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hear Karolyi tell you about it?"
"Yes, dear—"
"With his own mouth he told you! But it didn't mean much to you, because it isn't what you
want to believe. Karolyi is a gentleman, a noble soul—I'm not mocking—I had a long talk with
him, and I'm sure he's one of the most high-minded men who ever lived. He was a nobleman
and he had estates, and when he saw the ruin and misery after the war he gave them to the
government. No man could do more. He became the Socialist Premier of Hungary, and tried to
bring a peaceful change, and the Communists rose up against his government—and what did
he do? He said to me in these very words: 'I couldn't shoot the workers.' So he let the
Communist-led mob seize the government, and there was the dreadful bloody regime of that
Jew—what was his name?"
"Bela Kun. Too bad he had to be a Jew!"
"Yes, I admit it's too bad. You just told me that you didn't invent Mein Kampf and you didn't
invent the Brownshirts. Well, I didn't invent Bela Kun and I didn't invent Liebknecht and that
Red Rosa Jewess who tried to do the same thing in Germany, nor Eisner who did it in
Bavaria, nor Trotsky who helped to do it in Russia. I suppose the Jews have an extra hard time
and that makes them revolutionary; they haven't any country and that keeps them from being
patriotic. I'm not blaming them, I'm just facing the facts, as you're all the time urging me to do."
"I've long ago faced the fact that you dislike the Jews, Irma."
"I dislike some of them intensely, and I dislike some things about them all. But I love Freddi,
and I'm fond of all the Robins, even though I am repelled by Hansi's ideas. I've met other
Jews that I like—"
"In short," put in Lanny, "you have accepted what Hitler calls 'honorary Aryans.'" He was
surprised by his own bitterness.
"That's a mean crack, Lanny, and I think we ought to talk kindly about this problem. It isn't a
simple one."
"I want very much to," he replied. "But one of the facts we have to face is that the things you
have been saying to me are all in Mein Kampf, and the arguments you have been using are the
foundation stones upon which the Nazi movement is built. Hitler also likes some Jews, but he
dislikes most of them because he says they are revolutionary and not patriotic. Hitler also is
forced to put down the idealists and the liberals because they serve as a 'front' for the Reds,
But you see, darling, the capitalist system is breaking down, it is no longer able to produce goods
or to feed the people, and some other way must be found to get the job done. We want to do it
peaceably if possible; but surely the way to do it cannot be for all the men who want it done
peaceably to agree to shut up and say nothing, for fear of giving some benefit to the men of
violence!"
V
They argued for a while, but it didn't do any good; they had said it before, many times, and
neither had changed much. In the course of four years Irma had listened attentively while her
husband debated with many sorts of persons, and unless they were Communists she had nearly
always found herself in agreement with the other persons. It was as if the ghost of J. Paramount
Barnes were standing by her side telling her what to think. Saying: "I labored hard, and it
was not for nothing. I gave you a pleasant position, and surely you don't wish to throw it
away!" The ghost never said, in so many words: "What would you be without your money?" It
said: "Things aren't so bad as the calamity-howlers say; and anyhow, there are better
remedies." When Lanny, vastly irritated, would ask: "What are the remedies?" the ghost of the
utilities king would fall silent, and Irma would become vague, and talk about such things as
time, education, and spiritual enlightenment.
"It's no good going on with this, dear," said the husband. "The question is, what are we going
to do about Freddi?"
"If you would only tell me any definite thing that we can do!"
"But that isn't possible, dear. I have to go there and try this and that, look for new facts and
draw new conclusions. The one thing I can't do, it seems to me, is to leave Freddi to his fate.
It's not merely that he's a friend; he's a pupil, in a way. I helped to teach him what he believes;
I sent him literature, I showed him what to do, and he did it. So I have a double obligation."
"You have an obligation to your wife and daughter, also."
"Of course, and if they were in trouble, they would come first. But my daughter is getting
along all right, and as for my wife, I'm hoping she will see it as I do."
"Do you want me to come with you again?"
"Of course I want you; but I'm trying to be fair, and not put pressure upon you. I want you
to do what seems right to you."
Irma was fond enough of having her own way, but wasn't entirely reconciled to Lanny's
willingness to give it to her. Somehow it bore too close a resemblance to indifference. "A
woman wants to be wanted," she would say.
"Don't be silly, darling," he pleaded. "Of course I want your help. I might need you badly
some time. But ought I drag you there against your will, and feeling that you're being imposed
on?"
"It's a horrid bore for me to be in a country where I don't understand the language."
"Well, why not learn it? If you and I would agree not to speak anything but German to each
other, you'd be chattering away in a week or two."
"Is that what I do in English, Lanny?" He hastened to embrace her, and smooth her ruffled
feelings. That was the way they settled their arguments; they were still very much in love, and
when he couldn't bring himself to think as she did, the least he could do was to cover her
with kisses and tell her that she was the dearest woman in the world.
The upshot of the discussion was that she would go with him again, but she had a right to
know what he was going to do before he started doing it. "Of course, darling," he replied.
"How else could I have your help?"
"I mean, if it's something I don't approve of, I have a right to say so, and to refuse to go
through with it."
He said again: "Haven't you always had that right in our marriage?"
VI
Johannes had established himself in New York, where he was running errands for Robbie,
and incidentally trying to "pick up a little business," something he would never fail to do
while he lived. Lanny phoned to his father, who motored in, and the four had a long conference
in Johannes's hotel room. They threshed out every aspect of the problem and agreed upon a code
for communicating with one another. They agreed with Lanny that if Freddi was a prisoner of
the government, the Minister-Präsident of Prussia knew it, and there could be no gain in
approaching him, unless it was to be another money hold-up. Said Johannes: "He is doubtless
informed as to how much money Irma has."
Perhaps it was up to Irma to say: "I would gladly pay it all." But she didn't.
Instead, Robbie remarked to his son: "If you let anybody connected with the government
know that you are there on account of Freddi, they will almost certainly have you watched,
and be prepared to block you, and make trouble for anyone who helps you."
"I have a business," replied Lanny. "My idea is to work at it seriously and use it as a cover. I'll
cable Zoltan and find out if he'd be interested to give a Detaze show in Berlin this autumn.
That would make a lot of publicity, and enable me to meet people; also it would tip off
Freddi's friends as to where and how to get in touch with me. All this will take time, but it's
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