Henry Gondorf whistled to himself in the near empty Hanley House. He sat in his grey folding chair as he organized the depths of his travel case. He found new homes for most of his trade tools. "Note to self; start practicing your tumblers again." He muttered before returning to his tune. He turned his attention the rest of his tools. The weak, free form notes continued until they came together slowly into something he heard on the radio once.
Modern music. Some days it seemed like such a waste. Not the music itself, mind. Songs come in and out of style faster than whatever gets stitched together over in Paris. It is the authors and performers behind the music. People paid good money to idolize a bunch of coin operated mannequins. A generation of circus performers tailored to keep the public stunned by their antics while the rest of the world dragged on.
"Focus..." Henry chided himself. He whistled louder as the tune changed again. A bad habit that. It is easier to focus on the world at large than what is right outside his door. His hands moved over the stripped workings of his side arms with a mechanical deliberateness. He did not see the cylinders or barrels slipping back into place. Slowly his revolver and her sister semi-automatic reconstituted themselves. He barely heard the revolver's hammer fall as his mind caught up with the tune coming from him. The words followed unbidden and unwelcome. ...as I went down to the river to pray, studying about that good old way, and who shall wear that robe and crown
Gondorf threw his revolver down and held his head in his hands.