Ruth put her hands on her hips and rolled her eyes at George. “It’s a telegram, Haldeman!” she said, then poked him in the arm. “If they really don’t want us to go, they’d better come down here and tie something heavy to those wings, because it’s going to take more than a telegram from some silly old sailor to stop me from taking off!”

  George shrugged and handed it back to Ruth, who promptly crumpled it up and tossed it across the hangar into a wastebasket.

  It wasn’t until it landed square in the center that Ruth realized that the telegram was not from Lyle, and it felt like a bite. He wasn’t coming—had never intended to.

  * * *

  The following morning George held the weather report in his hand.

  When Ruth arrived at the hangar with her family in tow minutes later, she popped out of the car and immediately saw the look on George’s face.

  “Bad report again?” she asked.

  He dropped his hands at his sides in frustration. “We’ve been here for a month, and the weather won’t give. Just one day is all we need,” he said, shaking his head. “This is ridiculous. At this rate I’ll be doing nothing but getting clearance papers every time our seventy-two hours are up.”

  “I thought it might be today,” Ruth said, exasperated herself. Living in the Garden City Hotel for four weeks was wearing on all of them. The excitement of the flight had almost turned into a grind: the tests were fine, the instruments worked fine, they were ready to go; they just needed to load the fuel. The weather reports returned the same answers: storms, wind, ice.

  The irritating reporter, Dan Shear, one of a few who returned day after day just in case there was good weather news, stopped into the hangar and laughed when he saw George and Ruth standing there.

  “What are you two still doing here?” he called out, squinting and shaking his head.

  “Bad weather again,” George said, waving the report in his hand. “Maybe tomorrow.”

  “Well,” the reporter said with shrug and holding his palms up, “didn’t stop Grayson. She took off three hours ago. Looks like you’d better get going.”

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  FALL 1927

  Ruth Elder, boarding the American Girl for Le Bourget, Paris, October 11, 1927.

  Everybody in France is eager to see this audacious girl succeed in proving that she is not a weak woman. If she does succeed, that lovely American will have a triumph as great as Lindbergh’s. The daring and self-confidence of the American Girl has imbued the public opinion with the conviction that she will succeed. There will be no pessimistic predictions that sought to discourage flights since the recent scenes of transatlantic disasters.

  —THE NEW YORK TIMES, OCTOBER 12, 1927

  The newspapers sold out when they hit the streets the next morning.

  With the telegram from the navy still nestled at the bottom of the wastebasket and the news that Grayson, pilot Bill Stultz, and navigator Brice Goldsborough had left in the predawn hours, Ruth wasn’t going to spend another second standing in that hangar, talking.

  “Tow her out!” she said to George as soon as she heard Dan Shear’s revelation. “Let’s get the fuel on board and tow her out to the runway. We can beat her slog of a plane. There’s no way I’m giving this to her.”

  George, surprised by Ruth’s forcefulness, instead headed over to the office at Roosevelt Field to call for the latest weather report. If it was clear, he’d abide by Ruth’s choice, but if it looked problematic, he didn’t know what he was going to do.

  Chaos erupted inside the hangar. Once the news got out that Grayson had indeed taken off, reporters began swarming into the American Girl’s hangar, asking for comments, throwing questions from every direction now that Ruth and George looked like they had lagged behind.

  “If the weather is favorable, we’ll be gone by dusk,” she told them as she helped load the fuel tanks onto the American Girl. “But right now, fellas, I have five hundred twenty gallons of fuel to load up.”

  George came back with a promising look on his face. Ruth stopped loading once she saw him come in with the weather report from Doc Kimball, the assistant United States meteorologist for the Weather Bureau.

  “Along the Great Circle route, we’re facing seven hundred miles of fog, then some stormy weather, but we’re good after that,” he said.

  That was the route Grayson was taking; the American Girl, however, had a flight plan to dip south once over the Atlantic, hopefully avoiding most of the bad weather.

