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a children's novel
written by
Jaron Summers
©2008
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Chapter One
“France is as beautiful as you promised,” said Betty Graham, skipping
down the gang plank of the great ocean liner that had just brought her
from America.
“And
autumn is the perfect season to meet her,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
During their Atlantic crossing, Mademoiselle Ucret had helped
Betty brush up on her French by fueling her imagination with tales of
bloody guillotines, splendid palaces and wild revolutions.
Just before they docked at Le Havre, Mademoiselle Ucret announced
that Betty needed absolutely no more help with her imagination but her
French verbs required much work.
Customs
and baggage inspection seemed to take forever but finally Betty and
Mademoiselle Ucret were on the train to Paris.
Betty stared out of the window of their clattering coach as the
green countryside sped by. “You
know what I find amazing?” asked Betty.
“What?”
“That
everyone speaks French.”
“What
do you expect them to speak, Swahili?” asked her governess. “No, French of course. But I just never thought it would be like this. And they talk so fast.”
“It
will all come back to you,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“You will see.”
Mademoiselle
Ucret was probably right since French had been Betty’s first language.
Her mother, Pauline Graham, had taught it to her along with
English. Betty wondered if
her mother had ever ridden on such a train as she was now on. Maybe, for Pauline Graham had been born a few miles away.
What grand fun, thought Betty, if Mother were here to
explain to me about France.
And
then Betty gasped and caught her breath for she saw a huge airship
gently moving across the sky. It
bucked its way through the fluffy clouds.
The lighter-than-air vessel was a dirigible, the kind her father
had so many drawings of in his workshop and laboratory back in the
States. Just a few days
earlier, her father—Richard Graham—had flown across the Atlantic
from America in such a dirigible. Betty
had been heartbroken that she and Mademoiselle Ucret had not been
allowed to travel in the dirigible with her father but he had felt it
would be safer for them to take a ship.
“Do you think Daddy is up there in that dirigible?” asked
Betty.
“No,”
said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“Why?”
“You
see that swastika on its rudder?” asked Mademoiselle Ucret.
“Oh,
right,” said Betty. “It’s a German airship.
Daddy said he wasn’t going to sell them his invention.
That’s good.”
“Why?”
asked her governess.
“If
he’s not up there, then maybe he’ll meet us at the train station in
Paris.” Betty missed her
father and was so looking forward to seeing him.
“I
wouldn’t get my hopes up, Betty,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“He’s very busy but I’m sure he’ll be at the school
tomorrow to take you out for your birthday as he promised.”
“I
bet he’ll be at the station,” said Betty.
“We’ll
see,” said Mademoiselle Ucret but she did not sound reassuring.
Betty
stared at the rolling pastures. “The
cows look the same as they do in America,” she said.
“Yes
but here they don’t say ‘moo-moo.’”
“Do
they bark?” giggled Betty.
“No,”
said Mademoiselle Ucret. “French
children think cows go, ‘me-me’ and dogs go, ‘are-are.’”
Betty
remembered someone telling her that a long time ago.
It must have been her mother.
Yes.
Betty
watched more of the green landscape flash by.
Finally
the train arrived at the Gare d’Est in Paris.
Betty
hurried ahead of Mademoiselle Ucret.
A porter had to race to keep up as he brought their bags and
luggage on a hand trolley.
A
black French Citroen was parked at the curb.
The driver held up a sign that said: “Betty Graham.”
Betty thought the driver looked like a cheerful badger in his
gray suit. She introduced
herself and he said, “Welcome to Paris.
I am Andrew, at your service.”
He opened the rear door of the Citroen.
“Have
you seen my Daddy?” asked Betty.
“Earlier
this morning,” said the driver. “He
said to tell you he was sorry he couldn’t be here.
Now, if you ladies will excuse me, I’ll help the porter load
your baggage. And by the
way, Happy Birthday a day early, Betty.”
Betty
and Mademoiselle Ucret climbed into the car’s rear compartment, a snug
cocoon with the rich aroma of well-kept leather.
Not unlike a giant catcher’s mitt, thought Betty.
