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THE
SHIP'S ILLUSIONIST:
Dr. Vinay Kamat
This morning I have come on deck to watch them slowly
walk up the gangplank. The majority in pairs and some
in groups of four, almost all of them are clad in some
variation of tropical print. The cruise line has identified
them, processed them, dazed them with an introductory
shipboard photograph and blurred their reasoning with
a few pre-cruise drink specials. By this evening, as
we venture into international waters, the casino will
light up and the disco will shake. In two nights, I
will stand before them wearing a long-sleeved white
silk shirt and faux-leather pants. I will enter illuminated
by a single spotlight and exit, three-quarters of an
hour later, in a cloud of smoke. In between, I will
banter with them good-naturedly, perform card tricks,
levitate a silver ball and vanish an assistant. Some
will applaud politely while others will hoop and whistle
as if at a high school pep-rally. Many will simply shake
their heads slowly in a semi-inebriated confoundment.
After my show, while the comedienne begins her routine,
I will return to my cabin for a quick shower and change
of my perspiration-soaked clothing. I’ll make my way
to the casino deck by way of the stairs, to allow the
audience time to exit, and sit at the first blackjack
table. Some guests will smile or nod as they recognize
me. Other passengers will offer to buy me a drink to
afford them the opportunity to query about me or the
show. Often times they just want to know how I came
into my present circumstance.
My mum is from Ceylon and my father from England.
I was born and reared in a small town just one hour
outside of London. As early as I can recall, like many
of my grade school chums, I developed a fascination
for the world of theatrical magic. While my friends’
interest waned in our later years, superceded by girls
and sports, mine developed into an ambition and later
a vocation. I first joined a local magic club in my
town then a regional one in London to which my parents
would shuttle me for bi-weekly meetings. Unlike school,
I was accepted by this motley crew of amateur magicians
solely for my love of the field and no mention was made
of my ethnicity. Initially I poured over books of illusions
but reserved my performances, only for the occasional
mirror. Despite an otherwise traditional private school
education, my mum’s wish to have a barrister in the
family vanished like the proverbial rabbit in a hat.
My inclination was to become a professional illusionist.
I left home to attend a private University and chose
to study history but each summer I spent deliberating
over illusions. I perused dusty books from corners of
bookstores, new periodicals and attended workshops on
mastering the craft. I read of the past masters and
learned of the current popular magicians of Las Vegas.
Finally I honed my skills, and earned a few quid, at
the campus pub. My limited popularity reached its pinnacle
with a booking at an eight-year-old child’s birthday
party (the progeny of one of my history professors.)
In the summer of my junior year, I assisted a magician/alcoholic
who toured Europe in portable big-tops. On occasions,
in between his pub-crawls he would impart a few words
on the art of showmanship. When sober, Master Harold
had the world at his fingertips. He would charm women
with his graceful wit and entertain children with street
side tricks. He had been perfecting his act over the
last thirty years and as such had a built-in popularity
and fan base. Parents would crowd into the tent with
their children as their parents had done with them a
generation before.
“The wrist and the eyes, Alex.” he would say in a
resounding baritone. “These are the two keys. Divert
their attention with a glance then smoothly transition
to a flawless finish.”
Master Harold had trained with the finest showman and
had survived the golden age of the traveling circus.
He kept impeccably groomed and eminently presentable
unless, of course, he had returned from a night of excess.
Harold’s two loves were the sleight of hand and imbibing
warm pints. On the opening week of our tour he would
take me along to local pubs after the show. Here, we
were minor celebrities while we would mingle with the
locals who had seen us that afternoon. The pints would
flow freely and no currency was ever requested or exchanged.
Later in the evening Harold would put on an extemporaneous
production of card tricks and minor disappearances to
the delight of the crowd. After the first two weeks,
I told him that I couldn’t keep up with the daily shows
and nightly pub after-show. He nodded and stroked his
perfectly groomed magnolia white goatee and replied
enigmatically, “Alex, what I do for a living is not
mysterious to me anymore. It’s the rest of my life that
has been my greatest illusion.”
