<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXIII. THE UNEXPECTED </h2>
<p>Mary's first instinct on seeing the approach of Pemberton Bryce, the one
man she least desired to see, was to retreat to the back of the house and
send the parlourmaid to the door to say her mistress was not at home. But
she had lately become aware of Bryce's curiously dogged persistence in
following up whatever he had in view, and she reflected that if he were
sent away then he would be sure to come back and come back until he had
got whatever it was that he wanted. And after a moment's further
consideration, she walked out of the front door and confronted him
resolutely in the garden.</p>
<p>"Dr. Ransford is away," she said with almost unnecessary brusqueness.
"He's away until evening."</p>
<p>"I don't want him," replied Bryce just as brusquely. "I came to see you."</p>
<p>Mary hesitated. She continued to regard Bryce steadily, and Bryce did not
like the way in which she was looking at him. He made haste to speak
before she could either leave or dismiss him.</p>
<p>"You'd better give me a few minutes," he said, with a note of warning.
"I'm here in your interests—or in Ransford's. I may as well tell
you, straight out, Ransford's in serious and imminent danger! That's a
fact."</p>
<p>"Danger of what?" she demanded.</p>
<p>"Arrest—instant arrest!" replied Bryce. "I'm telling you the truth.
He'll probably be arrested tonight, on his return. There's no imagination
in all this—I'm speaking of what I know. I've—curiously enough—got
mixed up with these affairs, through no seeking of my own, and I know
what's behind the scenes. If it were known that I'm letting out secrets to
you, I should get into trouble. But, I want to warn you!"</p>
<p>Mary stood before him on the path, hesitating. She knew enough to know
that Bryce was telling some sort of truth: it was plain that he had been
mixed up in the recent mysteries, and there was a ring of conviction in
his voice which impressed her. And suddenly she had visions of Ransford's
arrest, of his being dragged off to prison to meet a cruel accusation, of
the shame and disgrace, and she hesitated further.</p>
<p>"But if that's so," she said at last, "what's the good of coming to me? I
can't do anything!"</p>
<p>"I can!" said Bryce significantly. "I know more—much more—than
the police know—more than anybody knows. I can save Ransford.
Understand that!"</p>
<p>"What do you want now?" she asked.</p>
<p>"To talk to you—to tell you how things are," answered Bryce. "What
harm is there in that? To make you see how matters stand, and then to show
you what I can do to put things right."</p>
<p>Mary glanced at an open summer-house which stood beneath the beech trees
on one side of the garden. She moved towards it and sat down there, and
Bryce followed her and seated himself.</p>
<p>"Well—" she said.</p>
<p>Bryce realized that his moment had arrived. He paused, endeavouring to
remember the careful preparations he had made for putting his case.
Somehow, he was not so clear as to his line of attack as he had been ten
minutes previously—he realized that he had to deal with a young
woman who was not likely to be taken in nor easily deceived. And suddenly
he plunged into what he felt to be the thick of things.</p>
<p>"Whether you, or whether Ransford—whether both or either of you,
know it or not," he said, "the police have been on to Ransford ever since
that Collishaw affair! Underground work, you know. Mitchington has been
digging into things ever since then, and lately he's had a London
detective helping him."</p>
<p>Mary, who had carried her work into the garden, had now resumed it, and as
Bryce began to talk she bent over it steadily stitching.</p>
<p>"Well?" she said.</p>
<p>"Look here!" continued Bryce. "Has it never struck you—it must have
done!—that there's considerable mystery about Ransford? But whether
it has struck you or not, it's there, and it's struck the police forcibly.
Mystery connected with him before—long before—he ever came
here. And associated, in some way, with that man Braden. Not of late—in
years past. And, naturally, the police have tried to find out what that
was."</p>
<p>"What have they found out?" asked Mary quietly.</p>
<p>"That I'm not at liberty to tell," replied Bryce. "But I can tell you this—they
know, Mitchington and the London man, that there were passages between
Ransford and Braden years ago."</p>
<p>"How many years ago?" interrupted Mary.</p>
<p>Bryce hesitated a moment. He had a suspicion that this self-possessed
young woman who was taking everything more quietly than he had
anticipated, might possibly know more than he gave her credit for knowing.
