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But he merely gathered her into his arms and kissed her––laid back her head and looked down into her face and kissed her lips, without haste, as though she belonged to him.
Her head rested quite motionless on his shoulder. Perhaps she was still too taken aback to do anything about the matter. Her heart had hurried a little––not much––stimulated, possibly, by the rather agreeable curiosity which invaded her––charmingly expressive, now, in her wide brown eyes.
“So that’s the way of it,” he concluded, still looking down at her. “There are other women in the world. And life is long. But I marry you or nobody. And it’s my opinion that I shall not die unmarried.”
She smiled defiantly.
“You don’t seem to think much of my opinions,” she said.
“Are you more friendly to mine?”
“Certain opinions of yours,” he retorted, “originated in the diseased bean of some crazy Russian––never in your mind! So of course I hold them in contempt.”
She saw his face darken, watched it a moment, then impulsively drew his head down against hers.
“I do care for your opinions,” she said, her cheek, delicately warm, beside his. “So, even if you can not comprehend mine, be generous to them. I’m sincere. I try to be honest. If you differ from me, do it kindly, not contemptuously. For there is no such thing as ‘noble contempt!’ There is respectability in anger and nobility in tolerance. But none in disdain, for they are contradictions.”
“I tell you,” he said, “I despise and hate this loose socialistic philosophy that makes a bonfire of everything the world believes in!”
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“Don’t hate other creeds; merely conform to your own, Jim. It will keep you very, very busy. And give others a chance to live up to their beliefs.”
He felt the smile on her lips and cheek:
“I can’t live up to my belief if I marry you,” she said. “So let us care for each other peacefully––accepting each other as we are. Life is long, as you say.... And there are other women.... And ultimately you will marry one of them. But until then–––”
He felt her lips very lightly against his––cool young lips, still and fragrant and sweet.
After a moment she asked him to release her; and she rose and walked across the room to the mirror.
Still busy with her hair, she turned partly toward him:
“Apropos of nothing,” she said, “a man was exceedingly impudent to me on the street this evening. A Russian, too. I was so annoyed!”
“What do you mean?”
“It happened just as I started to ascend the steps.... There was a man there, loitering. I supposed he meant to beg. So I felt for my purse, but he jumped back and began to curse me roundly for an aristocrat and a social parasite!”
“What did he say?”
“I was so amazed––quite stupefied. And all the while he was swearing at me in Russian and in English, and he warned me to keep away from Marya and Vanya and Ilse and mind my own damned business. And he said, also, that if I didn’t there were people in New York who knew how to deal with any friend of the Russian aristocracy.”
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She patted a curly strand of hair into place, and came toward him in her leisurely, lissome way.
“Fancy the impertinence of that wretched Red! And I understand that both Vanya and Marya have received horribly insulting letters. And Ilse, also. Isn’t it most annoying?”
She seated herself at the piano and absently began the Adagio of the famous sonata.
137CHAPTER X
There was still, for Palla, much shopping to do. The drawing room she decided to leave, for the present, caring as she did only for a few genuine and beautiful pieces to furnish the pretty little French grey room.
The purchase of these ought to be deferred, but she could look about, and she did, wandering into antique shops of every class along Fifth and Madison Avenues and the inviting cross streets.
But her chiefest quest was still for pots and pans and china; for napery, bed linen, and hangings; also for her own and more intimate personal attire.
To her the city was enchanting and not at all as she remembered it before she had gone abroad.
New York, under its canopy of tossing flags and ablaze with brilliant posters, swarmed with unfamiliar people. Every other pedestrian seemed to be a soldier; every other vehicle contained a uniform.
There were innumerable varieties of military dress in the thronged streets; there was the universal note of khaki and olive drab, terminating in leather vizored barrack cap or jaunty overseas service cap, and in spiral puttees, leather ones, or spurred boots.
Silver wings of aviators glimmered on athletic chests; chevrons, wound stripes, service stripes, an endless variety of insignia.
Here the grey-green and oxidised metal of the138marines predominated; there, the conspicuous sage-green and gold of naval aviators. On campaign hats were every hue of hat cord; the rich gilt and blue of naval officers and the blue and white of their jackies were everywhere to be encountered.
