When the doors of the big tent were
opened, and the people began to crowd in, just as
Toby had seen them do at Guilford, Mr. Lord announced
to his young clerk that it was time for him to go into
the tent to work. Then it was that Toby learned
for the first time that he had two masters instead
of one, and this knowledge caused him no little uneasiness.
If the other one was anything like Mr. Lord, his lot
would be just twice as bad, and he began to wonder
whether he could even stand it one day longer.
As the boy passed through the tent
on his way to the candy stand, where he was really
to enter upon the duties for which he had run away
from home, he wanted to stop for a moment and speak
with the old monkey who he thought had taken such
an interest in him. But when he reached the cage
in which his friend was confined, there was such a
crowd around it that it was impossible for him to
get near enough to speak without being overheard.
This was such a disappointment to
the little fellow that the big tears came into his
eyes, and in another instant would have gone rolling
down his cheeks if his aged friend had not chanced
to look toward him. Toby fancied that the monkey
looked at him in the most friendly way, and then he
was certain that he winked one eye. Toby felt
that there was no mistake about that wink, and it
seemed as if it was intended to convey comfort to
him in his troubles. He winked back at the monkey
in the most emphatic and grave manner possible, and
then went on his way, feeling wonderfully comforted.
The work inside the tent was far different
and much harder than it was outside. He was obliged
to carry around among the audience trays of candy,
nuts, and lemonade for sale, and he was also expected
to cry aloud the description of that which he offered.
The partner of Mr. Lord, who had charge of the stand
inside the tent, showed himself to be neither better
nor worse than Mr. Lord himself. When Toby first
presented himself for work he handed him a tray filled
with glasses of lemonade, and told him to go among
the audience, crying, “Here’s your nice
cold lemonade, only five cents a glass!”
Toby started to do as he was bidden;
but when he tried to repeat the words in anything
like a loud tone of voice they stuck in his throat,
and he found it next to impossible to utter a sound
above a whisper. It seemed to him that every
one in the audience was looking only at him, and the
very sound of his own voice made him afraid.
He went entirely around the tent once
without making a sale, and when he returned to the
stand he was at once convinced that one of his masters
was quite as bad as the other. This one - and
he knew that his name was Jacobs, for he heard some
one call him so - very kindly told him that
he would break every bone in his body if he didn’t
sell something, and Toby confidently believed that
he would carry out his threat.
It was with a very heavy heart that
he started around again in obedience to Mr. Jacobs’s
angry command; but this time he did manage to cry out,
in a very thin and very squeaky voice, the words which
he had been told to repeat.
This time - perhaps owing
to his pitiful and imploring look, certainly not because
of the noise he made - he met with very good
luck, and sold every glass of the mixture which Messrs.
Lord and Jacobs called lemonade, and went back to
the stand for more.
He certainly thought he had earned
a word of praise, and fully expected it as he put
the empty glasses and money on the stand in front of
Mr. Jacobs. But, instead of the kind words, he
was greeted with a volley of curses; and the reason
for it was that he had taken in payment for two of
the glasses a lead ten-cent piece. Mr. Jacobs,
after scolding poor little Toby to his heart’s
content, vowed that the amount should be kept from
his first week’s wages, and then handed back
the coin, with orders to give it to the first man
who gave him money to change, under the penalty of
a severe flogging if he failed to do so.
Poor Toby tried to explain matters
by saying, “You see, I don’t know anything
about money; I never had more’n a cent at a time,
an’ you mustn’t expect me to get posted
all at once.”
“I’ll post you with a
stick if you do it again; an’ it won’t
be well for you if you bring that ten-cent piece back
here!”
Now, Toby was very well aware that
to pass the coin, knowing it to be bad, would be a
crime, and he resolved to take the consequences of
which Mr. Jacobs had intimated, if he could not find
the one who had given him the counterfeit, and persuade
him to give him good money in its stead. He remembered
very plainly where he had sold each glass of lemonade,
and he retraced his steps, glancing at each face carefully
as he passed. At last he was confident that he
saw the man who had gotten him into such trouble,
and he climbed up the board seats, saying, as he stood
in front of him and held out the coin, “Mister,
this money that you gave me is bad. Won’t
you give me an other one for it?”
The man was a rough-looking party
who had taken his girl to the circus, and who did
not seem at all disposed to pay any heed to Toby’s
request. Therefore he repeated it, and this time
more loudly.
“Get out the way!” said
the man, angrily. “How can you expect me
to see the show if you stand right in front of me?”
“You’ll like it better,”
said Toby, earnestly, “if you give me another
ten-cent piece.”
“Get out, an’ don’t
bother me!” was the angry rejoinder; and the
little fellow began to think that perhaps he would
be obliged to “get out” without getting
his money.
It was becoming a desperate case,
for the man was growing angry very fast, and if Toby
did not succeed in getting good money for the bad,
he would have to take the consequences of which Mr.
Jacobs had spoken.
“Please, mister,” he said,
imploringly - for his heart began to grow
very heavy, and he was fearing that he should not
succeed - “won’t you please give
me the money back? You know you gave it to me,
an’ I’ll have to pay it if you don’t.”
The boy’s lip was quivering,
and those around began to be interested in the affair,
while several in the immediate vicinity gave vent to
their indignation that a man should try to cheat a
boy out of ten cents by giving him counterfeit money.
