Pemberton Bryce was not the only person in Wrychester who was
watching Ransford with keen attention during these events.
Mary Bewery, a young woman of more than usual powers of
observation and penetration, had been quick to see that her
guardian's distress over the affair in Paradise was something
out of the common. She knew Ransford for an exceedingly
tender-hearted man, with a considerable spice of sentiment in
his composition: he was noted for his more than professional
interest in the poorer sort of his patients and had gained a
deserved reputation in the town for his care of them. But it
was somewhat surprising, even to Mary, that he should be so
much upset by the death of a total stranger as to lose his
appetite, and, for at any rate a couple of days, be so
restless that his conduct could not fail to be noticed by
herself and her brother. His remarks on the tragedy were
conventional enough--a most distressing affair--a sad fate
for the poor fellow--most unexplainable and mysterious, and
so on--but his concern obviously went beyond that. He was
ill at ease when she questioned him about the facts; almost
irritable when Dick Bewery, schoolboy-like, asked him
concerning professional details; she was sure, from the lines
about his eyes and a worn look on his face, that he had passed
a restless night when he came down to breakfast on the morning
of the inquest. But when he returned from the inquest she
noticed a change--it was evident, to her ready wits, that
Ransford had experienced a great relief. He spoke of relief,
indeed, that night at dinner, observing that the verdict which
the jury had returned had cleared the air of a foul suspicion;
it would have been no pleasant matter, he said, if Wrychester
Cathedral had gained an unenviable notoriety as the scene of a
murder.
"All the same," remarked Dick, who knew all the talk of the
town, "Varner persists in sticking to what he's said all
along. Varner says--said this afternoon, after the inquest
was over--that he's absolutely certain of what he saw, and
that he not only saw a hand in a white cuff and black coat
sleeve, but that he saw the sun gleam for a second on the
links in the cuff, as if they were gold or diamonds. Pretty
stiff evidence that, sir, isn't it?"
"In the state of mind in which Varner was at that moment,"
replied Ransford, "he wouldn't be very well able to decide
definitely on what he really did see. His vision would retain
confused images. Probably he saw the dead man's hand--he was
wearing a black coat and white linen. The verdict was a most
sensible one."
No more was said after that, and that evening Ransford was
almost himself again. But not quite himself. Mary caught him
looking very grave, in evident abstraction, more than once;
more than once she heard him sigh heavily. But he said no
more of the matter until two days later, when, at breakfast,
he announced his intention of attending John Braden's funeral,
which was to take place that morning.
"I've ordered the brougham for eleven," he said, "and I've
arranged with Dr. Nicholson to attend to any urgent call that
comes in between that and noon--so, if there is any such call,
you can telephone to him. A few of us are going to attend
this poor man's funeral--it would be too bad to allow a
stranger to go to his grave unattended, especially after such
a fate. There'll be somebody representing the Dean and
Chapter, and three or four principal townsmen, so he'll not be
quite neglected. And"--here he hesitated and looked a little
nervously at Mary, to whom he was telling all this, Dick
having departed for school--" there's a little matter I wish
you'd attend to--you'll do it better than I should. The man
seems to have been friendless; here, at any rate--no relations
have come forward, in spite of the publicity--so--don't you
think it would be rather--considerate, eh?--to put a wreath,
or a cross, or something of that sort on his grave--just to
show--you know?"
"Very kind of you to think of it," said Mary. "What do you
wish me to do?"
"If you'd go to Gardales', the florists, and order--something
fitting, you know," replied Ransford, "and afterwards--later
in the day--take it to St. Wigbert's Churchyard he's to be
buried there--take it--if you don't mind--yourself, you know."
"Certainly," answered Mary. "I'll see that it's done."
