The Vanished Man
fingers now! He’s going to put the coinsback. Embarrass him in front of a roomful of magicians. Grab his hand!
Suddenly, without looking down, the illusionist froze and whispered, “Are you sure you want to do it?”
The boy blinked in surprise. “I—”
“Think twice.” A glance down at the boy’s hand.
Young Houdini looked at his palm, which was tensed to catch the great illusionist’s. He saw to his shock that the man had placed something there, but not the coins: five double-sided razor blades. If he’d closed his fingers as he’d planned, Young Houdini would’ve needed a dozen stitches.
“Let me see your hands,” he said, taking the blades out of them and vanishing them instantly.
Young Houdini held his palms up and the man touched them, stroked them with his thumbs. It felt to the boy that there was an electric current running between them.
“You’ve got the hands to be great,” he whispered for the boy alone to hear. “You’ve got the drive and I know you’ve got the cruelty. . . . But you don’t have the vision. Not yet.” A blade appeared again and the man used it to slice through a piece of paper, which began to bleed. He crumpled the paper and then opened it up. There was no slash and no blood. He handed it to the boy, who noticed that on the inside was an address, written in red ink.
As the small audience of onlookers cheered and clapped with genuine admiration, or jealousy, the illusionist whispered, “Come see me,” leaning forward, his lips brushing Young Houdini’s ear. “You have a lot to learn. And I have a lot to teach.”
The boy kept the illusionist’s address but he couldn’t work up the courage to go see him. Then, at his fifteenth birthday party, his mother changed the course of his life forever by flying into a tirade and flinging a platter of fettuccine at her husband over some recently received intelligence about the notorious Mrs. Loam. Bottles flew, collectibles shattered, police arrived.
The boy decided he’d had enough. The next day he went to visit the illusionist, who agreed to be his mentor. The timing was perfect. In two days the man was starting an extensive tour of the United States. He needed an assistant. Young Houdini cleaned out his secret bank account and did just what his namesake had done: he ran away from home to work as a magician. There was one major difference between them, however; unlike Harry Houdini, who’d left home only to make money to help his impoverished family and who was soon reunited with them, young Malerick would never see any member of his again.
“Hey, how you doing?”
The woman’s husky voice woke him out of these durable memories as he sat at the bar of the Upper West Side tavern. A regular here, he guessed. Fiftyish trying unsuccessfully for the illusion of ten years younger, she’d picked this hunting ground based largely on the dim lighting. She scooted onto a stool next to his and was leaning forward, flying a flag of cleavage.
“Sorry?”
“Just asked how you’re doing. Don’t think I’ve seen you in here.”
“Just in town for a day or two.”
“Ah,” she said drunkenly. “Say, I need a light.”Conveying the irritating impression that he should consider it a privilege to light her cigarette.
“Oh, sure,” he said.
He clicked a lighter and held it up. This flame flickered madly, he observed, as she wrapped her red, bony fingers around his to guide the lighter to her lips.
“Thanks.” She shot a narrow stream of smoke toward the ceiling. When she looked back Malerick had paid the bill and was pushing away from the bar.
She frowned.
“I have to go.” He smiled and said, “Oh, here, you can keep that.”
He handed her the small metal lighter. She took it and blinked. Her frown deepened. It was her own lighter, which he’d dipped from her purse when she’d leaned toward him.
Malerick whispered coldly, “Guess you didn’t need one after all.”
Leaving her at the bar, two tears leading the mascara down her cheeks, he thought that of all the sadistic illusions he’d perpetrated, and had planned for, this weekend—the blood, the cut flesh, the fire—this one would perhaps be the most satisfying.
• • •
She heard the sirens when they were two blocks away from Rhyme’s.
Amelia Sachs’s mind did one of those funny jogs: hearing the urgent electronic catcall from some emergency vehicle, thinking the sound seemed to be coming from the direction of his
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