"Bareback riders out!" shouted the callboy, poking his head
into the dressing tent.
"Get out!" roared a clown, hurling a fellow performer's bath
brush at the boy, which the youngster promptly shied back
at the clown's head, then prudently made his escape to call
Little Dimples in the women's dressing tent.
Phil Forrest, proud and happy, bounded out into the paddock,
resplendent in pink tights, a black girdle about his loins,
sparkling with silver spangles.
Little Dimples ran out at about the same time.
"How do I look?" he questioned, his face wreathed in smiles.
"If you ride half as well as you look today, you will make the
hit
of your life," twinkled Dimples merrily. "There, don't blush.
Run along. The band is playing our entrance tune. Mr. Ducro
will be in a fine temper if we are a second behind time."
For that day, and until Phil could break in on another animal,
Little Dimples had loaned her gray to him, for Phil did not
dare to try the experiment of riding a new horse at his
first appearance. Altogether too much depended upon his first
public exhibition as a bareback rider to permit his taking any
such chances.
Dimples owned two horses, so she rode the second one this day.
As Phil walked lightly the length of the big top, which he
was obliged to do to reach ring No. 1 in which he was to ride,
his figure, graceful as it was, appeared almost fragile.
He attracted attention because of this fact alone, for the people
did not recognize in him the lad who had that morning stayed the
stampede of the herd of huge elephants.
"Now keep cool. Don't get excited," warned Dimples as she left
him to enter the ring where she was to perform. "Forget all
about those people out there, and they will do the rest."
Phil nodded and passed on smiling. Reaching his ring he quickly
kicked off his pumps and leaped lightly to the back of his mount,
where he sat easily while the gray slowly walked about the
sawdust arena.
"Ladies and gentlemen," announced the equestrian director.
"You see before you the hero of the day, the young man who,
unaided, stopped the charge of a herd of great elephants,
saving, perhaps many lives besides doing a great service for
the Sparling Combined Shows."
"What did you do that for?" demanded Phil, squirming uneasily
on the slippery seat where he was perched.
"Unfortunately," continued the Director, "our principal male
bareback rider was slightly injured in that same stampede.
The management would not permit him to appear this evening on
that account, for the Sparling Combined Shows believe in
treating its people right. Our young friend here has consented
to ride in the regular rider's place. It is his first appearance
in any ring as a bareback rider. I might add that he has been
practicing something less than three weeks for this act;
therefore any slips that he may make you will understand.
Ladies and gentlemen, I take pleasure in introducing to you
Master Phillip Forrest, the hero of the day--a young man who is
winning new laurels on the tanbark six days in every week!"
The audience, now worked up to the proper pitch of enthusiasm by
the words of the director, howled its approval, the spectators
drumming on the seats with their feet and shouting lustily.
Phil had not had such an ovation since the day he first rode
Emperor into the ring when he joined the circus in Edmeston.
The lad's face was a few shades deeper pink than his tights,
and nervous excitement seemed to suddenly take possession of him.
"I wish you hadn't done that," he laughed. "I'll bet I fall off
now, for that."
"Tweetle! Tweetle!" sang the whistle.
Crash!
At a wave of the bandmaster's baton, the band suddenly launched
into a smashing air.
The ringmaster's whip cracked with an explosive sound, at which
the gray mare, unaffected by the noise and the excitement,
started away at a measured gallop, her head rising and falling
like the prow of a ship buffeting a heavy sea.
Phil was plainly nervous. He knew it. He felt that he was going
to make an unpleasant exhibition of himself.
"Get up! Get going! Going to sit there all day?" questioned
the ringmaster.
Phil threw himself to his feet. Somehow he missed his footing in
his nervousness, and the next instant he felt himself falling.
"There, I've done it!" groaned the lad, as he dropped lightly on
all fours well outside the wooden ring curbing, which he took
care to clear in his descent.
"Oh, you Rube! You've gone and done it now," growled
the ringmaster. "It's all up. You've lost them sure."
The audience was laughing and cheering at the same time.
