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the brandy. He perceived at once why he had been receiving all this hospitality. But then, he
had known Lanny Budd for some twelve years, and had had other meals at his expense and no
favors asked. It is injurious to one's vanity to have to suspect old friends, and Heinrich had a
naturally confiding disposition. So he asked: "What do you want me to do?"
"First, I want you to understand my position in this unhappy matter. I have many friends in
Germany, and I don't want to hurt them; but at the same time I can't let a member of my
family rot in a concentration camp without at least trying to find out what he's accused of. Can I,
Heinrich?"
"No, I suppose not," the other admitted, reluctantly.
"So far, there hasn't been any publicity that I have seen. Of course something may break loose
abroad; Johannes has friends and business associates there, and when they don't hear from
him they, too, may get busy on the telephone. If that happens, it will make a scandal, and I think
I'm doing a favor to you and to Kurt and to Seine Hochgeboren and even to the Führer, when I
come and let you know the situation. The first person I meet in Berlin is likely to ask me:
'Where is Johannes?' And what am I to say? Since he is my sister's father-in-law and my
father's associate, I'd be bound to call at his home, or at least telephone and let him know of my
arrival."
"It's certainly awkward," conceded Heinrich.
"Another thing: when Seine Hochgeboren gets my letter in the morning he may call up. He's a
friend of Johannes—in fact, it was at Johannes's palace that I first met him. Also, Irma expects
to meet the Fürstin Bismarck tomorrow—perhaps you know her, a very charming Swedish lady.
What is she going to say about the matter?"
Heinrich admitted that it was verteufelt; and Lanny went on: "If I tell these people what has
happened, I am in the position of having come here to attack the Regierung; and that's the last
thing I want to do. But the story can't be kept down indefinitely, and it's going to make a
frightful stink. So I said to Irma: 'Let's get to Heinrich quickly, and have the thing stopped
before it gets started.' Johannes is absolutely a non-political person, and he has no interest in
spreading scandals. I'm sure he'll gladly agree to shut up and forget that it happened."
"But the man must have done something, Lanny! They don't just grab people in Germany
and drag them to jail for nothing."
"Not even Jews, Heinrich?"
"Not even Jews. You saw how orderly the boycott was. Or did the foreign press lie to you
about it?"
"I have heard terrible stories; but I have refused to believe them and I don't want to have to. I
want to be able to go out and tell my friends that as soon as I reported this case to the Nazi
authorities, the trouble was corrected. I offer you a chance to distinguish yourself, Heinrich,
because your superiors will be grateful to you for helping to avoid a scandal in the outside
world."
VIII
This conversation was being carried on in German, because Heinrich's English was
inadequate. Irma's German was even poorer, but she had the advantage of having been told
Lanny's plan of campaign, and she could follow its progress on the young official's face. A well-
chiseled Nordic face, with two sky-blue eyes looking earnestly out, and a crown of straw-
colored hair shaved so that a Pickelhaube might fit over it—though Heinrich had never worn
that decoration. The face had been pink with pleasure at the evening's start; it had become rosy
with good food, wine, and friendship; now it appeared to be growing pale with anxiety and a
crushing burden of thought.
"But what on earth could I do, Lanny?"
"It was my idea that you would help me to take the matter directly to the Führer."
"Oh, Lanny, I couldn't possibly do that!"
"You have access to him, don't you?"
"Not so much as I used to. Things have changed. In the old days he was just a party leader,
but now he's the head of the government. You've no idea of the pressure upon him, and the
swarms of people trying to get at him all the time."
"I can understand that. But here is an emergency, and surely he would thank you for coming
to him."
"I simply wouldn't dare, Lanny. You must understand, I am nothing but an office-man. They
give me a certain job, and I do it efficiently, and presently they give me more to do. But I have
never had anything to do with politics."
"But is this politics, Heinrich?"
"You will soon find out that it is. If Dr. Ley has arrested a rich Jew, he has some reason; and
he's a powerful politician, and has friends at court—I mean, near the Führer. If I go and butt in,
it will be like walking into No Man's Land while the shooting is going on. What hold I have on
the Führer is because I am an old admirer, who has never asked anything of him in all my life.
Now, if I come to him, and he finds that I'm meddling in state affairs, he might be furious and say
" Raus mit dir! " and never see me again."
"On the other hand, Heinrich, if it should ever come to his ears that you had advance
knowledge of this matter and failed to give him warning, he wouldn't think it was a high sort
of friendship, would he?"
The young Nazi didn't answer, but the furrows on his brow made it plain that he was facing a
moral crisis. "I really don't know what to say, Lanny. They tell me he's frightfully irritable just
now, and it's very easy to make him angry."
"I should think he ought to feel happy after that wonderful speech, and the praise it is
bound to get from the outside world. I should think he'd be more than anxious to avoid having
anything spoil the effect of such a carefully planned move."
"Du lieber Gott!" exclaimed the other. "I ought to have the advice of somebody who knows
the state of his mind."
Lanny thought: "The bureaucrat meets an emergency, and has no orders!" Aloud he said: "Be
careful whom you trust."
"Of course. That's the worst of the difficulty. In political affairs you cannot trust anybody. I
have heard the Führer say it himself." Heinrich wrinkled his brows some more, and finally
remarked: "It seems to me it's a question of the effect on the outside world, so it might
properly come before our Reichsminister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda."
"Do you know him?"
"I know his wife very well. She used to work in Berlin party headquarters. Would you let me
take you to her?"
"Certainly, if you are sure it's the wise step. As it is a matter of politics, you ought to consider
the situation between Dr. Goebbels and Dr. Ley. If they are friends, Goebbels might try to hush
it up, and perhaps keep us from seeing the Führer."
"Gott im Himmel!" exclaimed Heinrich. "Nobody in the world can keep track of all the
quarrels and jealousies and intrigues. It is dreadful."
"I know," replied Lanny. "I used to hear you and Kurt talk about it in the old days."
"It is a thousand times worse now, because there are so many more jobs. I suppose it is the
same everywhere in politics. That is why I have kept out of it so carefully."
"It has caught up with you now," said Lanny; but to himself. Aloud he remarked: "We have to
start somewhere, so let us see what Frau Goebbels will advise."
IX
Heinrich Jung went to the telephone and called the home of Reichsminister Doktor Joseph
Goebbels. When he got the Frau Reichsminister he called her "Magda," and asked if she had
ever heard of Lanny Budd and Irma Barnes. Apparently she hadn't, for he proceeded to tell her
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