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to look like workingmen or labor leaders, you can hire them cheaply, but if you want one who
can play the Chancellor of the Exchequer, you have to dip into your own. Rick, who by now had
considerable experience, estimated the total at thirty thousand dollars, and the figure sounded
familiar to Lanny, because that had been the cost of Gracyn's first production, the sum for
which she had thrown him over. Now he would take a turn at being the "angel"; a higher,
celestial kind, for whom she wouldn't have to act anywhere but on the stage.
II
The play was finished early in April, and the family went north, with Alfy returning to school.
Lanny and Irma motored the mother and father as far as Paris, starting several days ahead; for
Zoltan Kertezsi was there, and they wanted to see the spring Salon through his expert eyes; also
there were plays to be seen, of interest to professionals such as they were about to become. As it
happened, France was in the midst of a furious election campaign, and when you had an uncle
running for the Chamber of Deputies, you were interested to see the show. Hansi and Bess had
consented to come and give a concert for the benefit of his campaign, so it would be a sort of
family reunion.
The Hungarian art expert was his usual serene and kindly self. He had just come back from a
trip to the Middle West, where, strange as it might seem, there were still millionaires who
enjoyed incomes and wanted to buy what they called "art paintings." Lanny had provided
Zoltan with photographs of the Detazes which were still in the storeroom, and three had been
sold, at prices which would help toward the production of The Dress-Suit Bribe. Irma insisted
upon putting up a share of the money, not because she knew anything about plays, but because
she loved Lanny and wanted him to have his heart's desires.
She took the same tolerant attitude toward political meetings. If Lanny wanted to go, she would
accompany him, and try to understand the French language shouted in wildly excited tones.
Jesse Blackless was running as candidate in one of those industrial suburbs which surrounded
Paris with a wide Red band. Under the French law you didn't have to be a resident of your
district but had to be a property-owner, so the Red candidate had purchased the cheapest
vacant lot he could find. He had been carefully cultivating the constituency, speaking to
groups of workers every night for months on end, attending committee meetings, even calling
upon the voters in their homes—all for the satisfaction of ousting a Socialist incumbent who had
departed from the "Moscow line." Irma didn't understand these technicalities, but she couldn't
help being thrilled to find this newly acquired uncle the center of attention on a platform,
delivering a fervid oration which drove the crowd to frenzies of delight. Also she couldn't fail to
be moved by the sight of Hansi Robin playing for the workers of a foreign land and being
received as a comrade and brother. If only they hadn't been such terrible-looking people!
III
All this put Lanny in a peculiar position. He attended his uncle's réunion, but didn't want
him to win and told him so. Afterward they repaired with a group of their friends to a cafe
where they had supper and argued and wrangled until the small hours of the morning. A noisy
place, crowded and full of tobacco smoke; Irma had been taken to such haunts in Berlin,
London, and New York, so she knew that this was how the intelligentsia lived. It was supposed
to be "bohemian," and certainly it was different; she could never complain that her marriage
had failed to provide her with adventures.
By the side of the millionairess sat a blond young Russian, speaking to her in English, which
made things easier; he had just come out of the Soviet Union, that place about which she had
heard so many terrible stories. He told her about the Five-Year Plan, which was nearing
completion. Already every part of its program had been overfulfilled; the great collective farms
were sowing this spring more grain than ever before in Russian history; it meant a complete
new era in the annals of mankind. The young stranger was quietly confident, and Irma
shivered, confronting the doom of the world in which she had been brought up. From the
attitude of the others she gathered that he was an important person, an agent of the Comintern,
perhaps sent to see that the campaign followed the correct party line; perhaps he was the
bearer of some of that "Moscow gold" about which one heard so much talk!
Across the table sat Hansi and Bess; and presently they were telling the Comintern man
details about the situation in Germany. Elections to the diets of the various states had just
been held, and the parties of the two extremes had made tremendous gains; the middle classes
were being wiped out, and with them the middle-class point of view. Hansi said that the battle
for the streets of the German cities, which had been waged for the last two or three years, was
going against the Communists; their foes had the money and the arms. Hansi had witnessed a
battle in broad daylight in Berlin. A squad of Stormtroopers had been marching with their
Hakenkreuz banners and a fife and drum, and passing a co-operative store they had hurled
stones through the windows; the men inside had rushed out and there had been a general
clubbing and stabbing. The Jewish violinist hadn't stayed to see the outcome. "I don't suppose
I ought to use my hands to beat people," he said, spreading them out apologetically.
