<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">CHAPTER IV</span> <br/>WITH THE AID OF PROVIDENCE</h2>
<p>To the little French girl, Petite Jeanne,
each day dawned as a bright new adventure.
Mysteries might come and go, as indeed
they often had, but adventure! Ah yes, adventure
was always with her.</p>
<p>Nor had her new treasure, the airplane with
its gauze-like wings, lessened her opportunity
for adventure. Indeed it had increased it tenfold.
To Rosemary Sample one might say,
“Well, you’re off to another airplane journey,”
and she undoubtedly would answer with a
sigh, “Yes, one more trip.” Not so Petite
Jeanne. She was not reckless, this slender child
of the air. Her motor was inspected often, each
guy and strut tested, her radio tuned to the last
degree of perfection. For all that, each day as
she took to the air it was with such a leaping
of the heart as comes only with fresh adventure.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_59">[59]</div>
<p>And so it was that, as she climbed into the
cockpit, with Madame Bihari, Danby Force,
and the tiny gypsy girl at her back, she
touched the controls of her perfect little plane
for all the world as if never before had her
fingers known that touch. And as, after skimming
along the air above the foothills, she began
climbing toward one lone snowy peak
among the Rockies, her heart was filled to
overflowing with a fresh zest for living.</p>
<p>“Just to live,” she whispered, “to live, to
love, to dream, to hope and sometimes see our
hopes fulfilled! To see the dew on the grass in
the early morning, to hear the robins chirping
in the early evening, to watch children play, to
feel the wind playing in your hair, to feel the
warm sunshine kiss your cheeks, to watch the
red and gold of evening sky. Ah yes, and to
watch that snowy peak just before me, watch it
grow and grow and grow—that is <i>life</i>—<i>beautiful,
wonderful, glorious life!</i>”</p>
<p>The airplane, which might have seemed to
one far away a giant silver insect, went gliding
about the white capped mountain to drop at
last with scarcely a bump upon that landing
field that had at other times been a pasture
above the clouds.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_60">[60]</div>
<p>How convenient it would be if at times one’s
spirit might, for a space of a half hour or more,
leave the body that, closing about it, holds it
in one place, and go with the speed of light to
distant scenes. The spirit of Rosemary Sample,
speeding away toward Chicago, might for
a quarter hour or more have been spared from
the great trans-continental airplane. No one
surely would have begrudged so faithful a
worker such a short period of recreation. And
surely Rosemary would have been thrilled by
the opportunity of following our little company
on the mountain crest as they left
Jeanne’s plane and followed the trail winding
down to the hunting lodge.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_61">[61]</div>
<p>Had the spirit of Rosemary truly been with
them, she must surely have been asking herself,
“Why is Danby Force here? What does
he expect to find at the lodge? Did he take the
dark lady’s traveling bag? Is it hidden there?
Will he find it? And if he does, what will he
take from it? ‘Valuable papers’ were the dark
lady’s words. Were there such papers? There
is some relation between this fine-appearing
young man and that lady. What can it be?”
So the spirit of Rosemary Sample might have
spoken to itself had it followed down the
mountainside. But the spirit of Rosemary Sample
was not there. Rosemary Sample, body,
soul and spirit, was in the trans-continental
plane speeding on toward Chicago. And beside
her, now talking loudly and boastfully of his
dangerous exploits as an amateur aviator, and
now speaking in kindly and gentle tones of
his mother, was young Willie VanGeldt.</p>
<p>“I should not care for him at all,” Rosemary
told herself. Yet there was something about
him, his light and good-natured views of life,
his smile perhaps, something about him that
claimed her interest.</p>
<p>“As if the stars had willed that for a time
our lives should run together, like trains on
parallel tracks,” she whispered to herself. Little
did she guess the part that this youth with
his wealth and his reckless ways would play in
her life, nor that which she would play in his.</p>
<p class="tb">In the meantime Jeanne, Danby Force and
their gypsy companions were wending their
way down the trail that led to the hunting
lodge.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_62">[62]</div>
<p>“I shan’t detain you long,” Danby Force was
saying to Jeanne. “It’s just a little thing I
want to look into up here.”</p>
<p>Jeanne, whose curiosity had not as yet been
aroused, scarcely heard him. She was awed
and charmed by the grandeur and beauty of
the mountains. To look up two thousand feet
to the snow-clad rocks that were the mountain
peaks, then to look down quite as far to the
tree-grown canyons far below—ah that was
grand!</p>
<p>When at last they came in sight of the rustic
lodge, flanked as it was by massive rocks
and half covered by overhanging boughs of
evergreens, she stopped in her tracks to stand
there lost in admiration.</p>
<p>“Ah!” she murmured, “What a grand solitude
is here! Who would not wish to return
many, many times!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_63">[63]</div>
<p>She was soon enough to learn that it was
not solitude the interesting young man, Danby
Force, sought. For, contrary to Rosemary
Sample’s suspicion, he had not hidden the dark
lady’s traveling bag. He had returned to seek
it. How did he hope to succeed when, on that
other occasion, all others had failed? Well
may one ask. Yet Danby Force did not lack
for hope. He believed in a kind Providence
that sometimes guides an honest soul in its
search for hidden things. With the aid of this
Providence he might succeed where others had
failed.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_64">[64]</div>
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