And then everywhere, also, the brighter hue and exotic cut of foreign uniforms was apparent––splashes of gayer tints amid khaki and sober civilian garb––the beautifulgaranceand horizon-blue of French officers; the familiar “brass hat” of the British; the grey-blue and maroon of Italians. And there were stranger uniforms in varieties inexhaustible––the schapska-shaped head-gear of Polish officers, the beret of Czecho-Slovaks. And everywhere, too, the gay and well-known red pom-pon bobbed on the caps of French blue-jackets, and British marines stalked in pairs, looking every inch the soldier with their swagger sticks and their vizorless forage-caps.
Always, it seemed to Palla, there was military music to be heard above the roar of traffic––sometimes the drums and bugles of foreign detachments, arrived in aid of “drives” and loans of various sorts.
Ambulances painted grey and bright blue, and driven by smartly uniformed young women, were everywhere.
And to women’s uniforms there seemed no end, ranging all the way from the sober blue of the army nurse and the pretty white of the Red Cross, to bizarre but smart effects carried smartly by well set up girls representing scores of service corps, some invaluable, some of doubtful utility.
Eagle huts, canteens, soldiers’ rest houses, Red Cross quarters, clubs, temporary barracks, peppered the city. Everywhere the service flags were visible,139also, telling their proud stories in five-pointed symbols––sometimes tragic, where gold stars glittered.
Never had New York seemed to contain so many people; never had the overflow so congested avenue and street, circle and square, and the wretchedly inadequate and dirty street-car and subway service.
And into the heart of it all went Palla, engulfed in the great tides of Fifth Avenue, drifting into quieter back-waters to east and west, and sometimes caught and tossed about in the glittering maelstrom of Broadway when she ventured into the theatre district.
Opera, comedy, musical show and cinema interested her; restaurant and cabaret she had evaded, so far, but what most excited and fascinated her was the people themselves––these eager, restless moving millions swarming through the city day and night, always in motion under blue skies or falling rain, perpetually in quest of what the world eternally offered, eternally concealed––that indefinite, glimmering thing called “heart’s desire.”
To discover, to comprehend, to help, to guide their myriad aspirations in the interminable and headlong hunt for happiness, was, to Palla, the most vital problem in the world.
For her there existed only one solution of this problem: the Law of Love.
And in this world-wide Hunt for Happiness, where scrambling millions followed the trail of Heart’s Desire, she saw the mad huntsman, Folly, leading, and Black Care, the whipper-in; and, at the bitter end, only the bones of the world’s woe; and a Horseman seated on his Pale Horse.
But the problem that still remained was how to swerve the headlong hunt to the true trail toward the140only goal where the world’s quarry, happiness, lies asleep.
How to make service the Universal Heart’s Desire? How to transfigure self-love into Love?
To preach her faith from the street corners––to cry it aloud in the wilderness where no ear heeded––violence, aggression, the campaign militant, had never appealed to the girl.
Like her nation, only when cornered did she blaze out and strike. But to harangue, threaten, demand of the world that it accept the Law of Service and of Love, seemed to her a mockery of the faith she had embraced, which, unless irrevocably in liaison with freedom, was no faith at all.
So, for Palla, the solution lay in loyalty to the faith she professed; in living it; in swaying ignorance by example; in overcoming incredulity by service, scepticism by love.
Love and Service? Why, all around her among these teeming millions were examples––volunteers in khaki, their sisters in the garments of mercy! Why must the world stop there? This was the right scent. Why should the hunt swerve for the devil’s herring drawn across the trail?
One for all; all for one! She had read it on one of the war-posters. Somebody had taken the splendid Guardsman’s creed and had made it the slogan for this war against darkness.
And that was her creed––the true faith––the Law of Love. Then, was it good only in war? Why not make it the nation’s creed? Why not emblazon it on the wall of every city on earth?––one for all; all for one; Love, Service, Freedom!
Before such a faith, autocracy and tyranny die.141Under such a law every evil withers, every question is unravelled. There are no more problems of poverty and riches, none of greed and oppression.
