At noon Toby was thoroughly tired
out, for whenever any one spoke kindly to him Mr.
Lord seemed to take a malicious pleasure in giving
him extra tasks to do, until Toby began to hope that
no one else would pay any attention to him. On
this day he was permitted to go to dinner first, and
after he returned he was left in charge of the booth.
Trade being dull - as it usually was during
the dinner hour - he had very little work
to do after he had cleaned the glasses and set things
to rights generally.
When, therefore, he saw the gaunt
form of the skeleton emerge from his tent and come
toward him he was particularly pleased, for he had
begun to think very kindly of the thin man and his
fleshy wife.
“Well, Toby,” said the
skeleton, as he came up to the booth, carefully dusted
Mr. Lord’s private chair, and sat down very cautiously
in it, as if he expected that it would break down
under his weight, “I hear you’ve been
making quite a hero of yourself by capturing the monkeys
last night.”
Toby’s freckled face reddened
with pleasure as he heard these words, and he stammered
out, with considerable difficulty, “I didn’t
do anything; it was Mr. Stubbs that brought ’em
back.”
“Mr. Stubbs!” And the
skeleton laughed so heartily that Toby was afraid
he would dislocate some of his thinly-covered joints.
“When you was tellin’ about Mr. Stubbs
yesterday I thought you meant some one belonging to
the company. You ought to have seen my wife Lilly
shake with laughing when I told her who Mr. Stubbs
was!”
“Yes,” said Toby, at a
loss to know just what to say, “I should think
she would shake when she laughs.”
“She does,” replied the
skeleton. “If you could see her when something
funny strikes her you’d think she was one of
those big plates of jelly that they have in the bake-shop
windows.” And Mr. Treat looked proudly
at the gaudy picture which represented his wife in
all her monstrosity of flesh. “She’s
a great woman, Toby, an’ she’s got a great
head.”
Toby nodded his head in assent.
He would have liked to have said something nice regarding
Mrs. Treat, but he really did not know what to say,
so he simply contented himself and the fond husband
by nodding.
“She thinks a good deal of you,
Toby,” continued the skeleton, as he moved his
chair to a position more favorable for him to elevate
his feet on the edge of the counter, and placed his
handkerchief under him as a cushion; “she’s
talking of you all the time, and if you wasn’t
such a little fellow I should begin to be jealous
of you - I should, upon my word.”
“You’re - both - very - good,”
stammered Toby, so weighted down by a sense of the
honor heaped upon him as to be at a loss for words.
“An’ she wants to see
more of you. She made me come out here now, when
she knew Mr. Lord would be away, to tell you that we’re
goin’ to have a little kind of a friendly dinner
in our tent to-morrow - she’s cooked
it all herself, or she’s going to - and
we want you to come in an’ have some with us.”
Toby’s eyes glistened at the
thought of the unexpected pleasure, and then his face
grew sad as he replied, “I’d like to come
first-rate, Mr. Treat, but I don’t s’pose
Mr. Lord would let me stay away from the shop long
enough.”
“Why, you won’t have any
work to do to-morrow, Toby - it’s Sunday.”
“So it is!” said the boy,
with a pleased smile, as he thought of the day of
rest which was so near. And then he added, quickly,
“An’ this is Saturday afternoon.
What fun the boys at home are havin’! You
see there hain’t any school Saturday afternoon,
an’ all the fellers go out in the woods.”
“And you wish you were there
to go with them, don’t you?” asked the
skeleton, sympathetically.
“Indeed I do!” exclaimed
Toby, quickly. “It’s twice as good
as any circus that ever was.”
“But you didn’t think
so before you came with us, did you?”
“I didn’t know so much
about circuses then as I do now,” replied the
boy, sadly.
Mr. Treat saw that he was touching
on a sore subject, and one which was arousing sad
thoughts in his little companion’s mind, and
he hastened to change it at once.
“Then I can tell Lilly that you’ll come,
can I?”