During the summer prior to my final year at the University,
with my future looming ahead of me, I saw a small sign
outside student affairs. An American-based cruise line
was hiring staff and entertainers for its Caribbean
cruises. I secured an interview in London and arrived
at the office building accompanied by a small aviary
of doves along with a trunk containing my collected
illusions. The panel of three initially sat stone-faced
but a few smiles broke out by the end of the playing
card materialization. My silver ball levitation drew
a smattering of applause but it was my final disappearance
which sealed a six-month contract headlining a Saturday
night show.
Now, four and one-half years later, I live for fifty
weeks out of the year in a one-hundred and fifteen square
foot cabin populated by only my clothes, books and two
impressionist lithographs I purchased from one of our
art auctions at sea. On a four-night cruise I have the
late Saturday show, and a “six-nighter” features me
twice. Excluding rehearsal I have only one hundred actual
working hours a year. This relaxed schedule allows countless
hours to read, ponder, and scrutinize the undulating
ocean.
On shore in Miami or Key West, I will stock up on
novels. I have read and re-read countless tomes on the
history of magic and biographies of famous magicians.
I have slowly worked through a list of classics seasoned
only with potboilers or the occasional throwaway spy-thriller.
Due to my cramped living space my narrow bookshelf is
periodically reorganized leaving me with stacks of paperbacks
which I donate to a coffee shop off Duval Street in
Key West.
One evening, while reading a novel by Somerset Maugham
I was reminded of a young lady I knew only peripherally
in England. I really only remembered her red hair and
free spirit. In reality, I had forgotten almost everything
about her except her name. Knowing I was due for shore
leave in the next month, I decided to look her up and
attempt to secure a meeting back home.
Remarkably, employing our new shipboard internet café,
I was able to track her down. She was still in England,
now living in London. Partly out of abject loneliness
and partly out of some other need I couldn’t quite recognize,
I set out to ring her. With satellite telephone at $6.99
a minute, even a fifty-cent employee discount relegates
conversations to a brutal pointedness.
At first I awkwardly jogged her memory as to exactly
who I was. When she claimed some familiarity, I told
her I would be in England soon for my two-week holiday
and I would very much like to catch up with her. Luckily,
and with a hint of trepidation, she consented and at
our next port in Mexico I bought her a gift. I chose
a small hand-carved vase which I had wrapped in month-old
shredded Mexican newsprint and sealed neatly in a cardboard
box. This cruise seemed interminable but finally we
arrived back in the states.
I took the red-eye from Miami International to Heathrow
with my eighty-peso treasure securely stowed in the
overhead cabin. Mum and Dad picked me up at the airport
as they had done annually for my vacation. They still
sported the twenty-year old forest green Volvo wagon
in which I had grown up. Other than the gray tinge to
their temples this scene could have been replayed from
my youth when they picked me up outside of my magic
club.
After initial pleasantries Dad started in on me.
“So are you going to give this thing up now, Alex?”
“No Dad, I’m doing well. I’m happy.”
This year he sounded more serious than last and I, hopefully,
sounded more assured. Mum just looked out the window,
deep into the drizzling London morning. Most of the
rest of the drive home was silent. I sat back and remembered
my childhood. I watched the windshield wipers create
than destroy perfect semi-circles of water. I slowly
traced with my index finger a scratch in the vinyl seat
left by my long deceased Dalmatian, Houdini. Finally,
I too sat and watched London sputter to life as we made
our escape home.
The next day I borrowed the old wagon for my meeting
in London. I was a little uneasy at the prospect of
this unrehearsed performance. She worked as the manager
of an East end clothing retailer. I entered the store
greeted by the smell of wood and just polished brass.
