concern, almost of affection. "What a stunt to pull—for a person who'd have been admitted here so eagerly, if she'd chosen to come through the front door!"

 

"Miss Taggart, may I present Midas Mulligan?" said Galt.

 

"Oh," she said weakly, and laughed; she had no capacity for astonishment any longer. "Do you suppose I was killed in that crash—and this is some other kind of existence?"

 

"It is another kind of existence," said Galt. "But as for being killed, doesn't it seem more like the other way around?"

 

"Oh yes," she whispered, "yes . . ." She smiled at Mulligan. "Where is the front door?"

 

"Here," he said, pointing to his forehead.

 

"I've lost the key," she said simply, without resentment. "I've lost all keys, right now."

 

"You'll find them. But what in blazes were you doing in that plane?"

 

"Following."

 

"Him?" He pointed at Galt.

 

"Yes."

 

"You're lucky to be alive! Are you badly hurt?"

 

"I don't think so."

 

"You'll have a few questions to answer, after they patch you up." He turned brusquely, leading the way down to the car, then glanced at Galt. "Well, what do we do now? There's something we hadn't provided for: the first scab."

 

"The first . . . what?" she asked.

 

"Skip it," said Mulligan, and looked at Galt. "What do we do?"

 

"It will be my charge," said Galt. "I will be responsible. You take Quentin Daniels."

 

"Oh, he's no problem at all. He needs nothing but to get acquainted with the place. He seems to know all the rest,"

 

"Yes. He had practically gone the whole way by himself." He saw her watching him in bewilderment, and said, "There's one thing I must thank you for, Miss Taggart: you did pay me a compliment when you chose Quentin Daniels as my understudy. He was a plausible one."

 

"Where is he?" she asked. "Will you tell me what happened?"



 

"Why, Midas met us at the landing field, drove me to my house and took Daniels with him. I was going to join them for breakfast, but I saw your plane spinning and plunging for that pasture. I was the closest one to the scene."

 

"We got here as fast as we could," said Mulligan. "I thought he deserved to get himself killed—whoever was in that plane. I never dreamed that it was one of the only two persons in the whole world whom I'd exempt."

 

"Who is the other one?" she asked.

 

"Hank Rearden."

 

She winced; it was like a sudden blow from another great distance.

 

She wondered why it seemed to her that Galt was watching her face intently and that she saw an instant's change in his, too brief to define.

 

They had come to the car. It was a Hammond convertible, its top down, one of the costliest models, some years old, but kept in the shining trim of efficient handling. Galt placed her cautiously in the back seat and held her in the circle of his arm. She felt a stabbing pain once in a while, but she had no attention to spare for it. She watched the distant houses of the town, as Mulligan pressed the starter and the car moved forward, as they went past the sign of the dollar and a golden ray hit her eyes, sweeping over her forehead.

 

"Who is the owner of this place?" she asked.

 

"I am," said Mulligan.

 

"What is he?" She pointed to Galt.

 

Mulligan chuckled. "He just works here."

 

"And you, Dr. Akston?" she asked.

 

He glanced at Galt, "I'm one of his two fathers, Miss Taggart. The one who didn't betray him."

 

"Oh!" she said, as another connection fell into place. "Your third pupil?"

 

"That's right."

 

"The second assistant bookkeeper!" she moaned suddenly, at one more memory.

 

"What's that?"

 

"That's what Dr. Stadler called him. That's what Dr. Stadler told me he thought his third pupil had become."

 

"He overestimated," said Galt. "I'm much lower than that by the scale of his standards and of his world."

 

The car had swerved into a lane rising toward a lonely house that stood on a ridge above the valley. She saw a man walking down a path, ahead of them, hastening in the direction of the town. He wore blue denim overalls and carried a lunchbox. There was something faintly familiar in the swift abruptness of his Galt. As the car went past him, she caught a glimpse of his face—and she jerked backward, her voice rising to a scream from the pain of the movement and from the shock of the sight: "Oh, stop! Stop! Don't let him go!" It was Ellis Wyatt.

 

The three men laughed, but Mulligan stopped the car. "Oh . . . " she said weakly, in apology, realizing she had forgotten that this was the place from which Wyatt would not vanish.

 

Wyatt was running toward them: he had recognized her, too. When he seized the edge of the car, to brake his speed, she saw the face and the young, triumphant smile that she had seen but once before: on the platform of Wyatt Junction.

