"So, that"s it, eh?"
Teddy nodded again.
"Did you give out any such information as that?"
Teddy shook his head.
"Who did?"
"I won"t tell. You can"t make me tell," retorted the Circus Boy belligerently.
"But you were responsible for the rumor getting out?"
Teddy did not answer.
"And those poor fellows are lying there on the siding, twenty miles from the nearest telegraph office?"
"I guess so." Tucker grinned broadly.
"And how are they going to get out?"
"Walk!"
Phil broke out into a roar of laughter.
"Oh, Teddy, what am I going to do with you? Do you know you have done very wrong?"
"No, I don"t. The trouble with you is that you don"t appreciate a good thing when you get it. You were wishing you could get rid of the opposition cars, weren"t you?"
"Yes, but--"
"Well, you"re rid of them, aren"t you?"
"Yes, but--"
"And I got rid of them for you."
"Yes, but as I was saying--"
"Then what have you got to raise such a row about? You got your wish."
Teddy curled up and began studying the landscape again.
"I admire your zeal young man, but your methods are open to severe criticism. First you imperil the lives of three carloads of men by cutting them loose from the train; then you climb a flag pole, nearly losing your own life in the attempt, and now you have lured three carloads of men to a deserted village, where you have lost them. Oh, I"ve got to laugh--I can"t help it!"
And Phil did laugh, disturbed as he was over Teddy Tucker"s repeated violation of what Phil believed to be the right and honorable way of doing business.
"Billy!" called Phil.
Mr. Conley responded promptly.
"I am not asking any questions. I do not want to know any more than I do about this business. I already know more than I wish I knew. I want to say, however, that when any more plans are made, any schemes hatched for outwitting our rivals, I shall appreciate being made acquainted with such plans before they are put into practice."
Teddy looked up in amazement. He had not the remotest idea that Phil even suspected who had been his accomplice. But the car manager had no need to be told. He was too shrewd not to suspect at once who it was that had carried out Teddy"s suggestions and sidetracked the opposition where they would not get out for at least a whole day.
"Yes, sir," answered Billy meekly.
"I understand that the opposition are where they are likely to stay for sometime to come?"
"Yes, sir; so I understand."
"Oh, you do, eh?"
"Yes, sir."
"You know all about it? Well, I thought as much. But I am sorry you have admitted it. That necessitates my reading you a severe lecture."
This Phil did, laying down the law as Conley never had supposed the Circus Boy could do. Billy repeated the lecture to the rest of the crew, later on, and all agreed that Phil Forrest, the young advance agent, had left nothing unsaid. Phil"s stock rose correspondingly. A man who could "call down" his crew properly was a real car manager.
While the Sparling Show profited by Teddy"s ruse, Phil felt unhappy that his advantage had come by reason of the falsehood that Teddy had told; and that night Phil read his young friend a severe lecture.
"If I find you doing a trick like that again," concluded Phil, "you close there and then."
CHAPTER XXIV
CONCLUSION
"Who is the man in charge of Sparling Advance Car Number Three?"
demanded Mr. Starr, manager of "The Greatest Show on Earth."
"A young fellow named Forrest. That is all I know about him,"
answered the treasurer of the show.
"He used to be a performer and a good one, too," spoke up the a.s.sistant manager.
This conversation took place in the office tent of the show that Phil Forrest had been fighting almost ever since he took charge of Car Three.
"He is one of the best bareback riders who ever entered the forty-two foot ring," continued the a.s.sistant manager.
"What has he ever done before? I never heard of him."
"He has been with Sparling, I think, about five years.
I understand he never did any circus work before that."
"I want that young man," announced the general manager decisively.
"Probably money will get him," smiled the treasurer.