She was with a customer and asked me politely to have
a seat in an overstuffed red leather chair. I sat her
Mexican gift on a matching ottoman in front of me. I
watched her slim figure outfitted in a grey pin-stripe
pant suit flutter around a customer. She and her tailor
wove around their patron strategically placing pins
and chalk marks. After her sale was secured she came
over to greet me and apologize for the delay. A perfunctory
acknowledgement of the vase followed its uncomfortable
presentation. In swift order, it quietly replaced her
handbag under a register. The handbag was slung over
her right shoulder and we were off to lunch.
We walked to a café which she frequented, I would imagine,
considering her familiarity with the servers and the
menu. She ordered a cucumber and cream cheese sandwich
on whole wheat with no crusts. She ate it with the nimble
fingers of someone who spends the day rifling through
tailored clothing. I told her about my experiences on
the ship which she seemed to absorb with interest. I
related to her that I have the deepest sleep of my life
every night I am aboard. Compared to land, the rolling
ocean provides a natural solace. I told her that every
time I am on shore it takes about a week to stop stepping
up into a lavatory as I am prone to do on board. Mostly
silent through lunch, she looked at me curiously as
she sipped decaffeinated tea with lemon.
“Why did you call me after so many years, Alex?”
For a moment I thought of telling her of the hundreds
of hours at sea I spent reading or musing about nothing.
I thought I would mention that I just felt the need
to ring someone up once again. Instead I said simply,
“I don’t know really. In the midst of my work week I
thought of you and I realized I really had no idea what
you might be doing so I took a chance and looked you
up.”
She had never married. She had no boyfriend and her
managerial duties left the weekends free. Each Sunday
she would take the underground to Tottingham Square
and meet her sister. They would spend the day drinking
tea, sharing fruit tarts and hunting down books they
fancied in the dozens of used book stores that line
the street.
She was a bit peculiar in appearance. Her nose was
straight— neither upturned or sloped, simply straight,
lengthy and ending in tiny nostrils through which I
couldn’t imagine she acquired enough oxygen to support
her metabolic processes. She wore her hair flat and
styled like a school girl. Her lips were thin and outlined
with a reddish brown hue which she periodically applied
from her handbag. I found her comely if not attractive.
“Would you mind if I ring you sometime?”
“From the ship you mean?”
“Yes or perhaps e-mail, we have a new satellite connection.”
“I suppose it would be fine.” she shrugged noncommittally.
Two weeks later I returned to the ship and delved back
into my work. The show picked up again and my usual
routine began. I attempted to e-mail her once a week
and gave her an update as to the mishaps of our ship.
A week after I had returned, I encountered a near miss
incident with one of my assistants. A torch I was holding
in the middle of a performance stubbornly refused to
extinguish and grazed her feather headdress. Fortunately
her plumage was just as stubborn and did not alight.
A few weeks later I related to her the anecdote behind
the heart attack of our shipboard physician. Our doctor
was a recently divorced and more recently a retired
gentleman who decided that he would escape to the seas
to serve out the remainder of his retirement. This moderately
obese sixty-seven year old made the ill-fated decision
to take up disco dancing at 3 a.m. after a few rounds
of cocktails. A helicopter was summoned to the ship
and whisked him away to a Miami hospital and it was
the last I heard of him.
Her responses were initially terse. I could visualize
her typing those short responses with her nimble fingers
while sipping her tea with lemon. However, by six months
she began to come around and, I believe, grew comfortable
with our electronic banter. I drew the courage to ask
her if she would like to come out to see my show and
to my delight she accepted.
It was the second time in my life that I had butterflies
when I performed. My first experience with stage fright
was the evening Master Harold and I went to dinner at
a pub two hours before a show. He drank the better part
of two bottles of wine with his meal and was in no shape
to perform. Instead of canceling due to Harold’s periodic
“illness” as I was prone to do, I decide to perform
in his place. As my mentor recovered from his drunken
stupor that evening backstage, I took the audience through
my first headlining show. The spotlights on me washed
away the audience but I could hear them cheering and
applauding with gusto. After the first half-hour, I
could feel the natural flow and rhythm of the show.
