1
The Adirondack Mountains, Upper New York State
1909
MRS. JOSEPHINE JOSEPHS FROST—a petite,
rosy-cheeked young woman with a tomboy’s pert manner, a farm girl’s
strong hands, and lively hazel eyes—flew her Celere Twin Pusher
biplane eight hundred feet above the dark forested hills of her
husband’s Adirondack estate. Driving in the open air, in a low
wicker chair in front, she was bundled against the cold headwind in
padded coat and jodhpurs, a leather helmet and wool scarf, gloves,
goggles, and boots. Her motor drummed a steady tune behind her,
syncopated by the ragtime clatter of the drive chains spinning her
propellers.
Her flying machine was a light framework of wood
and bamboo braced with wire and covered with fabric. The entire
contraption weighed less than a thousand pounds and was stronger
than it looked. But it was not as strong as the violent updrafts
that cliffs and ravines bounced into the atmosphere. Rushing
columns of air would roll her over if she let them. Holes in the
sky would swallow her whole.
A gust of wind snuck up behind and snatched the air
that held her wings.
The biplane dropped like an anvil.
Josephine’s exuberant grin leaped ear to ear.
She dipped her elevator. The machine pitched
downward, which made it go faster, and Josephine felt the air lift
her back onto an even keel.
“Good girl, Elsie!”
Flying machines stayed up by pushing air down. She
had figured that out the first time she left the ground. Air was
strong. Speed made it stronger. And the better the machine, the
more it wanted to fly. This “Elsie” was her third, but
definitely not her last.
People called her brave for flying, but she didn’t
think of herself that way. She just felt completely at home in the
air, more at home than on the ground where things didn’t always
work out the way she hoped. Up here, she always knew what to do.
Even better, she knew what would happen when she did it.
Her eyes were everywhere: glinting ahead at the
blue mountains on the horizon, glancing up repeatedly at the
aneroid barometer that she had hung from the upper wing to tell her
her altitude, down at the motor’s oil pressure gauge between her
legs, and searching the ground for breaks in the forest big enough
to alight on if her motor suddenly quit. She had sewn a ladies’
pendant watch to her sleeve to time how much gasoline she had left.
The map case, and compass ordinarily strapped to her knee, were
back at the house. Born in these mountains, she steered by lakes,
railroad tracks, and the North River.
She saw its dark gorge ahead, so deep and sheer
that it looked like an angry giant had split the mountain with an
ax. The river gleamed at the bottom. A break in the trees beside
the gorge revealed a golden meadow, the first sizable opening she
had seen since she had taken to the air.
She spied a tiny splash of red, like a flicker’s
red crest.
It was a hunting hat worn by Marco Celere, the
Italian inventor who built her flying machines. Marco was perched
on the cliff, rifle slung over his back, scanning for bear through
field glasses. Across the meadow, at the edge of the trees, she saw
the hulking silhouette of her husband.
Harry Frost raised his rifle and aimed it at
Marco.
Josephine heard the shot, louder than the motor and
drive chains clattering behind her.
HARRY FROST HAD A WEIRD FEELING he had missed the
Italian.
He was a seasoned big-game hunter. Since retiring
rich, he had shot elk and bighorn sheep in Montana, lion in South
Africa, and elephants in Rhodesia, and he could have sworn the
bullet had gone high. But there was his wife’s swarthy boyfriend
squirming on the edge of the cliff, hit but not dead.
Frost levered a fresh .45-70 shell into his Marlin
1895 and found him in the scope. He hated the sight of Marco
Celere—oily black hair brilliantined slick to his skull, high
forehead like a vaudeville Julius Caesar, thick eyebrows, deep-set
dark eyes, waxed mustache curled at the tips like pigs’ tails—and
he was taking great pleasure in smoothly squeezing the trigger when
suddenly a strange noise clattered in his head. It sounded like the
threshing machine at the farm at the Matawan Asylum for the
Criminally Insane, where his enemies had locked him up for shooting
his chauffeur at the country club.
The bughouse had been worse than the most monstrous
orphanage in his memory. Powerful politicians and high-priced
lawyers claimed credit for springing him. But it was only right to
let him out. The chauffeur had been romancing his first wife.
Unbelievably, it was happening again with his new
bride. He could see it written on their faces every time Josephine
hit him up for more dough to pay for Marco’s inventions. Now she
was begging him to buy the Italian’s latest flying machine back
from his creditors so she could win the Atlantic–Pacific
Cross-Country Air Race and claim the fifty-thousand-dollar Whiteway
Cup.
Wouldn’t that be swell? Winning the biggest air
race in the world would make his aviatrix wife and her inventor
boyfriend famous. Preston Whiteway—the snoot-in-the-air,
born-with-a-silver-spoon-in-his-mouth San Francisco newspaper
publisher who was sponsoring the race—would make them stars, and
sell fifty million newspapers in the process. The chump husband
would be famous, too—a famously cuckolded, fat old rich husband—the
laughingstock of all who despised him.