“Wasn’t
it thoughtful of your father to send a driver to take us to the
school?” asked
Mademoiselle Ucret, settling back in her seat.
“Yes,
lovely.” Although Betty was excited to be in France, she was not
enthusiastic about going to school in Paris.
At least she would see her father.
As far as Betty was concerned he was the most perfect man in the
world. Of course, she was
disappointed he had not personally met their train.
Never mind, he was busy with work.
He was always up in the air—that was a little joke they
made up about him working with dirigibles.
As
Andrew drove them through Paris, a gentle rain tumbled from the ice blue
sky, washing the cobblestones clean and when they turned a corner, the
Eiffel Tower leapt into view.
Breathtaking.
The
rain paused.
Betty
stared up at the metal webs of the Eiffel Tower, laced in silver
sunlight. The muted colors
of the city became music; an old man with a bushy beard wobbled by on a
red bike with a bent wheel. He
winked at Betty, then was gone, furiously peddling through rush hour
traffic. She glimpsed a
faded crest on his arm that proclaimed “Paris World Exposition.” It was from the previous year.
Some of the pavilions had become world famous and Betty was
looking forward to seeing several, especially the American one.
As
dusk fell, the driver turned into a small estate dominated by a
two-story building, its brick walls were almost hidden beneath tiny
roses that had just started to wilt, giving them a soft red hue.
Lace curtains, the color of vanilla ice cream, fluttered behind
sparkling windows. Each
window featured a freshly painted white shutter.
“Welcome to L’Ecole des Jeune Filles,” said Mademoiselle
Ucret. “Your new home.”
It
might be kind of fun, thought Betty — until she saw, standing in the
doorway, a woman who looked like, well… a giant bat.
The woman wore a long, black dress that flapped when she moved.
Her left arm was in a sling.
To Betty the woman seemed eight feet tall.
But when you’re only four foot-seven—most adults seem very
tall.
Gulp!
What has my Daddy gotten me into this time? Betty thought
to herself.
Betty
stared at the woman, whose ears seemed to curve forward—a pair of
fleshy trumpets for scooping up sound, maybe even thoughts.
“I
am Madame Proctor and you will find France much nicer than America.
I will be your mother while you’re at my school, child.”
“I
have a mother, thank you,” said Betty.
(When Betty was little, her mother had mysteriously disappeared.
Every night since that time Betty prayed that someday she would
find her mother.)
“Child,
your mother is with the angels. May
she rest in peace,” said Madame Proctor, stroking her snow-white
plaster cast, “I remember when she first came to this school.
Why, I was younger than Mademoiselle Ucret.”
“You
really remember my mother?” asked Betty.
“She
had your boldness.”
“How
do you know she’s with the angels?” asked Betty.
“People
don’t just disappear,” said Madame Proctor.
“Mademoiselle Ucret, take Betty to her room and issue her a
school uniform.”
Mademoiselle
Ucret said she would take care of it.
“And
remember, Betty,” continued Madame Proctor, “it is your
responsibility to make certain that your uniform is kept pressed and
spotless. And you must
always wear it.”
“Daddy
is taking me out for my birthday tomorrow and he said I could wear the
red dress he bought me.”
“Betty
Graham, the purpose of our school is to teach little ladies something
about manners and the importance of order in one’s life.
As I always say, ‘you must plan your life, then live your
plan.’”
“What
if something happens that you didn’t plan for?”
“Then
you haven’t made very good plans,” said Madame Proctor.
“I
don’t know if it would be much fun to plan your life like that,”
said Betty.
“Child,
you will discover my way is the best way.”
“What
am I supposed to do first?” asked Betty.
“First.
Wear your uniform with pride.
Is that clear?”
“Yes.”
“Furthermore,
I mostly certainly do not approve of parents taking my little ladies
from my school during regular days.
Your father has been informed.”
Madame Proctor’s words felt like tomahawks rushing past
Betty’s ears.
Fixing her green eyes on Mademoiselle Ucret, Madame Proctor
continued, “I gave you
permission, during your vacation, to accompany Betty on the ocean
crossing and act as her temporary governess.
However, I certainly did not give you permission to disregard
your official uniform.”