He had been watching her fingers since they sat down in the summer-house,
and his sharp eyes saw that they were as steady as the spire of the
cathedral above the trees—he knew from that that she was neither
frightened nor anxious.</p>
<p>"Oh, well—seventeen to twenty years ago," he answered. "About that
time. There were passages, I say, and they were of a nature which suggests
that the re-appearance of Braden on Ransford's present stage of life would
be, extremely unpleasant and unwelcome to Ransford."</p>
<p>"Vague!" murmured Mary. "Extremely vague!"</p>
<p>"But quite enough," retorted Bryce, "to give the police the suggestion of
motive. I tell you the police know quite enough to know that Braden was,
of all men in the world, the last man Ransford desired to see cross his
path again. And—on that morning on which the Paradise affair
occurred—Braden did cross his path. Therefore, in the conventional
police way of thinking and looking at things, there's motive."</p>
<p>"Motive for what?" asked Mary.</p>
<p>Bryce arrived here at one of his critical stages, and he paused a moment
in order to choose his words.</p>
<p>"Don't get any false ideas or impressions," he said at last. "I'm not
accusing Ransford of anything. I'm only telling you what I know the police
think and are on the very edge of accusing him of. To put it plainly—of
murder. They say he'd a motive for murdering Braden—and with them
motive is everything. It's the first thing they seem to think of; they
first question they ask themselves. 'Why should this man have murdered
that man?'—do you see! 'What motive had he?—that's the point.
And they think—these chaps like Mitchington and the London man—that
Ransford certainly had a motive for getting rid of Braden when they met."</p>
<p>"What was the motive?" asked Mary.</p>
<p>"They've found out something—perhaps a good deal—about what
happened between Braden and Ransford some years ago," replied Bryce. "And
their theory is—if you want to know the truth—that Ransford
ran away with Braden's wife, and that Braden had been looking for him ever
since."</p>
<p>Bryce had kept his eyes on Mary's hands, and now at last he saw the girl's
fingers tremble. But her voice was steady enough when she spoke.</p>
<p>"Is that mere conjecture on their part, or is it based on any fact?" she
asked.</p>
<p>"I'm not in full knowledge of all their secrets," answered Bryce, "but
I've heard enough to know that there's a basis of undeniable fact on which
they're going. I know for instance, beyond doubt, that Braden and Ransford
were bosom friends, years ago, that Braden was married to a girl whom
Ransford had wanted to marry, that Braden's wife suddenly left him,
mysteriously, a few years later, and that, at the same time, Ransford made
an equally mysterious disappearance. The police know all that. What is the
inference to be drawn? What inference would any one—you yourself,
for example—draw?"</p>
<p>"None, till I've heard what Dr. Ransford had to say," replied Mary.</p>
<p>Bryce disliked that ready retort. He was beginning to feel that he was
being met by some force stronger that his own.</p>
<p>"That's all very well," he remarked. "I don't say that I wouldn't do the
same. But I'm only explaining the police position, and showing you the
danger likely to arise from it. The police theory is this, as far as I can
make it out: Ransford, years ago, did Braden a wrong, and Braden certainly
swore revenge when he could find him. Circumstances prevented Braden from
seeking him closely for some time; at last they met here, by accident.
Here the police aren't decided. One theory is that there was an
altercation, blows, a struggle, in the course of which Braden met his
death; the other is that Ransford deliberately took Braden up into the
gallery and flung him through that open doorway—"</p>
<p>"That," observed Mary, with something very like a sneer, "seems so likely
that I should think it would never occur to anybody but the sort of people
you're telling me of! No man of any real sense would believe it for a
minute!"</p>
<p>"Some people of plain common sense do believe it for all that!" retorted
Bryce. "For it's quite possible. But as I say, I'm only repeating. And of
course, the rest of it follows on that. The police theory is that
Collishaw witnessed Braden's death at Ransford's hands, that Ransford got
to know that Collishaw knew of that, and that he therefore quietly removed
Collishaw. And it is on all that that they're going, and will go. Don't
ask me if I think they're right or wrong! I'm only telling you what I know
so as to show you what danger Ransford is in."</p>
<p>Mary made no immediate answer, and Bryce sat watching her. Somehow—he
was at a loss to explain it to himself—things were not going as he
had expected. He had confidently believed that the girl would be
frightened, scared, upset, ready to do anything that he asked or
suggested. But she was plainly not frightened. And the fingers which
busied themselves with the fancy-work had become steady again, and her
voice had been steady all along.</p>
<p>"Pray," she asked suddenly, and with a little satirical inflection of
voice which Brice was quick to notice, "pray, how is it that you—not
a policeman, not a detective!—come to know so much of all this?