The tyranny of convention, of observance, of taboo, of folkways, ends. And into the brain of all living beings will be born the perfect comprehension of their own indestructible divinity.
Part of this she ventured to say to Ilse Westgard one day, when they had met for luncheon in a modest tea-room on Forty-third Street.
But Ilse, always inclined toward militancy, did not entirely agree with Palla.
“To embody in one’s daily life the principles of one’s living faith is scarcely sufficient,” she said. “Good is a force, not an inert condition. So is evil. And we should not sit still while evil moves.”
“Example is not inertia,” protested Palla.
“Example, alone, is sterile, I think,” said the ex-girl-soldier of the Battalion of Death, buttering a crescent. She ate it with the delightful appetite of flawless health, and poured out more chocolate.
“For instance, dear,” she went on, “the forces of evil––of degeneration, ignorance, envy, ferocity, are gathering like a tornado in Russia. Virtuous example, sucking its thumbs and minding its own business, will be torn to fragments when the storm breaks.”
“The Bolsheviki?”
“The Reds. The Terrorists, I mean. You know as well as I do what they really are––merely looters skulking through the smoke of a world in flames––buzzards on the carcass of a civilisation dead. But, Palla, they do not sit still and suck their thumbs and say, ‘I am a Terrorist. Behold me and be converted.’ No, indeed!142They are moving, always in motion, preoccupied by their hellish designs.”
“In Russia, yes,” admitted Palla.
“Everywhere, dearest. Here, also.”
“I believe there are scarcely any in America,” insisted Palla.
“The country crawls with them,” retorted Ilse. “They work like moles, but already if you look about you can see the earth stirring above their tunnels. They are here, everywhere, active, scheming, plotting, whispering treason, stirring discontent, inciting envy, teaching treason.
“They are the Russians––Christians and Jews––who have filtered in here to do the nation mischief. They are the Germans who blew up factories, set fires, scuttled ships. They are foreigners who came here poisoned with envy; who have acquired nothing; whose greed and ferocity are whetted and ready for a universal conflagration by which they alone could profit.
“They are the labour leaders who break faith and incite to violence; they are the I. W. W.; they are the Black Hand, the Camorra; they are the penniless who would slay and rob; the landless who would kill and seize; the ignorant, nursing suspicion; the shiftless, brooding crimes to bring them riches quickly.
“And, Palla, your Law of Love and Service is good. But not for these.”
“What law for them, then?”
“Education. Maybe with machine guns.”
Palla shook her head. “Is that the way to educate defectives?”
“When they come at youen masse, yes!”
Palla laughed. “Dear,” she said, “there is no143nation-wide Terrorist plot. These mental defectives are not in mass anywhere in America.”
“They are in dangerous groups everywhere. And every group is devoting its cunning to turning the working masses into a vast mob of the Black Hundred! They did it in Russia. They are working for it all over the world. You do not believe it?”
“No, I don’t, Ilse.”
“Very well. You shall come with me this evening. Are you busy?”
The thought of Jim glimmered in her mind. He might feel aggrieved. But he ought to begin to realise that he couldn’t be with her every evening.
“No, I haven’t any plans, Ilse,” she said, “no definite engagement, I mean. Will you dine at home with me?”
“Early, then. Because there is a meeting which you and I shall attend. It is an education.”
“An anarchist meeting?”
“Yes, Reds. I think we should go––perhaps take part–––”
“What?”
“Why not? I shall not listen to lies and remain silent!” said Ilse, laughing. “The Revolution was good. But the Bolsheviki are nothing but greedy thieves and murderers. You and I know that. If anybody teaches people the contrary, I certainly shall have something to say.”
Palla desired to purchase silk for sofa pillows, having acquired a chaise-longue for her bedroom.
So she and Ilse went out into the sunshine and multi-coloured crowd; and all the afternoon they shopped very blissfully––which meant, also, lingering before store windows, drifting into picture-galleries, taking144tea at Sherry’s, and finally setting out for home through a beflagged avenue jammed with traffic.
Dusk fell early but the drooping, orange-tinted globes which had replaced the white ones on the Fifth Avenue lamps were not yet lighted; and there still remained a touch of sunset in the sky when they left the bus.