"Poor Hansi!" thought Irma. He and Freddi were unhappy, having discovered how their
father was dealing with all sides in this German civil war. The Nazis were using Budd machine
guns in killing the workers, and how could that have come about without the firm of "R & R"
knowing about it? The boys hadn't quarreled with their father—they couldn't bear to—but their
peace of mind was gone and they were wondering how they could go on living in that home.
Also Irma thought: "Poor Lanny!" She saw her husband buffeted between the warring
factions. The Reds were polite to him in this crowd because he was Jesse's nephew, and also
because he was paying for the supper, a duty he invariably assumed. He seemed to feel that he
had to justify himself for being alive: a person who didn't enjoy fighting, and couldn't make up
his mind even to hate wholeheartedly.
Yet he couldn't keep out of arguments. When the Communist candidate for the Chamber of
Deputies put on his phonograph record and remarked that the Social-Democrats were a
greater barrier to progress than the Fascists, Lanny replied: "If you keep on asking for it,
Uncle Jesse, you may have the Fascists to deal with."
Said the phonograph: "Whether they mean to or not, they will help to smash the capitalist
system."
"Go and tell that to Mussolini!" jeered Lanny. "You've had ten years to deal with him, and
how far have you got?"
"He knows that he's near the end of his rope."
"But we're talking about capitalism! Have you studied the dividend reports of Fiat and
Ansaldo?"
So they sparred, back and forth; and Irma thought: "Oh, dear, how I dislike the
intelligentsia!"
But she couldn't help being impressed when the elections came off, and Zhess Block-less, as
the voters called him, showed up at the top of the poll in his district. On the following Sunday
came a runoff election, in which the two highest candidates, who happened to be the Red and
the Pink, fought it out between them. Uncle Jesse came to Irma secretly to beg for funds, and
she gave him two thousand francs, which cost her seventy-nine dollars. As it happened, the
Socialist candidate was a friend of Jean Longuet, and went to Lanny and got twice as much; but
even so, Zhess Block-less came out several hundred votes ahead, and Lanny had the distinction
of having an uncle who was a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the French Republic.
Many a young man had made his fortune from such a connection, but all Lanny could expect
was a few more additions— that is to say, accounts for food and wine consumed by parties in
restaurants.
IV
The Pomeroy-Nielsons had gone to London, where Rick was engaging a stage director and a
business manager. The Budds and the Robins went for a visit to Les Forêts, where Emily
Chattersworth had just arrived. Hansi and Bess played for her; and later, while Bess and Lanny
practiced piano duets, Irma sought out the hostess to ask her advice about the problems of a
Pink husband and a Red uncle-in-law.
Mrs. Chattersworth had always been open-minded in the matter of politics; she had allowed
her friends and guests to believe and say what they chose, and as a salonnière had been
content to steer the conversation away from quarrels. Now, she said, the world appeared to be
changing; ever since the war it had been becoming more difficult for gentlemen—yes, and ladies,
too—to keep their political discussions within the limits of courtesy. It seemed to have begun
with the Russian Revolution, which had been such an impolite affair. "You have to be either for
it or against it," remarked Emily; "and whichever you are, you cannot tolerate anyone's being on
the other side."
Said Irma: "The trouble with Lanny is that he's willing to tolerate anybody, and so he's
continually being imposed upon."
"I watched him as a little boy," replied her friend. "It seemed very sweet, his curiosity about
people and his efforts to understand them. But like any virtue, it can be carried to extremes."
Lanny's ears would have burned if he could have heard those two women taking him to pieces
and trying to put him together according to their preferences. The wise and kind Emily, who
had been responsible for his marriage, wanted to make it and keep it a success, and she invited
the young people to stay for a while so that she might probe into the problem. Caution and tact
were necessary, she pointed out to the young wife, for men are headstrong creatures and do not
take kindly to being manipulated and maneuvered. Lanny's toleration for Reds and Pinks was
rooted in his sympathy for suffering, and Irma would love him less if that were taken out of his
disposition.
"I don't mind his giving money away," said Irma. "If only he didn't have to meet such
dreadful people—and so many of them!"
"He's interested in ideas; and apparently they come nowadays from the lower strata. You and
I mayn't like it, but it's a fact that they are crashing the gates. Perhaps it's wiser to let in a few
at a time."
Irma was willing to take any amount of trouble to understand her husband and to keep him
entertained; she was trying to acquire ideas, but she wanted them to be safe, having to do with
music and art and books and plays, and not politics and the overthrowing of the capitalist
system. "What he calls the capitalist system," was the way she phrased it, as if it were a tactical
error to admit that such a thing existed. "I've made sure that he'll never be interested in my
friends in New York," she explained. "But he seems to be impressed by the kind of people he meets
at your affairs, and if you'll show me how, I'll do what I can to cultivate them—before it's too late. I
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