The manager of the rival car strolled toward Car Three, whereupon Phil started, meeting him half-way. For reasons of his own he did not wish his rival to get too close to the Sparling car.
"I never saw you before," said the rival, eyeing Phil keenly.
"Nor I you."
"What"s your name?"
"Philip."
"Glad to know you, Philip. How long have you been with the car?"
"A few weeks only."
"Who"s your car manager?"
"A fellow named Forrest."
"Never heard of him. Is he in bed!"
"No; he is out."
"Humph! What time do you start your men on the country routes?"
"Usually about seven to seven-thirty."
"Well, you won"t start them this morning at that time."
"No; I think not."
"I"ll tell you what you do; you come and take breakfast with me.
We won"t go to any contract hotel, either."
"Thank you; I shall be delighted. Wait till I get my clothes on."
Phil hastened back to his own car.
"That fellow is playing a sharp trick. He is trying to get me away so he can get his men out ahead of mine. I will walk into his trap. He knows I am the manager. I could see that by the way he acted."
Phil stepped out and joined his rival.
"I believe you said you were the manager of that car, did you not?" asked the rival.
"I am, though I do not recollect having said so."
"A kid like you manager of a car? I don"t know what the show business is coming to, with all due respect to you, young man."
"Oh, that"s all right," answered the Circus Boy with a frank, innocent smile. "I am just learning the business, you know."
"I thought so," nodded the rival. "My name"s Tripp--Bob Tripp."
"You been in the business long?"
"Fifteen years, my boy. After you have been in it as long as I have, you will know every crook and turn, every trick in the whole show business," said the fellow proudly. "You are a bright-faced young chap. I should like to have you on my car.
Don"t want a job, do you?"
"No, thank you. I am very well satisfied where I am. I can learn on a Sparling car as well as anywhere else, you know."
"Yes, of course."
The couple stopped at the leading hotel of the town, where the rival manager ordered a fine breakfast. Phil Forrest was quite ready for it. He already had done a heavy day"s work and he was genuinely hungry.
"Guess they don"t feed you very well with your outfit,"
smiled Tripp.
"Contract hotels, you know," laughed Phil. "I do not get a chance at a meal like this every day."
"Do the way I do."
"How is that?"
"Feed at the good places and charge it up in your expense account."
"Oh, I couldn"t do that. It would not be right."
"That shows you are new in the business. Get all you can and keep all you get. That"s my way of doing things. I was just like you when I began."
They tarried unusually long over the meal, Tripp seeming to be in no hurry. Phil was sure that he was in no hurry, either. And he knew why there was no need for hurry. Bob, in the meantime, was relating to the show boy his exploits as a manager. In fact he was giving Phil more information about the work of his own car than he realized at the time.
Now and then the Circus Boy would slip in an innocent question, which Bob would answer promptly. By the time the meal was finished Phil had a pretty clear idea of the workings of his rival"s advance business, as well as their plans for the future, so far as Tripp knew them.
"By the way, how did you happen to get a berth like this, young man?" questioned Tripp. "I thought a fellow by the name of Snowden was running Car Three for old man Sparling."
"He was."
"Closed?"
"Yes."
"What for?"
"I would rather not talk about that. You will have to ask headquarters, or Snowden himself. You see, it is not my business, and I make it a rule never to discuss another fellow"s affairs in public."
"Nor your own, eh?"
"Oh, I don"t know. I think I have talked a good deal this morning. But you and I had better get back to our cars and get our men started, had we not? This is a late morning all around."
"No hurry, no hurry," urged Bob. "Why the men haven"t got back from their breakfast yet. Wait awhile. Have a smoke."