The Fiery Ring (34 page)

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Authors: Gilbert Morris

BOOK: The Fiery Ring
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“I know. You’re worried about that woman, and for good reason. You need to be careful, you hear me? You know what it says in Proverbs five: ‘The lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her mouth is smoother than oil: But her end is bitter as wormwood, sharp as a twoedged sword.’ ”

“I know,” Chase said huskily, “and the next verse is, ‘Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold on hell.’ ”

“You be real careful, Chase. Don’t let that woman get you. Better if you left here than let that happen.”

Chase did not speak but reached out and took Doak’s hand. “Thanks, Doak.” He moved on into the darkness and went to the menagerie, where he was surprised to find Joy putting one of the tiger cubs back into the cage. She secured the door and came up to him with a smile. The smile faded, however, when his face was illuminated by the light overhead. She saw the lipstick on his lips and smelled the perfume and knew where he had been.

“Good night,” she said curtly.

“Wait a minute, Joy!”

“Isn’t one woman enough for you?” she cried, then turned and ran away.

The darkness swallowed Joy up as she left the menagerie, and Chase stood, his shoulders drooping. “What kind of a fool have I become?” he said sadly. “A man who’s been burned once should know better.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

Success

“Well, we’ve sent the patch out, so it looks like we’re all ready to go.”

Joy had been feeding the tiger cubs through the bars of the cage when Gypsy Dan Darvo had strolled up and made his remark. Dan had spent more than a week in the hospital recovering from his injuries from his fall. He had broken his left leg in two places as well as his left arm. He had also cracked a couple of ribs. The circus family had taken good care of him as he gradually healed and got back on his feet again. Now he walked with a barely noticeable limp.

“The patch? What’s that, Dan?”

Darvo grinned at her, his teeth white against his swarthy skin. “You don’t know what a patch is? It’s the fellow we send out to put up the posters. He always stays just ahead of the circus. Those guys have a lot of trouble sometimes. Rival circuses have been known to go by and paper over ours or tear ours down.” Darvo came over and put his arm around Joy. “That was a good time we had last night.”

“Yes, it was.” Joy had been going out with Dan recently. Since they were still on hiatus, her nights were free, except for checking on the animals. She had found Darvo to be a witty and charming man, although somewhat forward. That, she had come to accept, went with circus life. True, there were solid families such as the Fontaines and the Martinos, but there was also a great laxness in morals. Now Dan started caressing her arm with his hand. She removed his hand from
her arm and said sternly, “Dan, I’m going to hit you over the head with a two-by-four if you don’t quit pawing me.”

“Oh, come on now, Joy, you know you like it. I can tell.” Darvo never got angry with her, and when Joy rejected his advances, he took it with good grace. He reached into the cage and stroked the head of one of the cubs, remarking, “All the tigers with this circus aren’t in a cage.”

Joy turned to him, not understanding his remark. “What do you mean, Dan?”

Darvo crossed his arms and tilted his head to the side. He was a handsome fellow with dark, soulful eyes that he used to good effect on young women. “I mean, I think there’s a tiger inside of Miss Joy Winslow.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I think if the right guy came along, you might let your wilder side show a little bit. You’re a good kisser—you know that?”

Joy flushed, for she was embarrassed that she had responded a few times to Darvo’s kisses but had quickly pulled away. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Sure you do, baby. Anyway, what do you say we go out to the beach this afternoon? Since the circus leaves for Atlanta early tomorrow morning, it’ll be our last chance.”

“All right, that suits me fine.”

Darvo stroked her cheek and shook his head. “You know, this act that you and Chase have put together—it’s gonna be big. I’ve been with the circus a long time, and I can tell.”

“We’re not really ready. The cats aren’t trained well enough.”

“They will be. In a couple years you’ll be the biggest thing. It makes me a little sad.”

“Sad? Why would you be sad about that?”

“Because you won’t be with this circus. You’ll be with the Greatest Show on Earth. Anyway, I’ll see you about one o’clock in your prettiest bathing suit. Bye-bye, babe.”

Joy slowly walked away from the cages. She felt bad because
she had started dating Dan more out of spite than anything else. She was trying to get back at Chase for spending so much time with Stella. She liked Dan well enough, and he was good company, but she would never consider marrying him. He simply wasn’t her type.

