<h2 id="c14"><span class="small">CHAPTER XIV</span> <br/>GYPSY TRAIL</h2>
<p>If life, for the moment, had been robbed of
its adventure for Florence, the little French
girl Petite Jeanne had not fared so badly. To
her life had come one more thrill. It happened
in a strange and quite unexpected manner.
Having left the gypsy child with friends in
Chicago, she and Madame Bihari had gone on
a true gypsy tour of the air. Their destination
was anywhere, their home the landing field
that appeared beneath them at close of day.
Never had Jeanne been so buoyantly happy as
now. And who could wonder at this?</p>
<p>One evening just at sunset they came soaring
down upon a landing field in the open
country. Many years ago some great lover of
trees had planted here a long row of hard maples.
These now formed the farthest boundary
of the landing field. The most glorious days
of autumn had arrived. Never had there been
such a gorgeous array of colors. Here red,
orange, yellow and green were blended in a
pattern of matchless beauty.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_143">[143]</div>
<p>The light of the setting sun presented all this
to the little French girl in a manner that delighted
her very soul. As if attracted by some
great magnet, her little plane taxied toward
them. The planes were all but touching the
leaves when at last the ship came to a halt.</p>
<p>“Madame,” Jeanne said, all but breathless
with delight, “this is where we stay tonight.”
Her tone became deeply serious. “Why do men
from Europe say America is ugly? Nowhere
in the world is there a moment more beautiful
than this!” She took up a handful of golden
leaves, lifted them high, then sent them sailing
away into the breeze.</p>
<p>“Here is a little pile of wood,” she said a moment
later. “There is a bare spot just out from
the trees. We shall make a little fire and boil
some water for tea. We shall dream just this
once that we are back in our so beautiful
France on the Gypsy Trail.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_144">[144]</div>
<p>“And Madame!” she exclaimed joyously,
“Why shouldn’t all gypsies travel in airplanes?
How wonderful that would be! When the
frost comes biting your toes in this beautiful
northland, when the trees lose their glory and
stand all bleak and bare, then they could fold
their tents to go gliding away to the south.
One, two, three, four, five hours racing with
the wild ducks in their flight, and see! there
you are! Would it not be wonderful?”</p>
<p>“Quite wonderful.” Madame Bihari beamed.
Already she had the fire burning, the water on
to boil.</p>
<p>They had traveled far that day. Jeanne was
tired. Dragging out the pad to her cot, she
spread it beneath one of those ancient maples.
Stretching herself out upon it, she lay there
looking up into the labyrinth of red and gold
that hung above her.</p>
<p>“Oh,” she breathed, “if only heaven is half
as beautiful as this!”</p>
<p>“Madame,” she said after a very long time,
“why is there always trouble? Why do people
struggle so much, when all this beauty may be
had without asking?”</p>
<p>“If I could answer that,” Madame said
soberly, “I should be very wise. But this you
must remember, my Jeanne: wherever you go,
whether you succeed or fail, you will find people
ready to drag you down. Shall you let
them? Surely not, my Jeanne. We must fight,
my Jeanne.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_145">[145]</div>
<p>“Always?” the little French girl asked as a
wistful note crept into her tone.</p>
<p>“Always, my Jeanne.”</p>
<p>For a time after that they sat staring dreamily
at the fire. Then, seeming to recall half
forgotten words, Jeanne murmured softly,
“Does the road lead uphill all the way?” Then,
as if answering her own question, “Yes, my
child, to the very end.</p>
<p>“Trouble,” Jeanne whispered. At once she
thought of her good pal Florence, then of
Danby Force and the problem they were trying
to solve.</p>
<p>“Madame,” she whispered, “do you suppose
Florence has found her spy?”</p>
<p>“Who knows?” Madame’s words were
spoken slowly. “Spies are hard to find. Some,
I am told, went all through the great war and
were not captured.”</p>
<p>“We should help her,” Jeanne decided quite
suddenly. “We shall go to that little city.
