Free Novel Read

Mischievous Maid Faynie Page 11


  CHAPTER XI.

  "YOU ARE DISINHERITED--EVERYTHING IN THIS HOUSE IS MINE."

  Faynie had indeed departed from that humble home as she had entered it,in the dark, dim silence of the bitter-cold night.

  She made her way as best she could to the station which, fortunatelyenough, was not far distant. The station master was old and anxious toget home, and therefore paid little heed to the little dark-robed figurewho bought a ticket to New York, and soon after crept silently aboard ofthe train which steamed into the little depot of the hamlet, almostburied in the snowdrifts across the hills.

  Weak and faint from her recent illness, Faynie, the beautiful, pettedlittle heiress of a short time before, huddled into a corner of the seatby the door, and drawing her veil carefully over her face, wept silentlyand unheeded as the midnight express bore her along to her destination.

  She was going home to Beechwood; going back to the home she had left insuch high spirits to join the lover who was to be all in all to herforever more; the lover who was to shield her henceforth and foreverfrom the world's storms, and was to be all devotion to her and love herfondly until death did them part. And this had been the end of it. Herhigh hopes lay in ruins around her. Her idol had been formed ofcommonest clay, and lay crumbled in a thousand fragments at her feet.

  Surely, no young girl's love dream ever had such a sad awakening, andwas so cruelly dispelled.

  She would go home to her haughty old father, tell him all, then lie downat his feet and die. That would end it all. Even in that moment linesshe had once read came back to her with renewed meaning:

  "And this is all! The end has come at last! The bitter end of all that pleasant dream, That cast a hallow o'er the happy past, Like golden sunshine on a summer stream.

  "Sweet were the days that marked life's sunny slope, When we together drew our hearts atune, And through the vision of a future hope, We did not dream that they would pass so soon.

  "In happy mood fair castles we upreared, And thought that life was one long summer day; We had no dread of future pain, nor feared That shadows e'er should fall athwart our way.

  "But sunken rocks lie hid in every stream, And ships are wrecked when just in sight of land; So we to-day wake from our pleasant dream To find our hopes were builded on the sand.

  "I do not blame you that you do not keep The troth you plighted e'er your heart you knew; Better the parting now than wake to weep, When time has robbed life's roses of their dew.

  "Another face will help you to forget, The idle dream that had its birth in trust, And other lips will kiss away regret, For broken faith and idols turned to dust,

  "Ah, well, you chose, perhaps, the better way; Another love may in your heart be shrined; And I--I shall go down my darkened way, Seeking forever what I ne'er shall find."

  It was two o'clock by the church belfry when she reached Beechwood, anda quarter of an hour later when she reached the great mansion that stoodon the brow of the hill.

  She remembered that one of the rear doors, seldom used, was neverfastened, and toward this she bent her faltering footsteps. It yieldedto her touch, and like a ghost she glided through it and up the wide,familiar corridors, her tears falling like rain at every step.

  She knew it was her father's custom to spend long hours in his library,sometimes far into the gray dawn. He found this preferable to thepresence of his sharp-tongued second wife, who was always nagging himfor more money, or to put his property into her name as proof positiveof his unbounded, undying affection for her.

  In his library, among his books, there was no nagging. Here he foundpeace, silence and quiet.

  Therefore, toward the library, late as the hour was, Faynie made herway, stealing along quietly as a shadow.

  The door stood slightly ajar, and a ray of light, a narrow, thread-likestrip, fell athwart the dim corridor.

  When Faynie reached the door she paused, trembling with apprehension, afeeling of intense dread, like a presentiment of coming evil, stealingover her like the shadow of doom.

  She was prepared for his bitter anger, for the whirlwind of wrath thatwould be sure to follow, but she would cast herself on her knees at hisfeet, and with head bowed, oh, so lowly, so piteously, wait for thehurricane of his rage to exhaust itself. Then she would bend over herhead still lower, her pride crushed, her pitiful humiliation complete,and sue on her bended knees, with her hands clasped for his pardon andhis love again.

  She would plead for it for the sake of the fair, hapless young motherwhom she had loved and lost in his early youth. Surely, for her sake hewould find mercy, perhaps pardon, for the child she had left behind her,the fair, petted, hapless daughter, who had been so lonely, and whoseheart yearned so for love ever since he had brought in a second wife torule over his household.

  Ay, from that hour he and his daughter had seemed to drift apart.

  Nerving herself for the ordeal, the girl crept to the door and timidlyswung it back.

  There was a figure bending over the writing desk; not the tall form ofher father, but her stepmother.

  Faynie drew back with a startled cry.

  In a single instant, with the swiftness of a lioness, the woman who hadbeen examining the desk, cleared the space that divided her from thegirl, and clutched her by the shoulder.

  "You!" she panted, in a voice that was scarcely human, it was so full ofvenomous hatred. "You!" she repeated, flinging the girl from her, asthough she had been something vile to the touch. "How dare you comehere?"

  Faynie looked at her for a moment with dilated eyes gazing out from herpale face.

  Had her stepmother suddenly gone mad? was the thought that flashedthrough the girl's brain.

  "I--I have come back to my father, and--and to his home--and mine. Anyexplanation I have to offer will be made to him alone."

  The woman laughed a sneering, demoniac laugh, and her clutch on thegirl's shoulder grew stronger, fiercer.

  "How lovely, how beautifully worded, how dutiful!" she sneered. "By thatI judge that you have not been keeping abreast of the times, or youwould have known, girl, that your father is dead, and that he hasdisinherited you, leaving every dollar of his wealth to me."

  "Dead!" Faynie repeated the words in an awful whisper.

  It seemed to her that every drop of blood in her veins seemed suddenlyturned to ice. A mist swam before her eyes and she put out her handgropingly, grasping the back of the nearest chair for support.

  She did not even hear the last of the sentence. Her thoughts and hearingseemed to end with that one awful word.

  "That is what I said," replied her stepmother, nonchalantly, "and youare his murderess, girl, quite as much as though you had plunged adagger in his heart. Your elopement caused him to have a terriblehemorrhage. He knew all the details about it in less than an hour'stime, learning from one of the servants how you stole out of the houseand met the tall man at the gate, who took you off in a closed carriage,and just as he made this discovery one of the maids handed him yournote, which you left pinned to the pillow, addressed to him. He had nosooner read it than he fell into a rage so horrible that it ended as Ihave said, in a hemorrhage. Within ten minutes' time your name, which hecursed, was stricken from his will, and he left everything to me,disinheriting you. Do you comprehend the force of my remark?"

  The steady, awful look in the young girl's eyes made the woman quail inspite of her bravado. "I--I do not care for my father's wealth, but thathe should curse me--oh, that is too much--too much. Oh, God, let me diehere and now, that I may follow him to the Great White Throne and therekneel before him and tell him all my pitiful story!"

  "That is a pretty theory, but people cannot go to and come at will fromthe Great White Throne, as you call it. You had better get back to therealities of life on this mundane sphere, where you find yourself justat present. I repeat for the third time that you are disinherited. Icannot seem to make you grasp
that fact. This home and everything in itbelongs absolutely to me."

  Faynie heard and realized, and without a word, turned and staggered likeone dying toward the door, but her stepmother put herself quickly beforeher.

  "Sit down there. I have something else to say to you," she added in ashrill whisper, pushing the girl into the nearest seat.

  "I must go. I will not listen," cried Faynie, struggling to her feet.

  "Yes, you shall listen and comply with my proposition," exclaimed herstepmother, her glittering eyes fastened on the beautiful face of thegirl she hated so intensely.