<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">CHAPTER VIII</span> <br/>TRAILING AN OLD PAL</h2>
<p>That same evening Jeanne’s giant dragon
fly came drifting sweetly down from the
clouds to land at the Chicago airport. After a
few words with Danby Force and a promise to
meet him before the airport depot on the following
day, she taxied her little plane into a
hangar, gave the mechanics some very definite
instructions regarding its care and general inspection,
then went away with her gypsy companions
to spend the night in a cozy Chicago
haunt of those dark brown wanderers, the
gypsies.</p>
<p>It was past mid-afternoon of the following
day when a large, rosy-cheeked girl came
striding along the path that leads to aviation
headquarters. Had you noted her jaunty
stride, the suggestion of strength that was in
her every movement, the joyous gleam of youth
that was in her eyes, you would have said:
“This is our old friend Florence Huyler, her
very own self.” And you would not have been
wrong.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_95">[95]</div>
<p>Had Petite Jeanne been there at that moment
she must surely have leapt straight into
her good pal’s strong arms. They had been
separated for months, Jeanne had journeyed to
France. Florence had been adventuring in her
own land. Letters had gone astray, addresses
lost, so now here they were in the same great
city, but each ignorant of the other’s nearness.
Would they meet? In a city of three million,
one seldom meets casually anyone one knows.</p>
<p>But here was Florence. She had come to the
airport with a definite purpose. She was, as
you will recall, a playground director. She had
tried her ability at many things, but this was
her true vocation. Times were hard. Playgrounds
had been closed. For the moment
Florence was unemployed. But was she downhearted?
Watch that smile, that jaunty tread.
Florence was young. Tomorrow was around
the corner and with it some opportunity for
work. Just at this moment an unusual occupation
had caught her fancy; she wished to become
an airplane stewardess. How Jeanne
would have laughed at this.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_96">[96]</div>
<p>“Oh, but my dear Florence!” she would
have cried, “You and your one hundred and
sixty pounds! You an airplane stewardess!”</p>
<p>Jeanne was not there, so Florence, marching
blissfully on, arrived in due time at the door
of aviation headquarters.</p>
<p>“I wonder if I might see Miss Marjory Monague?”
she said to the girl by the wicker window.
There was a suggestion of timidness in
her voice.</p>
<p>“Miss Monague, the chief stewardess?” The
girl at the small window arched her brow.
“She’s frightfully busy. But I—” She hesitated,
took one more look at Florence’s face,
found it clean, frank and fair as a dew-drenched
hillside on a summer morning, wondered
in a vague sort of way how anyone could
keep herself looking like that, then said, “I—I’ll
call her.”</p>
<p>She turned to a telephone. A moment later
she said to Florence, “Miss Monague will talk
to you. Go right up those stairs. It’s the last
office to the right.”</p>
<p>To the girl beside her this one whispered,
“Bet she’s going to apply as a stewardess of
the air! Can you e-ee-magine!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_97">[97]</div>
<p>“All the same,” she added after a moment’s
silence, “I’m sorry they won’t let her. She—she’s
a swell one I bet! Regular pal like you
dream about sometimes.”</p>
<p>In the meantime Florence had made her
way blithely up the stairs. “Chief stewardess,”
she was thinking, “probably forty, wears horn-rim
glasses, sits up straight, stares at you and
says, ‘Age please?’”</p>
<p>She was due for a shock. The chief stewardess
was not forty, nor yet twenty-five. A
slim slip of a girl, she looked in her large mahogany
chair not more than twenty.</p>
<p>“I—I want to see Miss Monague,” said
Florence.</p>
<p>“I am Miss Monague.”</p>
<p>“You? Why I—” Florence broke off, staring.</p>
<p>The other girl smiled. “There have been
stewardesses of the air for only about five
years,” Miss Monague explained quietly. “We
were all young when we started. Naturally
you can’t grow gray hair and get your spine
stiff with old age in five years. So—” she
smiled a very friendly smile. “So—o here I
am. What can I do for you?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_98">[98]</div>
<p>“I—why you see—” Florence began, “I—I’d
like to be a stewardess. I—I’ve been a
playground director.” She went on eagerly,
“That really calls for pretty much the same
thing. You try to make people comfortable
and happy—show them a good time. That’s
what a stewardess does, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I suppose so. But—”</p>
<p>“That,” Florence broke in, “that’s just
about what I’ve done. Sometimes I taught
them to do things, when they didn’t know how—trapeze,
swinging rings and all that. But
mostly I just stayed around and saw that
everyone was busy and happy. Truly, I did
love it. But I’ve been away. And now there
are no openings. I just thought—”</p>
<p>“Yes.” The little chief of the stewardesses
favored the big girl with one of her rarest
smiles. She too liked this girl. She wished
to help, but—</p>
<p>“I’m truly sorry!” A little up-and-down line
appeared between her eyes. “The trouble is,
I don’t think you could ever reduce that much.
