Jenny and Barnum (29 page)

Read Jenny and Barnum Online

Authors: Roderick Thorp

BOOK: Jenny and Barnum
13.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It was becoming clear to Barnum that he had been wise in scheduling the Lind tour for the seaboard cities first, where perhaps she would be spared an untimely encounter with one of the country's more rough-hewn types. Barnum already knew enough about the lady to shudder at the prospect of her first meeting with a savage redskin. Still, there would be the Cajuns of New Orleans, the slave-dealers of Charlestown—Barnum could only hope she was adaptable.

Ah, but whatever her limitations and fears, Barnum was more than satisfied with Jenny Lind. She thought she had done poorly at the dinner at Delmonico's, but in fact she had done just as well as he'd said, in exactly the way that he'd said. Present at the dinner had been a substantial cross section of the leadership of the community, all so-called reputable people, and she had given them something legitimate to talk about. Barnum could understand why men fell in love with her. She seemed completely vulnerable and in need of protection and care. He had felt the attraction of it himself, but in spite of what the idiot Minelli had said, something in Barnum didn't believe it for a minute.

More important than that, she had stood up to terrible pressure today, every bit as professional as Charlie. Barnum was thrilled. Signore Minelli might yet prove to be a problem, but finally she could only blame herself for that. If Minelli caused a commotion on the tour, Barnum would see that the press treated him as comic relief. The real problem for Barnum promised to be Waldo Collins, who was attempting to glue himself to the entourage at every turn. Barnum had an idea about how to deal with Collins, but there was no way to tell in advance if it would work. In that regard, Barnum had done himself no good at all in letting Jenny Lind know that he had never heard her sing. She had been offended, no question of it, but the alternative had been to lie to her outright; and because he spent so much of his business life shading the truth one way and another, Barnum was morally and esthetically put off by anything so gross and blatant. He had done the only thing he could accept, and now all he could do was allow the passage of time to reveal the consequences.

They came the next day, quickly, tumbling over each other pell-mell, a small, simple problem heralding the whole ghastly, cackling parade of woe—the presence of Miss Holobaugh, Jenny Lind's traveling secretary, at the American Museum shortly after nine in the morning. The museum was open, but in his quarters up on the fourth floor, Barnum clearly was not, catching up on his lost sleep and quite content in his bed. Miss Holobaugh, a peasant type and unswervable once she had set her course, puffed up the stairs with Barnum's people just off the pace, and pounded Barnum's door and his consciousness until the last sweet fragment of a sweet, sexual dream floated out of reach, like a feather wafted on the air pushed by the motion of his own hand.

Miss Holobaugh, bosom heaving, caught her breath while Barnum blinked her intimidating bulk into focus. Miss Lind had sent her, she gasped, because Barnum had scheduled the meeting with the press at the same time Miss Lind was to confer with Mr. Collins, the attorney. Barnum's brain was still unhinged by sleep, but he could see that he had to be bold.

“So late in the game, I don't think it will be possible to notify all the gentlemen of the press of a new meeting time,” he said carefully. “As much as I regret the inconvenience to Miss Lind and Mr. Collins, I must respectfully ask them to accommodate me this one time. In the future, we'll have much better liaison between us.” She did not look happy. Barnum was thinking of Collins, too. Collins was nosing around for any breach between Barnum and Jenny, and this would fuel his passion, if not actually present him with the situation he was looking for. Barnum took Miss Holobaugh to be a simple, God-fearing woman, and he had to be glad he was not still drinking and apparently suffering the effects of a hangover. “More than anything I want Miss Lind to believe and understand that I am eager to do anything and everything to assure that her visit to America is happy and comfortable.” He looked intently into Miss Holobaugh's eyes, his face washed of what he reckoned was all adult emotion. Miss Holobaugh had never seen a snake-oil salesman or a revivalist preacher, all piety and innocence, and now she looked as if she wanted to take Barnum in her arms and cradle him against life's pains. “You don't know how awful I feel about all this,” he murmured, showing as much of the whites of his eyes as he could. “Miss Lind is a wonderful, wonderful woman. My hope is that she will bring to this troubled country a new moral uplift. I can only hope that you sense the goodness radiating from her—I feel the call of destiny to serve as the instrument to present her to America. You do understand what I'm struggling to say, don't you?”

