Atlas Shrugged


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atlas-shrugged

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 The men in Washington were last to be reached by the panic. They watched, not the news from
Minnesota, but the precarious balance of their friendships and commitments; they weighed, not the fate of
the harvest, but the unknowable result of unpredictable emotions in unthinking men of unlimited power.
They waited, they evaded all pleas, they declared, "Oh, ridiculous, there's nothing to worry about! Those
Taggart people have always moved that wheat on schedule, they'll find some way to move it!"
Then, when the State Chief Executive of Minnesota sent a request to Washington for the assistance of
the Army against the riots he was unable to control—three directives burst forth within two hours,
stopping all trains in the country, commandeering all cars to speed to Minnesota.
An order signed by Wesley Mouch demanded the immediate release of the freight cars held in the
service of Kip's Ma. But by that time, it was too late. Ma's freight cars were in California, where the
soybeans had been sent to a progressive concern made up of sociologists preaching the cult of Oriental
austerity, and of businessmen formerly in the numbers racket.
In Minnesota, farmers were setting fire to their own farms, they were demolishing grain elevators and the
homes of county officials, they were fighting along the track of the railroad, some to tear it up, some to
defend it with their lives—and, with no goal to reach save violence, they were dying in the streets of
gutted towns and in the silent gullies of a roadless night.
Then there was only the acrid stench of grain rotting in half-smouldering piles—a few columns of smoke
rising from the plains, standing still in the air over blackened ruins—and, in an office in Pennsylvania,
Hank Rearden sitting at his desk, looking at a list of men who had gone bankrupt: they were the
manufacturers of farm equipment, who could not be paid and would not be able to pay him.
The harvest of soybeans did not reach the markets of the country: it had been reaped prematurely, it was
moldy and unfit for consumption.
On the night of October 15, a copper wire broke in New York City, in an underground control tower of
the Taggart Terminal, extinguishing the lights of the signals.
It was only the breach of one wire, but it produced a short circuit in the interlocking traffic system, and
the signals of motion or danger disappeared from the panels of the control towers and from among the
strands of rail. The red and green lenses remained red and green, not with the living radiance of sight, but
with the dead stare of glass eyes. On the edge of the city, a cluster of trains gathered at the entrance to
the Terminal tunnels and grew through the minutes of stillness, like blood dammed by a clot inside a vein,
unable to rush into the chambers of the heart.
Dagny, that night, was sitting at a table in a private dining room of the Wayne-Falkland. The wax of
candles was dripping down on the white camellias and laurel leaves at the base of the silver candlesticks,
arithmetical calculations were penciled on the damask linen tablecloth, and a cigar butt was swimming in a
finger bowl. The six men in formal dinner jackets, facing her about the table, were Wesley Mouch,
Eugene Lawson, Dr. Floyd Ferris, Clem Weatherby, James Taggart and Cuffy Meigs.
"Why?" she had asked, when Jim had told her that she had to attend that dinner. "Well . . . because our
Board of Directors is to meet next week." "And?" "You're interested in what's going to be decided about
our Minnesota Line, aren't you?" "Is that going to be decided at the Board meeting?'1 "Well, not exactly."
"Is it going to be decided at this dinner?" "Not exactly, but . . . oh, why do you always have to be so
definite? Nothing's ever definite. Besides, they insisted that they wanted you to come." "Why?" "Isn't that
sufficient?"

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