Master intercepts Hawthorne’s plea
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Miss Hawthorne attempts to visit the old vicar, Canon Smallwood, seeking help regarding the dark omens she has been sensing. Garvin, the verger, blocks her path and denies her access, claiming that the vicar is away due to illness.
Hawthorne expresses skepticism about Canon Smallwood's sudden departure and then tries to see the new vicar, but Garvin continues to obstruct her. The Master appears, intervening in the confrontation and addresses Miss Hawthorne.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Coldly indifferent, with a hint of smug satisfaction in his ability to thwart Hawthorne’s efforts. His demeanor suggests he views her concerns as irrelevant noise in the face of the Master’s will.
Garvin materializes abruptly in front of Hawthorne, his posture rigid and unyielding as he blocks her path to the vicarage. He responds to her pleas with bureaucratic indifference ('I've got no time to listen to your nonsense'), dismissing her concerns about Canon Smallwood’s disappearance and the Master’s true identity. His dialogue—particularly his insistence that 'Mister Magister' is unavailable—reveals his role as the Master’s enforcer, enforcing the Master’s control over the village’s spiritual authority. His physical presence (arms crossed, dismissive tone) underscores his loyalty to the Master’s agenda.
- • Prevent Hawthorne from reaching Canon Smallwood or exposing the Master’s deception.
- • Maintain the Master’s control over the vicarage and the village’s spiritual narrative.
- • The Master’s authority is absolute and must be defended at all costs.
- • Hawthorne’s concerns are baseless and disruptive to the village’s order.
Smug and amused, with an undercurrent of menace. His feigned concern masks his true intent: to silence Hawthorne and reinforce his control over Devil’s End.
The Master materializes suddenly, his arrival timed to intervene just as Hawthorne’s defiance reaches its peak. He feigns concern ('Dear me, I hope that violence will not be necessary'), his tone dripping with false solicitousness. His presence alone is a power play—he not only monitors Hawthorne’s movements but also asserts his dominance over the village’s spiritual authority. His dialogue, though brief, underscores his manipulative control, as he positions himself as the village’s protector while secretly orchestrating its downfall.
- • Silence Hawthorne’s suspicions and prevent her from exposing his deception.
- • Reinforce his dominance over the village by asserting his authority as 'Mister Magister.'
- • Hawthorne is a threat to his plans and must be neutralized or controlled.
- • His disguise as 'Mister Magister' is untouchable, and the village’s loyalty is assured.
Frustrated and indignant, with an undercurrent of fear. Her defiance masks a deeper anxiety about the village’s fate and her own vulnerability in the face of the Master’s influence.
Miss Hawthorne strides purposefully toward the vicarage, her determination faltering only when Garvin materializes to block her path. She escalates from polite insistence ('Out of my way, please') to outright defiance ('I shall be forced to use violence'), revealing her desperation to reach Canon Smallwood. Her dialogue—particularly her insistence on the 'real vicar' and her skepticism of 'Mister Magister'—exposes her as the village’s lone skeptic of the Master’s deception. Her physical presence (clenched fists, raised voice) and verbal threats mark her as a woman pushed to the brink by the village’s supernatural crisis.
- • Gain access to Canon Smallwood to seek his counsel and expose the Master’s deception.
- • Force Garvin to acknowledge the supernatural threat looming over Devil’s End.
- • The Master’s disguise as 'Mister Magister' is a deliberate deception to manipulate the village.
- • Canon Smallwood’s sudden departure was not natural and is connected to the Master’s schemes.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The vicarage, symbolizing spiritual authority and refuge, is the ultimate prize in this confrontation. Hawthorne’s desperate attempt to reach it—only to be blocked by Garvin—highlights the Master’s usurpation of Canon Smallwood’s role. The vicarage’s closed doors and Garvin’s refusal to grant access reinforce the Master’s control over the village’s moral and spiritual compass. The building’s silence and unyielding facade mirror the Master’s deception, turning a place of sanctuary into a fortress of lies.
The churchyard serves as a battleground for ideological and supernatural conflict, its storm-lashed grounds amplifying the tension between Hawthorne’s defiance and the Master’s enforcers. The space is charged with unspoken threats—Garvin’s sudden appearance from the shadows, the Master’s materialization, and Hawthorne’s escalating frustration all unfold against the backdrop of crumbling gravestones and howling winds. The churchyard’s role as a liminal space (neither fully sacred nor profane) mirrors the moral ambiguity of the confrontation, where spiritual authority is contested and supernatural forces loom.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Hawthorne seeks help from vicar follow on from earlier strange incident."
Hawthorne confronts the Master’s hypocrisy"Hawthorne seeks help from vicar follow on from earlier strange incident."
Master manipulates Hawthorne’s isolationKey Dialogue
"HAWTHORNE: I mean Canon Smallwood, our old vicar. The one who left in such mysterious circumstances."
"GARVIN: Nothing mysterious about it. Taken ill and had to leave."
"HAWTHORNE: Suddenly? In the middle of the night? Without so much as a goodbye to anyone in the village?"
"MASTER: Dear me, I hope that violence will not be necessary. Good evening, Miss Hawthorne, and what can I do for you?"