“Yes, I do,” she said, misty-eyed and snuffling.

So much for Miss Holobaugh.

But after a complete breakfast of eggs, sausage, and waffles, coffee and juice, and a leisurely carriage ride down Broadway to the crowd gathered at the bridge over the moat that led out to Castle Garden—a crowd had even followed Jenny to rehearsal, Barnum noted happily—another cataclysm, this one somewhat more natural and therefore that much more difficult to contend with.

It was not that Jenny had been confronted with the lyrics of the winning song in Barnum's contest. No, that she had already seen and turned over to her piano player, Goldschmidt, who was to set it to music—any kind of music. She was all business today, wearing a dark, plain dress and her hair braided in a work-a-day bun. Barnum did not have to ask her what she thought of the winning song, for she told him: it made her gag. But she could live with it; there were worse songs, although she could not think of any. What had the blood in her eye was Castle Garden itself. When Barnum arrived, Jenny was in her dressing room, waiting for him.

“What is this place?”

He told her that it had been a fort years ago, abandoned by the Army in 1824 and converted to peaceful purposes. “It's the largest auditorium in New York.”

“Exactly! How many people can be seated in here?”

“I mentioned it yesterday, five thousand.”

“You said five thousand
tickets
. I thought that was for two or even three performances. My dear Barnum, I have never sung in an auditorium as large as this in my life. I have only occasionally sung in buildings half this size. I will be disgraced. No one will hear me in this monstrosity! My voice will disappear into the rafters, people will begin muttering and then more will be lost. They will yell and shout and cry fraud. What are you going to do to prevent this from happening? I warn you, I will be on the next ship to Europe—”

He was staring at her. For a moment she had reminded him of the little girl with the curl in the nursery rhyme, who, when she was good, was very, very good—and when she was bad, she was horrid. He thought she was about to throw a tantrum like a child; the further she went with her complaint, the more uspet she became, until she was very nearly hysterical.

At least he was learning something about her, the depth of her commitment and identity as an artist. The notion was almost dangerous, not just because few people could understand it, but certainly because it was not what people expected of her, the Christian virgin young woman—not a girl any more, sadly, but an aging flower at the other edge of princesshood. And if her temperament scared Barnum, then the common upstairs maid would think Jenny Lind a raving bitch.

So there was his “destiny” or whatever it was: to keep this relatively fierce beast concealed from its adoring public. Barnum could not help seeing that what the public believed of her was exactly what she wanted to believe of herself. Could she possibly imagine that she had less in common with geniuses like madmen Byron and Shelley than with the Self-inflated Christian Henry Ward Beecher (not exactly the example Barnum was reaching for, since Barnum, like every other man privy to the city's gossip, had heard stories of the adventures of the lusty, well-equipped Beecher). If the woman could sing as her celebrants said, then by God and by right (yes, by right,
earned,
through her effort: Barnum could see the almost secret ravaging under her eyes) she defined and illuminated the artist and her art. Barnum smiled:
if
she could sing.

“Are you laughing at me?”

“I am marveling,” he lied. “Come with me.” He winked. “Trust me.”

“I am not interested in games—”

“Please.”

He led her from the dressing room out onto the stage, where on the piano Goldschmidt was plunking a tune for the winning song. The great rotunda of Castle Garden was dark, the curved rows of molded wooden seats marching upward to the back walls.

“Professor,” Barnum called to Goldschmidt, “if you don't mind, would you hotfoot it up to the back of the room so I can conduct a little demonstration?”

“Certainly.” Goldschmidt seemed to be in a chipper mood; with Signore Minelli still out of commission from the welcoming celebration, it did not take a detective to understand why.

Jenny stepped back from the footlights. “I do not like this stage, Barnum.”

“Wait until Otto gets in position.”

“I'm not happy with having to resolve today's scheduling conflict myself,” she said. “Your assistance in getting a message to Mr. Collins would have been appreciated.”

“Yes, I see what you mean,” Barnum answered. “The fact of the matter—and I've hesitated to tell you this—is that Mr. Collins has treated me with such suspicion for so many weeks now that I doubt that a message from me would carry much credibility with him.”

“I have become aware of a mutual antipathy,” she said. “Certainly you do not object if I give my attorney the opportunity to present his case to me?”

