Atlas Shrugged [43]
He slumped sidewise over the arm of the chair and caught sight of a clock on a distant building: it was twenty minutes past noon.
Through the open door of the bedroom, he heard Betty Pope washing her teeth in the bathroom beyond. Her girdle lay on the floor, by the side of a chair with the rest of her clothes; the girdle was a faded pink, with broken strands of rubber.
"Hurry up, will you?" he called irritably. "I've got to dress,"
She did not answer. She had left the door of the bathroom open; he could hear the sound of gargling.
Why do I do those things?-he thought, remembering last night. But it was too much trouble to look for an answer.
Betty Pope came into the living room, dragging the folds of a satin negligee harlequin-checkered in orange and purple. She looked awful in a negligee, thought Taggart; she was ever so much better in a riding habit, in the photographs on the society pages of the newspapers. She was a lanky girl, all bones and loose joints that did not move smoothly.
She had a homely face, a bad complexion and a look of impertinent condescension derived from the fact that she belonged to one of the very best families.
"Aw, hell!" she said at nothing in particular, stretching herself to limber up. "Jim, where are your nail clippers? I've got to trim my toenails."
"I don't know. I have a headache. Do it at home."
"You look unappetizing in the morning." she said indifferently. "You look like a snail."
"Why don't you shut up?"
She wandered aimlessly about the room. "I don't want to go home,"
she said with no particular feeling. "I hate morning. Here's another day and nothing to do. I've got a tea session on for this afternoon, at Liz Blane's. Oh well, it might be fun, because Liz is a bitch." She picked up a glass and swallowed the stale remnant of a drink. "Why don't you have them repair your air-conditioner? This place smells."
"Are you through in the bathroom?" he asked. "I have to dress. I have an important engagement today."
"Go right in. I don't mind. I'll share the bathroom with you. I hate to be rushed."
While he shaved, he saw her dressing in front of the open bathroom door. She took a long time twisting herself into her girdle, hooking garters to her stockings, pulling on an ungainly, expensive tweed suit.
The harlequin negligee, picked from an advertisement in the smartest fashion magazine, was like a uniform which she knew to be expected on certain occasions, which she had worn dutifully for a specified purpose and then discarded.
The nature of their relationship had the same quality. There was no passion in it, no desire, no actual pleasure, not even a sense of shame.
To them, the act of sex was neither joy nor sin. It meant nothing. They had heard that men and women were supposed to sleep together, so they did.
"Jim, why don't you take me to the Armenian restaurant tonight?"
she asked. "I love shish-kebab."
"I can't," he answered angrily through the soap lather on his face.
"I've got a busy day ahead."
"Why don't you cancel it?"
"What?"
"Whatever it is."
"It is very important, my dear. It is a meeting of our Board of Directors."
"Oh, don't be stuffy about your damn railroad. It's boring. I hate businessmen. They're dull."
He did not answer.
She glanced at him slyly, and her voice acquired a livelier note when she drawled, "Jock Benson said that you have a soft snap on that railroad anyway, because it's your sister who runs the whole works."
"Oh, he did, did he?"
"I think that your sister is awful. I think it's disgusting-a woman acting like a grease-monkey and posing around like a big executive. It's so unfeminine. Who does she think she is, anyway?"
Taggart stepped out to the threshold. He leaned against