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- Айн Рэнд
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- Стр. 246/1581
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He
still
wore
his
dress
clothes
;
his
tie
was
loose
,
and
a
strand
of
hair
hung
over
his
face
.
She
glanced
at
him
without
astonishment
,
as
if
she
knew
what
the
last
hour
in
his
room
had
done
to
him
.
He
looked
at
her
silently
.
He
had
not
entered
her
room
for
a
long
time
.
He
stood
,
wishing
he
had
not
entered
it
now
.
"
Isn
’
t
it
customary
to
talk
,
Henry
?
"
"
If
you
wish
.
"
"
I
wish
you
’
d
send
one
of
your
brilliant
experts
from
the
mills
to
take
a
look
at
our
furnace
.
Do
you
know
that
it
went
out
during
the
party
and
Simons
had
a
terrible
time
getting
it
started
again
?
.
.
.
Mrs
.
Weston
says
that
our
best
achievement
is
our
cook
—
she
loved
the
hors
d
‘
oeuvres
.
.
.
.
Balph
Eubank
said
a
very
funny
thing
about
you
,
he
said
you
’
re
a
crusader
with
a
factory
’
s
chimney
smoke
for
a
plume
.
.
.
.
I
’
m
glad
you
don
’
t
like
Francisco
d
’
Anconia
.
I
can
’
t
stand
him
.
"
He
did
not
care
to
explain
his
presence
,
or
to
disguise
defeat
,
or
to
admit
it
by
leaving
.
Suddenly
,
it
did
not
matter
to
him
what
she
guessed
or
felt
.
He
walked
to
the
window
and
stood
,
looking
out
.
Why
had
she
married
him
?
—
he
thought
.
It
was
a
question
he
had
not
asked
himself
on
their
wedding
day
,
eight
years
ago
.
Since
then
,
in
tortured
loneliness
,
he
had
asked
it
many
times
.
He
had
found
no
answer
.
It
was
not
for
position
,
he
thought
,
or
for
money
.
She
came
from
an
old
family
that
had
both
.
Her
family
’
s
name
was
not
among
the
most
distinguished
and
their
fortune
was
modest
,
but
both
were
sufficient
to
let
her
be
included
in
the
top
circles
of
New
York
’
s
society
,
where
he
had
met
her
.
Nine
years
ago
,
he
had
appeared
in
New
York
like
an
explosion
,
in
the
glare
of
the
success
of
Rearden
Steel
,
a
success
that
had
been
thought
impossible
by
the
city
’
s
experts
.
It
was
his
indifference
that
made
him
spectacular
.
He
did
not
know
that
he
was
expected
to
attempt
to
buy
his
way
into
society
and
that
they
anticipated
the
pleasure
of
rejecting
him
.
He
had
no
time
to
notice
their
disappointment
.
He
attended
,
reluctantly
,
a
few
social
occasions
to
which
he
was
invited
by
men
who
sought
his
favor
.
He
did
not
know
,
but
they
knew
,
that
his
courteous
politeness
was
condescension
toward
the
people
who
had
expected
to
snub
him
,
the
people
who
had
said
that
the
age
of
achievement
was
past
.