Mrs. Houdini

Harry nodded. “That’s a good suggestion.”


“Of course it is,” Welsh snapped. “And another thing. Have someone in the audience inspect the cuffs. People will think they’re trick cuffs if you don’t.” He cleared his throat. “They aren’t trick cuffs, are they?”

“No, sir.”

“Good. Now, we need you in Tent Five. They’re demanding a Wild Man, but we ain’t got one. So you’re it.”

Bess looked at Harry in his slacks and shirt. “How are we going to do that?”

“Rumple his hair a bit, tear up some sacks for clothes, and make him wild with some raw meat. He’s supposed to be a native of the jungle, but who really cares?”

When Welsh left Harry said, “What do you think he meant when he said we should drag the act out? I thought we already were.”

Bess thought about it. “Maybe we should give them a hint of danger. Make them think your life is really at stake. People want drama.”

Harry kissed her. “My little ingenue.”



Harry embraced the challenges. The Wild Man drew a crowd of fifty to his first show. The ringmaster claimed Harry was living on a diet of meat and tobacco, so at the end of the show the men threw cigarettes and cigars at the cage. Between this act and the Metamorphosis, Harry gave away a stash of loot to the canvas men.

Of their twenty-five dollars a week, he insisted on saving half and sending the other half to his mother in New York. In return, Bess would receive the loveliest letters from Mrs. Weiss. The letters never mentioned Bess’s mother (although Bess was certain Harry had told her about being thrown out of the house) but Bess understood that Mrs. Weiss was offering herself up as a mothering figure, advising her on how to do laundry on the road, and how to evade the drunk circus goers.

Most of the performers, Bess learned, were related to each other. Mrs. McCarthy was married to the ringmaster, and her brother was the fire-eater, and her husband’s cousin was one of the canvas men. The other woman, Moira, did the costumes, and made Bess a new dress she could wear in the show. In return, whenever they could find poultry, Bess cooked up platters of fried chicken on Friday nights.

She didn’t mind the lack of spending money as much as she minded the lack of privacy. She couldn’t think about doing anything intimate in their living space, which was nearly the same as doing it in public as far as she was concerned. But she began to be haunted by the faces of the babies she saw in the audience.

Harry was against the idea. “We can’t support a child right now,” he told her. “And you wouldn’t be able to perform for a year. Who would take your place?” She knew his ambitions were elsewhere. He was spending an hour every day on his exercises, doing push-ups and intricate stretches, and another hour with his cards, practicing his finger work. Sometimes he would revert to the old standby he had learned in his youth—hanging upside down from a suspended bar and picking up needles with his eyelids. A more complicated task was swallowing the needles, then regurgitating them.

Bess undid his collar. “Please, darling. Think how much fun we’ll have in trying. Just meet me here on Fridays during lunch so we’re alone. You can be tired. I’ll take care of you.” And he relented.

He made the most extraordinary discovery in the quaint, sweltering town of Birmingham, Alabama, which charmed Bess with its shop-lined streets and immaculately dressed southern women. After the show one night Harry met a doctor who mentioned that he worked at a nearby insane asylum, and asked him if he would like to visit. Bess was curious and insisted on accompanying him. Mrs. McCarthy thought she was out of her mind. “You don’t want to see what goes on in places like that,” she told her. “The rest of us are going swimming in the river. Come with us.”

But Harry’s excitement was infectious. Dr. Steeves had told him that he had a possible new idea for an escape trick, only he wouldn’t tell him what it was.

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