Feeling her rider leave her back the gray dropped her gallop and
fell into a slow trot.
Phil scrambled to his feet very red in the face, while
Mr. Sparling, from the side lines, stood leaning against a
quarter pole with a set grin on his face. His confidence in his
little Circus Boy was not wholly lost yet.
"Keep her up! Keep her up! What ails you?" snapped Phil.
All the grit in the lad's slender body seemed to come to the
front now. His eyes were flashing and he gripped the little
riding whip as if he would vent his anger upon it.
The ringmaster's whip had exploded again and the gray began
to gallop. Phil paused on the ring curbing with head slightly
inclined forward, watching the gray with keen eyes.
Phil had forgotten that sea of human faces out there now. He saw
only that broad gray, rosined back that he must reach and cling
to, but without a slip this time.
All at once he left the curbing, dashing almost savagely at
his mount.
"He'll never make it from the ground," groaned Mr. Sparling,
realizing that Phil had no step to aid him in his effort to reach
the back of the animal.
The lad launched himself into the air as if propelled by
a spring. He landed fairly on the back of the ring horse,
wavered for one breathless second, then fell into the pose
of the accomplished rider.
"Y-i-i-i--p! Y-i-i-i-p!" sang the shrill voice of Little Dimples
far down in ring No. 1.
"Y-i-i-i-p!" answered the Circus Boy, while the spectators broke
into thunders of applause.
Mr. Sparling, hardened showman that he was, brushed a suspicious
hand across his eyes and sat down suddenly.
"Such grit, Such grit!" he muttered.
Phil threw himself wildly into his work, taking every conceivable
position known to the equestrian world, and essaying many daring
feats that he had never tried before. It seemed simply
impossible for the boy to fall, so sure was his footing. Now he
would spring from the broad back of the gray, and run across the
ring, doing a lively handspring, then once more vault into a
standing position on the mare.
Suddenly the band stopped playing, for the rest that is always
given the performers. But Phil did not pause.
"Keep her up!" Forrest shouted, bringing down his whip on the
flanks of his mount and, in a fervor of excitement and stubborn
determination, going at his work like a whirlwind.
Mr. Sparling, catching the spirit of the moment scrambled to his
feet and rushed to the foot of the bandstand, near which he had
been sitting.
"Play, you idiots, play!" shouted the proprietor, waving his
arms excitedly.
Play they did.
Little Dimples, too, had by this time forgotten that she was
resting, and now she began to ride as she never had ridden
before, throwing a series of difficult backward turns, landing
each time with a sureness that she never had before accomplished.
Tweetle! Tweetle!
The act came to a quick ending. The time for the equestrian act
had expired, and it must give way to the others that were
to follow. But Phil, instead of dropping to the ground and
walking to the paddock along the concourse, suddenly brought down
his whip on the gray's flanks, much to that animal's surprise and
apparent disgust.
Starting off at a quicker gallop, the gray swung into the
concourse, heading for the paddock with disapproving ears laid
back on her head, Phil standing as rigid as a statue with folded
arms, far back over the animal's hips.
The people were standing up, waving their arms wildly.
Many hurled their hats at the Circus Boy in their excitement,
while others showered bags of peanuts over him as he raced
by them.
Such a scene of excitement and enthusiasm never had been seen
under that big top before. Phil did not move from his position
until he reached the paddock. Arriving there he sat down, slid
to the ground and collapsed in a heap.
Mr. Sparling came charging in, hat missing and hair
standing straight up where he had run his fingers through
it in his excitement.
He grabbed Phil in his arms and carried him into the
dressing tent.
"You're not hurt, are you, my lad?" he cried.
"No; I'm just a silly little fool," smiled Phil a bit weakly.
"How did I do?"
"It was splendid, splendid."
"Hurrah for Phil Forrest!" shouted the performers. Then boosting
the lad to their shoulders, the painted clowns began marching
about the dressing tent with him singing, "For He's a Jolly
Good Fellow."
"All out for the leaping act," shouted the callboy, poking his
grinning countenance through between the flaps. "Leapers and
clowns all out on the jump!"