<h2 id="c24"><span class="small">CHAPTER XXIV</span> <br/>48—48</h2>
<p>It was rather late on the following afternoon
that Florence received a hurry-up call
from Danby Force. She went at once to his
office in the mill.</p>
<p>As she entered she found him in a fine state
of excitement. He had been pacing the floor
but, as she entered, he turned abruptly toward
his desk. Snatching up a handful of pictures,
he held them out to her.</p>
<p>“Look at these!”</p>
<p>Florence looked. “They were taken inside
the mill,” she said.</p>
<p>“By a spy!” His eyes fairly shone. “And
with the camera you gave me, the little one
that is worn in a button hole. Whose is it?”</p>
<p>“I—I truly do not know.” Her head was in
a whirl. “But I—per—perhaps I should tell
you. Yes, yes I must. Hugo stole a picture, a
very rare little painting.”</p>
<p>“Stole it?” He stared.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_229">[229]</div>
<p>“Yes. He stole it. Can’t be any doubt of it.
I saw it in his private room. I took it for the
rightful owner. This—this camera was behind
it. Was it—”</p>
<p>“It was his beyond a doubt.” Danby was
staring harder than ever.</p>
<p>At that moment the girl thought she caught
some stealthy movement about the ivy outside
the window. She looked quickly. Did she
catch sight of a face? She could not be sure.
If so, it was gone on the instant.</p>
<p>“Hugo!” Danby’s voice rose. “Hugo! He
is our spy! Who would believe it!”</p>
<p>He pounded hard on an electric button.
Mark Sullivan, the day watchman, appeared at
the door.</p>
<p>“Mark,” Danby said in a steady tone, “go
find Hugo. Bring him here. If he refuses to
come, use force—but bring him!”</p>
<p>But Hugo was not to be found. He was
gone. He had flown in the truest sense of the
word. Strangest of all, it was the little French
girl, Petite Jeanne, who aided in his escape.
This may not seem so strange when we recall
that Jeanne had never seen Hugo and that
Hugo surely had a way with the ladies.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_230">[230]</div>
<p>It was late afternoon of that same day. Petite
Jeanne sat in the door of her dragon fly
airplane. The door faced the sun. She was
basking in its warmth. She loved the sun, did
this little French girl. She had once heard an
aged gypsy say the sun was the smiling face
of God. A rather fanciful remark this, yet it
had stayed in her mind. “At least,” she told
herself, “God made the sun and everything He
created is good, so surely He means us to enjoy
the sunshine.”</p>
<p>All day long, without presuming to call upon
the busy Danby Force, or even upon Florence,
Jeanne had wandered through the town
and had come to love it.</p>
<p>“It is wonderful!” she had said to Madame
Bihari. “And to think that any possible harm
might come to it! This indeed is too terrible!”</p>
<p>She was thinking of all this when her eye
caught sight of a person approaching rapidly.
It was Hugo.</p>
<p>“You are Petite Jeanne,” he said. He appeared
to be in great haste.</p>
<p>“Yes, I—”</p>
<p>“I am a friend of Florence,” he said, casting
his spell with a beaming smile.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_231">[231]</div>
<p>“A friend of Florence is my friend.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” One might have detected in the man’s
deep intake of breath a feeling of great relief.</p>
<p>“Then you will help me!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“But yes, if I may.” Jeanne was on her feet.</p>
<p>“If you would but take me a short distance
in your plane—it will not require an hour—you
will be back before dark.” Hugo talked
rapidly as one in great haste.</p>
<p>“What could be easier? Will you come
aboard?” Jeanne climbed to her place at the
wheel.</p>
<p>Ah, poor Jeanne! Had you but known!</p>
<p>A little thrill ran up the little flier’s spine as
her plane took to the air. She felt restless, ill
at ease.</p>
<p>“Ah well,” she whispered, “just one more incident
in a flying gypsy’s life—nothing more.”</p>
<p>It was more, much more than that, as she
was to learn.</p>
<p class="tb">Time passed. In Chicago it had been dark
for two hours. Rosemary Sample was seated
at her desk in her own private room. A radio
head-set had been clamped down over her ears
for two hours. She was reading a book. At
the same time she was listening. She had not
forgotten her promise to be on the air listening
every evening she was at her home port, listening
for that code number she had given so long
ago, but never forgotten.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_232">[232]</div>
<p>Of a sudden the book dropped from her
nerveless fingers. A message of startling clearness
had reached her ears.</p>
<p>“48—48! Petite Jeanne! One hundred miles
north of Happy Vale, an abandoned farm. You
will see my plane. Help! Come quick, or you
may be too late!”</p>
<p>“Too late?” Rosemary repeated, springing
to her feet.</p>
<p>A moment later she had Jerry, the mechanic,
on the wire:</p>
<p>“That motor done?” she demanded. “This
is Rosemary Sample.”</p>
<p>“Just finished. But say!—”</p>
<p>Rosemary hung up.</p>
<p>Another moment and she was talking to
Willie VanGeldt.</p>
<p>“Willie,” she said, “this is Rosemary Sample.