She would do anything that seemed good to Ransford--but all
the same she wondered at this somewhat unusual show of
interest in a total stranger. She put it down at last to
Ransford's undoubted sentimentality--the man's sad fate had
impressed him. And that afternoon the sexton at St. Wigbert's
pointed out the new grave to Miss Bewery and Mr. Sackville
Bonham, one carrying a wreath and the other a large bunch of
lilies. Sackville, chancing to encounter Mary at the
florist's, whither he had repaired to execute a commission for
his mother, had heard her business, and had been so struck by
the notion--or by a desire to ingratiate himself with Miss
Bewery--that he had immediately bought flowers himself--to be
put down to her account--and insisted on accompanying Mary to
the churchyard.
Bryce heard of this tribute to John Braden next day--from Mrs.
Folliot, Sackville Bonham's mother, a large lady who dominated
certain circles of Wrychester society in several senses. Mrs.
Folliot was one of those women who have been gifted by nature
with capacity--she was conspicuous in many ways. Her voice
was masculine; she stood nearly six feet in her stoutly-soled
shoes; her breadth corresponded to her height; her eyes were
piercing, her nose Roman; there was not a curate in Wrychester
who was not under her thumb, and if the Dean himself saw her
coming, he turned hastily into the nearest shop, sweating with
fear lest she should follow him. Endued with riches and
fortified by assurance, Mrs. Folliot was the presiding spirit
in many movements of charity and benevolence there were people
in Wrychester who were unkind enough to say--behind her back
--that she was as meddlesome as she was most undoubtedly
autocratic, but, as one of her staunchest clerical defenders
once pointed out, these grumblers were what might be
contemptuously dismissed as five-shilling subscribers. Mrs.
Folliot, in her way, was undoubtedly a power--and for reasons
of his own Pemberton Bryce, whenever he met her--which was
fairly often--was invariably suave and polite.
"Most mysterious thing, this, Dr. Bryce," remarked Mrs.
Folliot in her deepest tones, encountering Bryce, the day
after the funeral, at the corner of a back street down which
she was about to sail on one of her charitable missions, to
the terror of any of the women who happened to be caught
gossiping. "What, now, should make Dr. Ransford cause flowers
to be laid on the grave of a total stranger? A sentimental
feeling? Fiddle-de-dee! There must be some reason."
"I'm afraid I don't know what you're talking about, Mrs.
Folliot," answered Bryce, whose ears had already lengthened.
"Has Dr. Ransford been laying flowers on a grave?--I didn't
know of it. My engagement with Dr. Ransford terminated two
days ago--so I've seen nothing of him."
"My son, Mr. Sackville Bonham," said Mrs. Folliot, "tells me
that yesterday Miss Bewery came into Gardales' and spent a
sovereign--actually a sovereign!--on a wreath, which, she told
Sackville, she was about to carry, at her guardian's desire,
to this strange man's grave. Sackville, who is a warm-hearted
boy, was touched--he, too, bought flowers and accompanied Miss
Bewery. Most extraordinary! A perfect stranger! Dear me
--why, nobody knows who the man was!"
"Except his bank-manager," remarked Bryce, "who says he's
holding ten thousand pounds of his."
"That," admitted Mrs. Folliot gravely, "is certainly a
consideration. But then, who knows?--the money may have been
stolen. Now, really, did you ever hear of a quite respectable
man who hadn't even a visiting-card or a letter upon him? And
from Australia, too!--where all the people that are wanted run
away to! I have actually been tempted to wonder, Dr. Bryce,
if Dr. Ransford knew this man--in years gone by? He might
have, you know, he might have--certainly! And that, of
course, would explain the flowers."
"There is a great deal in the matter that requires
explanation, Mrs. Folliot," said Bryce. He was wondering if
it would be wise to instil some minute drop of poison into the
lady's mind, there to increase in potency and in due course to
spread. "I--of course, I may have been mistaken--I certainly
thought Dr. Ransford seemed unusually agitated by this affair
--it appeared to upset him greatly."