  “But I don’t have a report of what’s going on in the southern portion,” George said. “We’d have to wait until morning. Dan Shear said Grayson was stopping off in Old Orchard in Maine first, probably overnight. We could catch up easily if you wanted to wait.”

  Ruth thought for a moment. “No,” she said, looking George in the eye. “I want to go now. This is not about beating Frances Grayson. Not really. I’m just mad that she snuck off this morning like some dog that stole a chicken bone out of the trash. This is about you and me and everyone who has worked together for this flight. This is about all of our test flights, all of our calculations, each turn of your wrench, every time you wiped your hands on that rag. This is about coming in here every morning for a month to find out we can’t take off. This is about your wife being here and my husband not being here. This is about all of that. I don’t care about beating her, but I do care about losing all that we have worked for. I care too much to not take off as soon as possible.”

  George nodded in agreement. He felt the same way. He was glad that Ruth had the fire in her that she did; they might need all of it if they were going to make it across the vast span of the Atlantic.

  “All right,” George said. “Tell your folks; I’ll tell my wife. We’ll leave as soon as we’re loaded.”

  * * *

  She had said good-bye to her parents, her sister, and Aunt Susan; she gave Joyce a mushy peck on the cheek and a little squeeze. Ruth’s mother slipped a tiny Bible into Ruth’s hand and was under strict orders not to cry; Pherlie wouldn’t dare, and gave her a jade Chinese ring for good luck. Daddy just shook his finger at Ruth and said, “Be a brave girl,” then gave her a quick, tight hug.

  “Bring me some chocolate from France, and a nice little French husband,” Aunt Susan joked, but as soon as a tear appeared in the corner of her eye, she kissed Ruth and then hastily walked away.

  “I’m very happy,” Ruth exclaimed, jumping up and down, not able to contain her excitement. “This is the greatest day of my life!”

  George Haldeman held his wife’s hand and told her sternly, with a smile, “You are not to worry.”

  She smiled back and said, “You know I never do.”

  The crowd around the American Girl, now sitting on the edge of the runway, was expanding by the moment. Hundreds, maybe a thousand people, surged onto the field, eager to get a look at the crazy girl who was going to attempt the impossible. Police had been called in to keep the crowd manageable. Ruth looked out from the hangar and laughed at it all before heading out to the plane; a wicker hamper on her arm contained sandwiches, broth, coffee, and apples.

  Wearing the knickers her mother had made her, a dark sweater, a man’s shirt, a smart little black tie, and a scarf around her head, she stood up on the wing, placed the hamper in the plane, and waved to the crowd; a roar answered her back. Under her arm was her stuffed Felix the Cat, brought along for luck and security, and the tiny Bible. She plumped her curls with her hands, pulled out a compact, powdered her nose, and blew a kiss to the crowd before yelling out, “I’m off to Paris to buy an evening gown!” which was met with whoops and hollers before she climbed into the cockpit with a smile that almost matched the length of the wingspan. George climbed in beside her and started the engine.

  The crowd moved back slightly but was reluctant to lose their last glimpse of Ruth Elder and the American Girl taking off. Slowly, the Roosevelt Field crew and policemen moved the crowd back carefully until there was enough clearance that Geor
ge gave a thumbs-up. The crowd went mad.

  The plane lurched forward quickly once as George began moving it, rolling it with caution and ease. He and Ruth had taken off countless times with an equal load on test flights. He was not nervous, his hands calm and steady on the column. His wife waved from the middle of the crowd, but he could not see her.

  The plane continued down the field, picking up speed, faster, quicker, bumpier.

  From the crowd, all eyes were on the little maroon and orange plane that raced down the runway, its motor whirring, almost unheard over the cheering of the people there to see it off. Then, suddenly, it was in the air, just above the runway at first, then climbing higher and higher as it passed over the horizon, the sun barely behind it, and flew on eastward to challenge an ocean.

  Lyle Womack, at his desk in Panama, was unaware that Ruth was five hundred, seven hundred, one thousand, twelve hundred feet in the air, climbing toward the dark Atlantic, and would not discover it until he read about his wife’s departure the next day in the newspaper as headlines about her spread around the world.