The man whom Toby was speaking to
was about to dismiss him with an angry reply, when
he saw that those about him were not only interested
in the matter, but were evidently taking sides with
the boy against him; and knowing well that he had
given the counterfeit money, he took another coin
from his pocket, and handing it to Toby, said, “I
didn’t give you the lead piece; but you’re
making such a fuss about it that here’s ten
cents to make you keep quiet.”
“I’m sure you did give
me the money,” said Toby, as he took the extended
coin, “an’ I’m much obliged to you
for takin’ it back. I didn’t want
to tell you before, ‘cause you’d thought
I was beggin’; but if you hadn’t given
me this, I ‘xpect I’d have got an awful
whippin’, for Mr. Jacobs said he’d fix
me if I didn’t get the money for it.”
The man looked sheepish enough as
he put the bad money in his pocket, and Toby’s
innocently told story caused such a feeling in his
behalf among those who sat near that he not only disposed
of his entire stock then and there, but received from
one gentleman twenty-five cents for himself.
He was both proud and happy as he returned to Mr. Jacobs
with empty glasses, and with the money to refund the
amount of loss which would have been caused by the
counterfeit.
But the worthy partner of Mr. Lord’s
candy business had no words of encouragement for the
boy who was trying so hard to please.
“Let that make you keep your
eyes open,” he growled out, sulkily; “an’
if you get caught in that trap again, you won’t
be let off so easy.”
Poor little Toby! his heart seemed
ready to break; but his few hours’ previous
experience had taught him that there was but one thing
to do, and that was to work just as hard as possible,
trusting to some good fortune to enable him to get
out of the very disagreeable position in which he
had voluntarily placed himself.
He took the basket of candy that Mr.
Jacobs handed him, and trudged around the circle of
seats, selling far more because of the pitifulness
of his face than because of the excellence of his goods;
and even this worked to his disadvantage. Mr.
Jacobs was keen enough to see why his little clerk
sold so many goods, and each time that he returned
to the stand he said something to him in an angry
tone, which had the effect of deepening the shadow
on the boy’s face and at the same time increasing
trade.
By the time the performance was over
Toby had in his pocket a dollar and twenty-five cents
which had been given him for himself by some of the
kind-hearted in the audience, and he kept his hand
almost constantly upon it, for the money seemed to
him like some kind friend who would help him out of
his present difficulties.
After the audience had dispersed,
Mr. Jacobs set Toby at work washing the glasses and
clearing up generally, and then, the boy started toward
the other portion of the store - that watched
over by Mr. Lord. Not a person save the watchmen
was in the tent, and as Toby went toward the door
he saw his friend the monkey sitting in one corner
of the cage, and apparently watching his every movement.
It was as if he had suddenly seen
one of the boys from home, and Toby, uttering an exclamation
of delight, ran up to the cage and put his hand through
the wires.
The monkey, in the gravest possible
manner, took one of the fingers in his paw, and Toby
shook hands with him very earnestly,
“I was sorry that I couldn’t
speak to you when I went in this noon,” said
Toby, as if making an apology; “but, you see,
there were so many around here to see you that I couldn’t
get the chance. Did you see me wink at you?”
The monkey made no reply, but he twisted
his face into such a funny little grimace that Toby
was quite as well satisfied as if he had spoken.
“I wonder if you hain’t
some relation to Steve Stubbs?” Toby continued,
earnestly, “for you look just like him, only
he don’t have quite so many whiskers. What
I wanted to say was, that I’m awful sorry I run
away. I used to think that Uncle Dan’l
was bad enough; but he was just a perfect good Samarathon
to what Mr. Lord an’ Mr. Jacobs are; an’
when Mr. Lord looks at me with that crooked eye of
his, I feel it ’way down in my boots. Do
you know” - and here Toby put his mouth
nearer to the monkey’s head and whispered - “I’d
run away from this circus if I could get the chance;
wouldn’t you?”
Just at this point, as if in answer
to the question, the monkey stood up on his hind-feet,
and reached out his paw to the boy, who seemed to
think this was his way of being more emphatic in saying
“Yes.”
Toby took the paw in his hand, shook
it again earnestly, and said, as he released it, “I
was pretty sure you felt just about the same way I
did, Mr. Stubbs, when I passed you this noon.
Look here” - and Toby took the money
from his pocket which had been given him - “I
got all that this afternoon, an’ I’ll
try an’ stick it out somehow till I get as much
as ten dollars, an’ then we’ll run away
some night, an’ go ’way off as far as - as - as
out West; an’ we’ll stay there too.”
The monkey, probably tired with remaining
in one position so long, started toward the top of
the cage, chattering and screaming, joining the other
monkeys, who had gathered in a little group in one
of the swings.
“Now see here, Mr. Stubbs,”
said Toby, in alarm, “you mustn’t go to
telling everybody about it, or Mr. Lord will know,
an’ then we’ll be dished, sure.”
The monkey sat quietly in the swing,
as if he felt reproved by what the boy had said; and
Toby, considerably relieved by his silence, said, as
he started toward the door, “That’s right - mum’s
the word; you keep quiet, an’ so will I, an’
pretty soon we’ll get away from the whole crowd.”
All the monkeys chattered; and Toby,
believing that everything which he had said had been
understood by the animals, went out of the door to
meet his other taskmaster.