"Well, it was sold out—the Twentieth Century, I mean. The Twentieth Century Motor Company. It was sold twice, at the same time and to two different sets of owners. That was sort of a big scandal at the time, two years ago, and now it's just"—he pointed—"just a bunch of paper lying around, waiting for a court hearing. I don't see how any judge will be able to untangle any property rights out of it—or any right at all."
"Would you tell me please just what happened?"
"Well, the last legal owner of the factory was The People's Mortgage Company, of Rome, Wisconsin. That's the town the other side of the factory, thirty miles north. That Mortgage Company was a sort of noisy outfit that did a lot of advertising about easy credit. Mark Yonts was the head of it. Nobody knew where he came from and nobody knows where he's gone to now, but what they discovered, the morning after The People's Mortgage Company collapsed, was that Mark Yonts had sold the Twentieth Century Motor factory to a bunch of suckers from South Dakota, and that he'd also given it as collateral for a loan from a bank in Illinois. And when they took a look at the factory, they discovered that he'd moved all the machinery out and sold it piecemeal, God only knows where and to whom. So it seems like everybody owns the place—and nobody. That's how it stands now—the South Dakotans and the bank and the attorney for the creditors of The People's Mortgage Company all suing one another, all claiming this factory, and nobody having the right to move a wheel in it, except that there's no wheels left to move."
"Did Mark Yonts operate the factory before he sold it?"
"Lord, no, ma'am! He wasn't the kind that ever operates anything.
He didn't want to make money, only to get it. Guess he got it, too—more than anyone could have made out of that factory."
He wondered why the blond, hard-faced man, who sat with the woman in front of his desk, looked grimly out the window at their car, at a large object wrapped in canvas, roped tightly under the raised cover of the car's luggage compartment.
"What happened to the factory records?"
"Which do you mean, ma'am?"
"Their production records. Their work records. Their . . . personnel files."
"Oh, there's nothing left of that now. There's been a lot of looting going on. All the mixed owners grabbed what furniture or things they could haul out of there, even if the sheriff did put a padlock on the door. The papers and stuff like that—I guess it was all taken by the scavengers from Starnesville, that's the place down in the valley, where they're having it pretty tough these days. They burned the stuff for kindling, most likely."
"Is there anyone left here who used to work in the factory?" asked Rearden.
"No, sir. Not around here. They all lived down in Starnesville."
"All of them?" whispered Dagny; she was thinking of the ruins. "The . . . engineers, too?"
"Yes, ma'am. That was the factory town. They've all gone, long ago."
"Do you happen to remember the names of any men who worked there?"
"No, ma'am."
"What owner was the last to operate the factory?" asked Rearden.
"I couldn't say, sir. There's been so much trouble up there and the place has changed hands so many times, since old Jed Starnes died.
He's the man who built the factory. He made this whole part of the country, I guess. He died twelve years ago."
"Can you give us the names of all the owners since?"
"No, sir. We had a fire in the old courthouse, about three years ago, and all the old records are gone. I don't know where you could trace them now."
"You don't know how this Mark Yonts happened to acquire the factory?"
"Yes, I know that. He bought it from Mayor Bascom of Rome. How Mayor Bascom happened to own it, I don't know."
"Where is Mayor Bascom now?”
"Still there, in Rome."
"Thank you very much," said Rearden, rising. "We'll call on him."
They were at the door when the clerk asked, "What is it you're looking for, sir?"
"We're looking for a friend of ours," said Rearden. "A friend we've lost, who used to work in that factory."
Mayor Bascom of Rome, Wisconsin, leaned back in his chair; his chest and stomach formed a pear-shaped outline under his soiled shirt.
The air was a mixture of sun and dust, pressing heavily upon the porch of his house. He waved his arm, the ring on his finger flashing a large topaz of poor quality.
"No use, no use, lady, absolutely no use," he said. "Would be just a waste of your time, trying to question the folks around here. There's no factory people left, and nobody that would remember much about them. So many families have moved away that what's left here is plain no good, if I do say so myself, plain no good, just being Mayor of a bunch of trash."
He had offered chairs to his two visitors, but he did not mind it if the lady preferred to stand at the porch railing. He leaned back, studying her long-lined figure; high-class merchandise, he thought; but then, the man with her was obviously rich.