“Yes,
Madame Proctor,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
She stared at the ground.
Madame
Proctor spun around, her black robes whirling around her like a wild
windstorm.
Betty’s
mouth fell open. This was
going to be a lot worse than she had thought.
Sure, her Daddy had wanted her to go to the same school as her
mother. But this simply
wasn’t going to work out.
“It’s
all right,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“Madame Proctor can be nice once you get to know her.”
“She
looks like she eats little kids for breakfast.”
“Actually
supper. Now, let me introduce you to the other girls.” Mademoiselle
Ucret took Betty’s hand and the two continued into the school.
“What
happened to her arm?” asked Betty.
“Broke
it when she fell,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“How?”
“A
gypsy demanded a hand-out. She
struck at the man. Apparently
he had been a circus acrobat and executed a back flip to avoid the blow.
I regret that Madame Proctor missed his head and instead
fractured her arm on a marble sculpture by Rodin.”
“You
don’t look like you regret it,” said Betty.
“Shh,
I’m already in enough trouble.”
Betty
looked around the large room they had entered.
Along one wall, next to a cracked brick furnace, coats and hats
hung neatly and precisely from pegs.
“So, where is everyone?”
asked Betty.
“They
are studying, upstairs in the dormitory.
Come on,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
The
steps were well-worn oak and as Betty made her way up them, she found it
easy to imagine her mother walking up the same stairs so many years ago.
Angels. Could her
mother really be with them?
From
behind Betty, Madame Proctor called, “Young ladies caress banisters lightly.
They do not grip them too firmly.”
“Why?”
asked Betty.
“Because,”
said Madame Proctor, “it is one of my rules.
If you wish to become a productive part of society, then you have
many things to learn.”
“Sure,”
said Betty. There was an enormous wooden stove behind Madame Proctor.
It was dark and cold and unmoving—much like Madame Proctor.
“‘Sure’
is not an acceptable response for a young lady.
Use ‘yes’ or ‘pardon’ or ‘excuse me’—never
‘sure’—it is altogether too common.”
“But—”
“Hush.
In light of the fact arrangements have been made to see your
father tomorrow, I will allow it. But
there will be no parties outside our school.”
In
her entire life Betty had never spent more than a few weeks away from
her father. The Atlantic
crossing seemed to take forever—during which time she realized, again
and again, how much she missed her Daddy. “But that will make Daddy
upset because—”
“After
your father receives my telegram he will understand.
You’ve had a long day, and it’s time to go to bed.”
“Yes,”
said Betty. Bed? It’s
hardly dark.
“There
is one more thing, Betty,” said the great black bat.
“It has been brought to my attention that you indulge in play
games with imaginary friends and animals.”
“Never
animals. I used to have a pretend friend that I made up,” said
Betty.
“I
am pleased you have put such nonsense in the past, Betty, for here at
the school we have no time for little ladies who make up stories.
Is that clear?”
“Yes.”
A
few minutes later, Mademoiselle Ucret took Betty into the dormitory.
There were about twenty other girls—each studying at little
desks. Mademoiselle Ucret
said, “girls, this is Betty.”
The
girls all stared at her. Betty
felt uncomfortable.
Mademoiselle
Ucret instructed each girl to stand and say her name, then sit down.
They responded like well oiled little Swiss clocks.
Betty
supposed she was expected to remember all the other names.
Impossible. Even the
faces of her new classmates were a blur in Betty’s mind.
She felt the girls laughing at her, talking about her.
Mademoiselle
Ucret helped Betty unpack and put her clothes in a small locker at the
head of her cot.
A
bell rang.
All
the girls closed their books at the same time and Madame Proctor marched
into the room.
There
was a flurry of activity as the girls changed into gray night gowns.
Mademoiselle Ucret helped Betty put hers on. It was scratchy. Then
all the girls knelt by their beds and said their prayers. They seemed to do everything—from putting on night wear to
praying—like a drill team. Betty
found her new schoolmates’ actions frightening.
They acted like little soldiers, participating in a
well-practiced drill.
Betty
climbed into her bed.
Madame
Proctor told them how lucky they were to be enrolled at the school.
