<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">CHAPTER IX</span> <br/>LITTLE SWEDEN</h2>
<p>Little Sweden, strange to say, is not in
Europe, but on the near-north side in
Chicago. It is a place to eat, a unique and interesting
place. There buxom maidens in
white aprons and quaint starched caps do your
bidding. It is a place of marvelous abundance.
You do not order food. It is there before you
on a long table. You pay for a meal, then help
yourself. On the long board tables are great
circles of chopped meat—beef, veal and chicken
cooked in the most delicious manner. Salads,
also done in circles, and luscious fruits, strange
cakes and curious loaves of brown bread. It is
as if all that is best in Sweden had been carried
across the sea and reassembled for you and
for your guests.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_104">[104]</div>
<p>Our four friends, Rosemary, Jeanne, Danby
and Willie had been whisked away from the
airport to this remarkable place. A half hour
after Florence had asked the question, “Where
is Little Sweden?” they might have been
found shut away in a small private dining
room of the place, holding a conference over
cakes and coffee.</p>
<p>Rosemary was on a forty-eight hour rest
period. This is a regular thing for all stewardesses
when they arrive at their home port.
During the past twelve hours Rosemary had
seen much of Petite Jeanne, and she had found
her to be a very charming person. Simple in
her tastes, modest, kindly, ever ready to serve
others, Jeanne was, she thought, altogether
lovely. During that twelve hours Danby Force
had kept the wires hot in a vain search for
some clue that might lead him to the dark-faced
woman who had so mysteriously vanished.</p>
<p>Willie VanGeldt had been admitted to the
conference because, as Rosemary had discovered,
beneath his apparently happy-go-lucky
and altogether haphazard nature there was a
foundation of pure gold. He liked folks and
was ready to help them, to “go the limit,” as
he expressed it, if only they would tell him
what might be done. He had been quite
entranced with the company of the little stewardess
and was more than ready to aid her
friends.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_105">[105]</div>
<p>“First of all,” Rosemary was saying, “I
want you all to keep in touch with me as far
as that is possible. I have a radio in my room.
You have radios on your airplanes. We will
see that they are in tune. When I am here I’ll
be in my room from eight to eleven in the
evening. Should you have anything to report
or be in need, call the numbers 48—48, give
your location if you can, then deliver your
message. I’ll not be able to reply by radio, but
I’ll help in any way I can.”</p>
<p>“And I’ll take you round the world in my
plane if need be,” said Willie.</p>
<p>To this he received a strange reply from the
little stewardess: “You’ll not take me off the
ground, no matter what happens.”</p>
<p>“Why? Why won’t I?” He stared in unbelief.</p>
<p>“I’ll answer that later.” She cast him a half
apologetic look. “Mr. Force has something to
show us.”</p>
<p>“This,” said Danby Force, “is a picture of
the lady who threatens to ruin our happy community.”
He held the photograph before them.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_106">[106]</div>
<p>“She appears to prefer air travel, and she
will travel again,” said Rosemary. “We have
a hundred and fifty stewardesses in the air.
Why not have a picture made for each of
these? If they all keep watch, we may find
her quickly.”</p>
<p>“Grand idea!” Danby exclaimed. “I’ll have
them made at once.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be wandering about, as gypsy people
have a way of doing,” Jeanne said with a fine
smile. “If I catch sight of that dark lady, I’ll
whisper 48—48 into my receiver and things will
be doing at once.” Little did Jeanne dream of
the strange circumstances under which that
mystic signal 48—48 would slip from her lips.</p>
<p>“But tell us—” Jeanne leaned forward
eagerly. “Tell us of these so terrible spies.
Shall they be shot at sunrise?”</p>
<p>“No.” Danby Force smiled. “We don’t
shoot industrial spies. In fact I’m afraid it
would be difficult to so much as get them put
in prison. An idea, however valuable, is not
easy to get hold of and prove. You may steal
it, yet no one in the world can prove that you
have it. That sounds rather strange, doesn’t
it?” He laughed a jolly laugh.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_107">[107]</div>
<p>“And by the way!” he exclaimed suddenly.
“Just this morning I received a message that
proves we still have spies in our plant. A scrap
of note-paper with plans drawn on it, picked
up off the floor of the mill, proves that. And
this,” he added rather strangely, “gives me
fresh hope.”</p>
<p>“Hope! Hope! Hope!” the others cried in
chorus.</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said Danby, “if they are still
with us, then they have not yet secured all the
secrets needed for their selfish and cowardly
plans. You see—”</p>
<p>He broke short off. There came a movement
at the draperies of the door. A head was thrust
in. A smiling face looked down upon them. A
pair of lips said:</p>
<p>“Jeanne, I have found you!”</p>
<p>Ten seconds later Jeanne was in someone’s
arms. It was her good pal Florence. They were
together once more.</p>
<p>“This,” said Jeanne, turning a smiling face
to her friends at the table, “is Florence Huyler,
the best girl friend I have ever known. And,”
she added, eagerly nodding at Danby Force,
“she’s a fine solver of mysteries as well.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_108">[108]</div>
<p>“Ah!” Danby’s eyes gleamed. “Come and
join us, Miss Huyler.”</p>
<p>“I shall be back very soon.” Jeanne popped
out of the little dining room to reappear in an
incredibly short time with a heaping plate of
food.</p>
<p>“This,” she exclaimed, “is Little Sweden,
the place where everyone eats all he can.”</p>
<p>“And now,” said Danby, nodding to Jeanne,
“tell me about your friend. Why do you think
she is a solver of mysteries?”</p>
<p>“Because,” Jeanne replied, “she has solved
many.” At once she launched into a recital of
her friend’s many achievements. She spoke
of the mysterious “Crimson Thread,” of the
“Thirteenth Ring,” of the “Lady Cop and the
Three Rubies.”</p>
<p>“I am delighted,” said Danby Force. “But
then—” his voice dropped, “no doubt you are
permanently employed and cannot join us in
our search for this dark lady and her companion
spies.”</p>
<p>“On the contrary,” Florence smiled a doubtful
smile, “I am very much unemployed.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_109">[109]</div>
<p>“How fortunate!” Danby extended his
hand. “And you are a social worker of a sort,
a recreation lady. I have been promising myself
for a long time that we should have a
social secretary at our plant. I shall appoint
you at once and you shall have a double duty—to
serve our simple, kindly people, and to
search for a spy. What do you say?”</p>
<p>“What can I say but yes!” The large girl
beamed. “What a day!” she was thinking to
herself. “I go blundering into a place looking
for a job that’s several sizes too small for me.
And now I fall upon one that is just exactly
my kind.”</p>
<p>“Life,” she said aloud, “is beautiful.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Danby Force agreed, “life is beautiful
at times, and should always be so. When
we are selfish or unkind we mar the beauty of
life for someone. When we are suspicious or
unjust, when we lay heavy burdens on the
weak, we are destroying life’s beauty.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he repeated slowly, “life must be
beautiful.”</p>
<p>“Listen!” Rosemary Sample held up a hand.
“What was that?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_110">[110]</div>
<p>“A horn,” said Jeanne. “There’s another
and another. This, why this!” She sprang to
her feet. “This is the night of Hallowe’en!
And this is the last night of the Great Fair,
that most beautiful Century of Progress. Florence,”
she cried, “do you not remember the
‘Hour of Enchantment’? We must go there
tonight. We truly must!”</p>
<p>“We shall all go,” said Danby Force. “It
will prove a never-to-be-forgotten night, I feel
sure.” He spoke the truth, but he did not even
so much as dream the half of it.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_111">[111]</div>
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