<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">CHAPTER XII</span> <br/>FLYING THROUGH THE NIGHT</h2>
<p>Just twenty-four hours after she had stood
disconsolate before the airport depot,
watching giant man-made birds sail away into
the blue sky, Florence stood, traveling bag in
hand, all radiant, waiting for her silver ship to
wheel into position for flight. Beside her stood
Danby Force and the little French girl. Danby
too was going. It was to be a night flight. “All
the more thrilling!” had been Jeanne’s instant
prediction. “Flying by night! Seeming to play
among the stars! Ah, what could be more delightful!”</p>
<p>Rosemary Sample, whose plane did not go
out until the following morning, was there to
see them off. So too, quite dried out from the
previous night’s adventure, was Willie VanGeldt.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_127">[127]</div>
<p>Florence found herself thrilled to the very
tips of her toes. As a blue and gold plane with
three motors thundering glided away, then
with a roar of thunder rose in air, as a small
yellow one followed it into the sky, she counted
the moments that remained before the number
of her own plane should be called and she,
walking with all the care-free indifference of
the much air-traveled lady (which she was not
at all), should march to the three iron steps
leading to the plane and climb on board.</p>
<p>“You may think it strange,” Danby was saying
to Jeanne, “that we should go to so much
trouble to catch one industrial spy, and a lady
at that.”</p>
<p>“But no!” Jeanne exclaimed. “Lady spies,
they are the most clever and most difficult of
all. The great and terrible war proved that.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Danby agreed. “And in this peace-time
war of industry, when great secrets are
being guarded, secrets that might win or lose
another great war—which, please God, there
may never be—the ladies bear watching, I assure
you.</p>
<p>“And there <i>are</i> secrets,—” his tone became
animated. “Chemical secrets that have made
work for thousands, secret processes for heat-treating
steel that have revolutionized an entire
industry.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_128">[128]</div>
<p>“And secrets that give us better and more
beautiful dresses. Ah!” Jeanne laughed a
merry laugh. “This is the most wonderful secret
of all. For where there is color there is
beauty. Beauty brings happiness. Life must be
beautiful. So—o, my good friend—” She put
forth a slender hand—“I wish you luck! May
you and my good friend Florence catch those
so very wicked spies and may they be shot at
sunrise!</p>
<p>“And now,” her tone changed, “I must say
adieu, for see! There is your silver ship wheeling
into position. Do not be surprised if some
day you see my own little dragon fly coming
to light on the top of your flag pole or the landing
field nearby.</p>
<p>“And now, Florence!” She gave her good
pal a merry poke. “Shoulders up, eyes smiling,
the good and jaunty air. Tell the world that
this is nothing new. And <i>bon voyage</i> to you
both. I shall be seeing you. And I shall be
watching, always watching for that dark lady,
the most terrible spy.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_129">[129]</div>
<p>Smiling, Florence touched her lips to
Jeanne’s fair brow, then putting on her very
best air of indifference, which was very good
indeed, marched to her plane, climbed the
steps, then sank into a soft low seat to let forth
a sigh that was half relief and half deep abiding
joy.</p>
<p>Having seen them off, Jeanne went in search
of her flying gypsies. They had planned to
join in a reunion of their tribe a hundred miles
away. Jeanne was to fly them there.</p>
<p>“Now,” said Willie VanGeldt when he and
Rosemary were alone, “You said last night you
would not fly with me. Why not?”</p>
<p>“Because—” an intent look overspread Rosemary’s
usually smiling face. “Because you are
grown up, and yet you insist on playing about,
on making life a joke and because flying with
you is not safe.”</p>
<p>“Not safe!” He stared. “I’ve a pilot’s license.
Didn’t get it with a pull either. Earned it, I
did.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_130">[130]</div>
<p>“I’m not questioning that,” she went on soberly.