Since when were you taken into the confidence of Mitchington and the
mysterious person from London?"</p>
<p>"You know as well as I do that I have been dragged into the case against
my wishes," answered Bryce almost sullenly. "I was fetched to Braden—I
saw him die. It was I who found Collishaw—dead. Of course, I've been
mixed up, whether I would or not, and I've had to see a good deal of the
police, and naturally I've learnt things."</p>
<p>Mary suddenly turned on him with a flash of the eye which might have
warned Bryce that he had signally failed in the main feature of his
adventure.</p>
<p>"And what have you learnt that makes you come here and tell me all this?"
she exclaimed. "Do you think I'm a simpleton, Dr. Bryce? You set out by
saying that Dr. Ransford is in danger from the police, and that you know
more—much more than the police! what does that mean? Shall I tell
you? It means that you—you!—know that the police are wrong,
and that if you like you can prove to them that they are wrong! Now, then
isn't that so?"</p>
<p>"I am in possession of certain facts," began Bryce. "I—"</p>
<p>Mary stopped him with a look.</p>
<p>"My turn!" she said. "You're in possession of certain facts. Now isn't it
the truth that the facts you are in possession of are proof enough to you
that Dr. Ransford is as innocent as I am? It's no use your trying to
deceive me! Isn't that so?"</p>
<p>"I could certainly turn the police off his track," admitted Bryce, who was
growing highly uncomfortable. "I could divert—"</p>
<p>Mary gave him another look and dropping her needlework continued to watch
him steadily.</p>
<p>"Do you call yourself a gentleman?" she asked quietly. "Or we'll leave the
term out. Do you call yourself even decently honest? For, if you do, how
can you have the sheer impudence—more, insolence!—to come here
and tell me all this when you know that the police are wrong and that you
could—to use your own term, which is your way of putting it—turn
them off the wrong track? Whatever sort of man are you? Do you want to
know my opinion of you in plain words?"</p>
<p>"You seem very anxious to give it, anyway," retorted Bryce.</p>
<p>"I will give it, and it will perhaps put an end to this," answered Mary.
"If you are in possession of anything in the way of evidence which would
prove Dr. Ransford's innocence and you are wilfully suppressing it, you
are bad, wicked, base, cruel, unfit for any decent being's society! And,"
she added, as she picked up her work and rose, "you're not going to have
any more of mine!"</p>
<p>"A moment!" said Bryce. He was conscious that he had somehow played all
his cards badly, and he wanted another opening. "You're misunderstanding
me altogether! I never said—never inferred—that I wouldn't
save Ransford."</p>
<p>"Then, if there's need, which I don't admit, you acknowledge that you
could save him?" she exclaimed sharply. "Just as I thought. Then, if
you're an honest man, a man with any pretensions to honour, why don't you
at once! Any man who had such feelings as those I've just mentioned
wouldn't hesitate one second. But you—you!—you come and—talk
about it! As if it were a game! Dr. Bryce, you make me feel sick,
mentally, morally sick."</p>
<p>Bryce had risen to his feet when Mary rose, and he now stood staring at
her. Ever since his boyhood he had laughed and sneered at the mere idea of
the finer feelings—he believed that every man has his price—and
that honesty and honour are things useful as terms but of no real
existence. And now he was wondering—really wondering—if this
girl meant the things she said: if she really felt a mental loathing of
such minds and purposes as he knew his own were, or if it were merely
acting on her part. Before he could speak she turned on him again more
fiercely than before.</p>
<p>"Shall I tell you something else in plain language?" she asked. "You
evidently possess a very small and limited knowledge—if you have any
at all!—of women, and you apparently don't rate their mental
qualities at any high standard. Let me tell you that I am not quite such a
fool as you seem to think me! You came here this afternoon to bargain with
me! You happen to know how much I respect my guardian and what I owe him
for the care he has taken of me and my brother. You thought to trade on
that! You thought you could make a bargain with me; you were to save Dr.
Ransford, and for reward you were to have me! You daren't deny it. Dr.
Bryce—I can see through you!"</p>
<p>"I never said it, at any rate," answered Bryce.</p>
<p>"Once more, I say, I'm not a fool!" exclaimed Mary. "I saw through you all
along. And you've failed! I'm not in the least frightened by what you've
said. If the police arrest Dr. Ransford, Dr. Ransford knows how to defend
himself. And you're not afraid for him! You know you aren't. It wouldn't
matter twopence to you if he were hanged tomorrow, for you hate him. But
look to yourself! Men who cheat, and scheme, and plot, and plan as you do
come to bad ends. Mind yours! Mind the wheel doesn't come full circle. And
now, if you please, go away and don't dare to come near me again!"</p>
<p>Bryce made no answer. He had listened, with an attempt at a smile, to all
this fiery indignation, but as Mary spoke the last words he was suddenly
aware of something that drew his attention from her and them. Through an
opening in Ransford's garden hedge he could see the garden door of the
Folliots' house across the Close. And at that moment out of it emerge
Folliot himself in conversation with Glassdale!</p>
<p>Without a word, Bryce snatched up his hat from the table of the
summer-house, and went swiftly away—a new scheme, a new idea in his
mind.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />