Morris tells a story about
Southern Jews

Morris spoke: “… you see, with the placards of the Klan and the announcements—do you see, they put it in the local paper: ‘Jews and Catholics. You are not required. Leave now or be eliminated.”

“Well, in Belton, Renston, that area, now, they’re dragging people from their homes. Some priest …” He coughed.

He leaned forward and took a sip of the cordial.

“D’you get these glasses from?” he said.

“Aunt Claire,’ Frank said.

“Gave ’em to you …?”

“Certainly did.”

He admired the small, etched glass, and turned it to the light, and raised it to examine the base.

“Bavaria,” he read. He sighed and leaned back into the davenport, resting his left arm out along its high wooden frame.

“… Bavaria,” he said, softly, to himself, content that it meant nothing, content to be the head of the family, to be a man, happy with his friends, relaxed and full of a good dinner, and to be serious in the way people are when the subject is arguably more personal than gossip but devoid of any real threat—who are entertained by those best of entertainments, which go by the name of serious business.

“I don’t begrudge him,” Frank thought. “He is, upon balance, fair, and no more pompous than I would be in his situation—than I, in all probability, am now.

“If we prize substance, then he, as a substantial man, is worthy of admiration.

“And, by God, given time, and with a little help, I might accomplish as much as he.”

“The Ku Klux Klan,” Morris began again.

“… But, finally, who does he think he is?” Frank thought.

“The Ku Klux Klan. Which of us is immune?” Morris said.

“For all the world like bugbear stories around a campfire,” Frank thought.

“And don’t we sit here with our eyes wide like ten-year-old children—thrilled to be frightened?”

Mayra came back into the room, and behind her, Frank saw the colored maid, who, it was obvious, had just been receiving some timely instructions from her.

Mayra stood in the doorway and looked out on her husband as he continued. She looked down over her family, so still, listening to Morris go on.

She settled herself into the chair by the door. Slowly, in the rhythm of his speech, sinking down. Her husband, his eyes in a sweep of the assemblage, caught her eye and nodded, as if to a prized lieutenant.

“… and so Weiss …,” he said.

One of the children ran through the hall on some errand, and her mother reached out of the parlor and drew her in and whispered to her.

“… stayed at his home. Three days. And waited the ax blow.”

One of the men nodded, and expelled the cigar smoke.

“… in all anxiety. His store. His home.”

“His savings …,” one cousin said.

“Well, exactly,” Morris said. “Exactly,” granting the man’s intrusion grandly.

“His wife and family. Afraid to venture to the store. The store shuttered. The help … I don’t know if the household help came in, those days. They did not say. I do know they were bound to the house. The family. And whomever was there.

“What fantasies,” he said, as he took up the main theme again, “must not have formed in his mind? Of flight … of opposition … What was he to do? I don’t believe he even had a shotgun in the house. In fact, I’m sure he didn’t.”

The men in the room nodded.

“Of flight, then? Abandoning everything? And how to flee? If the Klan ruled the roads? And could they go cross-country? Now. What did that leave?”

“The railroad,” a young boy suggested.

The adults looked at him.

“No, No. That’s right,” Morris said. “That left the railroad. And they packed those few things they thought they could carry without attracting undue attention—as casual travelers might carry. And they planned to walk out, on Saturday evening, as if for a stroll, do you see, to the depot. Timing their walk to coincide with the departure—mind you, not the arrival, but the departure—of the nine-eighteen to Corinth.

“For they would not want to appear and to board the train, only to have the Klan board after them, and drag them from it. How terrible that would be—so close to freedom …”

He looked down at the cordial glass on the table before him. He reached forward and pushed it gently, by the base, so gently forward three inches.

“They took a baby carriage,” he said. “Scheming to save those few things it would hold. A wicker baby carriage filled with the silver, this photograph or that, I don’t know, papers

“And, at the time they set off …

“All over the town: posters. ‘The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan vow death upon the Scourge of Mankind, the Catholic and the Jew. And will eliminate them from our Midst, and stand, like the fiery ever-turning Sword …’”

“Well, I think that the State Militia should have come,” a young cousin said. “And yes, and yes, ‘Who is the State Militia,’ but it seems to me …”

“It seems to you what?” Morris said. “It seems to you what? What does it seem to you?” He smiled.