The reaction of the audience became secondary and, at
that moment, I knew that this career was my birthright.
That night, on the ship I could see her sitting to
the left of the stage, just under the haze of the stage
lights. She smiled on occasion and sometimes turned
to watch the reaction of the audience. I had arranged
for a bottle of champagne to be sent to her table and
she had wrapped her dexterous fingers around a flute.
She sat prim and attentive with her auburn hair held
back with a simple clip. After the show she came backstage
and commended me on my performance. She asked me from
where I derived my stage name.
I took my name from one of my favorite novels by Sinclair
Lewis. After reading it in grade school I knew I would
become either a microbiologist or magician. “Arrowsmith
the Amazing,” I would yell as I bound down the stairs
followed by my cloak and clutching my latest purchase
from the magic mail order catalog. Now fifteen years
later I am purely “Alex Arrowsmith, 10:30 p.m.”, a footnote
in your daily cruise notes. I sit, wedged tightly on
the daily activity calendar between shipboard bingo
and the guest talent show.
The next morning we sat at a café in Cozumel with
little to say to each other. We had endured the perilous
taxi ride to the beach only to confront a stilted conversation
over conch shell appetizers and unnamed Mexican beer.
Back on board, on the night prior to our return to the
mainland, she told me that she was in no position to
have a boyfriend. After we docked she gave me a quick
embrace and thanked me for my “hospitality.” I lost
touch with her soon after. I decided that a traveling
magician had little necessity for a girlfriend and even
less a wife.
My grandmother was admitted to a London hospital about
six months later. Mum wired me from home and a steward
slipped the message under my door with the same ease
of slipping in a vacation-ending invoice the morning
of disembarkment. It said plainly, “Alex, your grandmother
has taken ill. The doctors expect a full recovery but
she would like to see you all the same.” My phone calls
were to no avail as my parents had already left for
London and the hospital would not give me any information.
I took a leave of absence and set off to England.
I had never been very close to my grandmother. Due
to my lack of familiarity with her native Sinhalese,
our relationship suffered from a language barrier which
could not be overcome. Growing up, I was never able
to converse with her more than cursorily. She lived
in London and I remember visiting her as a child. Her
apartment smelled of sweet cumin and basmati rice. I
would see her occasionally after magic club meetings
and she would prepare a kitchen of Sri Lankan sweets
for every visit. I remembered that she would weep silently
for a few seconds every time I would leave. Upon our
exit, she would walk us out to the front door of her
building and watch our car until it was out of sight.
A physician I met on a cruise once remarked to me that
he would have reason for alarm if a Ceylonese came into
his office complaining of pain. He said that they were
people of a stock that remained stoic despite unbearable
discomfort. My grandmother was cut from the same cloth.
As a child it was easy to interpret that stoicism as
indifference.
The “full recovery” which my mother described in her
message was a ruse on her part. This lingual “sleight-of-hand”
allowed me a two week emergency leave. I arrived at
the hospital still carrying my bags. After inquiring,
I was directed to the intensive care waiting room. My
parents sat there waiting for her physician.
He was a small chap, just a few inches over five feet
and wore rounded spectacles with dark frames. He had
thinning hair and I presumed his age to be in his mid
thirties. A five-o-clock shadow shading his rounded
cheeks belied his age. He introduced himself at first
and we did same. Take-away Chinese food reeked from
leaky tin foil parcels filling a waste basket a few
feet away. I began to feel the pressure of nausea in
my throat as the combination of odors and the impending
news took their toll on me.
The doctor sat and wasted little time in warming up
his captive audience. “Well, you’ve told me you wanted
the whole family together so that we can discuss her
diagnosis. I’m sorry to tell you our diagnosis is pancreatic
cancer and we do not expect her to live much longer.”
We sat quiet for a few seconds. A bleating pager whisked
the doctor out of the room before we could even formulate
our first response. Master Harold would have been proud
of the doctor I thought. His beeper diversion worked
perfectly and he made his exit while his viewers sat
dumbfounded.
