Mischievous Maid Faynie
n a little dark heap at his feet just as he had struck her down-the cri
-curse her! My God! the girl is actually dying." Then, through his half-dazed brain came the
through the inky darkness as best he could to the barroom, where he k
his crime had quite so
s he made his way quickly to his friend's side. A few rapid words wh
get out of here without a moment's delay. The cabman must go with us,
uttered his companion, huskily, "your brain is
," went on Halloran. "She must
h her?" returned the other, sharply. "I tel
she came by her death. I have a desperate plan. I cannot explain it to you now. All I say is,
r hands, Halloran,"
bank notes was pressed into his hands as the price of his complying with their demand-a sum that would more than cover the
ow he came by the money to buy that outfit-and as it was done in
es to tell it the coach
le up to the room above, found the girl lying in the exact spot his companion had described, and, catching
ispered the other in a strained,
n, briefly, jumping in and
ade no attempt to break it, his companion leaned over, asking breathle
ind, and it is a knotty one. I must have more t
tandstill, and both of the men within heard their driver's voi
ave been scouring the country about to find her," gasped the fraudulent Lester A
t, whoever it is can share the girl's fate," and with these w
the matte
ld grave digger, who says he lives hereabouts, somewhere. He's half frozen with the cold tramping about. I told him '
; and, without waiting for a reply, he was out of the coach like a flash, and his hand wa
"we have a little work which you of all persons
the tall gentleman before him in som
ss, sir, if I answer that I do n
ar to you, in as plain English as I can comm
ing his old ears were not serving him tru
said," returned
old Adam, "this
id it was?" cut in
very limb, his brain too bewildered to try to reason out the meaning of this
ver from his pocket, and placed it at Adam's
life will pay the forfeit. I give
at in all the after years of his life Adam alway
till, life was sweet to him, ah, very sweet. He had a good wife and little bairns a
ve dug by the roadside on this terrible night? Whom did
ng rapidly through his brain,
nd now as I command you, or will you prefer that the next passer-by
s gleaming pitilessly upon him as he uttered the words, and he reali
nger of death still closer to the throbbing brow
tammered
ou need not make it the regulation depth-three feet or such a matter will answer. Begin without delay. I will also add that
by the light from the carriage lamp began his work on the spot poi
nd the frozen ground yielded quickly to the strokes of his trusty spade, and surely the faint moon, glimmering from between
he perspiration pouring
the cold steel of the revolver was pressed to his throbbing brow, and the hars