At the corner of Palla’s street, there seemed to be an unusual congestion, and now, above the noise of traffic, they caught the sound of a band; and turned at the curb to see, supposing it to be a military music.
The band was a full one, not military, wearing a slatternly sort of uniform but playing well enough as they came up through the thickening dusk, marching close to the eastern curb of the avenue.
They were playingThe Marseillaise. Four abreast, behind them, marched a dingy column of men and women, mostly of foreign aspect and squatty build, carrying a flag which seemed to be entirely red.
Palla, perplexed, incredulous, yet almost instantly suspecting the truth, stared at the rusty ranks, at the knots of red ribbon on every breast.
Other people were staring, too, as the unexpected procession came shuffling along––late shoppers, business men returning home, soldiers––all paused to gaze at this sullen visaged battalion clumping up the avenue.
“Surely,” said Palla to Ilse, “these people can’t be Reds!”
“Surely they are!” returned the tall, fair girl calmly. Her face had become flushed, and she stepped to the edge of the curb, her blue, wrathful eyes darkening like sapphires.
A soldier came up beside her. Others, sailors and145soldiers, stopped to look. There was a red flag passing. Suddenly Ilse stepped from the sidewalk, wrenched the flag from the burly Jew who carried it, and, with the same movement, shattered the staff across her knee.
Men and women in the ranks closed in on her; a shrill roar rose from them, but the soldiers and sailors, cheering and laughing, broke into the enraged ranks, tearing off red rosettes, cuffing and kicking the infuriated Terrorists, seizing every seditious banner, flag, emblem and placard in sight.
Female Reds, shrieking with rage, clawed, kicked and bit at soldier, sailor and civilian. A gaunt man, with a greasy bunch of hair under a bowler, waved dirty hands above the mêlée and shouted that he had the Mayor’s permission to parade.
Everywhere automobiles were stopping, crowds of people hurrying up, policemen running. The electric lights snapped alight, revealed a mob struggling there in the yellowish glare.
Ilse had calmly stepped to the sidewalk, the fragments of flag and staff in her white-gloved hands; and, as she saw the irresponsible soldiers and blue-jackets wading lustily into the Reds––saw the lively riot which her own action had started––an irresistible desire to laugh seized her.
Clear and gay above the yelling of Bolsheviki and the “Yip––yip!” of the soldiers, peeled her infectious laughter. But Palla, more gentle, stood with dark eyes dilated, fearful of real bloodshed in the furious scene raging in the avenue before her.
A little shrimp of a Terrorist, a huge red rosette streaming from his buttonhole, suddenly ran at Ilse and seized the broken staff and the rags of the red flag.146And Palla, alarmed, caught him by the coat-collar and dragged him screeching and cursing away from her friend, rebuking him in a firm but excited voice.
Ilse came over, shouldering her superb figure through the crowd; looked at the human shrimp a moment; then her laughter pealed anew.
“That’s the man who abused me in Denmark!” she said. “Oh, Palla,lookat him! Do you really believe you could educate a thing like that!”
The man had wriggled free, and now he turned a flat, whiskered visage on Palla, menaced her with both soiled fists, inarticulate in his fury.
But police were everywhere, now, sweeping this miniature riot from the avenue, hustling the Reds uptown, checking the skylarking soldiery, sending amused or indignant citizens about their business.
A burly policeman said to Ilse with a grin: “I’ll take what’s left of that red flag, Miss;” and the girl handed it to him still laughing.
Soldiers wearing overseas caps cheered her and Palla. Everybody on the turbulent sidewalk was now laughing.
“D’yeh see that blond nab the red flag outer that big kike’s fists?” shouted one soldier to his sweating bunkie. “Some skirt!”
“God love the Bolsheviki she grabs by the slack o’ the pants!” cried a blue-jacket who had lost his cap. A roar followed.
“Only one flag in this little old town!” yelled a citizen nursing a cut cheek with reddened handkerchief.
“G’wan, now!” grumbled a policeman, trying to look severe; “it’s all over; they’s nothing to see. Av ye got homes–––”
“Yip! Where do we go from here?” demanded a marine.