 

"Dagny! You, too, at last? One of us?"

 

"No," said Galt. "Miss Taggart is a castaway."

 

"What?"

 

"Miss Taggart's plane crashed. Didn't you see it?"

 

"Crashed—here?"

 

"Yes."

 

"I heard a plane, but I . . ." His look of bewilderment changed to a smile, regretful, amused and friendly. "I see. Oh, hell, Dagny, it's preposterous!"

 

She was staring at him helplessly, unable to reconnect the past to the present. And helplessly—as one would say to a dead friend, in a dream, the words one regrets having missed the chance to say in life—she said, with the memory of a telephone ringing, unanswered, almost two years ago, the words she had hoped to say if she ever caught sight of him again, "I . . . I tried to reach you."

 

He smiled gently. "We've been trying to reach you ever since, Dagny.

 

. . . I'll see you tonight. Don't worry, I won't vanish—and I don't think you will, either."

 

He waved to the others and went off, swinging his lunchbox. She glanced up, as Mulligan started the car, and saw Galt's eyes watching her attentively. Her face hardened, as if in open admission of pain and in defiance of the satisfaction it might give him. "All right," she said. "I see what sort of show you want to put me through the shock of witnessing."

 

But there was neither cruelty nor pity in his face, only the level look of justice. "Our first rule here, Miss Taggart," he answered, "is that one must always see for oneself."

 

The car stopped in front of the lonely house. It was built of rough granite blocks, with a sheet of glass for most of its front wall. "I'll send the doctor over," said Mulligan, driving off, while Galt carried her up the path.

 

"Your house?" she asked.

 

"Mine," he answered, kicking the door open.

 

He carried her across the threshold into the glistening space of his living room, where shafts of sunlight hit walls of polished pine. She saw a few pieces of furniture made by hand, a ceiling of bare rafters, an archway open upon a small kitchen with rough shelves, a bare wooden table and the astonishing sight of chromium glittering on an electric stove; the place had the primitive simplicity of a frontiersman's cabin, reduced to essential necessities, but reduced with a super-modern skill.

 

He carried her across the sunrays into a small guest room and placed her down on a bed. She noticed a window open upon a long slant of rocky steps and pines going off into the sky. She noticed small streaks that looked like inscriptions cut into the wood of the walls, a few scattered lines that seemed made by different handwritings; she could not distinguish the words. She noticed another door, left half-open; it led to his bedroom.

 

"Am I a guest here or a prisoner?" she asked.

 

"The choice will be yours, Miss Taggart."

 

"I can make no choice when I'm dealing with a stranger."

 

"But you're not Didn't you name a railroad line after me?"

 

"Oh! . . . Yes . . ." It was the small jolt of another connection falling into place. "Yes, I—" She was looking at the tall figure with the sun-streaked hair, with the suppressed smile in the mercilessly perceptive eyes—she was seeing the struggle to build her Line and the summer day of the first train's run—she was thinking that if a human figure could be fashioned as an emblem of that Line, this was the figure.

 

"Yes . . . I did . . . " Then, remembering the rest, she added, "But I named it after an enemy."

 

He smiled. "That's the contradiction you had to resolve sooner or later, Miss Taggart."

 

"It was you . . . wasn't it? . . . who destroyed my Line. . . ."

 

"Why, no. It was the contradiction."

 

She closed her eyes; in a moment, she asked, "All those stories I heard about you—which of them were true?"

 

"All of them."

 

"Was it you who spread them?"

 

"No. What for? I never had any wish to be talked about."

 

"But you do know that you've become a legend?"

 

"Yes."

 

"The young inventor of the Twentieth Century Motor Company is the one real version of the legend, isn't it?"

 

"The one that's concretely real—yes."

 

She could not say it indifferently; there was still a breathless tone and the drop of her voice toward a whisper, when she asked, "The motor . . . the motor I found . . . it was you who made it?"

 

"Yes."

 

She could not prevent the jolt of eagerness that threw her head up.

 

"The secret of transforming energy—" she began, and stopped, "I could tell it to you in fifteen minutes," he said, in answer to the desperate plea she had not uttered, "but there's no power on earth that can force me to tell it. If you understand this, you'll understand everything that's baffling you."