Rich he was, one of the richest men in America,
every damned dollar earned himself. But Harry Frost wasn’t old yet.
A little over forty wasn’t that old. And anyone who said he was
more fat than muscle hadn’t seen him kill a horse with a single
punch—a trick he had performed famously in his youth and lately had
made a birthday ritual.
Unlike the treachery with the chauffeur, this time
they wouldn’t catch him. No more flying off the handle. He had
planned this one down to the last detail. Savoring revenge, going
about it like a business, he had resurrected his formidable talents
for management and deception to lure the unsuspecting Celere on a
bear hunt. Bears couldn’t talk. There’d be no witnesses deep in the
North Country woods.
Convinced he had shot higher than he meant to,
Frost aimed low and fired again.

JOSEPHINE SAW CELERE whiplashed from the cliff by
the force of the bullet.
“Marco!”
THE CLATTER IN HARRY FROST’S SKULL GREW LOUD.
Still peering down the barrel of his rifle at the wonderful empty
space where Marco Celere had been, he suddenly realized that the
noise was not a memory of the Matawan farm but real as the
405-grain lead bullet that had just blown the bride thief into the
gorge. He looked up. Josephine was flying over him in her damned
biplane. She had seen him shoot her aeroplane inventor.
Frost had three cartridges left in his
magazine.
He raised the rifle.
But he didn’t want to kill her. She’d stay
with him now that Marco was out of the way. But she saw him kill
Marco. They would lock him back in the bughouse. Second time around
he’d never get out. That wouldn’t be fair. He wasn’t the betrayer.
She was.
Frost whipped the rifle skyward and fired
twice.
He misjudged her speed. At least one shot passed
behind her. With only a single bullet left, he gathered his wits,
settled his nerves, and led the biplane like a pheasant.
Bull’s-eye!
He had scored a hit, for sure. Her flying machine
lurched into a wide, clumsy turn. He waited for it to fall. But it
kept turning, wobbling back in the direction of the camp. It was
too high to hit with a pistol, but Frost jerked one from his belt
anyway. Bracing the barrel on his powerful forearm, he fired until
it was empty. Eyes bugging with rage, he flicked a snub-nosed
derringer out of his sleeve. He emptied its two shots futilely in
her direction and pawed at his hunting knife, to cut her heart out
when she smashed into the trees.
The clatter grew fainter and fainter and fainter,
and Harry Frost could do nothing but watch helplessly as his
treacherous wife disappeared beyond the tree line and escaped his
righteous wrath.
At least he had blown her lover into the
gorge.
He lumbered across the meadow, hoping for a glimpse
of Celere’s body smashed on the river rocks. But halfway to the rim
of the cliff, he stopped dead, poleaxed by a horrible realization.
He had to run before they locked him back in the bughouse.
JOSEPHINE FOUGHT WITH ALL HER SKILL to guide her
machine safely to the ground.
Harry had hit it twice. One bullet had nicked the
two-gallon gasoline tank behind her. The second was worse. It had
jammed the link between her control lever and the wire that twisted
the shape of her wings. Unable to warp them to bank the machine
into a turn, she was dependent entirely on its rudder. But trying
to turn without banking was like flying a glider before the Wright
brothers invented wing warping—god-awful awkward and likely to
slide her sideways into a deadly flat spin.
Lips tight, she worked the rudder like a surgeon’s
scalpel, taking measured slices of the wind. Her mother, a frantic
woman unable to cope with the simplest task, used to accuse her of
having “ice water in her veins.” But wasn’t ice water handy on a
crippled flying machine, Mother? Slowly, she brought the biplane
back on course.
When the wind gusted from behind, she smelled
gasoline. She looked for the source and saw it dripping from the
fuel tank. Harry’s bullet had punctured it.
Which would happen first? she wondered coolly.
Would the gasoline all leak out and stop her motor before she could
alight on Harry’s lawn? Or would sparks from the engine and chains
ignite the gasoline? Fire was deadly on a flying machine. The
varnish of nitrate fabric dope that stiffened and sealed the cotton
canvas covering her wings was as flammable as flash powder.
The only field nearer was the meadow. But if she
alighted there, Harry would kill her. She had no choice. She had to
land the machine at the camp, if she had enough gasoline to reach
it.
“Come on, Elsie. Take us home.”
The forest inched slowly beneath her. Updrafts
buffeted her wings and rolled the airship. Unable to warp them to
counteract, she tried to keep the machine on an even keel using her
elevators and rudder.
At last she saw the lake beside Harry’s camp.