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“Home!” repeated the policeman; “––that’s the answer. G’wan, now, peaceable––lave these ladies pass!–––”
Ilse and Palla, still walled in by a grinning, admiring soldiery, took advantage of the opening and fled, followed by cheers as far as Palla’s door.
“Good heavens, Ilse,” she exclaimed in fresh dismay, as she began to realise the rather violent rôles they both had played, “––is that your idea of education for the masses?”
A servant answered the bell and they entered the house. And presently, seated on the chaise-longue in Palla’s bedroom, Ilse Westgard alternately gazed upon her ruined white gloves and leaned against the cane back, weak with laughter.
“How funny! How degrading! But how funny!” she kept repeating. “That large and enraged Jew with the red flag!––the wretched little Christian shrimp you carried wriggling away by the collar! Oh, Palla! Palla! Never shall I forget the expression on your face––like a bored housewife, who, between thumb and forefinger, carries a dead mouse by the tail–––”
“He was trying to kick you, my dear,” explained Palla, beginning to remove the hairpins from her hair.
Ilse touched her eyes with her handkerchief.
“They might have thrown bombs,” she said. “It’s all very well to laugh, darling, but sometimes such affairs are not funny.”
Palla, seated at her dresser, shook down a mass of thick, bright-brown hair, and picked up her comb.
“I am wondering,” she said, turning partly toward Ilse, “what Jim Shotwell would think of me.”
“Fighting on the street!”––her laughter rang out uncontrolled. And Palla, too, was laughing rather148uncertainly, for, as her recollection of the affair became more vivid, her doubts concerning the entire procedure increased.
“Of course,” she said, “that red flag was outrageous, and you were quite right in destroying it. One could hardly buttonhole such a procession and try to educate it.”
Ilse said: “One can usually educate a wild animal, but never a rabid one. You’ll see, to-night.”
“Where are we going, dear?”
“We are going to a place just west of Seventh Avenue, called the Red Flag Club.”
“Is it a club?”
“No. The Reds hire it several times a week and try to fill it with people. There is the menace to this city and to the nation, Palla––for these cunning fomenters of disorder deluge the poorer quarters of the town with their literature. That’s where they get their audiences. And that is where are being born the seeds of murder and destruction.”
Palla, combing out her hair, gazed absently into the mirror.
“Why should not we do the same thing?” she asked.
“Form a club, rent a room, and talk to people?”
“Yes; why not?” asked Palla.
“That is exactly why I wish you to come with me to-night––to realise how we should combat these criminal and insane agents of all that is most terrible in Europe.
“And you are right, Palla; that is the way to fight them. That is the way to neutralise the poison they are spreading. That is the way to educate the masses to that sane socialism in which we both believe. It can be done by education. It can be done by matching149them with club for club, meeting for meeting, speech for speech. And when, in some local instances, it can not be done that way, then, if there be disorder, force!”
“It can be done entirely by education,” said Palla. “But remember!––Marx gave the forces of disorder their slogan––‘Unite!’ Only a rigid organisation of sane civilisation can meet that menace.”
“You are very right, darling, and a club to combat the Bolsheviki already exists. Vanya and Marya already have joined; there are workmen and working women, college professors and college graduates among its members. Some, no doubt, will be among the audience at the Red Flag Club to-night.
“I shall join this club. I think you, also, will wish to enroll. It is called only ‘Number One.’ Other clubs are to be organised and numbered.
“And now you see that, in America, the fight against organised rascality and exploited insanity has really begun.”
Palla, her hair under discipline once more, donned a fresh but severe black gown. Ilse unpinned her hat, made a vigorous toilet, then lighted a cigarette and sauntered into the living room where the telephone was ringing persistently.
“Please answer,” said Palla, fastening her gown before the pier glass.
Presently Ilse called her: “It’s Mr. Shotwell, dear.”
Palla came into the room and picked up the receiver:
“Yes? Oh, good evening, Jim! Yes.... Yes, I am going out with Ilse.... Why, no, I had no engagement with you, Jim! I’m sorry, but I didn’t understand––No; I had no idea that you expected to see me––wait a moment, please!”––she put one hand over the transmitter, turned to Ilse with flushed cheeks150and a shyly interrogative smile: “Shall I ask him to dine with us and go with us?”
