Cool, confident a troop of motley fools and clean-limbed
performers filed out from the dressing tent, on past the
bandstand and across the arena to the place where the springboard
had been rigged, with a mat two feet thick a short distance
beyond it.
With them proudly marched Teddy Tucker.
Mr. Sparling, in the meantime, was patting Phil on the back.
"I'm in a quandary, Phil," he said.
"What about?" smiled the lad, tugging away at his tights.
"I want you out front and yet it would be almost a crime to take
a performer like you out of the ring. Tell me honestly, where
would you prefer to be?"
"That's a difficult question to answer. There is a terrible
fascination about the ring, and it's getting a stronger hold of
me every day I am out."
"Yes; I understand that. It's so with all of them. I was that
way myself at first."
"Were you ever in the ring?"
"I clowned it. But I wasn't much of a performer. Just did a few
simple clown stunts and made faces at the audience. Then I got
some money ahead and started out for myself. If I'd had you then
I would have had a railroad show long before this season," smiled
the showman.
"On the other hand," continued Phil, "I am anxious to learn the
front of the house as well as the ring. I think, maybe, that I
could spend part of my time in the office, if that is where you
wish me. If you can spare me from the parade, I might put in
that time to decided advantage doing things on the lot for you,"
mused Phil.
"Spare you from the parade? Well, I should say so. You are
relieved from that already. Of course, any time you wish to go
out, you have the privilege of doing so. Sometimes it is a
change, providing one is not obliged to go," smiled the showman.
"Most of the performers would be glad if they did not
have to, though."
"No doubt of it. But let's see; you have how many acts now?
There's the flying rings, the elephant act and now comes the
bareback act--"
"Yes; three," nodded Phil.
"That's too many. You'll give out under all that, and now we're
talking about doubling you out in front. I guess we will let the
front of the house take care of itself for the present."
Phil looked rather disappointed.
"Of course, any time you wish you may come out, you know."
"Thank you; I shall be glad to do that. I can do a lot of
little things to help you as soon as I learn how you run
the show. I know something about that already," grinned the lad.
"If you wish, I will double somebody up on your flying rings act.
What do you say?"
"It isn't necessary, Mr. Sparling. I can handle all three
without any difficulty, only the bareback act comes pretty
close to the grand entry. It doesn't give me much time to
change my costume."
"That's right. Tell you what we'll do."
"Yes?"
"We'll set the bareback act forward one number, substituting
the leaping for it. That will give you plenty of time to make
a change, will it not?"
"Plenty," agreed Phil.
"How about the flying rings. They come sometime later, if I
remember correctly."
"Yes; the third act after the riding, according to the
new arrangement. No trouble about that."
"Very well; then I will notify the director and let him make
the necessary changes. I want to go out now and see your young
friend make an exhibition of himself."
"Teddy?"
"Yes. He's going on the leaping act for the first time,
you know."
"That's so. I had forgotten all about it. I want to see that,
too.
I'll hurry and dress."
"And, Phil," said the showman in a more kindly voice, even,
than he had used before.
"Yes, sir," answered the lad, glancing up quickly.
"You are going to be a great showman some of these days, both in
the ring and out of it. Remember what I tell you."
"Thank you; I hope so. I am going to try to be at least a
good one."
"You're that already. You've done a lot for the Sparling
Combined as it is and I don't want you to think I do not
appreciate it. Shake hands!"
Man and boy grasped each other's hand in a grip that meant more
than words. Then Mr. Sparling turned abruptly and hurried out
into the big top where the leaping act was in full cry.
Painted clowns were keeping the audience in a roar by their
funny leaps from the springboard to the mat, while the supple
acrobats were doing doubles and singles through the air,
landing gracefully on the mat as a round off.
The showman's first inquiring look was in search of Teddy Tucker.
He soon made the lad out. Teddy was made up as a fat boy with a
low, narrow-brimmed hat perched jauntily on one side of his head.
There was drollery in Teddy's every movement. His natural
clownish movements were sufficient to excite the laughter
of the spectators without any attempt on his part to be funny,
while the lad kept up a constant flow of criticism of his
companions in the act.
But they had grown to know Teddy better, by this time, and none
took his taunts seriously.
"That boy can leap, after all," muttered Mr. Sparling.
"I thought he would tumble around and make some fun for the
audience, but I hadn't the least idea he could do a turn.
Why, he's the funniest one in the bunch."
Teddy was doing funny twists in the air as he threw a somersault
at that moment. In his enthusiasm he overshot the mat, and had
there not been a performer handy to catch him, the lad might have
been seriously hurt.
Mr. Sparling shook his head.
"Lucky if he doesn't break his neck! But that kind seldom do,"
the owner said out loud.
Now the helpers were bringing the elephants up. Two were placed
in front of the springboard and over these a stream of gaudily
attired clowns dived, doing a turn in the air as they passed.
Teddy was among the number.
Three elephants were lined up, then a fourth and a fifth.
"I hope he isn't going to try that," growled Mr. Sparling,
noting that the lad was waiting his turn to get up on
the springboard. "Not many of them can get away with
that number. I suppose I ought to go over and stop the boy.
But I guess he won't try to jump them. He'll probably walk
across their backs, the same as he has seen the other clowns do."
Teddy, however, had a different plan in mind. He had espied
Mr. Sparling looking at him from across the tent, and he proposed
to let the owner see what he really could do.
For a moment the lad poised at the top of the springboard,
critically measuring the distance across the backs of the
assembled elephants.
"Go on, go on!" commanded the director. "Do you think this show
can wait on your motion all day? Jump, or get off the board!"
"Say, who's doing this you or I?" demanded Teddy in well-feigned
indignation, and in a voice that was audible pretty much all over
the tent.
This drew a loud laugh from the spectators, who were now in a
frame of mind to laugh at anything the Fat Boy did.
"It doesn't look as if anyone were doing anything.
Somebody will be in a minute, if I hear any more of your talk,"
snapped the director. "Are you going to jump, or are you going
to get off the board?"
"Well," shouted Teddy, "confidentially now, mind you. Come over
here.
I want to talk to you. Confidentially, you know. I'm going to
jump,
if you'll stop asking questions long enough for me to get away."
Amid a roar of laughter from spectators, and broad grins on the
part of the performers, Teddy took a running start and shot up
into the air.
"He's turning too quick," snapped Mr. Sparling.
Teddy, however, evidently knew what he was about. Turning a
beautiful somersault, he launched into a second one with the
confidence of a veteran. All the circus people in the big top
expected to see the lad break his neck. Instead, however, Tucker
landed lightly and easily on his feet while the spectators
shouted their approval. But instead of landing on the mat as he
thought he was doing, Teddy was standing on the back of the last
elephant in the line.
His double somersault had made him dizzy and the boy did not
realize that he had not yet reached the mat on the ground.
Bowing and smiling to the audience, the Fat Boy started to
walk away.
Then Teddy fell off, landing in a heap on the hard ground.
He rose, aching, but the onlookers on the boards took it all
as a funny finish, and gleefully roared their appreciation.