She snapped off the lights and left, followed by
Mademoiselle Ucret.
Betty
huddled on her bed in the dark listening to faint giggles and whispers.
In the dark her schoolmates acted a little bit more normal, but
in the light of day they were much, much too regimented for Betty.
None of the girls were like her friends at home in America.
Betty
was hungry and tired and confused.
A warm tear slipped down her cheek.
What had her father done to her?
Why hadn’t he met her at the train station?
What an awful place this was.
All the kids acted the same, couldn’t anyone think for herself?
Plan your life and live your plan.
Yikes. Betty thought about creeping out of bed and getting a
chocolate bar out of her suitcase or maybe calling her Daddy.
She
hoped everything was all right with her father’s work.
Lighter-than-air ships were very dangerous because the hydrogen
that lifted them was so explosive.
She remembered the awful pictures of the Hindenberg — one of
the world’s most famous airships — burning up.
The passengers had perished, tumbling out of the sky in flames.
As soon as the catastrophe happened, her father had started work
on the invention of a new kind of lighter-than-air gas that would not
ignite. Richard Graham had
been working night and day for almost a year in his lab.
Betty
was hungry and cold and lonely. There
aren’t even enough covers on my dumb bed, she thought.
Madame Proctor had said Pauline Graham was with the angels. That was just the old bat’s notion. Nothing more. The
fact was: no one knew, really.
Chapter
Two
Early
the next morning Betty dreamed that her father came into the dormitory
with a big brass band and played “Happy Birthday” to her.
It was a wonderful dream and she hated to open her eyes, but when
she did—her father was standing beside her bed and behind him
was a five-piece brass band. Madame
Proctor, Mademoiselle Ucret and all of Betty’s new schoolmates were
there. Betty could not help
but beam as everyone sang “Happy Birthday” while the brass band
played loudly.
Betty
didn’t know if she should pinch herself or not.
Everyone
finished singing at the same moment and then they all started to clap
and yell, “Happy Birthday, Betty.”
Betty
leapt out of bed and hurled herself into her father’s arms and hugged
him tightly.
She
idolized her father, Richard Graham.
He was tall and strong and very understanding and if every little
girl on earth had a father like hers, the world would be a much better
place. Betty felt totally
secure, totally safe.
“How
are you doing, Pumpkin?” asked her daddy.
“Pumpkin” was her daddy’s pet name for Betty.
As
soon as she heard him say “pumpkin” she whispered in his ear, “had
a wife and couldn’t keep her.”
Their game was based on the first nursery rhyme Betty remembered
her mother teaching her.
It
was called, “Peter, Peter Pumpkin Eater.”
Every child in the world knew its four lines, which went:
“Peter, Peter pumpkin-eater,
Had a wife and couldn’t keep her;
He put her in a pumpkin shell,
And there he kept her very well.”
Just
thinking about the words of the nursery rhyme made Betty feel warm.
Richard
Graham gave Betty a huge present wrapped with blue and red paper.
Inside was a toy circus with tiny clowns and animals and people.
All the other girls “oohed” and “aahed” when they saw the
brightly colored figures.
“Thank
you, Daddy,” said Betty. “I’d
almost forgotten that today was my birthday.”
“I
know we planned to have lunch but there’s been a slight change in
plans,” said her father, whispering in her ear.
Betty
smiled and then said to the other girls.
“My Daddy would like to take all of you for a party in his new
dirigible.”
The
girls cheered.
“That
sounds like a wonderful idea but these airships are simply not safe,”
said Madame Proctor.
“Not
until last month,” said Betty, “that’s when my Daddy invented
B-Z.”
“What’s
that?” asked one of the girls.
“A
new kind of lighter-than-air gas that can’t explode,” said Betty.
“It’s
already been invented,” said one girl.
“It’s called helium.”
“But
you can only get it from America,” said another girl.
“Is your father’s gas different?”
“Yes,
and it’s also cheaper,” said Betty.
“That
could change the course of aviation,” said Madame Proctor.
“Not
only could it, but it will,” said Richard Graham.
“Now, how about it? Can
the girls go for a ride? I
promise they will be absolutely safe.”
