The Circus Boys on the Flying Rings - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Perhaps, but not so gracefully."
"See, he's swinging his hand at us."
Sure enough, Rodney had picked out the two lads, and was smiling at them and waving a hand in their direction. The two lads felt very proud of this, knowing as they did that they were the envy of every boy of their acquaintance within sight of them.
The climax of the act was when the young woman seemed to plunge straight down toward the ground.
The women in the audience uttered sharp little cries of alarm.
But the performer was not falling. Strong slender ropes had been fastened to her heels, the other ends being held by one of the performers who was hanging from the rings.
As a result the falling girl's flight was checked just before she reached the ground and the spectators breathed a sigh of profound relief.
"My, that was great! I wouldn't want to do that."
"No, you're too heavy, Teddy. That's why they have a girl do it.
She is slender and light--"
"I'd be light headed."
"Guess, I would, too," laughed Phil.
At this juncture an attendant came running up the steps, halting before the lads.
"Are you Phil Forrest?" he asked.
"Yes."
"The boss wants to see you."
"Mr. Sparling? All right. I wanted to see the rest of the show, but I'll go." Phil rose reluctantly and followed the guide.
"I'll meet you by the ticket wagon if I don't get back here, Teddy," he said.
CHAPTER X
PHIL GETS A SURPRISE
"Where will I find Mr. Sparling?"
"In the doghouse."
"Where's that?"
"Out back of the ticket wagon. It's a little A tent, and we call it the boss's doghouse, because it's only big enough to hold a couple of St. Bernards."
"Oh! What does he want of me?"
"Ask him," grinned the attendant, who, it developed, was an usher in the reserved-seat section. "He don't tell us fellows his business. Say, that was a great stunt you did with Emperor."
"Oh, I don't know."
"I do. There's the doghouse over there. See it?"
"Yes, thank you."
The attendant leaving him, Phil walked on alone to Mr. Sparling's private office, for such was the use to which he put the little tent that the usher had called the "doghouse."
"I wonder what he can want of me?" mused Phil. "Probably he wants to thank me for stopping that pony. I hope he doesn't. I don't like to be thanked. And it wasn't much of anything that I did anyway. Maybe he's going to--but what's the use of guessing?"
The lad stepped up to the tent, the flaps of which were closed.
He stretched out his hand to knock, then grinned sheepishly.
"I forgot you couldn't knock at a tent door. I wonder how visitors announce themselves, anyway."
His toe, at that moment, chanced to touch the tent pole and that gave him an idea. Phil tapped against the pole with his foot.
"Come in!" bellowed the voice of the owner of the show.
Phil entered, hat in hand. At the moment the owner was busily engaged with a pile of bills for merchandise recently purchased at the local stores, and he neither looked up nor spoke.
Phil stood quietly waiting, noting amusedly the stern scowl that appeared to be part of Mr. Sparling's natural expression.
"Well, what do you want?" he demanded, with disconcerting suddenness.
"I--I was told that you had sent for me, that you wanted to see me," began the lad, with a show of diffidence.
"So I did, so I did."
The showman hitched his camp chair about so he could get a better look at his visitor. He studied Phil from head to foot with his usual scowl.
"Sit down!"
"On the ground, sir?"
"Ground? No, of course not. Where's that chair? Oh, my lazy tent man didn't open it. I'll fire him the first place we get to where he won't be likely to starve to death. I hear you've been trying to put my show out of business."
"I wasn't aware of it, sir," replied Phil, looking squarely at his questioner. "Perhaps I was not wholly blameless in attaching myself to Emperor."
"Huh!" grunted Mr. Sparling, but whether or not it was a grunt of disapproval, Phil could not determine.
"So you're not living at home?"
"I have no home now, sir."
"Just so, just so. Brought up in refined surroundings, parents dead, crabbed old uncle turned you out of doors for reasons best known to himself--"
Phil was amazed.