I called the ship’s administration a few days later
and they allowed me a four week leave of absence to
attend to my family duties. After much reflection I
told my mother and father that I would like to stay
with my grandmother in the hospital during her stay.
They were relieved that a family member would be able
to be with her constantly during this time. Neither
could devote twenty four hours a day to her with their
work schedule. I spoke to the nurses and they permitted
me to have a cot and sleep in the hospital room.
Initially she said very little to me or anyone for
that matter. I understood very little conversational
Sinhalese but was able to communicate with. She had
grown much older that I remembered. Her hair was now
almost pure white and her face dark and wrinkled. Her
face was gaunt but kind and softened every time she
saw me. She would hold my hand sometimes while she rested.
Her gold bangles would clink together with any movement
of her hands. I could see her fear but she never revealed
her discomfort. She was given morphine through her veins
but, when asked, would not respond the degree of her
pain. The nurses and doctors would have scales and pictures
of faces they would use to assess pain but she would
look at these items then nod her head side to side and
say, “Its ok.”
I knew she was afraid to be alone in the hospital.
I remember there were times when I would sit and watch
the cardiac monitor above her head for hours. If I believed
her to be asleep and I wished to stretch my legs I would
rise slowly. Often she would open her eyes and simply
say, “Stay” while patting the bed.
On the third day I showed her some card tricks. I
began with simple tricks then performed the advanced
“Maltese Crosses” trick and the card through the plate
with a breakfast dish. With the rhythmic beep of the
heart monitor as my metronome, I went through almost
every trick I could do with a deck of cards. At first
she nodded and patted my hand but soon she had sat up
in bed and smiled a bit. Nurses would on occasion join
her for few of the tricks when they would enter to quiet
a whining IV infuser. Every day I would entertain her
with a few more illusions. Eventually, I got to the
point where I had to refer to some handbooks to come
up with new ideas for tricks. When she slept for a few
hours in the afternoon I made my way down to the pediatric
ward and entertained a few of the children in the playroom.
These children were the most captive audience I had
ever seen, they would hang on every move and ask me
to repeat the tricks without end.
After about a week I began to tell my grandmother
about my life on the ship. This was mostly a one-sided
conversation as she would mostly sit and listen. I told
her about my show, how I was hired. I told her about
the ocean and some of the passengers I remembered. I
then told her about my ill-fated “girlfriend”. At the
end of the story she looked at me kindly and took my
hand.
She related to me a story in her native tongue that
I could mostly understand. She told me that when she
was a young girl her family owned a beautiful house
surrounded by rice fields. Behind the house was a small
pond in which she and her sister would swim in the warm
summer months. Her parents bought a pair of swans to
live on the pond. They bought a male and female who
lived behind the home. For three months the birds would
swim together as the girls would splash around them
at times. The female was killed one day by some area
boys who threw stones at the birds. Swans were expensive
to replace and my great-grandparents decided to wait
to replace the female. The male swan grew increasingly
despondent and soon would not lift his neck up to eat.
A doctor was summoned and despite his little knowledge
of swan physiology could not understand why the swan
was ill. The male swan died soon afterward. Her family
always believed that the swan died of a broken heart.
We both wept that morning. These were warm tears that
enveloped my eyes and rolled down my cheeks without
effort. Her tears welled in her kind eyes and found
their way through the dark creases of her face. She
placed her hand on my forehead and closed her eyes.
On the ninth day she died, and in forty-eight hours
I returned to the ship.
It has been over a year now. Today, I am watching
a new group of passengers’ board with romantic notions
of high sea adventure. In two days they will applaud
loudly after I vanish in a cloud of theatrical lighting
and smoke. Inevitably a gentleman will approach at the
casino later that evening and ask me how I can simply
disappear, and I will say, as I have said a hundred
times before, “Sir, even a ship’s illusionist cannot
reveal his secrets.”
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