Part 4 (1/2)

”Oh, no,” he replied, ”nothing of the sort; we are simply bluffing.

There are a number of expeditions going out to-day. We must make the appearance of a great invasion.”

”How many planes are there all told?”

Komoru smiled. ”Not so many,” he said.

”But how many?” persisted Ethel.

”Fifteen thousand, maybe,” Komoru replied.

”To invade a country with nearly two hundred million inhabitants! We will surely all be killed.”

Komoru smiled.

”By sheer force of numbers,” explained Ethel.

”Wait and see,” replied her enigmatical companion.

For hours the little aerial squadron sailed through the balmy air of Texas. They pa.s.sed over Austin and Waco and Fort Worth and Dallas.

They turned eastward and pa.s.sed over Texarkana, and thence south to impress the people of Shreveport.

The excitement evinced in the towns increased as the news of their flight was wired ahead. They were frequently shot at by groups of excited citizens or occasional companies of militia, but at the height and speed at which they were flying the bullets went wide.

One plane was lost. Something must have snapped. It doubled up and went tumbling downward like a wounded pigeon.

The sun was dropping toward the western horizon. The invaders had been flying for ten hours. They had been without food or sleep for thirty-six hours. Save for the brief relaxation of the morning, Komoru had not taken his hands from the steering wheel, nor his foot from the engine control since the previous sunset in the Bay of Tehauntepec.

[Ill.u.s.tration: The two women of Aryan blood worked together in the cotton field side by side with the Orientals.]

As they pa.s.sed near other planes, Ethel noted that in many cases the women were driving. Notwithstanding her dislike for him, the girl found herself wis.h.i.+ng that she could relieve Komoru.

She pondered over his ”wait and see” and began to discern a new possibility in an invasion of thirty thousand j.a.panese. She tried to imagine one of the society favorites of her Chicago girlhood sitting in front of her driving that plane. She remembered distinctly that aeroplane racing was a part of the diversion of such men and that five or six hours of driving was considered quite a feat.

The more she considered the man before her, the more she marvelled at his powers. She confessed he interested her; she wondered why she disliked him. The only answer that seemed acceptable was that he was ”not her kind.”

Towards dusk, they hove in sight of the derricks of the Beaumont oil region. The leader with the red plane descended in a large meadow.

Komoru was well to the front and brought his plane to earth a few meters from the red wings. The man in the flag plane who had that day led them over a thousand miles and a score of cities got out and stretched himself. With an exclamation of joyful surprise, Ethel recognized that he was Professor Os.h.i.+ma.

The j.a.panese camped where they were for the night. The wings of the planes were guyed to the ground with cordage and little steel stakes. Beneath such improvised tents the tired aerial cavalrymen rolled themselves in their sleeping blankets and for twelve hours the camp was as quiet as a graveyard.

That day had been a great day in history; it was the first consequential aerial invasion that the world had ever known. While the arrivals of the morning had been circling in fear-inspiring flights above the neighboring states, the later starters from the j.a.panese squadron had continued to arrive in the oil regions. Like migrating birds, they settled down over the rich fields and grazing lands of that wonderful strip of flat, black-soiled prairie that stretches westward from the south center of Louisiana until it emerges into the great semi-arid cattle plains of southern Texas.

The region, though one of the richest in the United States, was but spa.r.s.ely settled. Save for the few thousand white laborers who were supported by the oil industry, the whole resident population were negroes who were worked under imported white foremen in the rice and truck lands of the region.

The negroes were panic stricken by the j.a.panese invasion and made practically no resistance. In two or three days, the country for a forty-mile radius around Beaumont was cleared of Americans and practically the entire oil region of Texas with its vast storage tanks at Port Arthur on the Sabine River, were in the hands of the invaders.

There were not ten regiments of American soldiers within five hundred miles. The great ma.s.s of the American army had been rushed weeks before to southern California, and the remnant left in the Gulf region had more recently been hastened to Panama. In fact, the American squadron had steamed into Colon on the very morning the j.a.panese alighted on Texas soil.

On the second morning of their arrival, j.a.panese officials circling above the captured region, roughly allotted the land to Captains under whose leaders.h.i.+p were a hundred planes each. The captains then a.s.signed each couple places to stake their plane, which were located a hundred meters apart, allowing to each about two and a half acres of land.