She hesitated to make the experiment, and balanced the relief of reassurance against the horror of silence.She remembered a storm at sea, when through a long night, not lacking danger to a laboring steamer with weak engines, she had lain awake and felt her heart warm again when the watch shouted the hour.
She set out, then, determined to know if all prospered with her father- in-law.Nor would she give ear to misgiving or ask herself what she would do if no voice were steadily uplifted in the Grey Room.
The great wind seemed to play upon Chadlands like a harp.It roared and reverberated, now stilled a moment for another leap, now died away against the house, yet still sounded with a steady shout in the neighbor trees.At the casements it tugged and rattled; against them it flung the rain fiercely.Every bay and passage of the interior uttered its own voice, and overhead was creaking of old timbers, rattling of old slates, and rustling of mortar fragments dislodged by sudden vibrations.
Mary proceeded on her way, and then, to her astonishment, heard a footfall, and nearly ran into an invisible figure approaching from the direction of the Grey Room.Man and woman startled each other, butneither exclaimed, and Mrs.May spoke.
"Who is it?" she asked; and Masters answered:
"Oh, my gracious!Terrible sorry, ma'am!If I didn't think -" "What on earth are you doing, Masters?""Much the same as you, I expect, ma'am.I thought just to creep along and see if the reverend gentleman was all right.And he is.The light's burning - you can see it under the door - and he's praying away, steady as a steam-threshing machine.I doubt he's keeping the evil creature at arm's length, and I'm a tidy lot more hopeful than what I was an hour ago.The thing ain't strong enough to touch a man praying to God like what he can.But if prayers keep it harmless, then it's got ears and it's alive!""Can you believe that, Masters?" she whispered.