though a
cyclone had suddenly descended upon the little shop, or a
42-centimeter shell had burst within. The exultant chant of the lone
occupant of the building suddenly ceased. But its place was instantly
taken by another voice as Henry's mother suddenly appeared on the
back porch of the house, looking anxiously toward the workshop.
"Henry! Henry!" came her anxious call.
"Yes, mother," replied Henry, disentangling himself from the wreckage,
and thrusting his head out of the shop door. "What is it?"
"Whatever are you doing?" demanded Mrs. Harper. "I thought the shop
had tumbled in."
"It's only some things I knocked down," laughed Henry. Then his
enthusiasm bubbled over again. "Just think, mother," he cried. "We're
going! We're going! Captain Hardy has sent for us!"
Mrs. Harper looked at her son anxiously. His words meant absolutely
nothing to her, for Henry had not told any one of his letter to his
captain. Suddenly she feared that perhaps something had fallen on
Henry's head and momentarily unbalanced him.
"Going?" she said. "Where? What are you talking about?"
"We're going to New York City to help catch German spies," cried
Henry, beginning to dance about again in his excitement. "Isn't it bully!
And we'll catch 'em, too, just as we did the dynamiters."
"I guess you're going crazy," said his mother. Then as Henry continued
his demonstration, his mother said sharply, "You stop right there,
Henry Harper, and tell me what all this nonsense means about German
spies and New York and Captain Hardy. You know very well that
Captain Hardy is in Washington with the army."
Henry at once calmed down and took a grip on himself. "Yes, mother,"
he said. "Captain Hardy was in Washington, but he is going to New
York----"
"How do you know?" interrupted Mrs. Harper impatiently.
"He just telegraphed me----"
"Telegraphed you!" said the incredulous Mrs. Harper. "What would
Captain Hardy be telegraphing to a youngster like you for, I'd like to
know."
"In answer to my letter----" began Henry, but again his mother cut him
short.
"Your letter?" she said. "What letter? I didn't know that you had written
him a letter."
"You see, mother," said Henry patiently, "when I read in the
newspapers the other day that the Germans had found out about the
sailing of Pershing's men, and had sent submarines to lay in wait for
them out in the ocean, the idea came to me that perhaps the wireless
patrol could help to discover----"
"Henry Harper, I hope you never had the impudence to suggest that you
youngsters could----"
"I did, mother. But I don't think it was impudence. I wrote to Dr. Hardy
and asked if the wireless patrol couldn't help catch the spies who are
sending news to Germany."
"Well of all things!" ejaculated Mrs. Harper. "What will you infants do
next? Offer to relieve the President of his job?"
"Well, we did catch the dynamiters at the Elk City reservoir," protested
Henry defensively. "And we did it after the state police and the national
guards had failed. I don't see why we can't help catch German spies in
New York just as well as in Pennsylvania."
"Humph!" said Mrs. Harper. "It's a lot of help you youngsters would be
in catching real spies. You just happened to stumble on these
dynamiters and now you think you can do thing. But that's the way with
boys. They're all alike."
"But, mother," protested Henry, "boys can be useful in lots of ways.
And just because they are boys nobody thinks of suspecting them."
"There's one place where a certain boy I know could be of a lot of use
and never be suspected," agreed Mrs. Harper. "And that's at that
woodpile back of the shed."
"Please don't interrupt me, mother," said Henry. "You asked me to tell
you about our trip to New York."
"About your dream of a trip to New York," corrected Mrs. Harper.
"You don't for one minute think you are really going to New York, do
you?"
"Indeed we are," replied Henry. "And this is how it came about. When I
read of the leak in the navy's secrets and the attempts of the Germans to
torpedo our transports, I wrote to Captain Hardy about it. I told him we
could be just as useful catching German spies in New York as we were
in Pennsylvania. He answered and said he didn't think we could be of
any use, but----"
"Showed his sense," interrupted Mrs. Harper.
"But he said," continued Henry, paying no attention to the interruption,
"that he would mention the matter to the Chief of the Radio Service and
let me know if anything came of it. And something has come of it,
mother. Just think! We're to go. Here's the telegram itself."
Mrs. Harper took the
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