Jud assaults Deacon in explosive rage
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jud, in a voiceover, states he must begin nine months earlier to tell the story of the Good Friday murder through his eyes, referencing the moment he assaulted the Deacon.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A volatile cocktail of righteous indignation (fueled by Clark’s inflammatory words) transitioning to horror-stricken guilt the instant the Deacon falls. Beneath the surface, there’s a deep-seated shame—not just for the violence, but for the ease with which it came to him, as if the priestly role is a thin layer of ice over a frozen lake of rage. His 'Shit' isn’t just regret; it’s the sound of that ice cracking.
Jud stands rigid in the breezeway, his body language a study in barely contained frustration—shoulders hunched, jaw clenched—as he listens to Deacon Clark’s sermon. His neck tattoo, a relic of his boxing past, peeks above his collar, a visual shorthand for the violence simmering beneath his priestly veneer. When Clark’s words push him over the edge, Jud’s reaction is lightning-fast: a single, precise punch connects with the Deacon’s face, sending him sprawling. The moment the Deacon hits the ground, Jud’s demeanor shifts from cold fury to visceral horror. His hands tremble slightly, his breath hitches, and his whispered 'Shit' is less a curse than a prayer—an acknowledgment of the chasm between who he is and who he’s supposed to be.
- • To silence Deacon Clark’s inflammatory rhetoric, which Jud perceives as a betrayal of the Church’s values (or his own).
- • To reclaim control over his own temper, which he sees as a threat to his priestly vocation.
- • That violence is a last resort but sometimes necessary to confront injustice within the Church.
- • That his past (symbolized by the neck tattoo) is a stain he can never fully wash away, no matter how devout he becomes.
Smug confidence while delivering the sermon, believing his words are justified or even righteous. His emotional state post-punch is implied to be shock and humiliation, though the text doesn’t show his reaction—only the aftermath. The subtext suggests he may see Jud’s violence as further proof of the priest’s unworthiness, or as a perverse validation of his own worldview.
Deacon Clark is not physically present in the scene text beyond his role as the catalyst for Jud’s outburst, but his presence is palpable. His sermon—though its content is unspecified—is described as 'inflammatory,' implying a deliberate, vitriolic tone designed to provoke. The text suggests he holds a position of authority (as a deacon) but wields it like a cudgel, his words acting as the spark to Jud’s powder keg. His physical state post-punch is reduced to a metaphorical 'sack of flour,' emphasizing the suddenness and finality of his defeat. The lack of dialogue or active participation underscores that his role here is purely as a foil—his existence is a challenge to Jud’s self-control, and his downfall is the consequence of that challenge.
- • To assert his authority and ideological dominance over Jud and, by extension, the congregation.
- • To expose what he perceives as hypocrisy in the Church, using his sermons as a weapon.
- • That the Church’s teachings are best served by confrontation and moral absolutism, even at the cost of unity.
- • That Jud’s violent past (implied by the neck tattoo) makes him unfit for the priesthood, a belief Jud’s outburst seems to confirm.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The breezeway of the large urban church is far more than a passive setting—it is an active participant in the event, its architecture and atmosphere amplifying the tension and irony of the moment. As a sacred space, the breezeway should be a place of reflection and peace, but here it becomes the stage for a violent outburst, the stone arches and echoing quiet a grotesque contrast to the brutality of Jud’s punch. The location’s symbolic significance is twofold: first, it represents the institutional hypocrisy of the Church, where violence and piety coexist uneasily; second, it serves as a mirror for Jud’s internal conflict, the holy architecture framing his unholy act. The breezeway’s openness—neither fully interior nor exterior—mirrors Jud’s liminal state, caught between his past and present, his rage and his faith.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Church is the invisible but omnipresent force shaping this event, its influence manifesting in the power dynamics between Jud and Deacon Clark, the sacred setting of the breezeway, and the ideological underpinnings of their conflict. While the Church itself does not 'act' in this moment, its institutional weight is felt in every detail: the Deacon’s inflammatory sermon is a product of the Church’s hierarchical structure, where figures like Clark are empowered to wield moral authority; Jud’s struggle with violence is a direct consequence of the Church’s failure to reconcile its teachings with the real-world complexities of its members. The event is a microcosm of the Church’s broader dysfunction, where personal grievances and institutional hypocrisy collide. Jud’s outburst, though individual, is also a symptom of a larger sickness—one that the Church’s rigid structures either ignore or exacerbate.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"JUD: I guess to tell the story of the Good Friday murder through my eyes I gotta start here. Nine months ago. When this asshole Deacon said something way out of line and I did this."
"JUD: Shit."