“What happened to them?” one of the women said, and the group rustled and settled themselves again toward Morris.

“Well, I’m going to tell you,” he said. “They set out, walking down to the depot. Thinking at any moment to receive a bullet in the head, a rifle butt to the face, a shout which said, ‘There are the Jews!’

“To be dragged into an alley; into the town square. And they walked on. Past the store. They glanced at it, ‘Weiss’s Dry Goods.’

“The store they had built from nothing: his father a peddler, a pack on his back.

“And now Weiss. A pillar of the town. Who has a cause? A donation required, a …”

The men nodded. Businessmen.

“… a gift of … a bolt of cloth. The uniforms …”

“That’s right,” one of the cousins said.

“… for the ball teams. For the band. Community work, call it what you will. Who do they come to? A part of the town for the years, fifty years, that they had been there. ‘Weiss. Dry Goods.’ And here is the town. Risen against them, and one shout for blood, and their bodies swinging in the wind. As they walked past the store.

“And you can imagine his bitterness—to pass the store, knowing at any moment and inevitably it will be broken into, plundered. Burnt, no doubt. A shell. And what were two generations of his family’s life?

“They heard the whistle of the train, come into the town. As they walked on now.

“They walked on. They crossed the square. There was the Klan, down the Main Street. There was a rally, and they’d thrown up a small platform, and there they were, in the Robes of the Inquisition were up there, haranguing the crowd. Thirty, fifty men now, in their white robes, and the crowd of the townspeople.

“Well. They are committed. And they proceed to the train. What was that out of the side of his eye? Does Weiss see one of the Klansmen turn and spy him? Yes. No. What?

“On they walk. Do you see the pathetic procession? Man and wife. And three children, and a baby carriage, in which is all they have salvaged of their life.

“There is the depot. And there is the train. And people boarding. And there is the conductor, that’s right, checking his watch. Looks up the line, looks back; and is about to wave the brakeman to pull out. As the family comes up, comes up to the train, hurrying now: ‘Get on board.’ Weiss has his family board—he will go last, taking the baby carriage, and can still hear, do you see, the speaker and the crowd but one street over. ‘Cleanse our Land in Blood. … Death to the vermin … Death to those who bring death. … Death to the Jews. …’

“About to board the train. ‘Praise God I have gotten my family away from this.’

“When there is a hand on his shoulder. And he turns to see three of the hooded men.”

The colored girl was coming in with a new pot of coffee. Mayra, seated near the kitchen, put her hand out to stay her.

“… And Weiss turned to see the three men.”

“‘Where are you going?’ the one says.

“Can he make his voice out? Does Weiss recognize him? Does he care? Does it matter at this point? Some townsman. A customer, certainly. At this point does it matter?

“‘Where are you going?’ And the second man, who held a torch, passed the torch to the third and motions up at the conductor, and points up at Weiss’s family, who are aboard the train, and motions the conductor to remove them from the train. And he does.

“The train starts to leave. Starts to pull out. The conductor, looking back, shakes his head and mounts the train.

“Weiss and his family standing on the empty platform. The train pulling out.

“‘Where did you think you’re going?’

“‘Sir,’ Weiss says. ‘Sir … the signs said that the Jews … the Jews were to leave the town. …’

“The man came forward and stood inches from him. ‘Lord, Mr. Weiss,’ he said, ‘not you. You’re our Jew. …’”

The room erupted in laughter. The one cousin barked. Frank’s wife slapped her thighs and looked at her sister Mayra, who was already removing her handkerchief and screwing up her face for tears. Frank shook his head and chuckled. Morris looked at him.

“… our Jew,” Morris said, and shook his head, and nodded to the girl in the kitchen to say, “Yes. Now.” And she came forward with the Passover tray.