 

"That night . . . twelve years ago . . . a spring night when you walked out of a meeting of six thousand murderers—that story is true, isn't it?"

 

"Yes."

 

"You told them that you would stop the motor of the world."

 

"I have."

 

"What have you done?"

 

"I've done nothing, Miss Taggart. And that's the whole of my secret."

 

She looked at him silently for a long moment. He stood waiting, as if he could read her thoughts. "The destroyer—" she said in a tone of wonder and helplessness.

 

"—the most evil creature that's ever existed," he said in the tone of a quotation, and she recognized her own words, "the man who's draining the brains of the world."

 

"How thoroughly have you been watching me," she asked, "and for how long?"

 

It was only an instant's pause, his eyes did not move, but it seemed to her that his glance was stressed, as if in special awareness of seeing her, and she caught the sound of some particular intensity in his voice as he answered quietly, "For years."

 

She closed her eyes, relaxing and giving up. She felt an odd, lighthearted indifference, as if she suddenly wanted nothing but the comfort of surrendering to helplessness.

 

The doctor who arrived was a gray-haired man with a mild, thoughtful face and a firmly, unobtrusively confident manner.

 

"Miss Taggart, may I present Dr. Hendricks?" said Galt.

 

"Not Dr, Thomas Hendricks?" she gasped, with the involuntary rudeness of a child; the name belonged to a great surgeon, who had retired and vanished six years ago.

 

"Yes, of course," said Galt.

 

Dr. Hendricks smiled at her, in answer. "Midas told me that Miss Taggart has to be treated for shock," he said, "not for the one sustained, but for the ones to come."

 

"I'll leave you to do it," said Galt, "while I go to the market to get supplies for breakfast."

 

She watched the rapid efficiency of Dr. Hendricks' work, as he examined her injuries. He had brought an object she had never seen before: a portable X-ray machine. She learned that she had torn the cartilage of two ribs, that she had sprained an ankle, ripped patches of skin off one knee and one elbow, and acquired a few bruises spread in purple blotches over her body. By the time Dr. Hendricks' swift, competent hands had wound the bandages and the tight lacings of tape, she felt as if her body were an engine checked by an expert mechanic, and no further care was necessary, "I would advise you to remain in bed, Miss Taggart."

 

"Oh no! If I'm careful and move slowly, I'll be all right."

 

"You ought to rest."

 

"Do you think I can?"

 

He smiled. "I guess not."

 

She was dressed by the time Galt came back. Dr. Hendricks gave him an account of her condition, adding, "I'll be back to check up, tomorrow."

 

"Thanks," said Galt. "Send the bill to me."

 

"Certainly not!" she said indignantly. "I will pay it myself."

 

The two men glanced at each other, in amusement, as at the boast of a beggar.

 

"We'll discuss that later," said Galt.

 

Dr. Hendricks left, and she tried to stand up, limping, catching at the furniture for support. Galt lifted her in his arms, carried her to the kitchen alcove and placed her on a chair by the table set for two.

 

She noticed that she was hungry, at the sight of the coffee pot boiling on the stove, the two glasses of orange juice, the heavy white pottery dishes sparkling in the sun on the polished table top.

 

"When did you sleep or eat last?" he asked.

 

"I don't know . . . I had dinner on the train, with—" She shook her head in helplessly bitter amusement: with the tramp, she thought, with a desperate voice pleading for escape from an avenger who would not pursue or be found—the avenger who sat facing her across the table, drinking a glass of orange juice. "I don't know . . . it seems centuries and continents away."

 

"How did you happen to be following me?"

 

"I landed at the Alton airport just as you were taking off. The man there told me that Quentin Daniels had gone with you."

 

"I remember your plane circling to land. But that was the one and only time when I didn't think of you. I thought you were coming by train."

 

She asked, looking straight at him, "How do you want me to understand that?"

 

"What?"

 

"The one and only time when you didn't think of me."

 

He held her glance; she saw the faint movement she had noted as typical of him: the movement of his proudly intractable mouth curving into the hint of a smile. "In any way you wish," he answered.

 

She let a moment pass to underscore her choice by the severity of her face, then asked coldly, in the tone of an enemy's accusation, "You knew that I was coming for Quentin Daniels?"

 

"Yes."

 

"You got him first and fast, in order not to let me reach him? In order to beat me—knowing fully what sort of beating that would mean for me?"

