After a weekend of horror, Paris returned to the routines of the work week Monday with determination, defiance - and worry.<br />Rush-hour subway trains were full, shops were open, and office workers lined up for sandwiches or ate lunch on cafe terraces.<br />But this is also now a city dotted with makeshift shrines: carpets of flowers and candles, photos of lost loved ones and handwritten notes near the spots where gunmen and suicide bombers killed 129 people enjoying a fall Friday evening in the city.<br />Parisians stopped by throughout the day to honor the dead, many vowing that their city would remain its incomparable self - the sensual, tolerant, life-loving metropolis of the world's imagination.<br />"I was there (in New York) when 9/11 happened, and to tell you the truth it did change my life," said Gary Berrios, a student originally from New York.<br />Outside the Bataclan theater, where 89 people died when attackers gunned down young concertgoers, a banner vowed: "Freedom is an indestructible monument."
