Leon felt the muscles in his arms spasm after tearing down the Snake Girl tent in less than an hour. A job that usually took three other men two hours and a half-pack of cigarettes, he could do alone in 53 minutes.
People might think he was just a big dumb carny, but Leon
knew he was smart about the things that mattered. Who cared if he could factor
an integer, or whether he even knew what an integer was? What he did know was
that if you laid the poles to the tent in the back of the rig before you put
the scrim in … well, how are you going to put up the scrim if you don’t already
have the poles up? Were you just going to lay it on the ground till you got the
poles up? Daddy paid Doc Rivera $2,500 to paint that
scrim: The Snake Girl rising 15 feet high in all her freakdom. Everything had
to go in exactly opposite of how it would be reassembled in 12 hours at the
next stop.
Leon’s theory of learning was simple: “Sit down. Shut up.
Watch and listen.” That’s how he learned how to swallow swords. His Daddy
wouldn’t teach him, but he taught his big brother Michael. Prince Michael. Leon
learned by sitting there, keeping his mouth shut, watching and listening. Then,
after Daddy and Michael went inside he’d practice until he got it right or got
tired of spitting up blood.
He climbed up into the cab of the semi that pulled
the Museum of Wonders after packing up the Snake Girl. While the Ride Boys were still sullenly tearing down, crawling the skeleton of
the Zipper like tattooed tranquilized monkeys, he was already done and ready to
start the jump to the next town.
How can I describe Leon? If I told you about his voice you
wouldn’t be able to see his smile, lit in the strobe of traffic coming the
opposite direction on an interstate late at night in the vast someone
else’s somewhere nowhere of Texas at 2 in the morning. If I told you about his
smile, you wouldn’t be able to hear his voice, yelling above the sound of the
semi as he runs through the gears at 3 a.m. on an empty main street in a town
where tomorrow everyone will wake up to their same-old lives and he’ll have moved
on and be nothing but a laughing ghost.
That was Leon. A force of nature. There is water, wind,
fire, and Leon.
Lesli and I had just moved back to Johnstown from Santa Fe.
I was working as a reporter for The Breeze and writing freelance for an arts
and entertainment magazine in Ft. Collins. I got the assignment to do a story
about the Greeley Independence Stampede; a big rodeo and carnival in Greeley
over the course of the week before July 4.
Since it was a music publication, I looked at the schedule
of acts and saw "Up With People" were performing. That group of
Cherry Cheeked Christians that were supposed to be a hip alternative for the
kids to Heathen Heavy Metal.
So I made arrangements to cover their performance. I showed
up and these kids just knew I was there to write some sort of smirking and
mocking "I Partied with Up With People" piece. They smiled. They thanked
me for doing a story on them. They answered my questions and ravaged me with
politeness like a pack of wolves wearing turtlenecks and gingham dresses before
sending me stumbling back out into the night.
In a daze like a moth that kept flying into a closed window
trying to get out I made my way to the lights of the carnival midway and found The
Museum of Wonders. The second the word "reporter" came out of
my mouth people started getting hostile and nervous, but finally I talked my
way into an interview with the guy that owned it ... Henry Valentine.
Henry was probably in his 70s and he took me on a tour of
the museum, his "pickled punks" as he called them. All sorts of
malformed animal fetuses in jars, along with dummies and pictures of famous
freaks. All the time as we’re talking Henry’s voice, his grind, the carnival
barker spiel that attracts people to the show, was playing over and over on the
loudspeakers … Alive… Inside. We went outside and sat in lawn chairs in front of
the museum on the midway with all the people walking by and he told me his
story.
When Henry was 17, living in Ft. Collins, his girlfriend
broke up with him and to salve his grief he went to the carnival that was in
town. He left with it that night and never went back. With the exception of a
couple weeks during World War II when he worked in an airplane factory in
Texas, but got fired for wearing cowboy books, he had lived on the road with
the carnival.
Henry’s first marriage was to Selena the Seal Girl. Likely a
thalidomide baby, she had hands coming out of her shoulder like flippers. Henry
speaks of her in the past tense and I start to draft a melancholy little story
about how she died and how he’s still out on the road with her memory mixing
with the smell of corn dogs and cotton candy. I asked him finally what happened
to her.
