"Five o"clock. You will be there in the morning in time to see them set the tents. Let me warn you that Sully is ugly and unscrupulous. If he were to know what you are there for it might get you into a mix-up, so be careful."
"I"ll be careful. Have you any further instructions?"
"I want to give you some money. You can"t travel without money."
"I have plenty," answered Phil. "I will keep my expense account and turn it in to you when I get back. Where do you wish me to join you?"
"Corinto, unless you think best to come back in the meantime.
That is, if you get sufficient information. You know what I want without my going into details, don"t you?"
"I think so."
"Now, look out for yourself."
"I"ll try to."
"You have not mentioned to anyone what you are going to do, of course?"
"Certainly not. Not even to Teddy. Perhaps if you will, you might make the explanation to him," suggested Phil.
"Yes; I"ll do that as soon as you have gotten away. He"ll be raising the roof off the big top when he misses you."
Phil extended his hand to his employer, then turned and hurried from the tent. First, the boy proceeded to the sleeping car in which he berthed, for his bag. Securing this he had just time to reach the station before the five o"clock train rumbled in.
The lad boarded a sleeping car and settled himself for the long ride before him, pa.s.sing the time by reading the current magazines with which he provided himself when the train agent came through. Late in the evening the lad turned in. Riding in a sleeping car was no novelty to him, and he dropped asleep almost instantly, not to awaken again until the porter shook him gently by the shoulder.
"What is it?" questioned Phil, starting up.
"St. Catharines."
The lad pulled the curtains of his berth aside. Day was just breaking as he peered out.
"There they are," he muttered, catching sight of a switch full of gaudily painted cars bearing the name of the Sully Hippodrome Circus. "They have just got in," he decided from certain familiar signs of which he took quick mental note.
"Looks like a cheap outfit at that. But you never can tell."
Phil Forrest dressed himself quickly and grasping his bag hurried from the car, anxious to be at his task, which, to tell the truth, he approached with keen zest. He was beginning to enter into the spirit of the work to which he had been a.s.signed, and which was to provide him with much more excitement than he at that moment dreamed.
CHAPTER IX
PHIL MAKES A DISCOVERY
"I guess I"ll leave my bag in the station and go over to the lot," decided the lad.
"The stake and chain gang will just about be on the job by this time."
It is a well known fact in the circus world that there is no better place to get information than from the stake and chain gang, the men who hurry to the lot the moment their train gets in and survey it, driving stakes to show where the tents are to be pitched, and it is a familiar answer, when one is unable to answer a question to say: "Ask the stake and chain gang."
That was exactly what Phil Forrest had in mind to do.
He followed a show wagon to the circus lot, where he found the men already at work measuring off the ground with their surveyor"s chains, in the faint morning light.
"Morning," smiled Phil, sauntering over to where he observed the foreman watching the work of his men.
"Morning," growled the showman. Phil knew he would growl because the fellow had not yet had his breakfast.
"Seems to me the circuses are coming this way pretty fast?"
suggested the lad.
"What d"ye mean?"
"I hear that there are to be two over in Corinto within two days--yours and--and. What"s the name of the other one?"
"Sparling"s," grunted the foreman.
Phil grinned appreciatively. He had drawn his man out on the first round.
"That"s it. That"s the name. I shouldn"t think he"d want to show in the same place the day after you had been there?"
"Why not?"
" "Cause the folks will all spend their money going to your show."
The foreman threw back his head and laughed.
"That"s exactly what they will do, kid. That"s what we want them to do. We"ll make that Sparling outfit get off the earth before we get through with them. The boss has his axe out for that outfit."
"Indeed?" cooed Phil.
"Yes. He"s going, between you and me, to keep a day ahead of them all the way over this circuit."
"Smart, very smart," laughed Phil, slapping his thigh as if he appreciated the joke fully. "Have an orange. I always carry some about with me when I"m going to visit a circus."
"Thanks, that will taste good at this time of the morning.
It will keep me going until the cook tent is ready. The cook tent is where we get our meals, you understand. "Course you don"t know about those things."
"No indeed!"
"Outsiders never do," replied the man.
"I was wondering something a moment ago, when you told me about getting ahead of the other fellow."
"Wondering?"
"Yes."
"What?"