The
girls cheered with enthusiasm. Madame
Proctor frowned, thought hard and finally nodded her head.
While
the girls were talking to her father, Betty quietly asked Madame Proctor
if under the special circumstances it would be possible for her to wear
the red dress. Madame
Proctor frowned and said she supposed so, but only this one time.
Betty had the feeling the old bat didn’t want to get into a
showdown with her daddy.
An
hour later, Madame Proctor, Mademoiselle Ucret, and all the girls from
the school arrived at Orly Air Field in a large bus that Mr. Graham had
chartered. Mr. Graham and
Betty had driven ahead and were waiting at the entrance to a huge
hangar, about one hundred meters away.
Inside
the hangar, a great silver dirigible floated.
Below it was a special enclosure with seating for 40 people.
The enclosure—a gondola—contained a kitchen, luxurious
chairs, and telescopes.
The
girls stared at the dirigible as they walked toward it.
It was doubtful that any one of them had ever seen such a marvelous
flying machine up close.
“Oh,
Daddy,” said Betty, holding onto his hand, “this is the best
birthday present I could ever have.
Thank you so much.”
“Glad
you came to France now?”
“Yes,
although I hate going to that school and being treated like a little
soldier. You have to do
everything one way.” She
waved to the girls, signaling for them to hurry up.
Despite
Madame Proctor’s admonitions to walk, the girls suddenly broke rank
and raced to Betty at the bottom of the gondola stairs.
Betty and the girls all bounded into the gondola.
Madame
Proctor, who was out of breath, said to Mr. Graham, “You are certain
it is safe for my girls?”
“Absolutely,”
he said, taking her and Mademoiselle Ucret’s arms to escort them into
the ship.
“And
what kind of lighter-than-air gas is this B-Z?” asked Madame Proctor.
“It’s
inert and safe. That’s
about all I can tell you until we receive all our patents,” said
Richard Graham.
“And
you invented it?” asked Madame Proctor.
“With
my partner, a man by the name of Rene Bartholdi.”
“Would
he be of the same family as Frederic Bartholdi who had so much to do
with the Eiffel Tower’s development?” asked Mademoiselle Ucret.
“Yes,”
said Richard Graham.
From
inside the gondola, Betty was watching through a window.
She saw Mademoiselle Ucret laugh at something her father said.
“They
look like they like each other,” said one of the other girls.
“I
think they do,” said Betty, not sure if she was pleased or not.
A
few minutes later, everyone was on board, the door closed and the steps
were taken away.
A
dozen men pulled the dirigible out of the hangar and there was much
commotion and dashing about on the field as orders were given.
Mooring ropes dropped to the ground and with a sudden
whoosh, the great silver machine started to rise.
The
girls all cheered as the dirigible climbed higher and higher.
The
Seine curled out in the distance and the girls took turns pointing out
the great sights of Paris. The
Eiffel Tower. Notre Dame. The
cathedrals. The Champs-Elysées.
The Arc de Triomphe. “Look,”
said Betty, “there’s our school.”
Sure
enough, far below, L’Ecole des Jeune Filles glided by.
Then
Richard Graham had all the girls sit in the big comfortable chairs
while a waiter served them tea. They
stared down at Paris as the glistening city seemed to float by.
Betty
snuggled up next to her father. She
was very proud of him.
“Penny
for your thoughts, Pumpkin,” said Richard Graham.
Betty
loved the way he said Pumpkin. “I
was thinking how lucky I am to have a daddy like you.”
“I’m
lucky to have a girl like you.”
“And
I’m also thinking how unlucky I am that we can’t spend the next
months together.”
“Pumpkin,
that’s exactly why you came to Paris.
Since I have to be in Europe we can see a lot of each other.
We’ll have lots more days like this.”
“Madame
Proctor said no more parties.”
“She
is not your father. I am.
And we will spend a great deal of time together.”
“Good.
I don’t like being away from you, Daddy.”
“I
understand,” said her father. “You
realize I would never think of going anywhere without letting you
know.”
“That
makes me feel good, Daddy. Of
course, I knew that’s how you felt.
Did Mother really like the school I’m going to?”