Besides, you’re too tall.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_99">[99]</div>
<p>“Reduce!” Florence exclaimed. “Of course
I couldn’t. I’m hard as a rock. I put in four
hours in the tank or the gym every day when
I can. Why should I want to reduce?”</p>
<p>“Because—” a strange little smile played
around the chief stewardess’ mouth. “Because
our airplane cabins are just so big and we have
to get girls that fit the cabins,—five feet four
inches, a hundred and twenty pounds; those
are the limits. Can be smaller, but never
larger.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” Florence stared for a moment, then
burst out in good-natured laughter. “I—I
guess I won’t do.”</p>
<p>She was gone before the truly kind-hearted
stewardess could tell her how sorry she was.</p>
<p>Florence was still smiling when she left the
building. But the smile did not last. It is always
hard, for even the strongest hearted to
be in a great city alone and with no one near
who will say, “You may help me do this.”</p>
<p>She walked slowly and quite soberly over
the cinder path that led to the airport depot.
Arrived there, she walked in and looked about
her. There was something about the place
that stirred her strangely. “Such movement!
Such a wonderful feeling of abundant life!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_100">[100]</div>
<p>She walked through the door that led to the
landing field. Once outside, she stood spellbound.
A giant silver plane, looking more like
a huge sea bird than any man-made thing,
came gliding down the runway to wheel
gracefully about and into position. From
somewhere came the barking notes of an announcer:
“Plane No. 43 eastbound for Toledo,
Buffalo and New York, now loading.” She
saw the smiling passengers following redcaps
to the plane as they might have to a train,
caught the signal, watched the plane roll
away, heard the thunder of its motors, then
saw it rise slowly in air and speed away.</p>
<p>“That—” her voice caught. Experienced as
she was in the ways of the world, a tear glistened
in her eye as she murmured hoarsely,
“That is what I wanted to become a part of.
And they won’t let me be—because I’m too
big.”</p>
<p>She turned about to hide that tear. Next
instant she was staring fascinated at three tiny
objects lying close to the wall, three tiny
sticks, two parallel and one crossing them at
a sharp angle. “Jeanne! Petite Jeanne!” she
all but cried aloud. “Jeanne has been here, not
long ago either. That is her gypsy <i>patteran</i>!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_101">[101]</div>
<p>“Listen!” In her excitement she grasped
the arm of an attendant. “Was there a slim
blonde-haired girl here a little while ago?”</p>
<p>“Plenty of them,” the attendant grinned
good-naturedly, “mebby twenty.”</p>
<p>“No, but one you would not forget. One who
dresses in bright clothes like a gypsy. Perhaps
there was a gypsy woman with her.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you mean that gypsy pilot!” The attendant
began to show a real interest. “Yes,
she was here. She went away with Rosemary
Sample and a couple of men.”</p>
<p>“Who—who’s Rosemary Sample?” Florence
could scarcely speak for excitement.
Jeanne! She had found her good pal Jeanne—that
is, almost.</p>
<p>“Rosemary Sample is a stewardess,” the attendant
explained.</p>
<p>“Wh—where did they go?”</p>
<p>“I don’t—yes, come to think of it, I heard
Rosemary say they was goin’ to Little Sweden.”</p>
<p>“Little Sweden? Where’s that?”</p>
<p>“How should I know?” the man drawled.
“You might ask in Norway. That’s close to
Sweden, ain’t it?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_102">[102]</div>
<p>“Yes!” His voice rose suddenly. “Coming!”
He hurried away, leaving Florence hanging
between the heights of heaven and the depths
of despair.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_103">[103]</div>
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