minute,' she says. 'Oh dear,' I says, 'and them new chintzes 
will be entirely ruined with the damp. Why, what a good-for-nothing 
girl you are!' I says, 'and what you thinks on half your time is more 
than I can tell.' 'Whatever shall I do?' she says, 'for go along there at 
this time of night all by myself I dare not,' says she. 'Well,' I says, 
'rather than you should go alone, I'll go along with you,' I says, 'for stay 
here by myself I would not,' I says, 'not if any one was to pay me 
hundreds.' So we went down our stairs and along our passage to the 
door which you go into the gallery, Hann a-clutching hold of me and
starting, which when we come into the gallery I was all of a tremble, 
and she shook so I said, 'La! Hann, for goodness' sake do carry that 
candle straight, or you will grease the carpet shameful;' and come to the 
pink room I says, 'Open the door.' 'La!' says she, 'what if we was to see 
the ghost?' 'Hold your silly nonsense this minute,' I says, 'and open the 
door,' which she do, but stand right back for to let me go first, when, 
true as ever I am standing here, my lady, I see something white go by 
like a flash, and struck me cold in the face, and blew the candle out, 
and then come the fearfullest noise, which thunderclaps is nothing to it. 
Hann began a-screaming, and we ran as fast as ever we could till we 
come to the pantry, where Mr. Castleman and the footman was. I 
thought I should ha' died: died I thought I should. My face was as white 
as that antimacassar." 
"How could you see your face, Mrs. Mallet?" somewhat peevishly 
objected Lady Atherley. 
But Mrs. Mallet with great dignity retorted-- 
"Which I looked down my nose, and it were like a corpse's." 
"Very alarming," said Atherley, "but easily explained. Directly you 
opened the door there was, of course, a draught from the open window. 
That draught blew the candle out and knocked something over, 
probably a screen." 
"La' bless you, Sir George, it was more like paving-stones than screens 
a-falling." 
And indeed Mrs. Mallet was so far right, that when, to settle the 
weighty question once for all, we adjourned in a body to the pink 
bedroom, we discovered that nothing less than the ceiling, or at least a 
portion of it, had fallen, and was lying in a heap of broken plaster upon 
the floor. However, the moral, as Atherley hastened to observe, was the 
same. 
"You see, Mrs. Mallet, this was what made the noise."
Mrs. Mallet made no reply, but it was evident she neither saw nor 
intended to see anything of the kind; and Atherley wisely substituted 
bribery for reasoning. But even with this he made little way till 
accidentally he mentioned the name of Mrs. de Noël, when, as if it had 
been a name to conjure by, Mrs. Mallet showed signs of softening. 
"Yes, think of Mrs. de Noël, Mrs. Mallet; what will she say if you leave 
her cousin to starve?" 
"I should not wish such a thing to happen for a moment," said Mrs. 
Mallet, as if this had been no figure of speech but the actual alternative, 
"not to any relation of Mrs. de Noël." 
And shortly after the debate ended with a cheerful "Well, Mrs. Mallet, 
you will give us another trial," from Atherley. 
"There," he exclaimed, as we all three returned to the 
morning-room--"there is as splendid an example of the manufacture of 
a bogie as you are ever likely to meet with. All the spiritual phenomena 
are produced much in the same way. Work yourself up into a great state 
of terror and excitement, in the first place; in the next, procure one 
companion, if not more, as credulous and excitable as yourself; go at a 
late hour and with a dim light to a place where you have been told you 
will see something supernatural; steadfastly and determinedly look out 
for it, and--you will have your reward. These are precisely the lines on 
which a spiritual séance is conducted, only instead of plaster, which is 
not always so obliging as to fall in the nick of time, you have a paid 
medium who supplies the material for your fancy to work upon. Mrs. 
Mallet, you see, has discovered all this for herself--that woman is a 
born genius. Just think what she might have been and seen if she had 
lived in a sphere where neither cooking nor any other rational 
occupation interfered with her pursuit of the supernatural. Mrs. 
Molyneux would be nowhere beside her." 
"I suppose she really does intend to stay," said    
    
		
	
	
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