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He swept his hat from his head. It was their companions at the dinner table. Madame was pleased to remember him, also mademoiselle.
"I shall invite them to supper," Kendricks declared.
"If you do," Julien retorted, "I shall go home."
Kendricks heaved a long sigh as he regretfully let them pa.s.s by.
"It's just a touch of Oxford left in you," he complained. "For myself, I know that madame would be excellent company, and I am perfectly certain that mademoiselle would let me whisper--discreetly--in her ear.
Alas! it is a lost opportunity, and from here we go--to who knows what?"
He was suddenly serious. Julien looked at him in surprise. They were standing on the pavement outside. Kendricks consulted his watch.
"You have courage, I know, my friend," he said. "That is one reason why I choose you for my companion to-night. I have two tickets for a German socialist gathering here. The tickets were obtained with extraordinary difficulty. I know that your German is pure and I can trust to my own.
From this minute, not a word in any other language, if you please."
"I am really not sure," Julien objected, "that I want to go to a German socialist meeting. In any case, I am hungry."
"Hungry!" Kendricks exclaimed. "Hungry! What ingrat.i.tude! But be calm, my friend," he added, taking Julien's arm, "there will be sausages and beer where we are going."
"In that case," Julien agreed, "I am with you. Which way?"
"Almost opposite us," Kendricks declared. "Come along."
They paused outside a brilliantly lit cafe with a German name. Julien looked at it doubtfully.
"Surely they don't hold meetings in a place like this?" he muttered.
Kendricks lowered his voice.
"We go into the cafe first," he said. "The meeting is in a private room. Come."
They pushed open the swinging doors and entered the place.
CHAPTER XVIII
A MEETING OF SOCIALISTS
The _bra.s.serie_ into which the two men pushed their way was smaller and less ornate than the one which they had last visited. Many of the tables, too, were laid for supper. The tone of the place was still entirely Teutonic. Kendricks and his companion seated themselves at a table.
"You will eat sausage?" Kendricks asked.
"I will eat anything," Julien replied.
"It is better," Kendricks remarked. "Here from the first we may be watched. We are certainly observed. Be sure that you do not let fall a single word of English. It might be awkward afterwards."
"It's a beastly language," Julien declared, "but the beer and sausages help. How many of the people here will be at the meeting?"
"Not a hundredth part of them," Kendricks answered. "It was a terrible job to get these tickets and I wouldn't like to guarantee now that we have them that we get there. Remember, if any questions are asked, you're an American, the editor or envoy of _The Coming Age._"
"The d.i.c.kens I am!" Julien exclaimed. "Where am I published?"
"In New York; you're a new issue."
Julien ate sausages and bread and b.u.t.ter steadily for several minutes.
"To me," he announced, "there is something more satisfying about a meal of this description than that two-franc dinner where you stole my chicken."
"You have Teutonic instincts, without a doubt," Kendricks declared, "but after all, why not a light dinner and an appet.i.te for supper?
Better for the digestion, better for the pocket, better for pa.s.sing the time. What are you staring at?"
Julien was looking across the room with fixed eyes.
"I was watching a man who has been sitting at a small table over there," he remarked. "He has just gone out through that inner door. For a moment I could have sworn that it was Carl Freudenberg."
Kendricks shook his head.
"Mr. Carl Freudenberg takes many risks, but I do not think he would care to show himself here."
"It is no crime that he is in Paris," Julien objected.
"In a sense it is," Kendricks said. "These incognito visits of his must soon cease if they were talked too much about. Then there is another thing. This cafe is the headquarters of German socialism in Paris, and Herr Freudenberg is the sworn enemy of socialists. He fights them with an iron hand, wherever he comes into contact with them. This is a law-abiding place, without a doubt, and the Germans as a rule are a law-abiding people, but I would not feel quite sure that he would leave unmolested if he were recognized here at this minute."
"You think he knows that?" Julien asked.
"Knows it!" Kendricks replied scornfully. "There is nothing goes on in Paris that he does not know. He peers into every nook and corner of the city. He knows the feelings of the aristocrats, of the bourgeoisie, of the official cla.s.ses. Not only that, he knows their feelings towards England, towards the Triple Alliance, towards Russia. He never seems to ask questions, he never forgets an answer. He is a wonderful man, in short; but I do not think that you will see him here to-night."
The long hand of the clock pointed toward midnight. Kendricks called for the bill and paid it.
"We go this way," he announced, "through the billiard rooms."
They left the cafe by the swing-door to which Julien had pointed, pa.s.sed through a crowded billiard room, every table of which was in use, down a narrow corridor till they came face to face with a closed door, on which was inscribed "Number 12." Kendricks knocked softly and it was at once opened. There was another door a few yards further on, and between the two a very tall doorkeeper and a small man in spectacles.
"Who are you?" the doorkeeper demanded gruffly.
Kendricks produced his tickets. The tall man, however, did not move. He scrutinized them, word for word. Then he scrutinized the faces of the two men. Kendricks he seemed inclined to pa.s.s, but he looked at Julien for long, and in a puzzled manner.
"Of what nationality is your friend?" he asked Kendricks.
"I am an American," Julien replied.
"And your profession?"
"A newspaper editor. I edit _The Coming Age_."