The Mucker


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before leaving the room earlier in the evening, for Tony had feared some such  
contingency as that which had befallen.  
Tony fumbled with the handle of a door, and stabbed vainly at an elusive keyhole.  
"
Wait," mumbled Benito. "This is not the room. It was the second door from the  
stairway. This is the third."  
Tony lurched about and staggered back. Tony reasoned: "If that was the third  
door the next behind me must be the second, and on the right;" but Tony took  
not into consideration that he had reversed the direction of his erratic wobbling.  
He lunged across the hall--not because he wished to but because the spirits  
moved him. He came in contact with a door. "This, then, must be the second  
door," he soliloquized, "and it is upon my right. Ah, Benito, this is the room!"  
Benito was skeptical. He said as much; but Tony was obdurate. Did he not know  
a second door when he saw one? Was he, furthermore, not a grown man and  
therefore entirely capable of distinguishing between his left hand and his right?  
Yes! Tony was all of that, and more, so Tony inserted the key in the lock--it would  
have turned any lock upon the second floor--and, lo! the door swung inward upon  
its hinges.  
"Ah! Benito," cried Tony. "Did I not tell you so? See! This is our room, for the key  
opens the door."  
The room was dark. Tony, carried forward by the weight of his head, which had  
long since grown unaccountably heavy, rushed his feet rapidly forward that he  
might keep them within a few inches of his center of equilibrium.  
The distance which it took his feet to catch up with his head was equal to the  
distance between the doorway and the foot of the bed, and when Tony reached  
that spot, with Benito meandering after him, the latter, much to his  
astonishment, saw in the diffused moonlight which pervaded the room, the  
miraculous disappearance of his former enemy and erstwhile friend. Then from  
the depths below came a wild scream and a heavy thud.  
The sentry upon the beat before the bank heard both. For an instant he stood  
motionless, then he called aloud for the guard, and turned toward the bank door.  
But this was locked and he could but peer in through the windows. Seeing a dark  
form within, and being a Mexican he raised his rifle and fired through the glass of  
the doors.  
Tony, who had dropped through the hole which Billy had used so quietly, heard  
the zing of a bullet pass his head, and the impact as it sploshed into the adobe  
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Quick Jump
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