****

Chase was worn down by his responsibilities. Training such a large number of animals in itself was a killer, but in addition, he was saddled with the extra responsibilities Stella had asked him to assume. True enough Pete Delaney could work miracles in moving circuses around. Nonetheless, there were a thousand decisions to be made, and Stella had spent many hours going over all the possibilities with him. Now as he sat at the table in her trailer, he looked at the papers spread out and shook his head wearily. “I guess we’ll have to pull out for Atlanta tomorrow whether we’re ready or not. I wish we had another three months.”

Stella was sitting beside him. The two had been going over the routes and the problems that might arise. She saw that a lock of his hair had fallen down over his forehead, and she put it back in place. “You’ve worked too hard, Chase.”

“No harder than anybody else.”

“Yes, you have,” she countered. She let her hand fall on his arm and squeezed it gently. “You know everything’s riding on your act. If it goes big, the circus will make it. If not—well, I don’t think we’ll be able to survive.”

“It’s a good act, Stella, but it’d be better after another year.”

“We can’t wait a year,” Stella said moodily. She kept her hand on his arm and stroked it gently. All winter Stella had taken every opportunity to be close to Chase, and he had struggled to keep his distance. Now he gently removed her hand from his arm. “We’ll make it,” he said. “Everybody’s worked hard this winter.”

Stella pouted at Chase’s reluctance to give in to her caress, but she continued talking business. “We’ve spent a bundle of
money advertising in Atlanta. It’ll be kind of a test case. A lot of people remember you, Chase.”

“I always had a good reception in Atlanta.”

“You’ll have it again.”

Chase suddenly grinned, and the smile made him look younger. “They’ll come out to see if I’ve got the nerve to crawl back into the cage after what happened. They’ll come for that or to see me get eaten alive.”

“Don’t talk like that!” Stella said. “You’re going to be fine.”

She put her hand on his arm again, but Chase stood up and moved away. She shrugged, then asked almost idly, “Is Joy working out all right?”

“Better than I thought. She’s had to learn so much in such a short time. Really we’re rushing it too much.”

“Not much choice.” Again Stella’s voice seemed almost indifferent, but there was a glint in her eyes. “I’ve noticed she’s running around quite a bit with Dan. I wonder if anything will come of that.”

“Maybe so.” Chase liked Dan a great deal, but their relationship made him uneasy. He knew Darvo was quite a ladies’ man and pursued many of his female fans as well as some of the young performers. Chase wasn’t happy about Joy going out with him, but he had not spoken of it to anyone—least of all to her. Now his mind rebelled against what Stella was suggesting, but he could not talk to her. He pulled on his jacket and said, “Well, I’ve got a lot to do before we pull out in the morning.”

“Let’s go out and celebrate tonight,” she said as she stood. “You deserve a break.”

She was standing close enough to him that he could smell her perfume. Chase knew he should say no to her suggestion but felt himself weakening. Not wanting to spend the evening alone, he agreed. “That’ll be fine, Stella.”

She reached up, pulled his head down, and kissed him on the lips before he had time to resist. “I’m so proud of you,
Chase,” she said. “Nobody could have saved this circus except you. We’re going to go a long way together, you and me.”

Chase gently but firmly pushed Stella away and cleared his throat. “I’ll see you tonight, Stella.”

****

The band was playing, and the cats began pacing back and forth inside their cages. Chase stood beside the door along with Doak Williams, who was an important part of the act, getting the cats in and out of the big cage and serving as a watcher. Doak grinned and said, “You two gonna be fine—just fine.”

Joy felt weak. She had rehearsed the act enough times that she should not have been nervous, but this was real, and the noise of the crowd, the band, and the activities swirling around her drained her strength. “Chase,” she said tentatively, “I’m scared stiff.”

Chase put his hand on her shoulder. “Good,” he said.

“You think it’s good to be scared?”

“I think being scared is a mark of respect. I want you to respect these animals and make them respect you, and I want us to respect the crowd. They are why we’re here. We give them the best we have, Joy, the very best. You’re going to do fine. I’ve never known anybody to make progress like you have. You’re going straight to the top.”