  RUTH ELDER BRAVE, BUT TRULY FEMININE

  Powdered Her Nose and Arranged Her Curls as Plane Roared for Takeoff

  TRIUMPHED OVER TROUBLES

  Sea Flight Disasters Caused Fear Among Her Backers, but They Yielded to Her

  —THE NEW YORK TIMES, OCTOBER 14, 1927

  * * *

  While all the Mackay children gathered at Seamore Place to bid farewell to their parents as they left on their trip to Egypt, it was Elsie, Kenneth, and Bluebell who took the train with them to Liverpool for their departure.

  Lady Inchcape had rallied; after months of careful recovery, she insisted that she was back up to the speed of her old self, although the rest of the family knew she was a bit slower in walking, lost her breath easily, and could commit to doing only so much at once. The last thing she wanted to be was a bother, so it was with great hesitation that she permitted her children and niece to accompany them to the pier. She acquiesced only when Elsie reminded her that they would not see one another until the end of March, when Elsie’s work with the Viceroy of India would be complete enough for her to join her parents in Egypt.

  Once their parents were settled in their first-class compartment, Kenneth motioned for Elsie to meet him outside.

  “I know your secret,” he said immediately once Elsie had slid the door closed.

  “And what would that be, dear brother?” she replied with a wry smile.

  “Your little plane ride with a one-eyed pilot,” he said simply, then turned and began walking toward the dining car. Elsie’s face dropped.

  She caught up with him in a few well-paced steps.

  “Who told you?” she whispered. “How do you know?”

  “Does it matter?” he sighed. “You probably didn’t tip one of your waiters enough. Or someone eavesdropped. Or someone has a loose tongue. I don’t know. But it’s just a matter of time before it falls on the right ears.”

  “Tell me what you heard,” Elsie insisted. “I need to know what is being said.”

  “Just exactly that. You and Captain Hinchliffe are planning a transatlantic flight,” Kenneth relayed simply.

  “I’m only a backer,” she said. “At this point I don’t know if I’m flying or not. I don’t know if we’re going to India or to New York. Nothing has been decided. We don’t even have an airplane yet.”

  “No,” Kenneth said. “But you bought one. Hinchliffe just came back from America. After three days there. Why else would he be there?”

  Elsie didn’t know what to say next. She did not want to lie to her brother, but she also did not want to jeopardize the plans that had been made. It could all very easily be blown apart.

  “Are you going to tell him?” she finally asked.

  Kenneth sighed and looked out the window at the landscape that was rushing by.

  “You’ve put me in a hard place, Else,” he said. “All I can really do is take you at your word, and you know I trust you. But he’s going to find out eventually, even if he is in Egypt. It’s only a matter of time before this hits the papers, and when it does—”

  “Don’t tell him, Kenneth,” Elsie pleaded. “Let me work out a way.”

  “Please learn from your mistakes,” her older brother said.

  Elsie’s mouth tightened.

  “That is a horrible thing to say,” she whispered harshly. “Horrible. I thought that, out of anybody, you understood. You married who you chose. No one said a word about it. You weren’t chased by the police from country to country or arrested afterward. You were able to marry with your friends and family around you. And you were not exiled. I was not afforded any of those luxuries.”

  “That’s not what I meant,” Kenneth said. “You saw the difference in Father when you came back. He had aged a million years, and all you did was marry an actor and share a loo with peasants. Imagine for a moment what would happen to him if you never came back. Not to mention that it would destroy Mother—probably kill her.”

  He was right, and Elsie knew he was right. It was precisely the reason she wanted to keep it all as quiet as possible: there would be no need to worry her parents in the upcoming months before the flight. She had the fullest confidence that the trip would be such an absolute success that there was no reason to worry at all. However, she would not put that weight particularly on her mother when this was such a crucial time in her recovery.

  “Let them make this trip to Egypt,” Elsie concluded. “I want them to be settled and Mother to be stronger before I write to Father and tell him I am backing Hinchliffe’s attempt. You have my word I will do so, Kenneth, I just ask that you not say anything before then.”

