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Fowler, Frank

"The Broncho Rider Boys with Funston at Vera Cruz Or, Upholding the Honor of the Stars and Stripes"

"
Then he bethought him of the ape, which he had no mind to lose
after his exciting experience. But the animal was nowhere to be
seen.
"I wonder if I could raise him with a shot," soliloquized
Billie.
He raised his weapon, which he still carried in his hand, and
fired aimlessly, while he turned his eyes in various directions,
but there was nothing to be seen.
"Oh, well," he thought, "what's the difference? He'd just be a
nuisance anyway. I might as well be trudging along."
He jumped off the station platform and proceeded down the track,
filling the magazine to his automatic as he went. Then having
finished the task, he returned it to his holster and once more
began counting the ties.
"One, two, three, four, five, six----"
Bing! And a stone whistled by his head.
Billie turned, and as he did so a second stone from the same
source struck him on the temple, and he fell to the ground.
A second later the ape sprang from a palm beside the station and
ran toward him, stopping every few feet to see if the lad would
rise.
When within a few feet of the prostrate lad the animal made a
leap and landed upon his body. In another instant it had gained
possession of Billie's weapon, which it examined curiously for a
moment, ere it sprang away and stationed itself some two rods
distant, where it sat watching with the weapon aimed directly at
him.


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