"So I have heard--from others who were at the inquest,"
responded Mrs. Folliot. "In my opinion our Coroner--a worthy
man otherwise--is not sufficiently particular. I said to Mr.
Folliot this morning, on reading the newspaper, that in my
view that inquest should have been adjourned for further
particulars. Now I know of one particular that was never
mentioned at the inquest!"
"Oh?" said Bryce. "And what?"
"Mrs. Deramore, who lives, as you know, next to Dr. Ransford,"
replied Mrs. Folliot, "told me this morning that on the
morning of the accident, happening to look out of one of her
upper windows, she saw a man whom, from the description given
in the newspapers, was, Mrs. Deramore feels assured, was the
mysterious stranger, crossing the Close towards the Cathedral
in, Mrs. Deramore is positive, a dead straight line from Dr.
Ransford's garden--as if he had been there. Dr. Bryce!--a
direct question should have been asked of Dr. Ransford--had he
ever seen that man before?"
"Ah, but you see, Mrs. Folliot, the Coroner didn't know what
Mrs. Deramore saw, so he couldn't ask such a question, nor
could any one else," remarked Bryce, who was wondering how
long Mrs. Deramore remained at her upper window and if she saw
him follow Braden. "But there are circumstances, no doubt,
which ought to be inquired into. And it's certainly very
curious that Dr. Ransford should send a wreath to the grave
of--a stranger."
He went away convinced that Mrs. Folliot's inquisitiveness had
been aroused, and that her tongue would not be idle: Mrs.
Folliot, left to herself, had the gift of creating an
atmosphere, and if she once got it into her head that there
was some mysterious connection between Dr. Ransford and the
dead man, she would never rest until she had spread her
suspicions. But as for Bryce himself, he wanted more than
suspicions--he wanted facts, particulars, data. And once more
he began to go over the sum of evidence which had accrued.
The question of the scrap of paper found in Braden's purse,
and of the exact whereabouts of Richard Jenkins's grave in
Paradise, be left for the time being. What was now
interesting him chiefly was the advertisement in the Times to
which the bank-manager from London had drawn attention. He
had made haste to, buy a copy of the Times and to cut out the
advertisement. There it was--old friend Marco was wanted by
(presumably old friend) Sticker, and whoever Sticker might be
he could certainly be found under care of J. Braden. It had
never been in doubt a moment, in Bryce's mind, that Sticker
was J. Braden himself. Who, now, was Marco? Who--a million
to one on it!--but Ransford, whose Christian name was Mark?
He reckoned up his chances of getting at the truth of the
affair anew that night. As things were, it seemed unlikely
that any relations of Braden would now turn up. The
Wrychester Paradise case, as the reporters had aptly named it,
had figured largely in the newspapers, London and provincial;
it could scarcely have had more publicity--yet no one, save
this bank-manager, had come forward. If there had been any
one to come forward the bank-manager's evidence would surely
have proved an incentive to speed--for there was a sum of ten
thousand pounds awaiting John Braden's next-of-kin. In
Bryce's, opinion the chance of putting in a claim to ten
thousand pounds is not left waiting forty-eight hours--whoever
saw such a chance would make instant use of telegraph or
telephone. But no message from anybody professing
relationship with the dead man had so far reached the
Wrychester police.
When everything had been taken into account, Bryce saw no
better clue for the moment than that suggested by Ambrose
Campany--Barthorpe. Ambrose Campany, bookworm though he was,
was a shrewd, sharp fellow, said Bryce--a man of ideas. There
was certainly much in his suggestion that a man wasn't likely
to buy an old book about a little insignificant town like
Barthorpe unless he had some interest in it--Barthorpe, if
Campany's theory were true, was probably the place of John
Braden's origin.