“Oh yes, I’ll be sure
to be there; an’ I want you to know just how
good I think you both are to me.”
“That’s all right, Toby,”
said Mr. Treat, with a pleased expression on his face;
“an’ you may bring Mr. Stubbs with you,
if you want to.”
“Thank you,” said Toby;
“I’m sure Mr. Stubbs will be just as glad
to come as I shall. But where will we be to-morrow?”
“Right here. We always
stay over Sunday at the place where we show Saturday.
But I must be going, or Lilly will worry her life out
of her for fear I’m somewhere getting cold.
She’s awful careful of me, that woman is.
You’ll be on hand to-morrow at one o’clock,
won’t you?”
“Indeed I will,” said
Toby, emphatically, “an’ I’ll bring
Mr. Stubbs with me too.”
With a friendly nod of the head, the
skeleton hurried away to reassure his wife that he
was safe and well; and before he had hardly disappeared
within the tent Toby had another caller, who was none
other than his friend Old Ben, the driver.
“Well, my boy,” shouted
Ben, in his cheery, hearty tones, “I haven’t
seen you since you left the wagon so sudden last night.
Did you get shook up much?”
“Oh no,” replied Toby:
“you see I hain’t very big; an’ then
I struck in the mud; so I got off pretty easy.”
“That’s a fact; an’
you can thank your lucky stars for it, too, for I’ve
seen grown-up men get pitched off a wagon in that way
an’ break their necks doin’ it. But
has Job told you where you was going to sleep to-night?
You know we stay over here till to-morrow.”
“I didn’t think anything
about that; but I s’pose I’ll sleep in
the wagon, won’t I?”
“You can sleep at the hotel,
if you want to; but the beds will likely be dirty;
an’ if you take my advice you’ll crawl
into some of the wagons in the tent.”
Ben then explained to him that, after
his work was done that night, he would not be expected
to report for duty until the time for starting on
Sunday night, and concluded his remarks by saying,
“Now you know what your rights
are, an’ don’t you let Job impose on you
in any way. I’ll be round here after you
get through work, an’ we’ll bunk in somewhere
together.”
The arrival of Messrs. Lord and Jacobs
put a stop to the conversation, and was the signal
for Toby’s time of trial. It seemed to him,
and with good reason, that the chief delight these
men had in life was to torment him, for neither ever
spoke a pleasant word to him; and when one was not
giving him some difficult work to do, or finding fault
in some way, the other would be sure to do so; and
Toby had very little comfort from the time he began
work in the morning until he stopped at night.
It was not until after the evening
performance was over that Toby had a chance to speak
with Mr. Stubbs, and then he was so tired that he simply
took the old monkey from the cage, nestled him under
his jacket, and lay down with him to sleep in the
place which Old Ben had selected.
When the morning came Mr. Stubbs aroused
his young master at a much earlier hour than he would
have awakened had he been left to himself, and the
two went out for a short walk before breakfast.
They went instinctively toward the woods; and when
the shade of the trees was once reached, how the two
revelled in their freedom! Mr. Stubbs climbed
into the trees, swung himself from one to the other
by means of his tail, gathered half-ripe nuts, which
he threw at his master, tried to catch the birds,
and had a good time generally.
Toby, stretched at full length on
the mossy bank, watched the antics of his pet, laughing
boisterously at times as Mr. Stubbs would do some one
thing more comical than usual, and forgot there was
in this world such a thing as a circus, or such a
man as Job Lord. It was to Toby a morning without
a flaw, and he took no heed of the time, until the
sound of the church bells warned him of the lateness
of the hour, reminding him at the same time of where
he should be - where he would be, if he were
at home with Uncle Daniel.
In the mean time the old monkey had
been trying to attract his young master’s attention,
and, failing in his efforts, he came down from the
tree, crept softly up to Toby, and nestled his head
under the boy’s arm.