“I have nothing to fear.”

“But you will admit that you showed him only the minimal courtesies yesterday.”

He smiled. “I am a humbug, I freely confess it.”

“I told you not to play games with me, Barnum—”

“Ready!” Goldschmidt yelled. He was up in the darkness, invisible.

“Do you know your Shakespeare?” Barnum called.

“Passably well, Barnum!”

“Tell me what comes next.” He turned to Jenny and recited in a normal speaking voice:


O speak again, bright angel, for thou art

As glorious to this night, being o'er my head,

As is a winged messenger of heaven

Unto the white-upturned wond'ring eyes

Of mortals that fall back to gaze on him,

When he bestrides the lazy-pacing clouds

And sails upon the bosom of the air.

Her eyes flashing, Jenny raised her hand to keep Otto from speaking.

“Oh, Barnum, Barnum, wherefore art thou Barnum?”

He grinned. She had recognized the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet. She stepped toward him and suddenly jabbed her forefinger into the middle of his vest. She was directly in front of him, and she spoke as if they were alone, but with fire, taunting him.


What's Barnum? It is nor hand, nor foot,

Belonging to a man—except perhaps a belly!

What's in a name? That which we call a belly

By any other name would be just as round!

“Did you hear all that, Otto?” she called.

Barnum could hear his laughter. “Every word, perfectly.”

“I am undone by the new science of acoustics,” Barnum said to Jenny.

“The new science of acoustics won't help me in front of five thousand people,” she snapped.

“You are already a great success,” he soothed. “Nothing like this has ever happened to America before. Did you see the crowd outside?”

“Lunatics! They followed us down from the hotel, running in the street behind the carriage!”

He eyed her. Her nerves were frayed. “Nothing is scheduled tomorrow. You'll be able to rest—”

“No, not at all! Signore Minelli has yet to see this cavern, and there is much work to be done. And I would like to see something more of this city, too, if you don't mind!”

There was no calming her. He had to take his leave. He would tell his people to accede to her demands without question, at least for now. Perhaps her nerves were frayed, but he could see that if she reacted to pressure this way all the time, no part of the tour would run smoothly or simply. Barnum could not help wondering if Otto, in his chipper mood, could see that his effect on her was not nearly so bracing—or tranquilizing.

Outside, Barnum found that her mood was contagious. As he waved back to the crowd, which was larger than before, he felt shaken, as if he had been pushed to the edge of a cliff. He wanted to get away simply to give himself a chance to think—a chance to get hold of himself.

But Lavinia Warren was in his office waiting for him. And she was enraged. As soon as he arrived, she slid off the couch and started pacing as she talked, her agitation was so intense. When he tried to calm her, she cursed him. She was so perfectly proportioned and even-featured that it was difficult under ordinary conditions to remember that she was not a child, making her anger now and the language she was using that much more shocking.

Barnum knew—rather, had surmised—that she and Charlie were, or had been, lovers. Barnum had always taken the position privately that it was not his business, as long as it didn't interfere with the business he was in with them; and he had always hoped—again, privately—that the two would be married. What Charlie had told him aboard the
Great Western
had seemed to kill all that, and now Lavinia wanted to kill the corpse, or at least defile it.

And why?

Jenny Lind.

Or Jenny Lind, with a lot of help from Anna Swan.

Barnum could only listen in amazement. How had she come to cherish, as it were, Joe Gallagher over Charlie? Gallagher was a self-serving alcoholic whose sole achievement seemed to be the development of a certain urbane style. Aside from that question, Lavinia's mind was sound, her sense of reality keen, and her respect for truth genuine, so Barnum had no choice but to believe what she was telling him: Charlie, who was not that strong or unemotional anyway, drunkenly pouring out his grief to Jenny, and Jenny prattling his tale like a schoolgirl to the unexperienced Anna, who in her horror had been blabbing the details to any and all ears from the moment she had set foot again on American soil.

Other books

El hombre que fue Jueves by G. K. Chesterton
Casa capitular Dune by Frank Herbert
Storm: The Empire Chronicles by Alyssa Rose Ivy
Icefire by Chris D'Lacey
Difficult Run by John Dibble
Talent Is Overrated by Geoff Colvin
Murder and Mayhem by Rhys Ford