Mischievous Maid Faynie
img img Mischievous Maid Faynie img Chapter 7 HE RAISED HIS CLINCHED HAND, AND THE BLOW FELL HEAVILY UPON THE BEAUTIFUL UPTURNED FACE.

Chapter 7 HE RAISED HIS CLINCHED HAND, AND THE BLOW FELL HEAVILY UPON THE BEAUTIFUL UPTURNED FACE.

With returning consciousness, Faynie's violet eyes opened slowly-taking in, by the flickering light of the candle, the strange room in which she found herself; then, as they opened wider, in amazement too great for words, she beheld the figure of a man, half hidden among the shadows, standing but a few feet away from the couch, his eyes fastened upon her; she could even hear his nervous breathing.

With a gasp of terror Faynie sprang from the couch with a single bound; but the cry she would have uttered was strangled upon her lips by the heavy hand that fell suddenly over them, pressing so tightly against them as to almost take her breath away.

"Don't attempt to scream or make any fuss," cried a hissing voice in her ear-"submit to the inevitable-you are my wife-there is nothing out of the way in your being here with me. Come, now, take matters philosophically and we shall get along all right."

He attempted to draw the girl into his encircling arms, her wonderful beauty suddenly dawning upon him; but she shrank from his embrace, and from the approach of his brandy-reeking lips, as though he had been a scorpion.

With a suddenness that took him greatly aback, and for an instant at a disadvantage, she freed herself from his grasp, and stood facing him like a young tragedy queen in all her furious anger and outraged pride.

"Do not utter another word, Lester Armstrong!" she panted, "you only add insult to injury-why it seems to me some horrible trick of the senses-some nightmare-to imagine even that I could ever have cared for you-to have believed you noble, honorable and-a gentleman. Why, you almost seem to be a different person in his guise-you are so changed in tone and manner from him to whom I gave my heart. The affection that I thought I had for you died a violent death."

She did not notice that the man before her started violently at these words-but the look of fear in his eyes gave place the next instant to braggadocio.

He would have answered her, but she held up her little white hand with a gesture commanding silence, saying, slowly, with quivering lips:

"I repeat, the affection that I believed filled my heart for you died suddenly when I told you that I had changed my mind about eloping, and instead of studying my desires you insisted that the arrangement must be carried out."

"My-my-love for you prompted it, Faynie," he exclaimed, in a maudlin voice. He knew he had the name wrong, but could not think what it was to save his life. "Come, now, let's kiss and make up, and love each other in the same old way, as the song goes."

"What! love a man who thrusts me into a coach despite my entreaties, takes me to a church, and with a revolver pressed close to my heart-beneath my cloak-forces me to become his wife! No. No! I loathe, abhor you-open that door and let me go!"

With an unsteady spring he placed himself between her and the door, crying angrily as he ground out a fierce imprecation from between his white teeth. "Come, now, none of that, my beauty. You're my wife all right, no matter how much of a fuss you make over it. I want to be agreeable, but you persist in raising the devil in me, and though you may not know it, I've a deuce of a temper when I'm thoroughly roused to anger-at least that's what the folks who know me say.

"Sit right down here now, and let's talk the matter over-if you want to go home to the old gent, why I'm sure I have no objection, providing he agrees to take your hubby along with you. There'll be a scene of course-we may expect that-but when you tell him how you love me, and couldn't live without me and all that-and mind, you put it on heavy-it will end by his saying: 'Youth is youth, and love goes where it is sent. I forgive you, my children; come right back to the paternal roof-consider it yours in fact.' And when the occasion is ripe, you could suggest that the old gent start your hubby in business. Your wish would be law; he might demur a trifle at first, but if you stuck well to your point he'd soon cave in and ask what figure I'd take to-"

"Stop!-stop right where you are, you mercenary wretch!" cried Faynie in a ringing voice. "I see it all now-as clear as day. You-you-have married me because you have believed me my father's heiress, and-"

"You couldn't help but be, my dear," he hiccoughed. "An only child-no one else on earth to come in for his gold-couldn't help but be his heiress, you know-couldn't disinherit you if he wanted to. You've got the old chap foul enough there, ha, ha, ha!"

"You seem to have suddenly lost sight of the fact that there is some one beside myself-my stepmother and her daughter Claire."

He fell back a step and looked at her with dilated eyes-despite the brandy he had imbibed he still understood thoroughly every word she was saying.

"A stepmother-and-another daughter!" he cried, in astonishment-almost incoherently.

"You seem to forget that you always used to say to me-that you hoped they were well," said Faynie with deepening scorn in her clear, young voice.

"Oh-ah-yes," he muttered, "but you see I was not thinking of them--only of you," and deep in his heart he was cursing the hapless cousin-whom he believed dead by this time-for not mentioning that the girl had a stepmother and sister.

"Had you taken the time to listen to something else that I had to tell you, you might have reconsidered the advisability of eloping with me in such haste," went on the girl in her clear, ringing tones, "for it has become apparent to me-with even as little knowledge of the world as I possess-that you are a fortune hunter-that most despicable of all creatures-but in this instance your dastardly scheme has entangled your own feet. Your well-aimed arrow has missed the mark. You have wedded this night a penniless girl. An hour before you met me at the arched gate my father disinherited me, and when he has once made up his mind upon any course of action-nothing human, nothing on earth or in heaven would have power enough to induce him to change it."

The effect of her words were magical upon him. With a bound he was at her side grasping her slender wrists with so tight a hold that they nearly snapped asunder.

Intense as the pain was, Faynie would not cry aloud. He should not see that he had power to hurt her, even though she dropped dead at his feet at last from the excruciating torture of it.

"What is it you say-the old rascal has-disinherited you?" he cried, scarcely crediting the evidence of his own ears.

"That is just what I said-my father has disinherited me," she replied slowly and distinctly, adding: "His money was his own-to do with as he pleased-he gave me the choice of-of-marrying to suit him or being cut off entirely. I-I-refused to accept the man he had selected for me. That ended the matter. 'Then from this hour know that you shall not inherit one penny of my wealth,' he cried. 'I will cut you off with but the small amount required by law. There is nothing more to be said. You are a Fairfax. You have taken your choice, and as a Fairfax you must abide by your decision!' You will remember I told you I had something to tell you the moment you came up to me at the arched gate, but you would not listen. Now the consequence is upon your own head."

"I have married a beggar, when I thought I was marrying an-heiress!" he cried in a rage so horrible that Faynie, brave as she was, recoiled from him in terror and, dismay.

"You have married a penniless young girl," she corrected, half inaudibly.

He raised his clinched hand with a terrible volley of oaths, before which she quailed, despite her bravery.

"When the old man cast you off you thought you would tie yourself on to me," he cried. "You women are cunning-oh, yes, you are, don't tell me you're not; and you are the shrewdest one I've come across yet. You lie when you say you meant to tell me what had happened beforehand, and you know it. But you'll find out at your cost what it means to bind me to a millstone for a wife. But you shan't be a millstone. You'll do your share toward the support. Yes, by George, you shall. I'll put you on the stage-and you-"

"Never!" cried the girl with a bitter sob. "I'd die first."

"Don't set up your authority against mine," he cried, and as he uttered the words-half crazed by the brandy he had drunk so copiously-his clinched fist came down with a heavy blow upon the girl's beautiful, upturned face, and she fell like one dead at his feet.

            
            

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