 

"Sure."

 

It was she who looked away and remained silent. He rose to cook the rest of their breakfast. She watched him as he stood at the stove, toasting bread, frying eggs and bacon. There was an easy, relaxed skill about the way he worked, but it was a skill that belonged to another profession; his hands moved with the rapid precision of an engineer pulling the levers of a control board. She remembered suddenly where she had seen as expert and preposterous a performance.

 

"Is that what you learned from Dr. Akston?" she asked, pointing at the stove.

 

"That, among other things."

 

"Did he teach you to spend your time—your time!—" she could not keep the shudder of indignation out of her voice—"on this sort of work?"

 

"I've spent time on work of much lesser importance."

 

When he put her plate before her, she asked, "Where did you get that food? Do they have a grocery store here?"

 

"The best one in the world. It's run by Lawrence Hammond."

 

"What?"

 

"Lawrence Hammond, of Hammond Cars. The bacon is from the farm of Dwight Sanders—of Sanders Aircraft. The eggs and the butter from Judge Narragansett—of the Superior Court of the State of Illinois."

 

She looked at her plate, bitterly, almost as if she were afraid to touch it. "It's the most expensive breakfast I'll ever eat, considering the value of the cook's time and of all those others."

 

"Yes—from one aspect. But from another, it's the cheapest breakfast you'll ever eat—because no part of it has gone to feed the looters who'll make you pay for it through year after year and leave you to starve in the end."

 

After a long silence, she asked simply, almost wistfully, "What is it that you're all doing here?"

 

"Living."

 

She had never heard that word sound so real, "What is your job?" she asked. "Midas Mulligan said that you work here."

 

"I'm the handy man, I guess."

 

"The what?"

 

"I'm on call whenever anything goes wrong with any of the installations—with the power system, for instance."

 

She looked at him—and suddenly she tore forward, staring at the electric stove, but fell back on her chair, stopped by pain.

 

He chuckled. "Yes, that's true—but take it easy or Dr. Hendricks will order you back to bed."

 

"The power system . . ." she said, choking, "the power system here . . . it's run by means of your motor?"

 

"Yes."

 

"It's built? It's working? It's functioning?"

 

"It has cooked your breakfast."

 

"I want to see it!"

 

"Don't bother crippling yourself to look at that stove. It's just a plain electric stove like any other, only about a hundred times cheaper to run.

 

And that's all you'll have a chance to see, Miss Taggart."

 

"You promised to show me this valley."

 

"I'll show it to you. But not the power generator."

 

"Will you take me to see the place now, as soon as we finish?"

 

"If you wish—and if you're able to move."

 

"I am."

 

He got up, went to the telephone and dialed a number. "Hello, Midas? . . . Yes. . . . He did? Yes, she's all right. . . . Will you rent me your car for the day? . . . Thanks. At the usual rate—twenty-five cents, . . . . Can you send it over? . . . Do you happen to have some sort of cane? She'll need it. . . . Tonight? Yes, I think so.

 

We will. Thanks."

 

He hung up. She was staring at him incredulously.

 

"Did I understand you to say that Mr. Mulligan—who's worth about two hundred million dollars, I believe—is going to charge you twenty-five cents for the use of his car?"

 

"That's right."

 

"Good heavens, couldn't he give it to you as a courtesy?"

 

He sat looking at her for a moment, studying her face, as if deliberately letting her see the amusement in his. "Miss Taggart," he said, "we have no laws in this valley, no rules, no formal organization of any kind. We come here because we want to rest. But we have certain customs, which we all observe, because they pertain to the things we need to rest from. So I'll warn you now that there is one word which is forbidden in this valley: the word 'give,' "

 

"I'm sorry," she said. "You're right."

 

He refilled her cup of coffee and extended a package of cigarettes.

 

She smiled, as she took a cigarette: it bore the sign of the dollar.

 

"If you're not too tired by evening," he said, "Mulligan has invited us for dinner. He'll have some guests there whom, I think, you'll want to meet."

 

"Oh, of course! I won't be too tired. I don't think I’ll ever feel tired again."

 

They were finishing breakfast when she saw Mulligan's car stopping in front of the house. The driver leaped out, raced up the path and rushed into the room, not pausing to ring or knock. It took her a moment to realize that the eager, breathless, disheveled young man was Quentin Daniels.