“Yes,
and it has a very good reputation.
She often talked about how much fun it was to meet other girls
her age there.”
“So
far it’s been a little bit dreadful,” said Betty.
“You
have to give it a chance,” said Richard Graham.
Betty
nodded. “Do you think you’ll ever marry again, Daddy?” she
asked, looking at Mademoiselle Ucret.
Betty thought Mademoiselle Ucret might make an okay mother.
But what would happen if her father married again and then her
real mother came back? What
a thing!
“I
don’t know,” said her father. “It
would be very hard to find anyone like your mother.
I still miss her a lot. And
before I thought of marriage we’d have to make sure about your
mother.” He couldn’t
bring himself to say she was dead.
“I
know what you mean,” said Betty.
“You know Madame Proctor said Mother was with the angels.”
“I’m
going to have to have a long chat with that woman,” said Richard
Graham. “Betty, I don’t
want you to discuss this with anyone, but there is a chance we may find
out what happened to your mother in the next little while.”
“M’gosh,
Daddy, we might find her?”
“I
didn’t say that, Princess, but don’t give up hope just yet.”
They
continued to drift higher and higher, as the captain of the air ship
guided the craft high above the Seine, following its winding course.
“We’ll
see and do things in Europe you’ll remember all your life.
France is quite a place, you know.”
“We’re
doing things now I never dreamed of,” said Betty.
“I bet every girl here wishes her father could be like you.”
“What
am I like?” asked her father.
“I
saw you kiss Mademoiselle Ucret before we left home.”
“She
gave me a kiss on the cheek. It
was friendship, that’s all,” said her father, the edges of his eyes
wrinkling with smile lines.
“You
think Mademoiselle Ucret is right when she says Paris is magic?” asked
Betty.
“Adults
use magic as a metaphor.”
“Metaphor,
hmm?”
“A
metaphor is a way of talking about one thing and meaning another.”
He nodded out the window. “Look
down there. Doesn’t Paris
have a magic quality?”
Below,
the city did seem dream-like as the sun glistened on the Seine.
People were only the size of ants.
They reminded Betty of the toy figures her father had given her
with the miniature circus. Betty
was thinking about what her father had said about not giving up hope.
“We
can say Paris is magic,” said her father.
“But we don’t really mean magic, we mean it’s a beautiful
city.”
“I
understand. Just like I understand that people in movies are not really
‘real’ people. They’re
just pretending. Like when
I was a little kid and pretended to have Peter Pumpkin Eater as a
friend.”
“I’m
glad you got over that.”
“If
I really believed in magic, I’d use it to bring Sally and Yvonne here
from back home. We were
going to do a whole bunch of fun things in Washington.
They have some grit in them.
Not like the kids at this school, doing everything one way.”
“I’m
sure you’ll find a friend or two as mischievous as you,” said her
father.
“I’m
not mischievous.”
“Really?”
“If
I did know how to use magic I’d find Mother.”
“So
would I.”
“You’ve
got something cooking, haven’t you?” asked Betty.
“For
now all I can tell you is that we came here for more than just
government meetings.” It
was one of the few times Betty had seen her father so concerned and it
worried her. “Pumpkin,”
he said, and she could tell he was choosing his words carefully,
“sometimes countries, like people, don’t agree.
Sometimes they argue—”
“—and
fight,” said Betty. “And
that’s how wars start.”
“Well,
there are some countries in Europe that are arguing now.”
“Germany
is going to go to war, right?” asked Betty.
She leaned back and watched Paris creep past in soft blurs and
then she felt the airship turn and they headed back to Orly.
A
chef walked into the midst of the girls with a huge cake with
marshmallow frosting and birthday candles on it.
Betty blew them out. The
girls squealed with delight and again sang “Happy Birthday” to
Betty.
By
the time the girls had finished the cake (they ate every
crumb—finishing at the same instant), the airship’s docking moor and
hangar were in sight at Orly.
Richard
Graham bent down and said to Betty, “You were talking about Germany
going to war. Where in the
world did you come up with that?”
“Remember
when Uncle Fred came to our house in Washington and you talked in our
back yard?” Fred Brown was not really her uncle but ever since Betty
could remember, she had always called him that.