“I divorced her,” he said. “She was a drunk. She’s living in
Oklahoma somewhere.”
After that Henry met a woman who had been "camping" by the river with her kids. Every morning before she’d go to work she’d put them in life vests. He took her in, and her kids, and raised them as his own on the road.
After that Henry met a woman who had been "camping" by the river with her kids. Every morning before she’d go to work she’d put them in life vests. He took her in, and her kids, and raised them as his own on the road.
The youngest, the baby, was Leon.
Henry worked with all the real freaks back when "the
government would allow them to have some pride and work for a living rather
than be warehoused in hospitals," he said. Grace the Mule-Faced Woman.
Frank Lentini, the guy with three legs who used to tie a fishing line to his
third one when he and Henry would go fishing during the day at some lake they'd
find on the road.
So I go home that night and I tell Lesli. These people are
fascinating. They are a culture all their own. Somebody should write about
them. Not even breaking her gaze from her book she said, "Yeah, it's too
bad you aren't like a reporter or something and could go on the road with
them...."
I get in contact with Henry, which was hard enough since
they had already moved on to the next town, but he agreed that if I'm standing
outside the trucks when they leave the State Fair in Pueblo at the end of
August I can ride with them to the next stop. The next "jump" to
Abilene, Texas.
And, because I can talk freaks and old classic country
music, and I’m taking an interest in his career as a showman as it winds down,
Henry takes a liking to me and probably took Leon aside just before we left and
said, "Try to make sure nobody cuts his throat, okay?"
And that's how I came to sleep in The Snake Girl tent trailer
for the next 10 days, and meet my new friend and midway minder, Leon.
I'm sorry to disabuse you of your fantasy, but The Snake
Girl isn't real.
She actually isn't just a single girl. She's one of two or
three girls on the road with The Valentines, all of which who while working wear
the same black wig that sits on Leon's kitchen table in his trailer like a dead
Yorkie at night when you sit with him and the girls and smoke weed.
Usually, the girls sleep in the back of the Snake Girl
trailer, on a riser at the front where Henry put a couch. An American Flag
across the window serves as patriotic curtain to keep the people walking on the
back of the midway from seeing you without your shirt on when you wake up in
the morning. I think there might have also been a small table. It wasn't much,
but it beat sleeping under one of the trucks that hauled The Zipper like some
of the Ride Boys had to do.
There was a special place for THE Snake Girl who got to
share Leon's trailer, his bed, and his no doubt prodigious sexual hunger. When I
was on the road with them in Texas she was named Kayla.
Blond haired, buxom, with the beefy but sexy rocker chick
look of a 17-year-old who had yet to have three kids and put on 25 pounds
before she'd be smacking them around a Wal-Mart, Kayla had a nice hand-etched
swastika tattoo on her shoulder.
The trick behind the Snake Girl is that it is the girl,
sitting in an office chair, with a false box built around her so just her head
sticks out. Around the head, on which she wears the ratty black nylon hair crown
while on duty, is a rubber snake's body. There is a rope under the body around
her throat: move your head to the side,
the snake's tail moves to the side. Move your head to the back, the snake's tail
moves to the back.
Henry has one rule: you cannot fall asleep, which is sort of
hard when you are sitting on a chair in a box with a huge rubber snake body around
your neck and it's 115 degrees inside the tent in the middle of Abilene, Texas,
in August. But what Henry says goes.
Leon is the ticket taker for the attraction and its bouncer.
He sits out front of the tent in his ticket box and keeps an eye on the crowd;
because you and I in polite society think it’s fun to taunt the Snake Girl and
spit ice from our Coke on her down in the box.
I had breakfast on the midway, just Kayla and me, the
morning after the first night she got spit on. Her eyes were flat like a
shark's. She was never coming back to what you and I call society. After she
ran out her string with the Valentine's, who knows why, who knows how, she left
the carnival and when I asked Henry he said she "was working in a titty
bar in Dallas."
