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There was rejoicing on the part of his fellows, and relief in
the heart of Mr. Sparling when, along toward noon next day,
Phil Forrest came strolling on the circus lot at St. Joseph.
His friends, the farmers, had not only given him food and
lodging, but had advanced him enough money for his fare through
to join the show. His first duty was to get some money from
Mr. Sparling and send it back to his benefactors.
This done, Phil repaired to the owner's tent where he knew Mr.
Sparling was anxiously waiting to hear what had happened to him.
Phil went over the circumstances in detail, while Mr. Sparling
listened gravely at first, then with rising color as his
anger increased.
"It's Red Larry!" decided Mr. Sparling, with an emphasizing blow
of his fist on the desk before him.
"After I thought the matter over that was what I decided--I mean
that was the decision I came to."
"Right. Another season I'll have an officer with this show.
That's the only way we can protect ourselves."
"Do all the big shows carry an officer?" asked Phil.
"Yes; they have a detective with them--not a tin badge detective,
but a real one. Don't try to go out today. Get your dinner and
rest up for the afternoon performance. I think you had better go
to the train in my carriage tonight. I'm not going to take any
more such chances with you."
"I'll look out for myself after this, Mr. Sparling," laughed
Phil.
"I think it was only two days ago that I said I wasn't afraid of
Larry--that he couldn't get me. But he did."
That afternoon, as Phil related his experiences to the dressing
tent, he included the barnyard circus, which set the performers
in a roar.
Phil felt a little sore and stiff after his knockout and his
long ride in the freight car; but, after taking half an hour of
bending exercises in the paddock, he felt himself fit to go on
with his ring and bareback acts.
Both his acts passed off successfully, as did the Grand Entry in
which he rode old Emperor.
That night, after the performance, Phil hurried to the train,
but kept a weather eye out that he might not be assaulted again.
He found himself hungry, and, repairing to the accommodation car
for a lunch, discovered Teddy stowing away food at a great rate.
"Yep; I live here most of the time," grinned Teddy. "They like
to have me eat here. I'm a sort of nest egg, you know. It makes
the others hungry to see me eat, and they file in in a
perfect procession. How's your head?"
"Still a size too large," answered Phil, sinking down on a stool
and ordering a sandwich.
As the lads ate and talked two or three other performers came in,
whereupon the conversation became more general.
All at once there came a bang as a switching engine bumped into
the rear of their car. Teddy about to pass a cup of steaming
coffee to his lips, spilled most of it down his neck.
"Ouch!" he yelled, springing up, dancing about the floor,
holding his clothes as far from his body as possible. "Here, you
quit that!" he yelled, poking his head out of a window. "If you
do that again I'll trim you with a pitcher of coffee and see how
you like that."
Once more the engine smashed into them, having failed to make the
coupling the first time.
Teddy sat down heavily in the middle of the car, just as Little
Dimples tripped in. In one hand he held a sandwich half
consumed, while with the other he was still stretching his collar
as far from his neck as it would go.
"Why, Teddy," exclaimed Dimples, "what are you doing on the
floor?"
"Eating my lunch. Always eat it sitting on the floor, you know,"
growled the boy, at which there was a roar from the others.
"What are they trying to do out there?" questioned Phil.
"Going to shift us about on another track, I guess. I was nearly
thrown down when I tried to get on the platform. I never saw a
road where they were so rough. Did you?"
"Yes; I rode on one the other night that could beat this,"
grinned Phil.
A few minutes later the car got under motion, pushed by a
switching engine, and began banging along merrily over switches,
tearing through the yard at high speed.
"We seem to be in a hurry 'bout something," grunted Teddy.
"Maybe they've hooked us on the wrong train, and we're bound for
somewhere else."
"No, I don't think so," replied Phil. "You should be used to
this sort of thing by this time."
"I don't care as long as the food holds out. It doesn't make any
difference where they take us."
"What section does this car go out on tonight, steward?"
questioned Phil.
"That explains it. They are shifting us around, making up the
last section and to get us out of the way of section No. 2.
I never can keep these trains straight in my mind, they change
them so frequently. But it's better than riding in a canvas
wagon over a rough country road, isn't it, Teddy?"
"Worse," grunted the lad. "You never know when you're going to
get your everlasting bump, and you don't have any net to fall in
when you do. Hey, they're at it again!"
Little Dimples was hurled from her stool at the lunch counter,
and launched straight toward a window from which the glass was
showering into the car.
Phil made a spring, catching her in his arms. But the impact
and the jolt were too much for him. He went down in a heap,
Little Dimples falling half over him.
He made a desperate grab for her, but the woman's skirts
slipped through his hand and she plunged on toward the far end
of the car.
