<h2 id="c15"><span class="small">CHAPTER XV</span> <br/>LADY COP OF THE SKY</h2>
<p>But we must not forget Florence. At
Danby Force’s request, she had arranged
for a dance in the Community House. “Call
it a waltz night,” he suggested. “All these
older people love the old-fashioned dances and
the waltz is the best of them all.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she agreed, “there’s nothing quite
like a waltz.”</p>
<p>She took great pleasure in arranging for
this simple social affair. She sent a bevy of
girls into the hills to gather branches of maple
and sumac. These, all afire with colors of
autumn, turned the rather drab social hall into
an elfin grotto. High in one corner she hung
a cardboard moon. Behind this was a powerful
electric lamp.</p>
<p>“For the last waltz,” she whispered to Verna
who was helping. “We will turn off all the
other lamps and waltz by the light of the
golden moon.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_151">[151]</div>
<p>“That,” said the happy girl softly, “will be
grand.”</p>
<p>Their waltz night came and with it such a
crowd as the Community House had never
before known.</p>
<p>From the musicians of the community Florence
had managed to assemble an excellent
orchestra.</p>
<p>To the swinging rhythm of “The Beautiful
Blue Danube,” Danby Force and Florence led
the merrymakers away for the first dance.</p>
<p>“They’re happy,” Danby Force said as a
pleased smile passed over his face. “Truly,
peacefully happy. This waltz night idea is
going to be fine. We’ll have several of them,
have them all winter long.”</p>
<p>“Has he forgotten?” Florence asked herself.
“Has the spy and my mission here slipped
from his memory so soon?” It surely seemed
so, for here he was planning her social service
work for the distant future.</p>
<p>“Some day,” she told herself with a little
shudder, “there will be a big blow-up around
here. The spy will be found. Perhaps I shall
find him. And then there will be no more social
work done by little, big Florence.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_152">[152]</div>
<p>She resolved to forget all this and, for one
night at least, enjoy life to its full.</p>
<p>The fourth waltz had come to a close with
a glorious swing. She was seated on the side
line with Danby Force when, of a sudden, a
figure appeared on the narrow platform. A
jolly-faced young man he was. His dark eyes
were sparkling, his bushy black hair tumbled
about his ears. His was a face to charm the
world. From some woman’s gown he had
snatched a broad belt of red cloth. A fantastic,
romantic figure he cut indeed as he stood there
waving his hands. “Well now, that was wonderful!”
he shouted. “Beautiful! Artistic!
Entrancing! Marvelous!</p>
<p>“And now—” his face became animated like
a thing glowing with inner fire. “Now let’s
have a little jazz.”</p>
<p>The orchestra leader beckoned. He bent
low to listen. Then,</p>
<p>“No music? Bah! Who wants music? It
goes like this!”</p>
<p>Like a clown in the circus, he produced a
saxophone from nowhere at all, put it to his
lips and began a series of strange sounds which
everyone knew was jazz.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_153">[153]</div>
<p>“Now!” He beckoned to the orchestra. His
body swayed. His eyes shone. “Now!”</p>
<p>Who could resist him? Whether they could
or not, no one did. The orchestra followed his
lead. Dancers swarmed out upon the floor.
Soon the place was a mad house of wild, hilarious
dancing. Only Florence and Danby Force
did not dance.</p>
<p>“Who is he?” Florence asked as a puzzled
frown overspread her face.</p>
<p>“Hugo?” Danby Force said in a tone of surprise.
“Haven’t you met him? Well, of course
you might not. He’s an inspector, works in a
back room. But in a place like this he’s what’s
known as the life of the party.</p>
<p>“In fact,” he added, “that’s why I employed
him. I thought, with his saxophone and his
high spirits he’d stir things up. We’re a bit
dull in this old town. Well—” he laughed an
uneasy laugh. “He’s done it all right. He’s
stirred us up. See for yourself. He’s only been
here three months and he practically runs the
town. Jolly fellow, Hugo.”</p>
<p>“Three months,” Florence was thinking to
herself. “Then he’s one of the newcomers. He
might be—”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_154">[154]</div>
<p>Her thoughts broke off suddenly. Had she
caught some movement behind her? A door
stood ajar. Her keen eyes caught sight of a
figure that vanished instantly. It was the little
hunchback German, Hans Schneider, one of
her suspects,—she was sure of that.</p>
<p>As if he had read her thoughts, Danby said:
“The German people are the cleverest dye
makers in the world. While the World War
was on and we could not get their dyes, we
made some very poor cloth I can tell you. But
now—”</p>
<p>He did not finish. She knew what he would
have said: “Now if we can but find this spy,
if we can protect our interests, we shall lead
the world and our little city may become the
center of a great industry.”</p>
<p>“You don’t dance to that sort of music?” he
said, nodding his head toward the squealing,
squawking, sobbing orchestra.</p>
<p>“Is it music?” Florence smiled.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_155">[155]</div>
<p>“I wonder!” He did not smile. He was
watching the younger people in this mad
whirlpool of motion and sound. “Sometimes I
wonder,” he repeated. “I’ve been told that this
jazz started in the dark heart of Africa, or
perhaps in the black Republic of Haiti. That it
used to be practiced as a wild, frenzied dance,
mingled with a sort of madness, by the Voodoo
worshippers before they performed something
terrible—perhaps human sacrifice.</p>
<p>“Anyway—” his voice changed, “this wild
revel does things to our people. There’s sure
to be things happen tomorrow, a whole batch
of color spoiled perhaps, or bolts of cloth
ruined, perhaps valuable machines wrecked.
