Master manipulates Hawthorne’s isolation
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
As Hawthorne leaves, the Master subtly directs Garvin to follow her, ensuring she remains isolated and unable to find assistance.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Feigned calm and rationalism masking a cold, predatory satisfaction in undermining Hawthorne’s credibility and ensuring her vulnerability.
The Master, disguised as Vicar Magister, engages in a calculated psychological battle with Hawthorne. He feigns concern and rationalism, dismissing her warnings about Beltane and the excavation with condescending skepticism. When she brandishes her ankh, he removes his spectacles to deliver a menacing ‘look,’ signaling his true nature. His subtle gesture to Garvin to follow Hawthorne reveals his manipulative control over the village, ensuring her isolation and the cult’s unchecked progress.
- • To dismiss Hawthorne’s warnings as superstition, reinforcing his rationalist facade while advancing the cult’s ritual.
- • To isolate Hawthorne by having her followed, ensuring she cannot disrupt the excavation or rally support.
- • Superstition and fear are tools to control the weak, and Hawthorne’s defiance must be neutralized.
- • His disguise as Vicar Magister grants him the authority to manipulate the village’s institutions and people.
Desperate and angry, masking a deep sense of helplessness as her warnings are dismissed, but her defiance with the ankh reveals a core of unyielding resolve.
Olive Hawthorne confronts the Master (disguised as Vicar Magister) in the churchyard, pleading urgently for him to stop Professor Horner’s excavation of the tomb on Beltane. She warns of the supernatural dangers, her voice laced with desperation, but the Master dismisses her with cold rationalism. Frustrated, she brandishes her ankh—a symbolic gesture of defiance and protection—before storming off, her resolve hardening despite the Master’s manipulation.
- • To convince the Master (as Vicar Magister) to halt Horner’s excavation and prevent the unleashing of Azal on Beltane.
- • To rally support against the occult threat, even if it means defying the village’s authority figures.
- • The excavation is a direct threat to the village’s safety, and the Master’s rationalism is a facade hiding his true intentions.
- • Her role as the village’s white witch compels her to act, even if she must stand alone.
Neutral and detached, but his readiness to act on the Master’s signal suggests a quiet, unquestioning loyalty.
Garvin, the verger, stands silently in the background during the confrontation between Hawthorne and the Master. Though he does not speak, his presence is a reminder of the Master’s control over the village. When the Master subtly signals him, Garvin’s obedience is immediate—he prepares to follow Hawthorne, ensuring she remains isolated and monitored.
- • To carry out the Master’s unspoken orders without question, maintaining the cult’s control over the village.
- • To ensure Hawthorne does not interfere further with the Master’s plans, even if it means surveilling her.
- • The Master’s authority is absolute, and his directives must be followed without hesitation.
- • Hawthorne’s warnings are irrelevant or dangerous, and her actions must be contained.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Master’s spectacles serve as a critical prop in his disguise as Vicar Magister. When he removes them to deliver a menacing ‘look’ to Hawthorne, the gesture is a deliberate reveal of his true, manipulative nature. The spectacles symbolize his facade of rationality and authority, which he discards momentarily to assert his control over the situation. Their removal heightens the tension, signaling a shift from feigned concern to overt dominance.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The churchyard serves as a storm-lashed battleground of ideologies, where Hawthorne’s pleas for supernatural protection clash with the Master’s rationalist dismissal. The space is charged with tension, its gothic atmosphere amplifying the stakes of the confrontation. The howling wind and dark shadows mirror the unseen forces at play, while the isolation of the setting underscores Hawthorne’s vulnerability and the Master’s control over the village’s narrative. The churchyard is not just a physical location but a symbolic threshold between faith and skepticism, tradition and manipulation.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Master’s cult is the unseen but dominant force in this event, operating through the Master’s manipulation of the village’s institutions and people. While not explicitly present, the cult’s influence is felt in the Master’s authority as Vicar Magister, Garvin’s obedience, and the dismissal of Hawthorne’s warnings. The organization’s goal of unleashing Azal is advanced through the Master’s psychological control, ensuring Hawthorne’s isolation and the excavation’s continuation.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Hawthorne seeks help from vicar follow on from earlier strange incident."
Master intercepts Hawthorne’s plea"Following the wind incident, Hawthorne seeks help to stop the source."
Hawthorne’s Wind Warning and Groom’s Corruption"Hawthorne deciding to find someone who will help echoes forwards to the Doctor seeking to act."
Doctor’s frustration reveals mission to cult"Hawthorne deciding to find someone who will help echoes forwards to the Doctor seeking to act."
Winstanley reveals Devil’s Hump location"Hawthorne is deliberately misguided and the Doctor and Jo are also misguided on the road, showing the forces of evil trying to stop progress."
Doctor mocks Jo’s navigation skillsPart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"HAWTHORNE: "I beg you to help me, Mister Magister. Help me to stop that foolhardy man.""
"MASTER: "The soul as such is a very dated concept. Viewing the matter existentially, I...""
"HAWTHORNE: "Existentially? Oh, you're a blockhead!""
"MASTER: "You must believe me. You must believe me.""
"HAWTHORNE: "Must believe. Oh, why should I believe you? A rationalist, existentialist priest indeed.""