THE GREATEST MAN IN THE WORLD ** This satiric prophecy was written in 1931, up to which dateour national heroes had been well behaved.
Looking back on it now, from the vantage point of 1940, one -can only
marvel that it hadn't happened long before it did. The United States
of America had been, ever since Kitty Hawk, blindly constructing the
elaborate petard by which, sooner or later, it must be hoist. It was
inevitable that some day there would come roaring out of the skies a
national hero of insufficient intelligence, background, and character
successfully to endure the mounting orgies of glory prepared for avi-
ators who stayed up a long time or flew .a great distance. Both Lind-
bergh and Byrd, fortunately for national decorum and international
amity, had been gentlemen; so had our other famous aviators. They
wore their laurels gracefully, withstood the awful weather of publicity,
married excellent women, usually of fine family, and quietly retired
to private life and the enjoyment of their varying fortunes. No unto-
ward incidents, on a worldwide scale, marred the perfection of their
conduct on the perilous heights of fame. The exception to the rule
was, however, bound to occur and it did, in July, 1935, when Jack
("Pal") Smurch, erstwhile mechanic's helper in a small garage in
Westfield, Iowa, flew a second-hand, single-motored Bresthaven
Dragon-Fly III monoplane all the way around the world, without stop-
ping.
Never before in the history of aviation had such a flight as Smurch's
ever been dreamed of. No one had even taken seriously the weird
floating auxiliary gas tanks, invention of the mad New Hampshire
professor of astronomy. Dr. Charles Lewis Gresham, upon which
Smurch placed full reliance. When the garage worker, a slightly built,
surly, unprepossessing young man of twenty-two, appeared at Roose-
velt Field early in July, 1933, slowly chewing a great quid of scrap
tobacco, and announced "Nobody ain't seen no flyin' yet," the news-
papers touched briefly and satirically upon his projected twenty-five-
thousand-mile flight. Aeronautical and automotive experts dismissed
the idea curtly, implying that it was a hoax, a publicity stunt. The
rusty, battered, second-hand plane wouldn't go. The Gresham auxiliary
tanks wouldn't work. It was simply a cheap joke.
Smurch, however, after calling on a girl in Brooklyn who worked in
the flap-folding department of a large paper-box factory, a girl whom
he later described as his "sweet patootie," climbed nonchalantly into
his ridiculous plane at dawn of the memorable seventh of July, 1935
spit a curve of tobacco juice into the still air, and took off, carrying
with him only a gallon of bootleg gin and six pounds-of salami.
When the garage boy thundered out over the ocean the papers were
forced to record, in all seriousness, that a mad, 'unknown young man -
his name was variously misspelled - had actually set out upon a prepos-
terous attempt to span the world in a rickety, one-engined contraption,
trusting to the long-distance refuelling device of a crazy schoolmaster.
When, nine days later, without having stopped once, the tiny plane
appeared above San Francisco Bay, headed for New York, spluttering
and choking, to be sure, but still magnificently and miraculously aloft,
the headlines, which long since had crowded everything else off the
front page - even the shooting of the Governor of Illinois by the
Capone gang - swelled to unprecedented size, and the news stories
began to run to twenty-five and thirty columns. It was noticeable,
however, that the accounts of the epoch-making flight touched rather
lightly upon the aviator himself. This was not because facts about the
hero as a man were too meagre, but because they were too complete.
Reporters, who had been rushed out to Iowa when Smurch's plane
was first sighted over the little French coast town of Serly-le-Mer,
to dig up the story of the great man's life, had promptly discovered
that the story of his life could not be printed. His mother, a sullen
short-order cook in a shack restaurant on the edge of a tourists'
camping ground near Westfield, met all inquiries as to her son with
an angry "Ah, the hell with him; I hope he drowns." His father
appeared to be in jail somewhere for stealing spotlights and laprobes
from tourists' automobiles; his young brother, a weak minded lad,
had but recently escaped from the Preston, Iowa, Reformatory and
was already wanted in several Western towns for the theft of money-
order blanks from post offices. These alarming discoveries were still
piling up at the very time that Pal Smurch, the greatest hero of the
twentieth century, blear-eyed, dead for sleep, half-starved, was piloting
his crazy junk heap high above the region in which the lamentable
story of his private life was being unearthed, headed for New York
and a greater glory than any man of his time had ever known.
The necessity for printing some account in the papers of the young
man's career and personality had led to a remarkable predicament.
It was of course impossible to reveal the facts, for a tremendous popular
feeling in favor of the young hero had sprung up, like a grass fire,
when he was halfway across Europe on his flight around the globe.