Be down at the flying field in a quarter
hour. I’m going to take a ride in your plane.”</p>
<p>“A ride? That’s great! Say—”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_233">[233]</div>
<p>Once more Rosemary hung up.</p>
<p>When Willie appeared, prompt to the moment,
he found his plane oiled, fueled and
ready for flight.</p>
<p>“What’s happened?” he demanded. “You
said you’d never fly in my plane. You—”</p>
<p>“Hop in,” Rosemary commanded. “I’ve had
duplicated head-sets put in. We can talk on the
way. We’ll be flying the best part of the
night.”</p>
<p>Willie’s mouth dropped, but, be it said to
his everlasting credit, he never faltered. Three
minutes later they were in the air flying an
air-lane in the dark.</p>
<p>Rosemary shuddered as she thought what
the outcome of this journey might be. Not
that night flying over a regular air route, such
as they were to follow for hundreds of miles,
is usually hazardous. It is not. The way is
“fenced” in by code signals broadcast by radio
stations along the way. If the pilot is on the
beaten path he hears a series of dot signals. If
he swings to the right, this becomes dot-dash,
and if to the left it becomes dash-dot, so he
never loses the way.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_234">[234]</div>
<p>“Unless—” the girl whispered to herself.
She had seen to it that Willie’s motor was O.K.
She smiled grimly as she thought of the
month’s pay it would cost her.</p>
<p>“But if I had chartered one of our own
planes, it would have taken half a year to pay
up.” That, with her mother back in Kansas
looking to her for part of her support, was not
to be considered. “I just had to come!” she
told herself. “I promised. And that little
French girl would never call unless there was
some great need.”</p>
<p>“Listen to that motor!” Willie chuckled in
her ear. “Never heard it rattle along so
sweetly.”</p>
<p>“No,” Rosemary agreed, smiling down deep
in her soul, “I guess you never did!”</p>
<p>“For all that,” she thought, “he’s a real
sport, shooting away like this into the night
without asking a single question.”</p>
<p>“Willie!” she exclaimed aloud, “We’re getting
dot-dashes! You’re off the course.</p>
<p>“There!” she sighed ten seconds later.
“That’s O.K.”</p>
<p>So they zoomed on into the night.</p>
<p class="tb">What had caused Jeanne to call for help?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_235">[235]</div>
<p>She had flown the hundred miles when, to
her surprise, she was ordered to make a landing
on a pasture of what appeared to be a small
farm.</p>
<p>This was a level country. She experienced
no trouble in landing and in taxiing her plane
up to a spot near the house.</p>
<p>“Wait!” Hugo commanded. “There may be
some message to take back.”</p>
<p>There was that about Hugo’s look, the tone
of his voice that gave Jeanne a sudden impulse.</p>
<p>“As soon as he’s inside I’ll take a run down
that pasture, then go into the air,” she told
herself.</p>
<p>As if he had read Jeanne’s thoughts, Hugo
turned and looked back. Then it came to
Jeanne as a sort of revelation, “He must be
one of the spies! And I—I have been aiding
him to escape!”</p>
<p>Hugo had disappeared through a door. Like
a flash Jeanne leaped for the shadows beneath
a window.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_236">[236]</div>
<p>There, chilling and thrilling, she listened to
strange voices. There were, she told herself,
a man and a woman. They spoke in a foreign
tongue. But Jeanne, who had lived long in
Europe, knew a little of many tongues. She
was able to understand enough to know that
they were discussing the advisability of flight
over the border.</p>
<p>“But have you all the papers?” a woman’s
voice demanded.</p>
<p>“Yes, all.” It was Hugo who answered.
“Pictures, diagrams, plans, everything. They
are there in the black bag.”</p>
<p>“If only I had that bag!” thought Jeanne.</p>
<p>But now they had reached a decision. They
would come out. She must not seem to have
been listening.</p>
<p>To her surprise, as she sprang toward her
plane, she saw that it had grown quite dark.
The discussion had lasted longer than she had
thought.</p>
<p>“Here! Where are you?” Hugo called. “We
have decided to ask you to fly us to Canada.
We will pay you very well.”</p>
<p>“I—I’ll have to see if I have enough gas,”
Jeanne said in as even a tone as she could command.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_237">[237]</div>
<p>This was true. But that was not all. She
meant, at the risk of her life if need be, to get
off a message. Then it was that, after softly
closing her cabin door she had sent the message
that reached Rosemary Sample’s ears and
sent her flying away into the night.</p>
<p>“But what am I to do next?” Jeanne whispered
to herself, all but in despair. What indeed?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_238">[238]</div>
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