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Authors: Victoria Kelly

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BOOK: Mrs. Houdini
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Bess recognized the black-and-white-striped structure. It was the same lighthouse that was in the background of the yacht photograph she had found in the jeweler's window. So it was as she had suspected; that image had been taken by Charles in the Atlantic City Harbor.

But the date was familiar, too—April 1925. Bess reread the newspaper caption. “The Absecon Light has only been out once before . . .” She folded the paper quickly and put it on her lap. It was impossible. The article must be incorrect. In the photograph Charles had taken of the yacht—at dusk on April 2, 1925, according to the scribble underneath his signature—the light from the lighthouse had clearly been working. But the newspaper said the light had been out all day; so how had it been shining in the photograph?

Chapter 7
EUROPE
June 1900

The crowd blew kisses at the departing boat, and many of them cried. Some of the passengers, certainly, would not be back again—illness would strike them, or poverty, or love. Bess and Harry stood at the railing and waved their handkerchiefs to Mrs. Weiss and Gladys, who had come to New York Harbor to see them off to Europe. Tears were pouring down Mrs. Weiss's face; Gladys, pretty at eighteen years old, clung to her mother's arm. The passengers on the boat released colored paper streamers into the water, and somewhere close to the bow, outside the first-class dining room, an orchestra was playing “Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms.”

In a low moment, Bess and Harry had moved back into the cramped Weiss apartment in Manhattan. It was certainly better accommodations than their makeshift circus rooms had been, but still, it was difficult to be a wife without a home of their own to care for, and Harry carried the burden of that humiliation around with him daily. He could barely drag himself out of bed knowing that he had been unable to live up to his promises. Their time with the Welsh troupe hadn't been a failure, exactly; but attendance at the shows had dwindled gradually, until there was barely enough to support the troupe's travel, and eventually the circus had closed. There were larger acts springing up all over the country, mostly with animals—an elephant kneeling before a man was a sight to behold—but Mr. Welsh couldn't afford to purchase any animals, and he couldn't afford to continue without them. After their last night in Louisville, Bess found herself standing on the railway platform beside Harry, with their old black trunk between them, saying good-bye to the friends they had made. Many of them, like the Houdinis, were trying to continue on the vaudeville circuit; they boarded separate trains to places like New York, Chicago, or Atlanta. Others had purchased tickets to California, where they had heard there were industrial and farming jobs. Mrs. McCarthy handed her a pink shawl she had knitted herself.

“For that baby girl you're gonna have someday,” she said. She herself was headed to Idaho, where her daughter and her daughter's husband owned a small potato farm. “From the potato fields of Ireland to the potato fields of America,” she remarked sadly. “It's not what I'd dreamed of.” Bess noticed, for the first time, the thin brown lines that marked her forehead.

Mr. Welsh hooked one hand in his suspenders and shook Harry's hand with his other. “Good luck in Chicago, son. You'll do fine there.” He couldn't look Harry in the eye; Bess knew he'd bankrupted himself, and she wasn't sure what he was going to do next. He wasn't a young man anymore; thank God, she thought, she and Harry had their youth to fall back on. Harry had already been gaining notoriety in small towns by escaping from various jail cells, a trick that began when the whole troupe was arrested one afternoon in Georgia for performing on a Sunday. Charlotte, the Fat Woman and a new addition to the troupe, had bawled half the night, squeezed with the rest of the group into a concrete twelve-by-twelve cell. When the jailer fell asleep, Harry had picked the lock and let everyone out, and they had sneaked away to a new town before daylight. Now he had plans to bust out of a Chicago cell in front of a group of reporters, where it would be big news, and, he hoped, get himself known before they continued on with another poorly paid act.

Bess had grown to love life on the Welsh circuit. Harry was shy, often keeping to himself and practicing when he wasn't performing, and in those lonely hours Bess had sought the company of the others in the local beer and pool halls. She never again flirted with any of the men she met there but usually cradled a ginger beer and chatted with the women. Harry spent a great deal of time training with an old Japanese man who could swallow oranges and then bring them up again, a practice that thoroughly horrified Bess. But Harry was as fascinated with swallowers as he was with snake charmers, and he spent hours stretching the muscles of his throat to the point of accommodating small potatoes.

But it was in Chicago where Harry found his headlines. He had walked brazenly into the detective headquarters on the afternoon of their arrival and said to the sergeant on duty, “I would like to be locked up, please.” The sergeant had laughed out loud and had Harry escorted from the premises. He'd had to return on three consecutive days before anyone would take him seriously, but when they did, and he was handcuffed and locked inside a cell, he'd escaped easily enough. Then he had performed the feat in the city's larger prison, and the following morning his picture was in the paper, next to the headline
KING OF HANDCUFFS
. He'd woken Bess up waving a stack of newspapers in his hand.

“I'm famous! My picture's in the papers!” He had purchased over a hundred of them, along with envelopes and stamps, and they'd spent all afternoon mailing the clippings to anyone they could think of who might help them get a job.

It had worked. The clippings got the attention of a manager by the name of Martin Beck, the booker for the Orpheum Circuit. He installed Harry and Bess in his popular theater chain, where they gained a temporary notoriety. In
The Omaha Daily News,
Harry was described as “a young lion, with muscles like steel, roaming about the theater like a restless tiger.” Bess had never read anything more exquisite. Sometimes, when they were alone at night together, it seemed he thrust his whole being into his dreams. He would wake up heaving, dripping with sweat as if he had just exited some great performance.

