The Mucker


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"
Leave enough of him for the inquest," pleaded Lasky.  
When the wagon arrived Billy had disappeared, but Lasky had recognized him  
and thereafter the two had nodded pleasantly to each other upon such occasions  
as they chanced to meet upon the street.  
Two years elapsed before the event transpired which proved a crisis in Billy's life.  
During this period his existence had been much the same as before. He had  
collected what was coming to him from careless and less muscular citizens. He  
had helped to stick up a half-dozen saloons. He had robbed the night men in two  
elevated stations, and for a while had been upon the pay-roll of a certain union  
and done strong arm work in all parts of the city for twenty-five dollars a week.  
By day he was a general utility man about Larry Hilmore's boxing academy, and  
time and time again Hilmore urged him to quit drinking and live straight, for he  
saw in the young giant the makings of a great heavy-weight; but Billy couldn't  
leave the booze alone, and so the best that he got was an occasional five spot for  
appearing in preliminary bouts with third- and fourth-rate heavies and has-  
beens; but during the three years that he had hung about Hilmore's he had  
acquired an enviable knowledge of the manly art of self-defense.  
On the night that things really began to happen in the life of Billy Byrne that  
estimable gentleman was lolling in front of a saloon at the corner of Lake and  
Robey. The dips that congregated nightly there under the protection of the  
powerful politician who owned the place were commencing to assemble. Billy  
knew them all, and nodded to them as they passed him. He noted surprise in the  
faces of several as they saw him standing there. He wondered what it was all  
about, and determined to ask the next man who evinced even mute wonderment  
at his presence what was eating him.  
Then Billy saw a harness bull strolling toward him from the east. It was Lasky.  
When Lasky saw Billy he too opened his eyes in surprise, and when he came  
quite close to the mucker he whispered something to him, though he kept his  
eyes straight ahead as though he had not seen Billy at all.  
In deference to the whispered request Billy presently strolled around the corner  
toward Walnut Street, but at the alley back of the saloon he turned suddenly in.  
A hundred yards up the alley he found Lasky in the shadow of a telephone pole.  
"Wotinell are you doin' around here?" asked the patrolman. "Didn't you know that  
Sheehan had peached?"  
Two nights before old man Schneider, goaded to desperation by the repeated  
raids upon his cash drawer, had shown fight when he again had been invited to  
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5 6 7 8 9

Quick Jump
1 76 153 229 305