“If you choose,” called Ilse, faintly amused.
Then Palla called him: “––Jim! Come to dinner at once. And wear your business clothes.... What?... Yes, your every day clothes.... What?... Why, because I ask you, Jim. Isn’t that a reason?... Thank you.... Yes, come immediately.... Good-bye, de–––”
She coloured crimson, hung up the receiver, and picked up the evening paper, not daring to glance at Ilse.
151CHAPTER XI
When Shotwell arrived, dinner had already been announced, and Palla and Ilse Westgard were in the unfurnished drawing-room, the former on a step-ladder, the latter holding that collapsible machine with one hand and Palla’s ankle with the other.
Palla waved a tape-measure in airy salute: “I’m trying to find out how many yards it takes for my curtains,” she explained. But she climbed down and gave him her hand; and they went immediately into the dining-room.
“What’s all this nonsense about the Red Flag Club?” he inquired, when they were seated. “Do you and Ilse really propose going to that dirty anarchist joint?”
“How do you know it’s dirty?” demanded Palla, “––or do you mean it’s only morally dingy?”
Both she and Ilse appeared to be in unusually lively spirits, and they poked fun at him when he objected to their attending the meeting in question.
“Very well,” he said, “but there may be a free fight. There was a row on Fifth Avenue this evening, where some of those rats were parading with red flags.”
Palla laughed and cast a demure glance at Ilse.
“What is there to laugh at?” demanded Jim. “There was a small riot on Fifth Avenue! I met several men at the club who witnessed it.”
The sea-blue eyes of Ilse were full of mischief. He was aware of Palla’s subtle exhilaration, too.
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“Why hunt for a free fight?” he asked.
“Why avoid one if it’s free?” retorted Ilse, gaily.
They all laughed.
“Is that your idea of liberty?” he asked Palla.
“What is all human progress but a free fight?” she retorted. “Of course,” she added, “Ilse means an intellectual battle. If they misbehave otherwise, I shall flee.”
“I don’t see why you want to go to hear a lot of Reds talk bosh,” he remarked. “It isn’t like you, Palla.”
“Itislike me. You see you don’t really know me, Jim,” she added with smiling malice.
“The main thing,” said Ilse, “is for one to be one’s self. Palla and I are social revolutionists. Revolutionists revolt. A revolt is a row. There can be no row unless people fight.”
He smiled at their irresponsible gaiety, a little puzzled by it and a little uneasy.
“All right,” he said, as coffee was served; “but it’s just as well that I’m going with you.”
The ex-girl-soldier gave him an amused glance, lighted a cigarette, glanced at her wrist-watch, then rose lightly to her graceful, athletic height, saying that they ought to start.
So they went away to pin on their hats, and Jim called a taxi.
The hall was well filled when they arrived. There was a rostrum, on which two wooden benches faced a table and a chair in the centre. On the table stood a pitcher of drinking water, a soiled glass, and a jug full of red carnations.
A dozen men and women occupied the two benches.153At the table a man sat writing. He held a lighted cigar in one hand; a red silk handkerchief trailed from his coat pocket.
As Ilse and Palla seated themselves on an empty bench and Shotwell found a place beside them, somebody on the next bench beyond leaned over and bade them good evening in a low voice.
“Mr. Brisson!” exclaimed Palla, giving him her hand in unfeigned pleasure.
Brisson shook hands, also, with Ilse, cordially, and then was introduced to Jim.
“What are you doing here?” he inquired humorously of Palla. “And, by the way,”––dropping his voice––“these Reds don’t exactly love me, so don’t use my name.”
Palla nodded and whispered to Jim: “He secured all that damning evidence at the Smolny for our Government.”
Brisson and Ilse were engaged in low-voiced conversation: Palla ventured to look about her.
The character of the gathering was foreign. There were few American features among the faces, but those few were immeasurably superior in type––here and there the intellectual, spectacled visage of some educated visionary, lured into the red tide and left there drifting;––here and there some pale girl, carelessly dressed, seated with folded hands, and intense gaze fixed on space.