Perhaps tomorrow we shall go.”</p>
<p>At that moment some wood sprite might
have whispered, “No, Jeanne, not tomorrow.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_146">[146]</div>
<p>With the lightning bugs flashing about them
and the song of tree toads in their ears, they
drank their tea, munched some hard crackers,
and felt that life was indeed very beautiful.</p>
<p>“Shall you sleep now?” Madame asked a
half hour later. “The tent is ready.”</p>
<p>“No. Not yet.” Jeanne wrapped herself in
a blanket, then stretched out beneath her canopy
of gold. “How wonderful autumn is!”
she sighed. “It makes you wish that life were
all like this and that one might go on living
forever. But this we cannot do, so it is best
to sing.</p>
<div class="verse">
<p class="t0">“‘Dance, gypsy, dance.</p>
<p class="t">Sing, gypsy, sing,</p>
<p class="t0">Sing while you may, and forget</p>
<p class="t">That life must end.’</p>
</div>
<p>“I should go in,” she told herself after a
time. But she did not go. Dry leaves, rustling
in the breeze, seemed to whisper, stars, peeping
through the trees, appeared to wink at
her. The whole world seemed at peace. Even
the dog that barked from some place far away
appeared to be singing in the night.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_147">[147]</div>
<p>“How like it is to one of those lovely nights
in France,” she thought to herself. “I was
only a small child. There were many gypsies,
sometimes fifty, sometimes a hundred. They
sang and they danced. Their violins! Ah yes,
how sweetly they sounded out into the night!</p>
<p>“And yet—” her mood changed. “Would I
go back to that? Perhaps not. This is America.
This is a new day. There are exciting things
to do. There are mysteries to solve, people to
be helped. I shall solve those mysteries. I shall
help those people. I—the little French girl
they call Petite Jeanne!” She laughed a low
laugh.</p>
<p>“I should go in,” she said again. She took
in three deep breaths of the pure night air, yet
she did not move. Very soon after, had one
been passing, he might have said, “She is
asleep.” He would have spoken the truth.</p>
<p>When she awoke some time later, a sense of
strangeness filled her mind. A spot of light in
the sky caught her eye. An exclamation
escaped her lips. “I am still dreaming,” she
murmured. She pinched herself hard. It hurt.
She must be wide awake, yet, up there in the
sky, gleaming as a white tower gleams when
a hundred spotlights are upon it, was a silver
ship—an airplane.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_148">[148]</div>
<p>“Angels!” she murmured. “They too must
have taken to the air in planes.” This, she
knew well enough, was pure fancy. What
could this silver ship be? And what kept it
glistening like a star? That there were no
spotlights near, she knew well. And if there
were, their beams of light would stand out
against the darkness.</p>
<p>The silver ship began to circle as for a
landing. Jeanne shuddered. What if this
strange visitor of the night should land close
to her own tiny plane! She was about to spring
up and dash for the tent, when a vision of extraordinary
beauty caught her eye. The plane,
having arrived at a point directly above her
leafy bower, formed a gleaming white background
against which the red and gold of
maple leaves stood out like the colors of the
most costly tapestries.</p>
<p>So lost in her contemplation of this was the
little French girl, she did not miss the plane
when it was gone. The after-image lingered
on the picture walls of her mind.</p>
<p>“It is gone!” she cried softly at last,
“Gone!” So it was. As if swallowed up by the
night, the silver ship had vanished.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_149">[149]</div>
<p>“Perhaps it has gone over to the depot,” she
told herself. “I may see that mysterious ship
in the morning.”</p>
<p>Then, as if in need of companionship and
protection, she rolled up her thin mattress and
disappeared within the tent.</p>
<p>“There is a plane by the depot, a silver
plane!” Jeanne exclaimed excitedly the moment
she thrust her head from the tent next
morning. “I must see it. There was one that
glowed white all over last night. Is this the
one? I must know.”</p>
<p>Since it was some distance to the depot
Jeanne, using her plane as another might an
automobile, warmed up the motor and went
taxiing over.</p>
<p>To Madame’s vast astonishment, ten minutes
later as the silver plane went gliding over
the field to at last rise in air, Jeanne’s dragon
fly went speeding on its trail and, in an astonishingly
short time, both planes were lost
in the blue.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_150">[150]</div>
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