"Yes, sir. Let me introduce my friend, Chester Rand."
"Glad to meet you, Mr. Rand," said Wilson, heartily. "So you are a friend of Edward"s."
"Indeed he is, an excellent friend!" exclaimed young Granger. "Have you--seen my mother lately?"
"Come over to my hotel and I"ll answer all your questions. I"m stopping at the Continental, on the next block."
"All right! Will you come, Chester?"
"Yes; I shall be glad to."
They were soon sitting in the office of the Continental Hotel, at the corner of Broadway and Twentieth Street.
"Now I"ll answer your questions," said Nathaniel Wilson. "Yes, I saw your mother the day before I set out."
"And is she well?" asked Edward, anxiously.
"She was looking somewhat careworn. She probably misses you."
"She never writes to me," said Edward, bitterly.
"It may be because she doesn"t know your address. Then your stepfather keeps her prejudiced against you."
"I suppose there is no change in him?"
"No; except that he is drinking harder than ever. His business is against him, though he would drink even if he didn"t keep a saloon."
"Does he treat my mother well?"
"I think he does. I have never heard anything to the contrary. You see, he wouldn"t dare to do otherwise, as your mother has the property, and he wants to keep in with her in order to get a share."
"I have been afraid that she would give a part to him."
"Thus far I am confident she hasn"t done it. She is Scotch, isn"t she?"
"Yes; her name was Downie, and she was born in Glasgow, but came to this country at an early age."
"The Scotch are careful and conservative."
"She probably gives most of her income to Trimble--indeed, he collects her rents--but the princ.i.p.al she keeps in her own hands. Once I heard your stepfather complaining bitterly of this. "My wife," he said, "treats me very badly. She"s rolling in wealth, and I am a poor man, obliged to work early and late for a poor living.""
"He pays nothing toward the support of the house," said Edward, indignantly. "Mother pays all bills, and gives him money for himself besides."
"I don"t see how she could have married such a man!"
"Nor I. He seems coa.r.s.e, and is half the time under the influence of drink."
"I wonder whether he has induced your mother to make a will in his favor," said Wilson, thoughtfully. "If he did, I think her life would be in danger."
Edward turned pale at this suggestion.
"I don"t care so much for the property," he said, "but I can"t bear to think of my mother"s life as being in danger."
"Probably your mother"s caution will serve her a good turn here also,"
said Wilson. "It isn"t best to borrow trouble. I will keep watch, and if I see or hear of anything alarming I will write you. But now tell me about yourself. Are you at work?"
"Not just at present," replied Edward, embarra.s.sed.
"But I think I can get him another place in a day or two," said Chester, quickly.
"If you need a little money, call on me," added the warm-hearted Westerner. "You know you used to call me your uncle Nathaniel."
"I wouldn"t like to borrow," said Edward, shyly.
"When was your birthday?"
"A month ago."
"Then I must give you a birthday present You can"t object to that," and Mr. Wilson took a ten-dollar gold piece from his pocket and pressed it upon Edward.
"Thank you very much. I can"t decline a birthday gift."
"That"s what I thought. I am an old friend, and have a right to remember you. Was Mr. Rand in the same office with you?"
"No; Chester is an artist."
"An artist! A boy like him!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the Oregonian in surprise.
Chester smiled.
"I am getting older every day," he said.
"That"s what"s the matter with me," rejoined Mr. Wilson. "You haven"t any gray hair yet, while I have plenty."
"Not quite yet," smiled Chester.
"What kind of an artist are you?"
"I make drawings for an ill.u.s.trated weekly. It is a comic paper."
"And perhaps you put your friends in occasionally?"
"Not friends exactly, but sometimes I sketch a face I meet in the street."
"You may use me whenever you want a representative of the wild and woolly West."
"Thank you, Mr. Wilson."