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"Do you think journalists should write respectfully about politicians?" Mother replied cheerfully. "That's radical. The Nazi press would have to be polite about my husband! They wouldn't like that."

"Not all politicians, obviously," Franck said irritably.

They crossed the teeming junction of Potsdamer Platz. Cars and trams vied with horse-drawn carts and pedestrians in a chaotic melee.

Mother said: "Isn't it better for the press to be able to criticize everyone equally?"

"A wonderful idea," he said. "But you socialists live in a dream world. We practical men know that Germany cannot live on ideas. People must have bread and shoes and coal."

"I quite agree," Mother said. "I could use more coal myself. But I want Carla and Erik to grow up as citizens of a free country."

"You overrate freedom. It doesn't make people happy. They prefer leadership. I want Werner and Frieda and poor Axel to grow up in a country that is proud, and disciplined, and united."

"And in order to be united, we need young thugs in brown shirts to beat up elderly Jewish shopkeepers?"

"Politics is rough. Nothing we can do about it."

"On the contrary. You and I are leaders, Ludwig, in our different ways. It's our responsibility to make politics less rough--more honest, more rational, less violent. If we do not do that, we fail in our patriotic duty."

Herr Franck bristled.

Carla did not know much about men, but she realized they did not like to be lectured on their duty by women. Mother must have forgotten to press her charm switch this morning. But everyone was tense. The coming election had them all on edge.

The car reached Leipziger Platz. "Where may I drop you?" Herr Franck said coldly.

"Just here will be fine," said Mother.

Franck tapped on the glass partition. Ritter stopped the car and hurried to open the door.

Mother said: "I do hope Frieda gets better soon."

"Thank you."

They got out and Ritter closed the door.

The office was several minutes' walk away, but Mother clearly had not wanted to stay any longer in the car. Carla hoped Mother was not going to quarrel permanently with Herr Franck. That might make it difficult for her to see Frieda and Werner. She would hate that.

They set off at a brisk pace. "Try not to make a nuisance of yourself at the office," Mother said. The note of genuine pleading in her voice touched Carla, making her feel ashamed of causing her mother worry. She resolved to behave perfectly.

Mother greeted several people on the way: she had been writing her column for as long as Carla could remember, and was well known in the press corps. They all called her "Lady Maud" in English.

Near the building in which The Democrat had its office, they saw someone they knew: Sergeant Schwab. He had fought with Father in the Great War, and still wore his hair brutally short in the military style. After the war he had worked as a gardener, first for Carla's grandfather and later for her father, but he had stolen money from Mother's purse and Father had sacked him. Now he was wearing the ugly military uniform of the storm troopers, the Brownshirts, who were not soldiers but Nazis who had been given the authority of auxiliary policemen.

Schwab said loudly: "Good morning, Frau von Ulrich!" as if he felt no shame at all about being a thief. He did not even touch his cap.

Mother nodded coldly and walked past him. "I wonder what he's doing here," she muttered uneasily as they went inside.

The magazine had the first floor of a modern office building. Carla knew a child would not be welcome, and she hoped they could reach Mother's office without being seen. But they met Herr Jochmann on the stairs. He was a heavy man with thick spectacles. "What's this?" he said brusquely, speaking around the cigarette in his mouth. "Are we running a kindergarten now?"

Mother did not react to his rudeness. "I was thinking over your comment the other day," she said. "About how young people imagine journalism is a glamorous profession, and don't understand how much hard work is necessary."

He frowned. "Did I say that? Well, it's certainly true."

"So I brought my daughter here to see the reality. I think it will be good for her education, especially if she becomes a writer. She will make a report on the visit to her class. I felt sure you would approve."

Mother was making this up as she went along, but it sounded convincing, Carla thought. She almost believed it herself. The charm switch had been turned to the On position at last.

Jochmann said: "Don't you have an important visitor from London coming today?"

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