But the majority of these people, men and women, were foreign in aspect––round, bushy heads with no backs to them were everywhere; muddy skins, unhealthy skins, loose mouths, shifty eyes!––everywhere around her Palla saw the stigma of degeneracy.
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She said in a low voice to Jim: “These poor things need to be properly housed and fed before they’re taught. Education doesn’t interest empty stomachs. And when they’re given only poison to stop the pangs––what does civilisation expect?”
He said: “They’re a lot of bums. The only education they require is with a night-stick.”
“That’s cruel, Jim.”
“It’s law.”
“One of your laws which does not appeal to me,” she remarked, turning to Brisson, who was leaning over to speak to her.
“There are half a dozen plain-clothes men in the audience,” he said. “There are Government detectives here, too. I rather expect they’ll stop the proceedings before the programme calls for it.”
Jim turned to look back. A file of policemen entered and carelessly took up posts in the rear of the hall. Hundreds of flat-backed heads turned, too; hundreds of faces darkened; a low muttering arose from the benches.
Then the man at the table on the rostrum got up abruptly, and pulled out his red handkerchief as though to wipe his face.
At the sudden flourish of the red fabric, a burst of applause came from the benches. Orator and audience wereen rapport; the former continued to wave the handkerchief, under pretence of swabbing his features, but the intention was so evident and the applause so enlightening that a police officer came part way down the aisle and held up a gilded sleeve.
“Hey!” he called in a bored voice, “Cut that out! See!”
“That man on the platform is Max Sondheim,”155whispered Brisson. “He’ll skate on thin ice before he’s through.”
Sondheim had already begun to speak, ignoring the interruption from the police:
“The Mayor has got cold feet,” he said with a sneer. “He gave us a permit to parade, but when the soldiers attacked us his police clubbed us. That’s the kind of government we got.”
“Shame!” cried a white-faced girl in the audience.
“Shame?” repeated Sondheim ironically. “What’s shame to a cop? They got theirs all the same–––”
“That’s enough!” shouted the police captain sharply. “Any more of that and I’ll run you in!”
Sondheim’s red-rimmed eyes measured the officer in silence for a moment.
“I have the privilege,” he said to his audience, “of introducing to you our comrade, Professor Le Vey.”
“Le Vey,” whispered Brisson in Palla’s ear. “He’s a crack-brained chemist, and they ought to nab him.”
The professor rose from one of the benches on the rostrum and came forward––a tall, black-bearded man, deathly pale, whose protruding, bluish eyes seemed almost stupid in their fixity.
“Words are by-products,” he said, “and of minor importance. Deeds educate. T. N. T., also, is a byproduct, and of no use in conversation unless employed as an argument––” A roar of applause drowned his voice: he gazed at the audience out of his stupid pop-eyes.
“Tyranny has kicked you into the gutter,” he went on. “Capital makes laws to keep you there and hires police and soldiers to enforce those laws. This is called civilisation. Is there anything for you to do except to pick yourselves out of the gutter and destroy156what kicked you into it and what keeps you there?”
“No!” roared the audience.
“Only a clean sweep will do it,” said Le Vey. “If you have a single germ of plague in the world, it will multiply. If you leave a single trace of what is called civilisation in the world, it will hatch out more tyrants, more capitalists, more laws. So there is only one remedy. Destruction. Total annihilation. Nothing less can purify this rotten hell they call the world!”
Amid storms of applause he unrolled a manuscript and read without emphasis:
“Therefore, the Workers of the World, in council assembled, hereby proclaim at midnight to-night, throughout the entire world:
“1. That all debts, public and private, are cancelled.
“2. That all leases, contracts, indentures and similar instruments, products of capitalism, are null and void.
“3. All statutes, ordinances and other enactments of capitalist government are repealed.
“4. All public offices are declared vacant.
“5. The military and naval organisations will immediately dissolve and reorganise themselves upon a democratic basis for speedy mobilisation.
“6. All working classes and political prisoners will be immediately freed and all indictments quashed.
“7. All vacant and unused land shall immediately revert to the people and remain common property until suitable regulations for its disposition can be made.