I rode the first part of the trip to Abilene with Henry, but
somewhere early that evening I asked Leon if I could ride with him. I think it
was somewhere in Oklahoma, in the middle of the night, when Leon was telling me
how he shot someone with a shotgun once, that I told him if he was thinking he
might need to be killing me I could just get out right here.
“Nah, you seem okay,” he said. He explained to me that he
used to road race motorcycles. As a privateer, with no factory backing, he and
his buddies had taken a bike to Daytona for the annual Bike Week race. He not only
finished, but ahead of many of the factory riders. A year or so ago, however,
he had had a bad crash and sustained a head injury.
What would have likely killed a lesser man had simply
mellowed him out, he said.
“Only two things make me mad anymore. People that mistreat
their kids (Leon had a son back in Texas living with his mom) and people who
steal from my daddy.” Every morning, Leon said, before anyone else was awake he
would get up and prowl the midway for “ground scores” … the stuff that fell out
of people’s pockets as they were jerked and tumbled like human dryer laundry on
the rides. Sunglasses, lighters, combs, keys, pens and anything you could think
of that people would have in their pockets. He was keeping it all in a box in
his trailer for Little Henry, his son. Leon had an almost preternatural ability
to spot the things you and I drop. At every gas station we stopped at he’d
suddenly stoop low and pick up a piece of change from beneath the check-out
counter.
We got into Abilene just before dawn. I climbed into back of
the semi in the sleeper and didn’t wake up till early afternoon. Leon on the
other hand was back up only a couple hours later to put up the Snake Girl. As I
sat drinking coffee still trying to wake up he finished driving the last tent
stakes, swinging a sledge hammer with one hand.
When I admired his strength he looked at me, almost hurt, as
if I like everyone thought he was just a dumb muscle-bound mule. You only had
to be strong for a moment, he explained, once you had the hammer in the air and
in motion, it was a matter of focus.
It was a couple of hours before the carnival was to open when the sky filled with angry black clouds and down came a Biblical Rain that turned the fairground midway into a quagmire of mud .... When it stopped I ventured back out of the Snake Girl trailer and found Leon getting ready to open up.
It was a couple of hours before the carnival was to open when the sky filled with angry black clouds and down came a Biblical Rain that turned the fairground midway into a quagmire of mud .... When it stopped I ventured back out of the Snake Girl trailer and found Leon getting ready to open up.
"Do you think anybody will even come?" I asked,
thinking how opening night would be a bust after all the costs of gas and food to
make the jump from Colorado.
"Just watch," he said.
And they began to come. By 9 p.m. the midway was filled.
People dragging strollers, the wheels long too caked and clogged with mud to
roll, while with the other hand cursing parents pulled screaming and crying
children who would slip and fall, only to be jerked back up with a pop of their
shoulder. They all marched, like mud covered zombies, around and around the
midway as the speakers on the Zipper blasted Guns and Roses and ZZ Top.
"I would never bring my child out in something like
this," Leon said sitting in the ticket booth looking disgusted.
“Life’s a dare,” Leon said to me one afternoon while we were
sitting in his trailer. “You either decide you’re gonna take it, or you back
down. I’d much rather get my assed kick than back down from someone. No shame
in getting beat if you at least tried. Can’t ain’t never got nothing done.
“When I was 16 Daddy let me do the bed of nails act,” he
said. “The whole key is that the nails are close enough together that when you
lay down on them the weight is displaced, so none of them stick through you.
You take the pain all at once like that, you can survive it. Man, you take each
and little hurt individually, they’re gonna go right through you eventually.
“I was doing the bed of nails and part of the show was Daddy
called someone up to stand on my chest. He always picked the biggest guy he
could find in the crowd. The idea was you have them get up slow. Well one night
this fat fuck came up, and before daddy could stop him, he just jumps up on top
of me real quick.”
Did it hurt? I asked?
“Of course it hurt,” Leon said, looking at me like I was
retarded. “But I didn’t let on it hurt. I just held it in. Then after the show
ended I had the guy who runs the Ferris wheel take me up to the top and stop
it. I smoked a joint and I cried, then I came back down and went back to work.”
One day on the midway I let it slip to Leon that I was out
here on a freelance gig. That nobody was paying me to do this. That my hope was
I could write something someone would want to buy.