He was, therefore, described as a modest chap, taciturn, blond, pop-
ular with his friends, popular with girls. The only available snapshot
of Smurch, taken at the wheel of a phony automobile in a cheap
photo studio at an amusement park, was touched up so that the little
vulgarian looked quite handsome. His twisted leer was smoothed
into a pleasant smile. The truth was, in this way, kept from the
youth's ecstatic compatriots; they did not dream that the Smurch
family was despised and feared by its neighbors in the obscure Iowa
town, nor that the hero himself, -because of numerous unsavory ex-
ploits, had come to be regarded in Westfield as a nuisance and a
menace. He had, the reporters discovered, once knifed the principal
of his high school - not mortally, to be sure, but he had knifed him;
and on another occasion, surprised in the act of stealing an altarcloth
from a church, he had hashed the sacristan over the head with a pot
of Easter lilies; for each of these offences he had served a sentence
in the reformatory.
Inwardly, the authorities, both in New York and in Washington,
prayed that an understanding Providence might, however awful such
a thing seemed, bring disaster to the rusty, battered plane and its
illustrious pilot, whose unheard-of flight had aroused the civilized
world to hosannas of hysterical praise. The authorities were con-
vinced that the character of the renowned aviator was such that the
limelight of adulation was bound to reveal him, 'to all the world,
as a congenital hooligan mentally and morally unequipped to cope
with his own prodigious fame. "I trust," said the Secretary of State,
at one of many secret Cabinet meetings called to consider the national
dilemma, "I trust that his mother's prayer will be answered," by
which he referred to Mrs. Emma Smurch's wish that her son might
be drowned. It was, however, too late for that - Smurch had leaped
the Atlantic and then the Pacific as if they were millponds. At three
minutes after two o'clock on the afternoon of July 17, 1935 the
garage boy brought his idiotic plane into 'Roosevelt Field for a perfect
three-point landing.
It had, of course, been out of the question to arrange a modest little
reception for the greatest flier in the history of the world. He was
received at Roosevelt Field with such elaborate and pretentious cere-
monies as rocked the world. Fortunately, however, the worn and
spent hero promptly swooned, had to be removed bodily from his
plane, and was spirited from the field without having opened his
mouth once. Thus he did not jeopardize the dignity of this first
reception, a reception illumined by the presence of the Secretaries
of War and the Navy, Mayor Michael J. Moriarity of New York,
the Premier of Canada, Governors Fanniman, Groves, McFeely,
and Critchfield, and a brilliant array of European diplomats. Smurch
did not, in fact, come to in time to take part in the gigantic hullabaloo
arranged at City Hall for the next day. He was rushed to a secluded
nursing home and confined in bed. It was nine days before he was
able to get up, or to be more exact, before he was permitted to get
up. Meanwhile the greatest minds in the country, in solemn assembly,
had arranged a secret conference of city, state, and government officials,
which Smurch was to attend for the purpose of being instructed in the
ethics and behavior of heroism.
On the day that the little mechanic was finally allowed to get up
and dress and, for the first time in two weeks, took a great chew of
tobacco, he was permitted to receive the newspapermen - this by way
of testing him out. Smurch did not wait for questions. "Youse guys,"
he said - and the Times man winced - "youse guys can tell the cock-
eyed world dat I put it over on Lindbergh, see? Yeh - an' made an
ass o' them two frogs." The "two frogs" was a reference to a pair
of gallant French fliers who, in attempting a flight only halfway
round the world, had, two weeks before, unhappily been lost at sea.
The Times man was bold enough, at this point, to sketch out for
Smurch the accepted formula for interviews in cases of this ' kind;
he explained that there should be no arrogant statements belittling
the achievements of other heroes, particularly heroes of foreign nations.
"Ah, the hell with that," said Smurch. "I did it, see? I did it, an'
I'm talkin' about it." And he did talk about it.
None of this extraordinary interview was, of course, printed. On
the contrary, the newspapers, already under the disciplined direction
of a secret directorate created for the occasion and composed of states-
men and editors, gave out to a panting and restless world that "Jacky,"
as he had been arbitrarily nicknamed, would consent to say only
that he was very happy and that anyone could have done what he
did. "My achievement has been, I fear, slightly exaggerated," the
Times man's article had him protest, with a modest smile. These
newspaper stories were kept from the hero, a restriction which did
not serve to abate the rising malevolence of his temper. The situation
was, indeed, extremely grave, for Pal Smurch was, as he kept in-
sisting, "rarin' to go." He could not much longer be kept from a
nation clamorous to lionize him. It was the most desperate crisis the
United States of America had faced since the sinking of the Lusitania.