They had celebrated that night, but they couldn't maintain their publicity. As the months progressed they booked fewer and fewer acts, and were offered smaller and smaller salaries, until they were forced to move back to New York, where Bess got a sales position in a hat shop. She spent the hours when the shop was empty sewing ribbons onto felt in a cramped back room; Harry went to the offices of the city papers and offered to sell his magic secrets to them for ten dollars. There were no bidders.

Still, through the dark moments, he loved her. He left her notes every morning in the kitchen before going out to search for a booking:
Sunshine of my life, I have had my coffee, have washed out my glass, and am on my way to business.
Sometimes the notes included frivolous poetry:
What is there in the vale of life / half as delightful as a wife?

After two months, Beck had called with a last-chance offer. If Harry wanted to go to London, he said, he had a contact for him at Scotland Yard. If he could break out of a prison like that, Beck told him,
then
he would be made.

Bess had never traveled abroad. She was desperate to see the elaborate palaces of Europe, the shining taffeta dresses of the British ladies. The boat was grand, with mahogany banisters and porcelain china. They were staying in the second-class cabin, which had none of those luxuries, but at night she sat on the stairs and listened to the music of the violins from the dining room. She missed her friends from the circus, but not enough to despair; the circus had been one adventure, but Europe was something else entirely. She thought back on her musings that first night on the bridge, that their lives could be glazed with greatness, that intimacy would somehow cascade into remarkable love. The night they married, she had removed her hairpins and her hair had fallen onto her shoulders and she had stood before Harry in the burning lamplight like a spectator of her own performance.

Harry, for his part, was green with seasickness and couldn't keep anything down but ice and lemon juice. By the third evening he was delirious with fever. The pressure of the sorely needed success in Europe, combined with illness, almost broke him. He began talking in his sleep. “They think I break my knuckles to get the cuffs off,” he murmured one night, to no one. “They think they know how I does it.”

Bess leaned over him and stroked his burning forehead. His eyes were still closed. “It's okay, Harry. You're just dreaming.” She looked around. They shared a large dormitory lined with identical cots, but it didn't appear he had woken anyone else.

“But it's not talent,” he said. “It's just practicing with every lock till I know how they all work.”

Was he conducting an imaginary interview in his sleep? Bess laughed. “I know, Harry.”

“I love you, Beth,” he muttered, slurring her name. “What would I do without you?”

“I don't know,” she said. “I suppose you'd be lost.”

When he finally woke up, early the next morning, she was still awake, watching him. He looked at her intensely, with an expression of such tenderness it made her shiver. He had never looked at her like that before, not even on their wedding night. It was more than infatuation or desire. It was a look that came from years of real love, tested by hardship—the kind of bursting, painful emotion she herself sometimes felt when she cried over tiny babies she'd seen in prams, and he took her in his arms and held her without saying a word.

He tried to stand but ended up knocking over their open vanity cases in the process.

“I've got to get you some more ice,” she told him. “You be a good boy while I'm gone.” She tied his wrist to the bed, for fear he would somehow stumble out of the room and fall overboard.

“I'll get loose,” he said, falling back on the bed. “I've broken outta prisons, you know.”

“Not in this condition you won't.”

They arrived in Southampton battered and bruised, Harry from his disastrous short trips around the deck for fresh air, and Bess from her many late-night struggles to get him to stay in bed. The port itself was far from glamorous—even more crowded than New York had been, and dirtier. They had to navigate their trunks through a maze of horse droppings to find the railway station. Beck had given them the address of a boardinghouse in London, and they had not even settled in before Harry had swallowed a half gallon of water, washed his face, and sat down at the table with a map of the city to plot out a route to Scotland Yard.

Bess sat down beside him and wrapped her arms around his shoulders. “How do you know they're expecting you?”

“Beck said so.”

“What'll you do if they've never heard of you?”

Harry shrugged.

She turned his head toward hers and kissed him. “Don't go just yet. We've only just gotten here. You've only just recovered.”

“We're out of money.” Harry pulled away. “I've got to go to work.”

She knew he was right. “I want to go with you,” she said.

Harry looked at her sadly. “My sweet, sweet girl. You know you can't.”

“I am your assistant, you know.”

Harry thought about it. “I think I have to go in on my own here. Or else they'll think you're helping me somehow. That you sneaked in some kind of lock pick.”

Bess surveyed his appearance. “At least change your clothes. You've been wearing those same pants for three days.”

Harry looked down. “Have I? I can't remember when I put them on.”

After he had gone, in a clean shirt and pressed pants, she fell into a deep sleep. She dreamed of a man who'd grabbed her hand outside her school when she was twelve, a vagabond with swift eyes and tiny crystals of perspiration on his face, and the nun who'd come out of the school lobby and saved her, and the cool glass of water she'd given Bess in her office afterward, and her soft voice saying, “No one will ever hurt you.” Except when she looked up the nun wasn't there anymore, and it was Harry standing over her, with his hand on her shoulder.

She had forgotten where she was. She looked out the window and saw clothes flapping from lines in the alley, and two children kicking dust clouds out of the dirt, the shafts of light between the buildings like two wide-open eyes.

BOOK: Mrs. Houdini
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