“All the same, it’s flyers like you who
are spoiling this whole aviation business. Look
at me—I’m a worker. Being a flying stewardess
is my job. I work at it every month in the
year. The pilots and their helpers, the mechanics
in our shops, the radio men on duty all day,
every day, depend on it for their living and the
support of their families. Together we hope to
make our transportation safe, comfortable and
inexpensive for all. We—”</p>
<p>“Well, I—”</p>
<p>“No! Let me finish,” she insisted. “Look at
our planes. Sixty of them, cost seventy thousand
dollars apiece. Multiply that and see what
it comes to. Shows that men with money believe
in us.</p>
<p>“See how those planes are cared for. Looked
over in every port. Least thing wrong, out
they go. Motors taken off and overhauled every
three hundred hours. Always in perfect
condition.</p>
<p>“And you—” there was a rising inflection in
her voice. “You go round the world proclaiming
to all the world that life is a joke and that
airplanes are grand, good playthings. You
flirt with death. And in the end death will get
you. Then thousands will say, ‘See! Flying
is <i>not</i> safe!’ See what I mean?”</p>
<p>“Well, I—”</p>
<p>“Tell you what!” she exclaimed. “It’s a safe
guess you don’t even know when your motor
was last overhauled and cleaned.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_131">[131]</div>
<p>“No, I—” the play-boy was not smiling now.
“Well now, Miss Sample, you see this crack-up
has cost a lot of money. So I—”</p>
<p>“So you ask me to risk my life flying with
you. And I say ‘No!’</p>
<p>“I—I’ll have to be going.” Her tone
changed. “Got a report to make out. I’ll be
seeing you. And I only hope it won’t be under
a high bank of cut flowers.”</p>
<p>She was gone, leaving Willie staring.</p>
<p>“Queer sort of girl!” he grumbled after a
time. “But I—she sure is a good one!</p>
<p>“She might be right at that,” he murmured
as he left the building.</p>
<p>For Florence, speeding away through space
with the stars above and the earth below, that
was a never-to-be-forgotten night. First the
broad expanse of the city’s gleaming lights and
after that, in sharp contrast, deep, sullen blue
below that suggested eternity of space.</p>
<p>“We’re over the lake,” Danby Force smiled.
“Way over there is the light of a ship.”</p>
<p>“And still farther there is another,” Florence
replied. “How rapidly we leave those
lights behind! How strange to be speeding
along through the night.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_132">[132]</div>
<p>Soon the deep blue below changed to varying
shadows. They were over land once more.
The panorama that passed beneath them never
lost its charm. Here, faintly glowing, were the
lights of a tiny village. Were they asleep, those
people? Probably not. Too early for that.
Some were reading, some studying, some playing
games, those simple kindly people who live
in small villages.</p>
<p>The village vanished and only a single light,
here and there, like reflections of the stars, told
where farm houses stood. A city loomed into
sight, then passed on into the unknown.</p>
<p>“It’s like life,” Florence said soberly. “We
are always passing from one unknown to another.</p>
<p>“And speaking of unknowns—” her voice
changed. “Do you think the industrial spy who
is still in your employ is a man or a woman?”</p>
<p>“We have no means of knowing.” Danby
spoke soberly. “To find this out if you can,
this is to be part of your task.”</p>
<p>“If I can,” Florence whispered to herself,
after a time.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_133">[133]</div>
<p>So they rode on through the night. Danby
Force seldom spoke. This riding in an airplane
appeared to cast a spell of silence over him.
Perhaps, at times, he slept. Florence could not
tell. She did not sleep. The experience was
too novel for that. Twice she caught the gleam
of colored lights and knew they were meeting
another plane. She tried to imagine what it
would be like when everyone traveled by air.
But would that time come? Who could tell?</p>
<p>It was still dark when Danby Force, after
looking at his watch, said:</p>
<p>“We’ll be there in ten minutes. You shall go
to my house for ten winks of sleep.”</p>
<p>True to his prediction, the plane went roaring
down to a small landing field. They disembarked,
were met by a small man in a green
uniform and were led to a powerful car. Having
taken their places in the back seat, they
were whirled away to at last mount a hill by a
winding road and stop before a tall gray stone
house surrounded by very tall trees.</p>
<p>“My mother and I live here,” Danby said.
“I should prefer greater simplicity, but a beautiful
old lady you call ‘mother’ must always be
humored.” Florence could have loved him for
that speech.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_134">[134]</div>
<p>She understood more clearly what he meant
when, once inside the wide reception room,
they were met by a butler and a white-capped
maid whisked her away to a spacious bedroom
all fitted up with massive furniture.</p>
<p>Sleep came at once. Before she realized it a
rosy dawn ushered in another day. “What shall
this day bring forth?” she murmured as, with a
chill and a thrill, she leaped from her bed to
do a dozen setting-up exercises, and at last to
dress herself in her most business-like costume.</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle the detective,” she laughed
as she looked in the mirror. “I surely don’t
look the part.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_135">[135]</div>
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