On the afternoon of the twenty-seventh of July, Smurch was spirited
away to a conference-room in which were gathered mayors, governors,
government officials, behaviorist psychologists, and editors. He gave
them each a limp, moist paw and a brief unlovely grin. "Hah ya?"
he said. When Smurch was seated, the Mayor of New York arose
and, with obvious pessimism, attempted to explain what he must
say and how he must act when presented to the world, ending his
talk with a high tribute to the hero's courage and integrity. The
Mayor was followed by Governor Fanniman of New York, who, after
a touching declaration of faith, introduced Cameron Spottiswood,
Second Secretary of the American Embassy in Paris, the gentleman
selected to coach Smurch in the amenities of public ceremonies. Sitting
in a chair, with a soiled yellow tie in his hand and his shirt open
at the throat, unshaved, smoking a rolled cigarette, Jack Smurch
listened with a leer on his lips. "I get ya, I get ya," he cut in,
nastily. "Ya want me to ack like a softy, hub? Ya want me to ack like
that -- baby-face Lindbergh, hub? Well, nuts to that, see?" Every-
one took in his breath sharply; it was a sigh and a hiss. "Mr. Lind-
bergh," began a United States Senator, purple with rage, "and Mr.
Byrd - " Smurch) who was paring his nails with a jackknife, cut in
again. "Byrd!" he exclaimed. "Aw fa God's sake, dat big - " Somebody
shut off his blasphemies with a sharp word. A newcomer had entered
the room. Everyone stood up, except Smurch, who, still busy with his
nails, did not even glance up. "Mr. Smurch," said someone, sternly,
"the President of the United States!" It had been thought that the
presence of the Chief Executive might have a chastening effect upon
the young hero, and the former had been, thanks to the remarkable
cooperation of the press, secretly brought to the obscure conference-
room.
A great, painful silence fell. Smurch looked up, waved a hand at
the President. "How ya comin'?" he asked, and began rolling a fresh
cigarette. The silence deepened. Someone coughed in a strained way.
"Geez, it's hot, ain't it?" said Smurch. He loosened two more shirt
buttons, revealing a hairy chest and the tattooed word "Sadie" en-
closed in a stencilled heart. The great and important men in the
room, faced by the most serious crisis in recent American history,
exchanged worried frowns. Nobody seemed to know how to proceed.
"Come awn, come awn," said Smurch. "Let's get the hell out of here!
When do I start cuttin' in on de parties, hub? And what's they
goin' to be in it?" He rubbed a thumb and forefinger together mean-
ingly. "Money!" exclaimed a state senator, shocked, pale. "Ych, money,"
said Pal, flipping his cigarette out of a window. "An' big money."
He began rolling a fresh cigarette. "Big money," he repeated, frown-
ing over the rice paper. He tilled back in his chair, and leered at each
gentleman, separately, the leer of an animal that knows its power,
the leer of a leopard loose in a bird-and-dog shop. "Aw fa God's
sake, let's get some place where it's cooler," he said. "I been cooped
up plenty for three weeks!"
Smurch stood up and walked over to an open- window, where he
stood staring down into the street, nine floors below. The faint shouting
of newsboys floated up to him. He made out his name. "Hot dog!"
he cried, grinning, ecstatic. He leaned out over the sill. "You tell 'cm,
babies!" he shouted down. "Hot diggity dog!" In the? tense little
knot of men standing behind him, a quick, mad impulse flared up.
An unspoken word of appeal, of command, seemed to ring through
the room. Yet it was deadly silent. Charles K. L. Brand, secretary to
the Mayor of New York City, happened to be standing nearest
Smurch; he looked inquiringly at the President of the United States.
The President, pale, grim, nodded shortly. Brand, a tall, powerfully
built man, once a tackle at Rutgers, stepped forward, seized the greatest
man in the world by his left shoulder and the seat of his pants, and
pushed him out the window.
"My God, he's fallen out the window!" cried a quick-witted editor.
"Get me out of here I" cried the President. Several men sprang to
his side and he was hurriedly escorted out of a door toward a side-
entrance of the building. The editor of the Associated Press took
charge, being used to such things. Crisply he ordered certain men to
leave, others to stay; quickly he outlined a story which all the papers
were to agree on, sent two men to the street to handle that end of
the tragedy, commanded a Senator to sob and two Congressmen to
go to pieces nervously. In a word, he skillfully set the stage for the
gigantic task that was to follow, the task of breaking to a grief-
stricken world the sad story of the untimely, accidental death of
its most illustrious and spectacular figure.
The funeral was, as you know, the most elaborate, the finest, the
solemnest, and the saddest ever held in the United States of America.
The monument in Arlington Cemetery, with its clean white shaft
of marble and the simple device of a tiny plane carved on its base,
is a place for pilgrims, in deep reverence, to visit. The nations of the
world paid lofty tributes to little Jacky Smurch, America's greatest
hero. At a given hour there were two minutes of silence throughout
the nation. Even the inhabitants of the small, bewildered town of
Westfield, Iowa, observed this touching ceremony; agents of the
Department of Justice saw to that. One of them was especially assigned
to stand grimly in the doorway of a little shack restaurant on the
edge of the tourists' camping ground just outside the town. There,
under- his stern scrutiny, Mrs. Emma Smurch bowed her head above
two hamburger steaks sizzling on her grill - bowed her head and
turned away, so that the Secret Service man could not see the twisted,
strangely familiar, leer on her lips.
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