“Shall we have to sit absolutely still all the time we are in the air?” Kitty wanted to know.
“No, you may dance if you want to,” Dave grinned. “Probably Marshmallow will have to sit still in the middle of the floor, or he’ll rock the boat.”
“Shucks, I wouldn’t ride in such a flimsy thing,” Marshmallow retorted. “I’ll drive over to Raven Rock in my little old car and get there first!”
The howls that greeted this boast made the chandeliers ring.
“Sh-sh,” cautioned Mrs. Mallow. “Not so loud. Remember Mr. Force’s headache!”
“Mr. Force! Say, I must give him the message from Pete!” Dave exclaimed. “May I go up?”
“Certainly, but make sure he is not asleep,” said Mrs. Mallow. “His room is the first on the right, Dave.”
The others arose from the table, and in the living room brought out again the maps and atlases they had consulted earlier in the day. At that time the flight had been no more than a lark with scant probability of achievement.
Presently Dave rejoined them, reporting:
“Mr. Force is more certain than ever that we should fly to Raven Rock. He is afraid that if the party goes by rail the thieves will learn of it and try to do you harm.”
“Then we start day after tomorrow!” Doris exclaimed.
“At dawn,” Dave added.
“Dawn!” echoed Marshmallow with dismay. “Not before breakfast!”
“I’ll have your breakfast before you are up,” put in Mrs. Mallow. “I know I shan’t sleep a wink the night before—or tonight, for that matter, thinking about flying,”
“Why, Mrs. Mallow, there is less danger than if you were driving in a powerful sedan driven by the best chauffeur in the country,” the young aviator said.
“Here, Dave, show us the route we will take,” Kitty chimed in. “Perhaps she will feel differently.”
“Well, I rather think Pete will follow the regular air mail route,” Dave said, leaning over a map of the United States. “That means he will head for Cleveland or Pittsburgh, then dip down toward Cincinnati and head in at Indianapolis.”
“Cleveland or Pittsburgh the first night, and Cincinnati the second,” Kitty counted off. “Then Indianapolis the third day—”
“No, no!” Dave was laughing. “Indianapolis the first night, at least.”
“From here to Indianapolis in one day?” Mrs. Mallow asked, astounded.
“That is easy and conservative flying,” Dave assured her. “We shall get to Indianapolis by mid-afternoon without hurrying.”
“I—oh, dear, I’m afraid I’ll never catch up with the times,” Mrs. Mallow sighed.
“There’s a whole day to wait,” Doris commented. “And nothing to do. Kitty and I are all packed and ready. What shall we do tomorrow?”
“Let’s go for a picnic,” Marshmallow suggested. “Good id—no.” Doris pondered a moment. “Instead, will you drive Kitty and me to Rumson?”
“Sure,” Marshmallow agreed. “Why?”
“I think we ought to see the Gates twins and tell them all about what has happened—and what is going to happen.”
“Good idea, maybe,” Marshmallow grunted. “We’ll picnic on the way, just the same.”
So, with the annoying detail of a day’s tedious waiting taken care of, Doris and Kitty went to bed intending to discuss until after midnight plans for their trip, but to their own surprise went almost immediately to sleep.
Soon after breakfast the next morning they were rolling along the state highway bound for Rumson, Marshmallow at the wheel of his ancient but gaudy automobile. With them went Wags, Doris’s pet dog, who in the excitement of the past day or two had been rather neglected.
“Where shall we eat?” Marshmallow asked, before they had traveled twenty miles.
“Let’s have lunch at the same place we did the first time we made this trip,” Doris suggested.
“That’s where you found Wags,” Kitty said.
“And where we saw that horrid man who said he was my cousin,” Doris added. “Ugh! I can’t forget him.”
“Nor could I forget a man like that,” Marshmallow chuckled. “No, sir, not if his claiming to be my cousin paid me $1,000 reward for proving he wasn’t.”
Lunch was eaten at the spot crowded with thrilling memories, and Locked Gates, the home of the elderly twin spinsters whose lives Doris had so radically changed, was reached in short time thereafter. Contrary to many people, Marshmallow was always most active after a good meal.
“I have to work up an appetite for the next,” he explained.
Locked Gates was still Locked Gates, in so far as the wrought iron entrance gave its name to the old mansion. The Misses Gates had locked the portal thirty years before, after their father and their suitor had passed through it for the last time.
In other respects the house was transformed. The bushes had been trimmed and the ancient fences were newly painted. No weeds grew in the pathways now.
Marshmallow drove to the other entrance which was now the main gate, and accompanied the girls to the door.
In contrast to the surly Henry Sully, who had grudgingly admitted them upon their first visit, a trim maid opened the door for the callers and ushered them into the living room. To Doris’s pleasure this had not been changed a particle. It was still the dignified but livable room of soft light, polished century-old mahogany and deep-piled antique rugs.
“Welcome! Welcome!” a charming voice spoke from the hall doorway. Two voices, as a matter of fact, but they sounded as if uttered from the same throat.
Azalea and Iris Gates looked as much alike as their voices sounded. They entered the room side by side, identically clad in dove-gray chiffon, their white hair framing surprisingly youthful faces.
“When are you off to the West?” was their first query, after greetings were exchanged.
“Tomorrow, by airplane,” Doris said happily. “How very modern and exciting!” Azalea exclaimed. “I suppose the young gentleman who was often flying overhead while you were here is to be the engineer, or whatever he is called?”
Doris felt her cheeks grow pinker.
“He isn’t experienced enough to fly a huge cabin plane,” she said. “He could do it, of course, but he has to do a certain amount of flying before he can be licensed to pilot one. Dave is coming as assistant to the pilot.”
“That reminds me,” Iris said, “a couple of men came here yesterday—no, the day before—and asked if we would sell the Raven Rock property.”
“It must be valuable, as your uncle claims,” her sister added.
“What were the men like?” demanded Doris. “Please describe them. I have a special reason.” In as few words as possible she told of the attack on Mr. Force and the theft of the deeds. The Misses Gates were visibly shaken by the recital.
“One man was tall and thick-set, burly, I should say,” Azalea began. “He wore rather eccentric clothing, I thought. Good enough, but rather— noticeable. He was quite tanned and had very bright, dark-blue eyes.”
“His hair was just brownish,” Iris added. “He didn’t have any outstanding characteristics, except his voice, which was sort of drawly and yet nasal.”
“The