In many ways he was better than a real uncle because he always
remembered to send her lovely presents at Christmas and on her birthday.
He worked for the government.
“I
bet you don’t know what we talked about in our back yard,” said her
father as the waiter arrived with wine and milk.
“Can
I taste your wine, Daddy?”
“No.”
“Kids
in Paris are allowed to drink wine.”
“Not
my kid,” said her father, pouring her some milk from a crystal carafe.
“I’m
not really a kid anymore. It
is my birthday.”
“Good
point and I suppose it won’t be long before you’re all grown up and
boys are coming to court.”
“I’m
not ready for boys and I don’t think they’re ready for me, Daddy.”
“Good,”
said Richard Graham. “But
getting back to Uncle Fred. Remember
what I said to him about Germany?”
“I
was in my playhouse and I honestly didn’t mean to listen.”
“Exactly
what did you hear, Betty?”
“Uncle
Fred said the Germans wanted the formula for your lighter-than-air gas
you invented—”
“Why
didn’t you tell me about this before?”
“I
thought you might think I was being too nosy, Daddy.
Please don’t be angry with me.”
“I’m
not. But, Pumpkin, I want
you to forget everything we said that day.”
Her father paused. “But before you forget it, do you remember anything
else?”
“You
both thought it would be a bad idea to give your secret to the Germans
because there might be a war and they would use their airships to hurt
people.”
“That’s
right,” said Richard Graham. “And
just for the record, you know I didn’t invent B-Z by myself.
I only invented half of it.
Rene Bartholdi invented the other half.”
“Right.
And you each make up a batch, then you combine it,” said Betty.
“Well, I bet your half of the formula is more important than
Bartholdi’s.”
“Not
really. We need each
other.”
“It
sounds like a funny relationship,” said Betty.
“Some
of the best relationships in the world are when each person has
something the other wants.”
One
of the girls pointed to the hangar below and screamed,
“It’s on fire! It’s
on fire!”
Betty
looked out of the window. Oh-my-gosh!
Flames spat out of the hangar below. Betty felt the dirigible shudder. She could sense the heat
from the fire below.
“Daddy,
are you sure this gas won’t explode?”
“I’m
pretty sure,” he said, “but it’s never been subjected to this much
heat.”
Betty
prayed that they would be able to climb high enough so that nothing bad
would happen. The flames
licked higher—the air ship started to fall toward the snapping red
flames that reached up at them! Chapter Three
The
girls screamed as the dirigible plunged toward the flames.
Betty could feel the searing heat all the way through the thick
glass windows. Out of the
corner of her eye she saw her Daddy stumble toward the cockpit door.
The sudden drop must have knocked out the pilot for he was
slumped against the wheel.
The
great silver airship was in free fall.
The girls were screaming and Madame Proctor had turned stone
white, gripping the arm of her chair.
Betty thought of calling out that real ladies only caress arm
chairs. But there was no
time for that.
Richard
Graham grabbed the controls and pulled back hard.
Betty rushed to help him.
The
airship continued sinking toward the earth.
The gondola swayed wildly back and forth and some of the ropes
holding it to the dirigible snapped.
“You
push on that control, I’ll pull on this one,” said Richard Graham.
Betty pushed with all of her might.
Propellers
turning slowly, the great sliver machine seemed to creak, then slowly,
ever so slowly moved out of the path of the flame and settled several
hundred meters from the hangar on a grass field.
A miracle.
Fire
engines and police cars were everywhere.
A group of mechanics managed to tether the dirigible to a water
truck. Richard Graham opened the gondola door as men pushed a
walkway in place. Mademoiselle
Ucret, Madame Proctor and the girls scrambled out of the dirigible onto
the ground. They were safe. Everyone was safe.
As
Richard Graham carried the pilot out of the gondola, the girls were
talking about how Betty and her father had saved their lives.
When the dirigible was turning, it struck an air pocket and
tossed the pilot backward. He
had bumped his head and lost consciousness.
The
hangar they had left a few hours earlier was a sheet of flames and
despite the efforts of firemen and airport officials the massive
building was soon only a shell of black twisted debris.
