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Nov 16th, 2018
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  1. She had fallen asleep and she awakened with a jolt, knowing that something was wrong, before she knew what it was: the wheels had stopped. The car stood soundless and dim in the blue glow of the night lamps. She glanced at her watch: there was no reason for stopping. She looked out the window: the train stood still in the middle of empty fields.
  2. She heard someone moving in a seat across the aisle, and asked, "How long have we been standing?"
  3. A man's voice answered indifferently, "About an hour." The man looked after her, sleepily astonished, because she leaped to her feet and rushed to the door. There was a cold wind outside, and an empty stretch of land under an empty sky. She heard weeds rustling in the darkness. Far ahead, she saw the figures of men standing by the engine-and above them, hanging detached in the sky, the red light of a signal.
  4. She walked rapidly toward them, past the motionless line of wheels. No one paid attention to her when she approached. The train crew and a few passengers stood clustered under the red light. They had stopped talking, they seemed to be waiting in placid indifference.
  5. "What's the matter?" she asked.
  6. The engineer turned, astonished. Her question had sounded like an order, not like the amateur curiosity of a passenger. She stood, hands in pockets, coat collar raised, the wind beating her hair in strands across her face.
  7. "Red light, lady," he said, pointing up with his thumb.
  8. "How long has it been on?"
  9. "An hour."
  10. "We're off the main track, aren't we?"
  11. "That's right."
  12. "Why?"
  13. "I don't know."
  14. The conductor spoke up. "I don't think we had any business being sent off on a siding, that switch wasn't working right, and this thing's not working at all." He jerked his head up at the red light. "I don't think the signal's going to change. I think it's busted."
  15. "Then what are you doing?"
  16. "Waiting for it to change."
  17. In her pause of startled anger, the fireman chuckled. "Last week, the crack special of the Atlantic Southern got left on a siding for two hours-just somebody's mistake."
  18. "This is the Taggart Comet," she said. "The Comet has never been late."
  19. "She's the only one in the country that hasn't," said the engineer.
  20. "There's always a first time," said the fireman.
  21. "You don't know about railroads, lady," said a passenger.
  22. "There's not a signal system or a dispatcher in the country that's worth a damn."
  23. She did not turn or notice him, but spoke to the engineer.
  24. "If you know that the signal is broken, what do you intend to do?"
  25. He did not like her tone of authority, and he could not understand why she assumed it so naturally. She looked like a young girl; only her mouth and eyes showed that she was a woman in her thirties. The dark gray eyes were direct and disturbing, as if they cut through things, throwing the inconsequential out of the way. The face seemed faintly familiar to him, but he could not recall where he had seen it.
  26. "Lady, I don't intend to stick my neck out," he said.
  27. "He means," said the fireman, "that our job's to wait for orders."
  28. "Your job is to run this train."
  29. "Not against a red light. If the light says stop, we stop."
  30. "A red light means danger, lady," said the passenger.
  31. "We're not taking any chances," said the engineer. "Whoever's responsible for it, he'll switch the blame to us if we move. So we're not moving till somebody tells us to."
  32. "And if nobody does?"
  33. "Somebody will turn up sooner or later."
  34. "How long do you propose to wait?"
  35. The engineer shrugged. "Who is John Galt?"
  36. "He means," said the fireman, "don't ask questions nobody can answer."
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