This little act of devotion seemed
to cause Toby’s grief to burst forth afresh,
and clasping the monkey around the neck, hugging him
close to his bosom, he sobbed,
“Oh, Mr. Stubbs, Mr. Stubbs,
how lonesome we are! If we was only at Uncle
Dan’l’s we’d be the two happiest
people in all this world. We could play on the
hay, or go up to the pasture, or go down to the village;
an’ I’d work my fingers off if I could
only be there just once more. It was wicked for
me to run away, an’ now I’m gettin’
paid for it.”
He hugged the monkey closely, swaying
his body to and fro, and presenting a perfect picture
of grief. The monkey, not knowing what to make
of this changed mood, cowered whimperingly in his arms,
looking up into his face, and licking the boy’s
hands whenever he had the opportunity.
It was some time before Toby’s
grief exhausted itself; and then, still clasping the
monkey, he hurried out of the woods toward the town
and the now thoroughly hated circus tents.
The clocks were just striking one
as Toby entered the enclosure used by the show as
a place of performance, and, remembering his engagement
with the skeleton and his wife, he went directly to
their tent. From the odors which assailed him
as he entered, it was very evident that a feast of
no mean proportions was in course of preparation, and
Toby’s keen appetite returned in full vigor.
Even the monkey seemed affected by the odor, for he
danced about on his master’s shoulder, and chattered
so that Toby was obliged to choke him a little in
order to make him present a respectable appearance.
When Toby reached the interior of
the tent he was astonished at the extent of the preparations
that were being made, and gazed around him in surprise.
The platform on which the lean man and fat woman were
in the habit of exhibiting themselves now bore a long
table, loaded with eatables; and, from the fact that
eight or ten chairs were ranged around it, Toby understood
that he was not the only guest invited to the feast.
Some little attempt had also been made at decoration
by festooning that end of the tent where the platform
was placed with two or three flags and some streamers,
and the tent-poles also were fringed with tissue-paper
of the brightest colors.
Toby had only time enough to notice
this when the skeleton advanced toward him, and, with
the liveliest appearance of pleasure, said, as he
took him by the hands with a grip that made him wince,
“It gives me great joy, Mr.
Tyler, to welcome you at one of our little home reunions,
if one can call a tent, that is moved every day in
the week, home.”
Toby hardly knew whom Mr. Treat referred
to when he said “Mr. Tyler;” but by the
time his hands were released from the bony grasp he
understood that it was himself who was spoken to.
The skeleton then formally introduced
him to the other guests present, who were sitting
at one end of the tent, and evidently anxiously awaiting
the coming feast.
“These,” said Mr. Treat,
as he waved his hand toward two white-haired, pink-eyed
young ladies, who sat with their arms twined around
each other’s waist, and had been eying the monkey
with some appearance of fear, “are the Miss
Cushings, known to the world as the Albino Children;
they command a large salary, and form a very attractive
feature of our exhibition.”
The young ladies arose at the same
time, as if they had been the Siamese Twins and could
not act independently of each other, and bowed.
Toby made the best bow he was capable
of; and the monkey made frantic efforts to escape,
as if he would enjoy twisting his paws in their perpendicular
hair.
“And this,” continued
Mr. Treat, pointing to a sickly, sour-looking individual,
who was sitting apart from the others, with his arms
folded, and looking as if he was counting the very
seconds before the dinner should begin, “is
the wonderful Signor Castro, whose sword-swallowing
feats you have doubtless heard of.”
Toby stepped back just one step, as
if overwhelmed by awe at beholding the signor
in the guise of a humble individual; and the gentleman
who gained his livelihood by swallowing swords unbent
his dignity so far as to unfold his arms and present
a very dirty-looking hand for Toby to shake.
The boy took hold of the outstretched hand, wondering
why the signor never used soap and water; and
Mr. Stubbs, apparently afraid of the sour-looking
man, retreated to Toby’s shoulder, where he sat
chattering and scolding about the introduction.