“8. All telephones, telegraphs, cables, railroads, steamship lines and other means of communication and transportation shall be immediately taken over by the157workers and treated henceforth as the property of the people.
“9. As speedily as possible the workers in the various industries will proceed to take over these industries and organise them in the spirit of the new epoch now beginning.
“10. The flag of the new society shall be plain red, marking our unity and brotherhood with similar republics in Russia, Germany, Austria and elsewhere–––”
“That’ll be about all from you, Professor,” interrupted the police captain, strolling down to the platform. “Come on, now. Kiss your friends good-night!”
A sullen roar rose from the audience; Le Vey lifted one hand:
“I told you how to argue,” he said in his emotionless voice. “Anybody can talk with their mouths.” And he turned on his heel and went back to his seat on the bench.
Sondheim stood up:
“Comrade Bromberg!” he shouted.
A small, shabby man arose from a bench and shambled forward. His hair grew so low that it left him practically no forehead. Whiskers blotted out the remainder of his features except two small and very bright eyes that snapped and sparkled, imbedded in the hairy ensemble.
“Comrades,” he growled, “it has come to a moment when the only law worth obeying is the law of force!–––”
“You bet!” remarked the police captain, genially, and, turning his back, he walked away up the aisle toward the rear of the hall, while all around him from the audience came a savage muttering.
Bromberg’s growling voice grew harsher and deeper158as he resumed: “I tell you that there is only one law left for proletariat and tyrant alike! It is the law of force!”
As the audience applauded fiercely, a man near them stood up and shouted for a hearing.
“Comrade Bromberg is right!” he cried, waving his arms excitedly. “There is only one real law in the world! The fit survive! The unfit die! The strong take what they desire! The weak perish. That is the law of life! That is the–––”
An amazing interruption checked him––a clear, crystalline peal of laughter; and the astounded audience saw a tall, fresh, yellow-haired girl standing up midway down the hall. It was Ilse Westgard, unable to endure such nonsense, and quite regardless of Brisson’s detaining hand and Shotwell’s startled remonstrance.
“What that man says is absurd!” she cried, her fresh young voice still gay with laughter. “He looks like a Prussian, and if he is he ought to know where the law of force has landed his nation.”
In the ominous silence around her, Ilse turned and gaily surveyed the audience.
“The law of force is the law of robbers,” she said. “That is why this war has been fought––to educate robbers. And if there remain any robbers they’ll have to be educated. Don’t let anybody tell you that the law of force is the law of life!–––”
“Who are you?” interrupted Bromberg hoarsely.
“An ex-soldier of the Death Battalion, comrade,” said Ilse cheerfully. “I used a rifle in behalf of the law of education. Sometimes bayonets educate, sometimes machine guns. But the sensible way is to have a meeting, and everybody drink tea and smoke cigarettes and discuss their troubles without reserve, and159then take a vote as to what is best for everybody concerned.”
And she seated herself with a smile just as the inevitable uproar began.
All around her now men and women were shouting at her; inflamed faces ringed her; gesticulating fists waved in the air.
“What are you––a spy for Kerensky?” yelled a man in Russian.
“The bourgeoisie has its agents here!” bawled a red-haired Jew. “I offer a solemn protest–––”
“Agent provocateur!” cried many voices. “Pay no attention to her! Go on with the debate!”
An I. W. W.––a thin, mean-faced American––half arose and pointed an unwashed finger at Ilse.
“A Government spy,” he said distinctly. “Keep your eye on her, comrades. There seems to be a bunch of them there–––”
“Sit down and shut up!” said Shotwell, sharply. “Do you want to start a riot?”
“You bet I’ll start something!” retorted the man, showing his teeth like a rat. “What the hell did you come here for–––”
“Silence!” bawled Bromberg, hoarsely, from the platform. “That woman is recognised and known. Pay no attention to her, but listen to me. I tell you that your law is the law of hatred!–––”
Palla attempted to rise. Jim tried to restrain her: she pushed his arm aside, but he managed to retain his grasp on her arm.
“Are you crazy?” he whispered.
“That man lies!” she said excitedly. “Don’t you hear him preaching hatred?”
“Well, it’s not your business–––”