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The colour drained from the girl's face; even her lips looked white, and the Beggar Man went on hurriedly and rather pathetically:
"It makes me terribly unhappy to see you like this. I had hoped such great things ... I was a fool, I suppose. Faith, have you forgotten those first days when we knew each other? You were happy enough then...."
She turned her face away obstinately.
"I did not know who you were then."
The Beggar Man shrugged his shoulders.
"Well, we won't argue about it. How soon can you be ready? Miss Fraser has packed all the things it will be necessary for you to take. I will send for a taxi if you will put on your hat and coat."
"I am not going; I am going to stay here."
He walked out of the room without a word, returning almost at once with her hat and coat. He laid them down beside her on the table.
"Put them on," he said quietly.
She looked up with scared eyes.
"No."
"Put them on," said the Beggar Man once again.
"No." Only a whisper this time.
He stooped and raised her to her feet. He held her arms firmly, so that it was impossible for her to escape him.
"I've tried all ways with you," he said, and his voice sounded a little laboured and difficult. "At least, I hope I have. I've made every allowance for you and tried to be patient. That was my mistake; I should have shown you first of all that I was your master. Faith--look at me!"
She had been standing with her head down-drooping, and he could feel how she trembled, but he did not soften.
"Look at me," he said again, and she looked up.
Her brown eyes met his--kind no longer, only stern and determined--and for a moment neither spoke. But in that silence something seemed to tell Faith how useless was her resistance, how truly he had spoken when he said that he was her master.
Then he let her go and stood back a pace.
"Now are you coming with me?" he asked.
She put on her hat and coat without a word, and she heard him go out into the hall and into the street and send a boy for a taxi.
When he came back she was standing apathetically by the table, looking round the room which she was never to see again.
She hated him because he was tearing her away from the only home she knew--hated him because her mother had hated him; the knowledge had quite killed the first immature affection she had felt for him, quite wiped out all the romance.
The Beggar Man stood for a moment in the doorway, looking at her, and there was a great longing in his heart to try and comfort her, to try and drive that look of desolation from her childish face, but he knew it was no moment for wavering.
"Are you ready?" he asked, and his pity made his voice harsh.
"Yes."
She followed him out of the house without another word or backward glance, but her heart felt as if it were breaking. She kept telling herself that this was her punishment for having deceived her mother. She wished she could fall down dead, as her mother had done.
Forrester only spoke to her once during the drive to his rooms, and that was when he leaned forward and forced her wedding ring back to her third finger.
"Don't you ever dare to take it off again," he said.
There was a little smile in his eyes as he spoke, but she only heard the masterfulness of his voice, and she shrank back as if he had struck her.
Dinner was waiting for them at the flat, as he had said, and there was a maid in attendance who looked with kindly interest at Faith as she took her to her room.
"May I take off your boots for you?" she asked, as Faith stood helplessly by the dressing-table. "You must be tired. I will bring some hot water, and when you have had dinner you will feel better."
Forrester had felt bound to tell her something of the circ.u.mstances of his unusual marriage, and she was deeply interested. She felt sorry for Faith, too. Possibly she could afford to be, seeing the generous salary which Forrester had offered her if she would stay with his wife and do everything in her power to help her and make her happy.
Faith looked at her with troubled eyes.
"Must I go down to dinner?"
The girl smiled kindly.
"I think you had better. Mr. Forrester will be disappointed if you do not."
"I don't care," said Faith.
But she went all the same, and managed to eat something.
The Beggar Man made her drink some wine, which brought a faint colour to her white cheeks.
She no longer looked round the room with interest or admiration; she felt like a creature at bay, captured against her will by this man.
When dinner was ended and cleared away Forrester drew up an armchair for her. "Sit down; I want to talk to you," he said.
"Well?"
But she stood where she was, with the chair between them.
He had meant to be kind and affectionate, but the antagonism in that one monosyllable dispersed all his good resolutions. He was sick of scenes, tired of being held at arms' length; reluctantly he had grown to see that this marriage had been the greatest mistake of his life, that he had been a fool to imagine he could mould this girl to his own wishes and desires, child as she seemed. There was a strong will in the slim, soft body which defied him.
With a swift movement he caught her in his arms. She gave a quick, frightened breath, but before she could speak he had kissed her lips--kissed the eyes that closed in terror before his, and the soft face that turned from him with such desperation.
She was a child in his arms, but though she could not escape from him, her lips felt like steel beneath his. He might break her body, but he could never bend her will. Through every nerve in his body he could feel that she hated and feared him, and at last with sullen anger and bitterness he let her go, so violently that she staggered and almost fell, catching at the table to save herself.
He waited, pale to the lips and breathless, for the storm of sobbing which he thought would come, but though she put up her shaking hands to hide her face and the crimson patches left by the roughness of his kisses, she did not shed a tear. She only said over and over again in a broken-hearted little whisper, "Oh, mother--mother ... mother...."
"Faith!" The Beggar Man took a quick step towards her. "Faith! Oh, for G.o.d's sake...." But he did not touch her, and for a long moment there was silence. Then she looked up at him, haggard-eyed and piteous.
"Oh, please--please go away."