  Kenneth nodded immediately. “You have my word,” he promised.

  “Thank you,” she said.

  “Do you really think you can make it?” he asked as he lit a cigarette. “It’s a long way across that ocean. Ask Princess Löwenstein.”

  “With the right plane and the right pilot, yes,” she answered quickly. “Hinchliffe is the most respected pilot in the world. His experience is unparalleled. And the Stinson we bought is the best, most advanced ship ever manufactured for safety and long-distance flights. And if we leave at the right time of year, the odds are actually with us, not against us.”

  “You repeatedly say ‘us,’ ” Kenneth observed. “Are you really sure you haven’t made up your mind to take this risk?”

  “I have made no decisions yet,” Elsie said. “But I do want to be the first woman to fly across the Atlantic. I want that very much.”

  Kenneth raised his eyebrows, pursed his lips, and took a deep breath.

  “I would love to see you surrounded by glory,” he finally said. “But just to keep seeing you would be enough for me.”

  The door to the Mackay compartment slid open and Bluebell took one step into the hall.

  “Where did you slink off to?” she called to her cousins. “Uncle James and Aunt Janey are wondering where you went!”

  Elsie smiled and walked back with Kenneth close behind.

  “There they are!” Lady Inchcape said as her two children returned and took their seats. “We were thinking about going to tea in the dining car.”

  “In a moment, dear,” her husband murmured as he read the newspaper. “We just got on the train. Let me catch my breath.”

  “Of course,” Lady Inchcape agreed. “I was afraid the children might be hungry.”

  “I am fine, Mother,” Elsie assured her. “Please don’t worry about me.”

  “I am your mother,” Lady Inchcape replied. “Everything you do worries me!”

  “Have you seen this, Elsie?” Lord Inchcape passed over the newspaper so she could see it, tapping his finger on the front page.

  Elsie’s eyes darted to it immediately, even without her father’s direction.

  DARING AIRWOMAN

  American Girl Attempts Atlantic Flight

  REFUSED TO BE DISCOURAGED


  Elsie had to reach down deep into her bones to gather enough control so she didn’t snatch the paper out of her father’s hands immediately.

  “Why, look at that,” she said casually. “May I?”

  Her father relinquished his grip on the newspaper and Elsie tilted her head as she read the article.

  “What is it?” Bluebell asked.

  “Some harebrained girl in America has got it into her head to fly across the Atlantic from New York,” Inchcape said, shaking his head. “The American government tried to stop her, but she took off anyway. I don’t understand it. Why are people so eager to fly directly into the face of death? I will never understand. I will never understand.”

  Ruth Elder, Elsie learned, had finally taken off, although Elsie had never heard of her until Hinch came back and told her about the girl pilot and her impressive plane that he had seen at Roosevelt Field. Elsie’s pulse began to beat behind her eyes and she felt heat surge up behind her ears like a prickly collar.

  The story didn’t say much more than that, except that Miss Elder had a copilot and was planning on following the shipping lanes after a 1,200-mile leg flying eastward.

  “I certainly hope the girl makes it,” Lady Inchcape said. “I like that kind of spunk. If Lindbergh did it, I don’t see why a woman can’t. It’s only flying a plane; she’s not building a house, for heaven’s sake. Hopefully, she’ll have better luck than Princess Anne, the poor dear.”

  “I think it sounds exciting,” Bluebell added. “Flying is wonderful. When Elsie took me up in her plane, I don’t think I ever felt so free.”

  “I’m with Mother,” Kenneth tossed in. “I hope the girl makes it and puts an end to this ridiculous race of who wants to be first. Let her have it and then let’s be done with it before more people die for vanity.”

  The compartment was quiet for a moment.

  “Do you think it’s merely vanity, Kenneth?” Elsie asked. “Or could it possibly be the accomplishment of doing what is said can’t be done? If discovery and achievement were nothing but vanity that should be discouraged, we’d all be wearing furs and living in caves.”