Joy felt a surge of emotion go through her, and she took a deep breath. His hand was firm on her shoulder, and his dark eyes were intense. “Thanks, Chase, I’m ready now.”

“Okay, let’s get out there, and then you can let ’em in, Doak.”

“Yes, sir!”

“You first. Beauty before the beast,” Chase said with a wink.

Joy obeyed and walked quickly out of the inner area into the big top. The big cage was up with the tunnel leading back to where the cats were kept. She unlocked the door, and Max
Taylor, who was acting as one of the watchers, said, “Break a leg, Miss Joy.”

“Thanks, Max.” She stepped into the spotlight and was blinded for a moment, but she felt Chase come and stand close enough to touch her. They stood there smiling as the new ringmaster, Wilbur Whitfield, announced their act. He was a rather small man but with a voice as big as Mount Olympus. He had married Ella Devoe at the end of last season, and the two had been on a winter-long honeymoon. His big voice boomed over the speakers: “And now, ladies and gentlemen, you’re in for a treat. Together for the first time in the big cage along with thirty vicious lions and tigers, I give you Mr. Chase Hardin and Miss Joy Winslow!”

Joy smiled at the applause, then turned to get into the cage as the cats came out. The first one was Major, one of her favorites. He was a huge tiger that always had an odd look on his face because one of his eyes was off-center, making him look cross-eyed. Major turned to the right and was quickly followed by Tom, who turned left, and then Brutus who went right. Brutus started to approach her, and she immediately said, “Back, Brutus, get in line there!” She made her voice harsh, and Brutus growled deep in his throat but took his place.

One by one they came on, one to the right, one to the left, until finally the cage was filled with lions and tigers. Joy could smell them and was well aware of the tension of the moment. Many of these cats had not performed before a big audience, although Chase had insisted on inviting people all winter long to watch as they were trained, both to get the cats used to an audience and to let the general public see that the animals were being well treated.

Joy stood almost in the center of the cage, turning her back on half of the animals while facing the other half. It gave her a strong sense of comfort to know that Chase was there. Since she had started working with the big cats, she
could not imagine being alone with her back to such ferocious animals. It would just be asking for trouble.

The act did not go smoothly. More than once one of the cats would forget or would deliberately challenge the trainers. Betty, usually one of the mildest of the lions, decided she was not going to get up on her perch. Chase immediately approached her and tapped her on the head with his stick. “Get up on that perch, Betty!” Betty swiped at him with one paw, but Chase stood there until finally, with a grumpy growl, she went up.

When all thirty animals were up on their perches, Chase said under his breath, just loud enough for Joy to hear him, “Now, Joy.”

At that instant Joy commanded, “Up!” in a loud, firm voice and lifted her hands. She heard Chase doing the same thing, and to her relief all of her charges reared up on their hind legs. Tom, the tiger with bad balance, had difficulty, but he managed to sway for a few seconds. As the applause thundered from the audience and the cheers came, Joy felt an immense satisfaction.

The time passed quickly in the big cage. Joy had no time to think of herself, for every moment was filled with tension. Brutus, a huge animal with beautiful markings, gave Chase a hard time and balked at some of his stunts. This temperamental animal could turn vicious in a moment.

When it came time for Greta to jump through the ring of fire, Wilbur Whitfield went into a long spiel about how all wild animals dreaded fire and how it took tremendous patience to teach a tiger this trick.

As usual, Chase lit the ring, and Joy instructed Greta to approach the ramp. Greta seemed to be distracted by the crowd and hesitated, but Joy insisted firmly, “Greta, you can do it! Jump!” To her relief, the great cat jumped through the ring of fire, and a wave of applause ran through the big top.

Toward the end of the act, a bad moment caught Joy off guard. The black-maned lion named Colonel was good at
balancing on the big ball and rolling it. Chase had charge of him while Joy got a beautiful Bengal tiger named Grace to do the same. These two animals were the best at this trick and had never given Chase and Joy any trouble.

The trick was going well until Chase passed close to Brutus’s perch. The beast leaped down and started for Chase. Chase’s back was turned and his attention was on the lion rolling the ball, so he was unaware of Brutus’s move.

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