 

"Miss Taggart," he gasped, "I'm sorry!" The desperate guilt in his voice clashed with the joyous excitement in his face, "I've never broken my word before! There's no excuse for it, I can't ask you to forgive me, and I know that you won't believe it, but the truth is that I—I forgot!"

 

She glanced at Galt, "I believe you."

 

"I forgot that I promised to wait, I forgot everything—until a few minutes ago, when Mr. Mulligan told me that you'd crashed here in a plane, and then I knew it was my fault, and if anything had happened to you—oh God, are you all right?"

 

"Yes. Don't worry. Sit down."

 

"I don't know how one can forget one's word of honor. I don't know what happened to me."

 

"I do."

 

"Miss Taggart, I had been working on it for months, on that one particular hypothesis, and the more I worked, the more hopeless it seemed to become. I'd been in my laboratory for the last two days, trying to solve a mathematical equation that looked impossible. I felt I'd die at that blackboard, but wouldn't give up. It was late at night when he came in. I don't think I even noticed him, not really. He said he wanted to speak to me and I asked him to wait and went right on.

 

I think I forgot his presence. I don't know how long he stood there, watching me, but what I remember is that suddenly his hand reached over, swept all my figures off the blackboard and wrote one brief equation. And then I noticed him! Then I screamed—because it wasn't the full answer to the motor, but it was the way to it, a way I hadn't seen, hadn't suspected, but I knew where it led! I remember I cried, 'How could you know it?'—and he answered, pointing at a photograph of your motor, 'I'm the man who made it in the first place.' And that's the last I remember, Miss Taggart—I mean, the last I remember of my own existence, because after that we talked about static electricity and the conversion of energy and the motor."

 

"We talked physics all the way down here," said Galt.

 

"Oh, I remember when you asked me whether I'd go with you," said Daniels, "whether I'd be willing to go and never come back and give up everything . . . Everything? Give up a dead Institute that's crumbling back into the jungle, give up my future as a janitor-slave-by-law, give up Wesley Mouch and Directive 10-289 and sub-animal creatures who crawl on their bellies, grunting that there is no mind! . . . Miss Taggart"—he laughed exultantly—"he was asking me whether I'd give that up to go with him! He had to ask it twice, I couldn't believe it at first, I couldn't believe that any human being would need to be asked or would think of it as a choice. To go? I would have leaped off a skyscraper just to follow him—and to hear his formula before we hit the pavement!"

 

"I don't blame you," she said; she looked at him with a tinge of wistfulness that was almost envy. "Besides, you've fulfilled your contract. You've led me to the secret of the motor."

 

"I'm going to be a janitor here, too," said Daniels, grinning happily.

 

"Mr. Mulligan said he'd give me the job of janitor—at the power plant.

 

And when I learn, I'll rise to electrician. Isn't he great—Midas Mulligan? That's what I want to be when I reach his age. I want to make money. I want to make millions. I want to make as much as he did!"

 

"Daniels!" She laughed, remembering the quiet self-control, the strict precision, the stern logic of the young scientist she had known. "What's the matter with you? Where are you? Do you know what you're saying?"

 

"I'm here, Miss Taggart—and there's no limit to what's possible here!

 

I'm going to be the greatest electrician in the world and the richest! I'm going to—"

 

"You're going to go back to Mulligan's house," said Galt, "and sleep for twenty-four hours—or I won't let you near the power plant."

 

"Yes, sir," said Daniels meekly.

 

The sun had trickled down the peaks and drawn a circle of shining granite and glittering snow to enclose the valley—when they stepped out of the house. She felt suddenly as if nothing existed beyond that circle, and she wondered at the joyous, proud comfort to be found in a sense of the finite, in the knowledge that the field of one's concern lay within the realm of one's sight. She wanted to stretch out her arms over the roofs of the town below, feeling that her fingertips would touch the peaks across. But she could not raise her arms; leaning on a cane with one hand and on Galt's arm with the other, moving her feet by a slow, conscientious effort, she walked down to the car like a child learning to walk for the first time.


Date: 2015-12-17; view: 410


<== previous page | next page ==>
THE SIGN OF THE DOLLAR 5 page | THE SIGN OF THE DOLLAR 7 page
doclecture.net - lectures - 2014-2024 year. Copyright infringement or personal data (0.027 sec.)