“Goddamn,” he said, with genuine admiration in his eyes for
maybe the first time. “I thought you were just some reporter out here on
assignment with an expense account. Good for you.”
In many ways, with his shaved head and perpetual good spirit
Leon was a lot like a Buddhist teacher to me. After breakfast on a rainy
morning in Greeley, decades and kids and a whole lifetime after that summer in
Abilene and those 10 days of meditation in the Snake Girl trailer, I sat in the
empty and quiet Mirror newsroom alone and watched Leon's funeral service on
streaming video from the church in Texas. It was probably best summed up by one
of the guys who spoke, who didn't even bother to take off his greaser shades
when he went up to the podium.
"I have a million stories about Leon," he said,
"and I can't tell one of them in here."
So here we go, one final story about Leon...
We were sitting on the midway in Abilene, a late afternoon,
the promise of another night of neon and noise lying ahead of us. Sitting in
front of the Snake Girl tent. Leon was telling me about how he bit a guy's
finger off one night in a fight.
It sort of put a damper on the party they were at, he said,
and his girlfriend was pissed because they had to leave ... As Leon was telling
the story a woman, pushing a stroller with a small child in it, passed by. As
she did the kid dropped their stuffed animal and the woman didn't notice and
continued along her way.
In mid-sentence Leon leapt out of the Snake Girl ticket
booth and sprinted across the midway. He picked up the soft toy and caught up
with the woman and gave it back to the kid, bending down and handing it to them
and smiling.
Coming back to the booth he just went right back to telling
me about biting the guy's finger off at the party.
That was Leon. The kindest, funniest, most joyful soul I
have likely ever met, who was the last person you ever wanted to be crossways
with. The night he was stabbed in Abilene, only about a week after I left, two
guys and a girl were trying to sneak into the back of the Snake Girl tent
without paying. Only two things made Leon mad anymore: people being mean to
kids and someone who tried to steal from his Daddy.
I have no doubt that Leon wasn't politically correct about
telling the two guys and the girl that they needed to pay, but I know he gave
them the chance to do it. The chance to avoid the fight. But they wanted to
fight. They stabbed him through the heart. All he did was beat the hell out of
all three of them and then go back to the Snake Girl booth and keep taking
tickets till he stroked out.
Leon was never the same again. That fierce joy now trapped
in a body that needed to be pumped full of drugs to keep it from seizing like a
bike being run without oil. He had a hard time talking, his speech now slurred.
That's the most painful thing I remember about being around Leon after the
stabbing ... the sad, hurt look in his eyes when he would try to talk to kids
on the midway and they would recoil in fear.
The thing that always came to mind was Frankenstein.
Well, that's over now. Leon is free again. Fierce and funny
and free. And for that, I am eternally grateful and a little ashamed at the
selfish grief that wishes he was still here. The Buddhists have a concept that
we shouldn't grieve too deeply, because it holds the spirit back from moving on.
I got the message from Texas that Leon had died in the nursing home, more than
two decades after being stabbed through the heart, the same weekend Harper, my
youngest, was graduating from high school. Oddly, the sadness of his passing
made it easier to mourn the moving on of my little girl. It put it in
perspective. To hold her back, for my own selfish reasons, was as bad as
feeling bad that Leon was finally released.
As the service was ending they played the Carrie Underwood
song "Temporary Home." It talks about moving on. How this is but a
passing place. As the song was ending, a guy with sunglasses and a Mohawk like
Leon had when I met him walked by the window of The Mirror. He was there for a
moment, and then he was gone.
I feel privileged that I got to spend that time with Leon
just before he was stabbed. The bike wreck had softened him just ever so
slightly, but he was still in his midway monster glory. To remember him, and
that time, I plan to get another bracelet tattoo, right above the one on my
right wrist made up of Day of the Dead skulls tweaked for those in my life who
have passed on but remain forever in my heart. In the center of my wrist I will
get, as a clasp, a Ferris wheel. And around the edges of my wrist the words
that every reporter should remember… A mantra of my business.
Sit down. Shut up. Watch and listen.
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