Chapter 29 of 29 · 627 words · ~3 min read

CHAPTER XXI.

“MY BELOVED JEW!”

From the office of the _Arbeiter-Zeitung_ Leo had of course gone directly to Grinzing. Lotte, who, together with her parents, was already aware of the results of the Parliamentary session, was waiting for her lover at an open window on the ground floor. And when the automobile drove up and Leo saw her, the passage through the hall seemed too long for him, he swung himself through the window, and an instant later the two young people were in each other’s arms, laughing and weeping at once. In spite of his athletic skill, however, Leo had broken a window-pane when he made his short-cut into the house; and as this caused an audible crash, the Hofrat and his wife, alarmed, hurried in from the neighboring living-room, only to stop in amazement at the sight of their daughter being covered with kisses by a strange bearded man. Until the Hofrat began to cough so energetically that Lotte heard him and, flushing deeply, extricated herself from her lover’s arms to present him to her parents:

“Papa--Mama--this is my fiancé, Henry Dufresne!”

“Leo Strakosch by rights,” he added as he threw himself in the arms of the Hofrat and of his future mother-in-law.

After the joy and confusion of the surprise had abated a little, Herr Spineder did what a Hofrat should do in such a case. He added: “Now, children, tell me everything just as it happened.”

And Frau Spineder did what any good housewife would have done in her place. She cried, declared that she was so excited she couldn’t see straight, and hurried into the kitchen to prepare a supper to fit the occasion.

In the meanwhile the Hofrat, Lotte and Leo conversed in the bathroom, where Leo cut off his beard with a pair of scissors before he shaved and told his story simultaneously. And it was fortunate he did so, for just as he finished shaving and again was a handsome, smooth-faced young man, something quite unexpected happened.

There drove up an automobile containing Herr Habietnik, a Socialist Deputy, and a converted Municipal Councillor, who informed Leo that he absolutely had to go to the City Hall with them in order to appear before the crowds gathered there, and to endure an address by the Mayor.

It was useless to resist--Leo was forced to go along; but Lotte, who assumed the responsibility of bringing him back in time for the evening meal, went with him.

They rode on undisturbed until they reached the Schottentor, where their course was obstructed. For here the crowd was so dense that the car could not go on. Whereupon the Municipal Councillor leaned out, and with excellent intentions, though not very tactfully, shouted to the people:

“Hey, let’s get through! Herr Leo Strakosch, the first Jew to come back to Vienna, has to go to the City Hall!”

These words called forth a thunderous shout of joy. The car was not permitted to pass, but had to wait there with Lotte; Leo, however, now found himself on the shoulders of two sturdy men, and was borne to the City Hall amid the exultant cheers and yells of the masses.

The beautiful building was illuminated again, looked once more like a flaming torch; the men who bore Leo on their shoulders had difficulty in making their way there. And as the trumpets blared the Mayor of Vienna, Herr Karl Maria Laberl, stepped out on the balcony, stretched out his arms in a gesture of benediction, and pronounced an impassioned speech that began with the words:

“My beloved Jew!”

_THE END_

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:

Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.

Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.