Again the skeleton waved his hand,
and this time he introduced “Mademoiselle Spelletti,
the wonderful snake-charmer, whose exploits in this
country, and before the crowned heads of Europe, had
caused the whole world to stand aghast at her daring.”
Mademoiselle Spelletti was a very
ordinary-looking young lady of about twenty-five years
of age, who looked very much as if her name might
originally have been Murphy, and she too extended a
hand for Toby to grasp - only her hand was
clean, and she appeared to be a very much more pleasant
acquaintance than the gentleman who swallowed swords.
This ended the introductions; and
Toby was just looking around for a seat, when Mrs.
Treat, the fat lady, and the giver of the feast which
was about to come, and which already smelled so invitingly,
entered from behind a curtain of canvas, where the
cooking-stove was supposed to be located.
She had every appearance of being
the cook for the occasion. Her sleeves were rolled
up, her hair tumbled and frowzy, and there were several
unmistakable marks of grease on the front of her calico
dress.
She waited for no ceremony, but rushed
up to Toby, and taking him in her arms, gave him such
a squeeze that there seemed to be every possibility
that she would break all the bones in his body; and
she kept him so long in this bear-like embrace that
Mr. Stubbs reached his little brown paws over and
got such a hold of her hair that all present, save
Signor Castro, rushed forward to release her from
the monkey’s grasp.
“You dear little thing!”
said Mrs. Treat, paying but slight attention to the
hair-pulling she had just undergone, and holding Toby
at arm’s-length, so that she could look into
his face, “you were so late that I was afraid
you wasn’t coming; and my dinner wouldn’t
have tasted half so good if you hadn’t been
here to eat some.”
Toby hardly knew what to say for this
hearty welcome, but he managed to tell the large and
kind-hearted lady that he had had no idea of missing
the dinner, and that he was very glad she wanted him
to come.
“Want you to come, you dear
little thing!” she exclaimed, as she gave him
another hug, but careful not to give Mr. Stubbs a chance
of grasping her hair again. “Of course
I wanted you to come, for this dinner has been got
up so that you could meet these people here, and so
that they could see you.”
Toby was entirely at a loss to know
what to say to this overwhelming compliment, and for
that reason did not say anything, only submitting
patiently to the third hug, which was all Mrs. Treat
had time to give him, as she was obliged to rush behind
the canvas screen again, as there were unmistakable
sounds of something boiling over on the stove.
“You’ll excuse me,”
said the skeleton, with an air of dignity, waving
his hand once more toward the assembled company, “but,
while introducing you to Mr. Tyler, I had almost forgotten
to introduce him to you. This, ladies and gentlemen” - and
here he touched Toby on the shoulder, as if he were
some living curiosity whose habits and mode of capture
he was about to explain to a party of spectators - “is
Mr. Toby Tyler, of whom you heard on the night when
the monkey cage was smashed, and who now carries with
him the identical monkey which was presented to him
by the manager of this great show as a token of esteem
for his skill and bravery in capturing the entire
lot of monkeys without a single blow.”
By the time that Mr. Treat got through
with this long speech Toby felt very much as if he
were some wonderful creature whom the skeleton was
exhibiting; but he managed to rise to his feet and
duck his little red head in his best imitation of
a bow. Then he sat down and hugged Mr. Stubbs
to cover his confusion.
One of the Albino Children now came
forward, and, while stroking Mr. Stubbs’s hair,
looked so intently at Toby that for the life of him
he couldn’t say which she regarded as the curiosity,
himself or the monkey; therefore he hastened to say,
modestly,
“I didn’t do much toward
catchin’ the monkeys; Mr. Stubbs here did almost
all of it, an’ I only led ’em in.”
“There, there, my boy,”
said the skeleton, in a fatherly tone, “I’ve
heard the whole story from Old Ben, an’ I sha’n’t
let you get out of it like that. We all know
what you did, an’ it’s no use for you to
deny any part of it.”