Everyone
from the school climbed onto a bus.
Richard Graham helped his daughter aboard.
“Get these girls out of here.
I’ll see you tonight, Betty.”
“What
happened, Daddy?”
“I
don’t know,” said her father.
“I
don’t want to leave you now, Daddy.”
“Please
go with Madame Proctor,” said her father as the last girl got on the
bus and he closed the door. The
bus roared off. From it,
Betty watched the smoke rising from the charred ruins of the airship
hangar.
For
the rest of the day the girls at the school treated Betty as though she
were very special. They were all impressed with the way Betty and her father had
saved the airship and of course, them.
Richard Graham was a hero and Betty was so proud of him.
Everyone was proud of Richard Graham.
Everyone
but Madame Proctor, who took Betty aside and said that her father was
not only irresponsible but had risked the lives of all of the children
plus the staff so he could show off his lighter-than-air gas.
Madame Proctor said that there would be absolutely no more
escapades such as dirigible excursions.
Mademoiselle
Ucret made certain that Betty was wearing a properly pressed school
uniform when her daddy picked her up for dinner.
Betty
wrinkled her nose and made a face at herself in the mirror.
“I look like a little soldier in this uniform.”
“No,
you don’t,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
“Your father will tell you, you look lovely—”
“You
like him, don’t you?” asked Betty.
“I’m
sure everyone likes your father,” said Mademoiselle Ucret.
Betty
adjusted her school hat and smiled coyly at Mademoiselle Ucret who was
watching her in the mirror. Betty
had noticed that a great many women found her father... attractive.
“I saw the way you and Daddy were talking in New York. And I saw you kiss him on his cheek.”
“Oh,
my goodness,” said Mademoiselle Ucret, blushing. “It was just a
harmless goodbye.”
“You
seemed very interested in him when he took your arm this morning,”
said Betty.
“He
was simply being courteous to Madame Proctor and myself.”
Betty
was going to disagree when through the window she saw a black Citroen
glide into the circular driveway below.
Betty turned, and raced out of the room, down the stairs and out
the enormous front door.
Betty
dashed across the cobblestone driveway and into the open rear door of
the limo. She hurled
herself into her father’s arms and hugged him before he could get out
of the car.
Richard
Graham gave Betty a warm squeeze, pulled the door shut and the limo sped
away.
“How
are you doing, Pumpkin?” asked her Daddy.
“Had
a wife and couldn’t keep her.”
And then she said in the same breath, “Daddy, was it sabotage?
Is that what destroyed the hangar?”
“The
authorities are investigating, but it does not look good,” said
Richard Graham. “We’ll
have a nice dinner and we’ll talk about other things.”
She
said nothing.
“Penny
for your thoughts, Pumpkin,” said Richard Graham.
“All
the other girls loved you for what you did this morning but the bat lady
said you couldn’t take me and the other girls on any more parties.”
“Bat
lady?” Her father
frowned.
“Madame
Proctor. She looks like a giant bat.”
“Pumpkin,
go easy on that imagination of yours.
She’s just concerned. Not
a bat. Although with that
outfit, she almost looks like she could flap across the sky.
Please, don’t tell her I said that.”
“I
know, but I still wouldn’t be surprised if under her black robe she
had big flappy wings. She
said she was going to stop you from taking us anywhere.”
“She’s
a strange bird, but she’s not going to stop us from seeing a lot of
each other.”
Betty
smiled. “So even though Madame Proctor doesn’t want us to have
adventures, we still will?”
“Absolutely,”
said Richard Graham. “I
promised you this morning we’d see and do things in Europe you’ll
remember all your life.”
Fifteen
minutes later their driver stopped in front of an old building at 15
Quai de la Tournelle. Located there was the oldest restaurant in Paris, Restaurant
de La Tour-d’Argent.
Andrew,
the driver, opened their door. Richard
Graham and Betty stepped out and hurried into the building.
Andrew told Richard Graham how sorry he was about Rene Bartholdi. A man in a tuxedo bowed to her father and took them upstairs to a table at the front of a room where a dozen diners were eating. |