Atlas Shrugged [538]
"Hello, Miss Ives. I haven't startled you, have I? You knew that I was alive?"
"Oh yes! I heard it on the radio this morning."
"Is Mr. Rearden in his office?"
"No, Miss Taggart. He . . . he's in the Rocky Mountains, searching for . . . that is . . ."
"Yes, I know. Do you know where we can reach him?"
"I expect to hear from him at any moment. He's stopping in Los Gatos, Colorado, right now. I phoned him, the moment I heard the news, but he was out and I left a message for him to call me. You see, he's out flying, most of the day . . . but he'll call me when he comes back to the hotel."
"What hotel is it?"
"The Eldorado Hotel, in Los Gatos."
"Thank you, Miss Ives." She was about to hang up.
"Oh, Miss Taggart!"
"Yes?"
"What was it that happened to you? Where were you?"
"I . . . I'll tell you when I see you. I'm in New York now. When Mr. Rearden calls, tell him please that I'll be in my office."
"Yes, Miss Taggart."
She hung up, but her hand remained on the receiver, clinging to her first contact with a matter that had importance. She looked at her apartment and at the city in the window, feeling reluctant to sink again into the dead fog of the meaningless.
She raised the receiver and called Los Gatos.
"Eldorado Hotel," said a woman's drowsily resentful voice.
"Would you take a message for Mr. Henry Rearden? Ash him, when he comes in, to-"
"Just a minute, please," drawled the voice, in the impatient tone that resents any effort as an imposition.
She heard the clicking of switches, some buzzing, some breaks of silence and then a man's clear, firm voice answering: "Hello?" It was Hank Rearden.
She stared at the receiver as at the muzzle of a gun, feeling trapped, unable to breathe.
"Hello?" he repeated.
"Hank, is that you?"
She heard a low sound, more a sigh than a gasp, and then the long, empty crackling of the wire.
"Hank'" There was no answer. "Hank!" she screamed in terror.
She thought she heard the effort of a breath-then she heard a whisper, which was not a question, but a statement saying everything: "Dagny."
"Hank, I'm sorry-oh, darling, I'm sorry!-didn't you know?"
"Where are you, Dagny?"
"Are you all right?"
"Of course."
"Didn't you know that I was back and . . . and alive?"
"No . . . I didn't know it."
"Oh God, I'm sorry I called, I-"
"What are you talking about? Dagny, where are you?"
"In New York. Didn't you hear about it on the radio?"
"No. I've just come in."
"Didn't they give you a message to call Miss Ives?"
"No."
"Are you all right?"
"Now?" She heard his soft, low chuckle. She was hearing the sound of unreleased laughter, the sound of youth, growing in his voice with every word. "When did you come back?"
"This morning."
"Dagny, where were you?"
She did not answer at once. "My plane crashed," she said. "In the Rockies. I was picked up by some people who helped me, but I could not send word to anyone."
The laughter went out of his voice. "As bad as that?"
"Oh . . . oh, the crash? No, it wasn't bad. I wasn't hurt. Not seriously."
"Then why couldn't you send word?"
"There were no . . . no means of communication."
"Why did it take you so long to get back?"
"I . . . can't answer that now,"
"Dagny, were you in danger?"
The half-smiling, half-bitter tone of her voice was almost regret, as she answered, "No."
"Were you held prisoner?"
"No-not really."
"Then you could have returned sooner, but didn't?"
"That's true-but that's all I can tell you,"
"Where were you, Dagny?"
"Do you mind if we don't talk about it now? Let's wait until I see you."
"Of course. I won't ask any questions. Just tell me: are you safe now?"
"Safe? Yes."
"I mean, have you suffered any permanent injuries or consequences?"
She answered, with the same sound of a cheerless smile, "Injuries-
no, Hank. I don't know, as to the permanent