from which no voice or person had yet returned. The towns they had left were dying. Some of the
factories they built had remained ownerless and locked; others had been seized by the local authorities;
the machines in both stood still.
She had felt as if a dark map of Colorado were spread before her like a traffic control panel, with a few
lights scattered through its mountains. One after another, the lights had gone out. One after another, the
men had vanished. There had been a pattern about it, which she felt, but could not define; she had
become able to predict, almost with certainty, who would go next and when; she was unable to grasp the
"why?"
Of the men who had once greeted her descent from the cab of an engine on the platform of Wyatt
Junction, only Ted Nielsen was left, still running the plant of Nielsen Motors. "Ted, you won't be the next
one to go?" she had asked him, on his recent visit to New York; she had asked it, trying to smile. He had
answered grimly, "I hope not."
"What do you mean, you hope?—aren't you sure?" He had said slowly, heavily, "Dagny, I've always
thought that I'd rather die than stop working. But so did the men who're gone. It seems impossible to me
that I could ever want to quit. But a year ago, it seemed impossible that they ever could. Those men were
my friends. They knew what their going would do to us, the survivors. They would not have gone like
that, without a word, leaving to us the added terror of the inexplicable—unless they had some reason of
supreme importance. A month ago, Roger Marsh, of Marsh Electric, told me that he'd have himself
chained to his desk, so that he wouldn't be able to leave it, no matter what ghastly temptation struck him.
He was furious with anger at the men who'd left. He swore to me that he'd never do it.
"And if it's something that I can't resist,' he said, 'I swear that I'll keep enough of my mind to leave you a
letter and give you some hint of what it is, so that you won't have to rack your brain in the kind of dread
we're both feeling now.' That's what he swore. Two weeks ago, he went. He left me no letter. . . .
Dagny, I can't tell what I'll do when I see it—whatever it was that they saw when they went."
It seemed to her that some destroyer was moving soundlessly through the country and the lights were
dying at his touch—someone, she thought bitterly, who had reversed the principle of the Twentieth
Century motor and was now turning kinetic energy into static.
That was the enemy—she thought, as she sat at her desk in the gathering twilight—with whom she was
running a race. The monthly report from Quentin Daniels lay on her desk. She could not be certain, as
yet, that Daniels would solve the secret of the motor; but the destroyer, she thought, was moving swiftly,
surely, at an ever accelerating tempo; she wondered whether, by the time she rebuilt the motor, there
would be any world left to use it.
She had liked Quentin Daniels from the moment he entered her office on their first interview. He was a
lanky man in his early thirties, with a homely, angular face and an attractive smile. A hint of the smile
remained in his features at all times, particularly when he listened; it was a look of good-natured
amusement, as if he were swiftly and patiently discarding the irrelevant in the words he heard and going
straight to the point a moment ahead of the speaker.
"Why did you refuse to work for Dr. Stadler?" she asked.
The hint of his smile grew harder and more stressed; this was as near as he came to showing an emotion;
the emotion was anger. But he answered in his even, unhurried drawl, "You know, Dr. Stadler once said
that the first word of 'Free, scientific inquiry' was redundant.
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