T H E TORCH OF REASON, S IL V E R T O N , OREGON, TH U R SD A Y , MAY 27, 1891 GOLDEN THRONE. [ a ROMANCE BY SAMUEL P. PUTNAM.] C hapter x v iii . “ Mr. Morton, I believe?” said Blanche, with piquant grace. “ Yes,” said Charlie. “ I’m su r­ prised. I didn’t expect to se e y o u .” “ I suppose you are anxious to see little Pete?” “ Yes, I called for this purpose. I hope he has the good fortune to be Jiving here.” “ Yes, and as happy as a lark .” “ I should think he would be. I should call it p aradise.” “ A little better than Golden Throne for him , isn ’t it?” “ I should say so. It wasn’t good for his health to stay there, was it? ” “ He has told me about it. W hat a queer place Golden Throne m ust he! I feel quite well acquainted, Pete has told me so much T here’s G rubbins and Prince Hal and S »1 Jones and P ilkins and Paddie Jo h n and Bill and Big Diek and Jennie an d Tim. I’m curious to know all ab o u t th em .” “ T hey’re scattered. Bill and I have left Golden Throne to m ake o ur fo rtn n e.” “ W hat, in this big city! Are you not afraid of being swallowed up?” “ We’ll take our chances. If we go to the wall, we’ll take to digging again. Our arm s are strong, and fortune ca n ’t crush us.” “ And the rest?” “ Paddie is in the city. He’s Jon McConnel now, in civilized parlance. H e’s on the press, and I suppose you read some of his d a sh ­ ing ariicles every day. Big Dig is in the tire departm ent. Mr. R ichard Cole is his name on the books. Sol Jones is running for office, and G rubbins is in the legis­ lature, and Pilkins is any where be­ tween two hundred and fifty and three hundred pounds. Prince H al, I suppose, is asleep. Like Rip Van W inkle, he will wake up some tine m orning an d find himself rich; for Golden T hrone is bound to grow, and all one has to do is to stay and grow with it, like Jack on th e bean-stalk, .Jennie and Tim are one and the same. The gray m are is the better horse.” “ I forgot about Gooch. Pete used to describe him and his p ray ­ ing and singing Psalm s and read ­ ing the B ible.” “ Gooch is pursuing his only e a rth ­ ly or heavenly desire, to m ake money: * and he knows how to do it in a quiet way. He buys a n d sells always on the nick of time, and prays witn one eye open.” “ Pm quite interested in all these doings,” said Blanche. “ I ’m so glad to see you. Shall I go for little Pete? He will be delighted to see you ” “ Of course, I w ant to see the lit­ tle cuss; but, really, I ’ve lost my interest in him since seeing you ” “ Oh, th at isn’t fair! If it h ad n ’t been for little Pete, I should never h av e seen you.’’ “ I did like little Pete.” said C h ar­ lie. “ There was som ething about him so strange and showy, as if he wasn’t fit for this world, and ought to be an angel. I presum e he’s changed, though.” “ Indeed, he is. You w ouldn’t know him. I assure you he’s quite stylish, and learned, too. Do you know he can play on the piano and paint? He has some notion of be­ ing an a rtis t.” “ I shouldn’t wonder if he was a genius. He looked half-crazy. Bring him. I do want to see how he looks now.” “ You would know him , if you saw h im ?” said Blanche, looking at him with a bewildering glance and dazzling smile. Again, the strange fam iliarity swept over her features. “ W here have I m et you?” he cried. “ Met me! How you talk, sir!” “ But I have met you,” said C har­ lie. “ I saw you at the Opera House on the evening of Ingersoll’s lecture, ami thought then th a t I haunt.” “ This is indeed a fairy tale,” said Charlie. “ And this is little Pete— th a t little devil, as we used to call him. You did look funny, no mis­ take, with that scared expression and silent ways. W ell, it’s lucky I d id n ’t let ’em hang you. I don’t know w hat m ade me interfere >o desperately— a mere whim, I sup­ pose. A nother time, perhaps, I'd let things g ». You see we get awful rough and cruel in this coun­ try .” “ I see th a t, yet th ere’s much good th a t shines out. Even Big Dick has s »¡ne genuine good feel­ ing. H e has a spite agaii.-t me though; but I guess, if lie shoubl see me now, he’d soften a little, w ouldn’t he?” said Blanche, with a ringing laugh. “ I think he would. But he’s m arried, and it w ouldn’t do any good for you to cap tu re him. You look high now, of course—a lord or a duke or a m illionnaire, at least.” “ W hy shouldn’t I? I have had all I w ant of poverty and disgrace, and now I am going to look high and keep high. I ’m going to take the best m an th a t comes alo g.” “ You can have your pick.” said C harlie, disconsolately. “ 1 came to seek my fortune. I have lost it already, for a thousand are ahead of me.” • “ I told you little Pete could play. Listen and hear if he can ’t,” said Blanche. She ran to the piano as graceful­ ly as a faw n, and sat down, and the music sparkled forth like a fountain. The swift notes glided on in perfect harm ony. Then she sang, and her rich voice expressed the very spirit of the song. There was nothing formal about her, though she was so elegantly attired She was anim ated by a beautiful and, in some respect-», extrao rd in ary genius. She inherited her fath er’s literary and poetic faculty, with much more steadiness of character, which came from her n u th e r’s side.