Just as she got close enough to see the main house
and the dairy barns, her motor sputtered on the last fumes of
gasoline. The propellers stopped turning. The pusher biplane went
silent but for the wind whispering through the wire stays.
She had to volplane—to glide—all the way to the
lawn.
But the propellers, which had been pushing her,
were dragging in the air. They held her back, reducing her speed.
In moments she would be gliding too slowly to stay aloft.
She reached behind her and jerked the cable that
opened the engine’s compression valve so the pistons would move
freely and allow the propellers to spin. The difference was
immediate. The aeroplane felt lighter, more like a glider.
Now she could see the dairy pasture. Speckled with
cows and crisscrossed with fences, it offered no room to come down
safely. There was the house, an elaborate log mansion, and behind
it the sloping lawn of mowed grass from which she had earlier taken
to the air. But first she had to clear the house, and she was
dropping fast. She threaded a path between the tall chimneys,
skimmed the roof, and then coaxed the rudder to turn into the wind,
taking great care not to slide into a spin.
Eight feet above the grass, she saw that she was
moving too fast. Air squeezed between the wings and the ground had
the effect of holding her up. The biplane was refusing to stop
flying. Ahead loomed a wall of trees.
The gasoline that had soaked into the varnished
canvas ignited in a sheet of orange flame.
Trailing fire, unable to slant her wings sharply to
slow enough to touch her wheels to the grass, Josephine reached
back and jerked the compression cable. Closing the valve locked the
eight-foot propellers. They grabbed the air like two fists, and her
wheels and skids banged hard on the grass.
The burning biplane slid for fifty yards. As it
slowed, the fire spread, scattering flame. When she felt it singe
the back of her helmet, Josephine jumped. She hit the ground and
threw herself flat to let the machine roll past, then she sprang to
her feet and ran for her life as flames engulfed it.
Harry’s butler came running. He was trailed by the
gardener, the cook, and Harry’s bodyguards.
“Mrs. Frost! Are you all right?”
Josephine’s eyes locked on the pillar of flame and
smoke. Marco’s beautiful machine was burning like a funeral pyre.
Poor Marco. The steadiness that had gotten her through the ordeal
was dissolving, and she felt her lips quiver. The fire looked like
it was underwater. She realized that she was shaking and crying,
and that tears were filling her eyes. She couldn’t tell if she was
crying for Marco or herself.
“Mrs. Frost!” the butler repeated. “Are you all
right?”
It was the closest by far she had ever come to
getting killed in an aeroplane.
She tried to pull her handkerchief from her sleeve.
She couldn’t get it out. She had to take her glove off. When she
did, she saw her skin was dead white, as if her blood had gone into
hiding. Everything was different. She now knew what it felt like to
be afraid.
“Mrs. Frost?”
They were all staring at her. Like she had cheated
death or was standing among them like a ghost.
“I’m O.K.”
“May I do anything to help, Mrs. Frost?”
Her brain was whirling. She had to do something.
She pressed her handkerchief to her face. A thousand men and women
had learned to fly since Wilbur Wright won the Michelin Cup in
France, and until this moment Josephine Josephs Frost had never
doubted that she could drive an aeroplane just as fast and as far
as any of them. Now every time she climbed onto a flying machine
she would have to be brave. Well, it still beat being stuck on the
ground.
She mopped her cheeks and blew her nose.
“Yes,” she said. “Drive into town, please, and tell
Constable Hodge that Mr. Frost just shot Mr. Celere.”
The butler gasped, “What?”
She glanced at him sharply. How surprised could he
be that her violent husband had killed someone? Again.
“Are you quite sure of that, Mrs. Frost?”
“Am I quite sure?” she echoed. “Yes, I saw it
happen with my own eyes.”
The butler’s dubious expression was a chilling
reminder that it was Harry who paid his salary, Harry who paid for
everything, and Mrs. Frost was now a woman alone with no one to
count on but herself.
The bodyguards didn’t look surprised. Their long
faces said, There goes our meal ticket. The butler, too, was
already getting over it, asking as routinely as if she had just
ordered a glass of iced tea, “Will there be anything else, Mrs.
Frost?”
“Please do what I asked,” she said in a voice with
a slight tremor as she stared at the fire. “Tell the constable my
husband killed Mr. Celere.”
“Yes, madam,” he replied in a blank tone.
Josephine turned her back on the fire. Her hazel
eyes were wont to shift toward green or gray. She did not have to
look in a mirror to know that right now they reflected a colorless
fear. She was alone and she was vulnerable. With Marco Celere dead
and her husband an insane killer, she had no one to turn to. Then
the thought of Preston Whiteway flowed into her mind.
Yes, that’s who would protect her.
“One more thing,” she said to the butler as he
started to walk away. “Send a telegram to Mr. Preston Whiteway at
the San Francisco Inquirer. Say that I will visit him next
week.”