A chance encounter with Iron Man gives a vaudeville entertainer the inspiration to abandon his act for a criminal career as The Scarecrow!
Notes:
- The story begins with Iron Man pursuing an armed robber--but "the Uncanny Umberto", a contortionist who just happens to be performing nearby, actually stops the criminal with a well-timed tackle. Peter Parker (aka Spider-Man) once allowed a robber to run past him and escape, beginning a tragic chain of events that ultimately led to Parker accepting the responsibilities of a hero. Umberto brings down a fleeing perp but an opposite action produces an opposite result in this case . . . "Seeing how you operate, I'm mighty glad you're on the side of the law, pal," says Iron Man. "Yeah, I guess a guy like me would make a mighty tough opponent," responds Umberto. Whoa, there, fella! Being an exceptionally limber egomaniac doesn't qualify you to be a super-villain!
- Or does it? It's Iron Man's turn to feel the sting of humiliation in this issue. Right after defeating the Mandarin, who commanded a castle full of advanced weaponry and was capable of cowing an entire nation, our hero is bearded in his own penthouse lair by a sideshow performer armed with nothing more than bendy limbs and a couple of trained crows. Allowing two birds to tangle him in drapes really plumbs the depths of super-hero embarassment. (Well, maybe they were really expensive drapes and Tony didn't want tear them . . . It's one thing to wreck a place that belongs to someone else--like a Chinese super-villain, for instance--but this is Iron Man's crib!)
- "It was child's play to outwit that overrated fool!" boasts the Scarecrow just before escaping with secret weapon designs from Stark's wall safe. He may be right but he's punching above his weight class and probably should've quit while he was ahead . . . The Scarecrow also makes a fool of Happy when the ex-fighter tries to wade into him. "The only reason I lost so many fights when I was a boxer is because I was too soft-hearted to wanna hurt anyone," claims Hap. "But I don't feel that way about crooks!" Riiiight. Good thing Stark is his own bodyguard.
- The Scarecrow next tries to sell the stolen plans to a bunch of Castro look-alikes aboard a Cuban gunboat but the deal is interrupted by Iron Man. (Cuba is apparently only a short motorboat trip from Flushing, Long Island in the Marvel Universe.) This encounter doesn't go quite as well for the rookie bad guy and he ends up getting dragged to exile in Cuba by his birds in the story's preposterous conclusion. (Iron Man's "jet transistors" are low on power and he can't give chase.)
- Pepper sabotages Tony's date with a haughty fake blonde named Veronica Vogue. Tony suspects the truth but seems to prefer an evening playing cards with his chauffeur than trying to fix things with VV, establishing Happy Hogan as the most entertaining poker partner ever.
- The Scarecrow refers to his birds as his "little slaves". What a jerk.