Therefore, information about Braden, leading to knowledge of
his association or connection with Ransford, might be found at
Bartborpe. True, the Barthorpe police had already reported
that they could tell nothing about any Braden, but that, in
Bryce's opinion, was neither here nor there--he had already
come to the conclusion that Braden was an assumed name. And
if he went to Barthorpe, he was not going to trouble the
police--he knew better methods than that of finding things
out. Was he going?--was it worth his while? A moment's
reflection decided that matter--anything was worth his while
which would help him to get a strong hold on Mark Ransford.
And always practical in his doings, he walked round to the
Free Library, obtained a gazeteer, and looked up particulars
of Barthorpe. There he learnt that Barthorpe was an ancient
market-town of two thousand inhabitants in the north of
Leicestershire, famous for nothing except that it had been the
scene of a battle at the time of the Wars of the Roses, and
that its trade was mainly in agriculture and stocking-making
--evidently a slow, sleepy old place.
That night Bryce packed a hand-bag with small necessaries for
a few days' excursion, and next morning he took an early train
to London; the end of that afternoon found him in a Midland
northern-bound express, looking out on the undulating, green
acres of Leicestershire. And while his train was making a
three minutes' stop at Leicester itself, the purpose of his
journey was suddenly recalled to him by hearing the strident
voices of the porters on the platform.
"Barthorpe next stop!--next stop Barthorpe!"
One of two other men who shared a smoking compartment with
Bryce turned to his companion as the train moved off again.
"Barthorpe?" he remarked. "That's the place that was
mentioned in connection with that very queer affair at
Wrychester, that's been reported in the papers so much these
last few days. The mysterious stranger who kept ten thousand
in a London bank, and of whom nobody seems to know anything,
had nothing on him but a history of Barthorpe. Odd! And yet,
though you'd think he'd some connection with the place, or had
known it, they say nobody at Barthorpe knows anything about
anybody of his name."
"Well, I don't know that there is anything so very odd about
it, after all," replied the other man. "He may have picked up
that old book for one of many reasons that could be suggested.
No--I read all that case in the papers, and I wasn't so much
impressed by the old book feature of it. But I'll tell you
what--there was a thing struck me. I know this Barthorpe
district--we shall be in it in a few minutes--I've been a good
deal over it. This strange man's name was given in the papers
as John Braden. Now close to Barthorpe--a mile or two outside
it, there's a village of that name--Braden Medworth. That's a
curious coincidence--and taken in conjunction with the man's
possession of an old book about Barthorpe--why, perhaps
there's something in it--possibly more than I thought for at
first."
"Well--it's an odd case--a very odd case," said the first
speaker. "And--as there's ten thousand pounds in question,
more will be heard of it. Somebody'll be after that, you may
be sure!"
Bryce left the train at Barthorpe thanking his good luck--the
man in the far corner had unwittingly given him a hint. He
would pay a visit to Braden Medworth--the coincidence was too
striking to be neglected. But first Barthorpe itself--a
quaint old-world little market-town, in which some of even the
principal houses still wore roofs of thatch, and wherein the
old custom of ringing the curfew bell was kept up. He found
an old-fashioned hotel in the marketplace, under the shadow of
the parish church, and in its oak-panelled dining-room, hung
about with portraits of masters of foxhounds and queer old
prints of sporting and coaching days, he dined comfortably and
well.
It was too late to attempt any investigations that evening,
and when Bryce had finished his leisurely dinner he strolled
into the smoking-room--an even older and quainter apartment
than that which he had just left. It was one of those rooms
only found in very old houses--a room of nooks and corners,
with a great open fireplace, and old furniture and old
pictures and curiosities--the sort of place to which the
old-fashioned tradesmen of the small provincial towns still
resort of an evening rather than patronize the modern
political clubs. There were several men of this sort in the
room when Bryce entered, talking local politics amongst
themselves, and he found a quiet corner and sat down in it to
smoke, promising himself some amusement from the conversation
around him it was his way to find interest and amusement in
anything that offered. But he had scarcely settled down in a
comfortably cushioned elbow chair when the door opened again
and into the room walked old Simpson Harker.