A yell from a waiter told them that the warning had come
too late. The man had gotten a large part of the contents
of the boiler over him.
But all at once those in the car began to realize that something
else was occurring. Somehow, they could feel the accommodation
car wavering as if on the brink of a precipice. Then it began to
settle slowly and the mystified performers and car hands thought
it was going to rest where it was on the ties.
Phil, who had scrambled quickly to his feet, half-dazed from the
fall, stood irresolutely for a few seconds then began making his
way toward where Little Dimples had fallen.
At that moment young Forrest was hurled with great force against
the side of the car. Everything in the car seemed suddenly to
have become the center of a miniature cyclone. Dishes, cooking
utensils, tables and chairs were flying through the air, the
noise within the car accompanied by a sickening, grinding series
of crashes from without.
Groans were already distinguishable above the deafening crashes.
Those who were able to think realized that the accommodation car
was falling over an embankment of some sort.
Through accident or design, what is known as a "blind switch" had
been turned while the engine was shunting the accommodation car
about the yards. The result was that the car had left the rails,
bumped along on the ties for a distance, then had toppled over an
embankment that was some twenty feet high.
It seemed as if all in that ill-fated car must be killed or
maimed for life. A series of shrill blasts from the engine
called for help.
The crash had been heard all over the railroad yards.
Railroad men and circus men had rushed toward the spot where
the accommodation car had gone over the embankment, Mr. Sparling
among the number. He had just arrived at the yards when the
accident occurred.
Fortunately, the wrecking crew was ready for instant service,
and these men were rushed without an instant's delay to the
outskirts of the yard where the wreck had occurred.
However, ere the men got there a startling cry rose from hundreds
of throats.
Yet no one seemed to have the presence of mind to do anything.
Phil had been hurled through a broken widow, landing halfway down
the bank, on the uphill side of the car, else he must have been
crushed to death. But so thoroughly dazed was he that he was
unable to move.
"It's Phil Forrest," cried one of the showmen, recognizing the
lad, whose face was streaked where it had been cut by the jagged
glass in the broken window.
All at once he understood what had happened. He staggered to his
feet holding to a man standing beside him.
"Why don't you do something?" cried Phil. "Don't you know there
are people in that car?"
"It's burning up. Nobody dares get in till the wreckers can get
here and smash in the side of the car," was the answer.
"What?" fairly screamed Phil Forrest. "Nobody dares go in
that car? Somebody does dare!"
"Come back, come back, Phil! You can't do anything," shouted a
fellow performer.
But the lad did not even hear him. He was leaping, falling
and rolling down the bank, regardless of the danger that he was
approaching, for the flames already showed through a broken spot
in the roof of the car, which was lying half on its side at the
foot of the embankment.
Without an instant's hesitation Phil, as he came up alongside,
raised a foot, smashing out the remaining pieces of glass in
a window. Then he plunged in head first.
Phil rushed to her assistance. Her legs were pinioned beneath
a heavy timber. Phil attacked it desperately, tugging and
grunting, the perspiration rolling down his face, for the heat
in there was now almost more than he could bear.
With a mighty effort he wrenched the timber from the prostrate
woman, then quickly gathered her up in his arms.
"I knew you'd come, Phil, if you were alive," she breathed,
her head resting on his shoulder.
"Do you know where Teddy is?" he asked, plunging through the
blinding smoke to the window where voices already were calling
to him.
It proved an easy matter to liberate Teddy and drag him to the
window, where Phil dumped him out.
Mr. Sparling had climbed in by this time, and the wrecking crew
were thundering at the roof to let the smoke and flames out,
while others had crawled in with their fire extinguishers.
There were now quite a number of brave men in the car all working
with desperate haste to rescue the imprisoned circus people.
"All out!" bellowed the foreman of the wrecking crew. "The roof
will be down in a minute!"
"All out!" roared Mr. Sparling, himself making a dash for
a window.
Others piled out with a rush, the flames gaining very rapid
headway now.
"Phil! Phil! Where's Forrest?" called Mr. Sparling.
It was a howl--a startled howl rather than a spoken question.
The voice belonged to Teddy Tucker.
Teddy rushed through the crowd, pushing obstructors aside,
and hurled himself through the window into the burning car.
He looked more like a big, round ball than anything else.
No sooner had Tucker landed fairly inside than he uttered a yell.
"I've got him!" howled Teddy, springing up and dragging the
half-dazed Phil Forrest to the window. There both boys were
hauled out, Teddy and Phil collapsing on the embankment from
the smoke that they had inhaled.
"Phil! Teddy!" begged Mr. Sparling, throwing himself
beside them.