People are nervous and jumpy after just one
wild night. You can’t trust them to be themselves.</p>
<p>“Last time we had a revel like this,” he
laughed low, “one of the girls was working
near a vat of indigo blue coloring matter. She—she
tried a new jazz step, I believe,—and—fell
in! She was blue for a week after that.”
He laughed aloud. Florence joined him and
felt better. Her night of waltz music was
spoiled, but here at least was amusement. “She
would have been blue for life,” Danby went on,
“only the coloring material wasn’t in its last
stages.</p>
<p>“Well—” he rose. “I’ll be going. Got a lot
of work to do. No more waltz tonight.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_156">[156]</div>
<p>“No—no more waltz!” Florence looked up
at her imitation moon. She was disappointed
and unhappy. She had pictured that last dance
as something unusual and beautiful.</p>
<p>“Your Hugo is attractive at any rate,” she
said to Danby.</p>
<p>Just at that moment Hugo went whirling
by. He was dancing with Ina Piccalo, the
dark-eyed girl who had carried away the dye.</p>
<p>“She’s wearing a purple dress,” Florence
said to herself, “the very shade that was in the
ink bottle. I wonder—” she was to wonder
many times.</p>
<p>It was not many hours after Florence had
returned to her small room in the bird-cage
cottage, when Jeanne, in quite a different part
of the country, started on her strange flight
following the small silver plane.</p>
<p>“What can have happened?” Madame Bihari
asked herself in utter astonishment as she
watched the two planes, like homing pigeons,
rapidly disappearing into the distance.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_157">[157]</div>
<p>That which had happened was truly very
simple. As Jeanne, after taxiing down the field,
came in sight of that silver plane, she caught
sight of a tall dark figure just entering the
plane. One look was enough. Her lips parted
in sudden surprise as she hissed under her
breath: “The dark lady! The spy!”</p>
<p>She was about to spring from her place
when the silver plane, whose propeller had
been slowly revolving, started gliding away.
There was nothing left but to follow.</p>
<p>Jeanne followed, not alone on the ground,
but in the air. And did she follow? Miles and
miles the two planes roared on. Perhaps some
early milkman, looking up at the sky, wondered
where they were going. Jeanne wondered
also, but not once did she think of turning
back. In her mind’s eye, she could see the
earnest look on Danby’s face. She could picture
his happy little city and her friend Florence
working there.</p>
<p>“I’ll catch that so terrible spy,” she told
herself. “Somehow I <i>must</i>!”</p>
<p>We feel certain that she would have accomplished
her purpose, but for one thing. She
and Madame had traveled far on the previous
day. Their supply of gas was low. Just when
Jeanne fancied that the silver plane was slowing
up for a landing, her motor gave an angry
sput-sput-sput, then went quite dead.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_158">[158]</div>
<p>“No gas!” she exclaimed in sudden consternation.</p>
<p>Wildly her eyes sought the earth beneath
her. There were plowed fields to the right and
left of her, very soft and dangerous, she knew.
Directly before her were corn shocks, hundreds
of them. There were wide spaces between
the shocks. Could she land between
them?</p>
<p>With a little prayer to the god of the air,
she set her plane to go gliding in a circle and
land as nearly as possible in one particular
spot.</p>
<p>She missed the spot and the space between
the shocks completely. With a sudden intake
of breath, she saw herself headed for an endless
row of shocks.</p>
<p>“God take pity on one poor little gypsy
girl!” she whispered.</p>
<p>The plane bumped softly. A brown bundle
shot past her, another and another, five, ten,
twenty. The earth and sky turned brown.
Then, her plane quite buried in brown, she
came to a standstill.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_159">[159]</div>
<p>Realizing the danger from fire, she leaped
from the plane to begin dragging at the bundles
of corn fodder that covered her motor. To
her surprise, she discovered that someone on
the other side was engaged in the same occupation.
When at last the motor was quite clear,
a freckled youth, with two front teeth gone,
came round the side to grin at her.</p>
<p>“Now you’ll have t’set ’em all up ag’in, I
reckon.” He cackled a merry cackle.</p>
<p>“Oh no; you set them up.” Jeanne joined
him in the laugh. Then, digging deep in her
knickers pocket, she dragged forth a new five
dollar bill. “You take this and get me some
gas. You can keep the rest. Just enough gas
to take me to the landing field. Where is the
nearest one?”</p>
<p>“Thanks! Er—” the boy paused to cackle
again. “Them shocks was just husked. I
husked ’em. Weren’t tied none. If they wasn’t
husked you’d might nigh cracked up, I
reckon.</p>
<p>“I’ll get the gas,” he added hurriedly. “Sure
I will. Landin’ field over thar.” He pointed
north. “Ten miles. How come you all didn’t
stop thar?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_160">[160]</div>
<p>“No gas.” Jeanne smiled a happy smile.
“But say! You hurry!” she put in as he moved
slowly away. “I’m a lady cop of the air. I was
chasing a spy.”</p>
<p>“Gee Whillikins! A spy!” The boy was
away on the run.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_161">[161]</div>
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