Catherine confronts systemic failure
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Catherine explains the next steps to Leonie, including a visit to the station and a medical examination in Bradford, and attempts to reassure her that they will ensure her safety. Catherine tries to avoid using the word 'swabs'.
Catherine reassures Leonie that the same negligent officers will not be involved in collecting evidence and promises to deal with them directly. Catherine prepares to take Leonie to the station.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Furious at institutional negligence; deeply protective of Leonie; sobered by the gravity of the assault.
Annette, slightly inebriated but sobered by Leonie’s trauma, greets Catherine at the door with urgency. She provides context about the attack, Kelsey’s intervention, and the Special Constables’ callous response, her anger palpable. Physically, she hovers near Leonie, ensuring her comfort (e.g., sitting her on a plastic bag for evidence preservation). Her dialogue is laced with sarcasm and frustration, especially when mimicking the Specials’ dismissive tone: ‘Oh has he not paid yer, love? Boo hoo.’ She hands Catherine a Biro and fag packet, facilitating the documentation process, and her protective instincts are evident in her insistence that Leonie not be left alone.
- • To ensure Leonie receives justice and proper care.
- • To hold the Special Constables accountable for their dismissive behavior.
- • To support Catherine in documenting the evidence and pursuing the attacker.
- • To shield Leonie from further trauma (e.g., during medical exams).
- • That the police system fails vulnerable women like Leonie.
- • That Catherine is a rare ally who will act on Leonie’s behalf.
- • That the attacker is likely someone dangerous (e.g., Sean Balmforth).
Traumatized, tearful, and angry; fragile trust in Catherine as a safe figure; deep shame and violation from the assault.
Leonie sits shattered on Annette’s settee, her bruised face and bloodshot eyes betraying the violence she endured. She recounts the assault in a thin, trembling voice, her anger flaring briefly before dissolving into tears. Physically, she is hunched, her body language closed off, but she manages to provide critical details—the attacker’s threats, the broken bottle, the van’s license plate (SP55) written in lipstick on her arm. Her relief at Catherine’s arrival is palpable, though she remains deeply distrustful of the system after the Special Constables’ dismissal. When Catherine asks about the swabs, her fear resurfaces: ‘It won’t [be]—?’—a plea for assurance that the humiliation won’t be repeated.
- • To be believed and taken seriously by Catherine and the system.
- • To ensure the attacker is caught and punished.
- • To avoid further humiliation (e.g., during the evidence kit process).
- • To find safety and support (e.g., in Bradford’s rape crisis unit).
- • That the police system is broken and dismissive of women like her.
- • That Catherine is one of the few who will listen and act.
- • That the attacker (and possibly Sean Balmforth) will not be held accountable.
Not directly observable, but inferred as menacing and triumphant (given the assault’s brutality and his evasion).
Sean Balmforth is not physically present but looms over the scene as the suspected attacker. His white van (SP55 UMV) is identified through Leonie’s lipstick-smeared arm and Catherine’s recognition of the license plate. The mention of his vehicle triggers a flashback to his aggressive driving in Episode 1, linking him to the crime. His absence is felt through the tension his potential involvement creates—Catherine’s jaw tightens, Annette’s face contorts with anger, and Leonie’s fear resurfaces. The unspoken threat of his return or escalation hangs in the air.
- • To evade capture and continue preying on vulnerable women.
- • To intimidate Leonie into silence (threats with the broken bottle).
- • To exploit systemic failures (e.g., Special Constables’ negligence).
- • That he can act with impunity due to police incompetence.
- • That women like Leonie are powerless to stop him.
- • That his prior encounters with Catherine will not lead to his capture.
Not directly observable, but inferred as apathetic, dismissive, and possibly indifferent to the severity of the crime.
The Special Constables (Steph and Bryony) are absent from the scene but are the focal point of Annette’s and Catherine’s rage. Their dismissive handling of Leonie’s report—mocking her as a ‘payment dispute’ and abandoning her at the hospital—is recounted with biting sarcasm by Annette: ‘Oh has he not paid yer, love? Boo hoo.’ Catherine’s quiet vow, ‘I’ll be dealing wi’ them two,’ signals her intent to hold them accountable. Their negligence is a catalyst for Catherine’s moral outrage and Leonie’s distrust of the system, underscoring the event’s critique of institutional apathy.
- • To minimize their workload (e.g., not taking a statement).
- • To avoid confronting the gravity of the assault.
- • To uphold the status quo (dismissing vulnerable complainants).
- • That sex workers’ reports are not worth serious investigation.
- • That their part-time role excuses negligence.
- • That institutional bias justifies their dismissive attitude.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Catherine’s phone is the tool that transitions Leonie’s oral testimony into digital evidence. She uses it to photograph the lipstick-smeared license plate (SP55) on Leonie’s arm, ensuring the clue is preserved. The act is clinical but charged with urgency; the phone’s flash illuminates the bruises on Leonie’s skin, underscoring the violence. Its role extends beyond documentation: it represents Catherine’s bridge between the raw, emotional account and the bureaucratic machinery of the investigation. The phone’s presence also highlights the tension between immediacy (capturing the moment) and institutional delay (the system’s slow response).
The Biro from Argos, a mundane office supply, becomes a critical tool in documenting Leonie’s assault. Catherine uses it to jot down Kelsey’s contact number and Leonie’s account on the inside of a fag packet, ensuring no detail is lost. Its blue ink scratches across the cardboard, capturing the raw, unfiltered truth of the attack—from the attacker’s threats to the partial license plate (SP55). The object’s functional role is elevated by the stakes: a simple pen becomes a lifeline for justice in a system that has already failed Leonie once.
Catherine’s fag packet, turned inside out, serves as an improvised notepad for documenting Leonie’s statement. Its foil interior becomes a canvas for the brutal details of the assault—choking, unprotected rape, threats with a broken bottle—written in Catherine’s precise handwriting. The object’s humble origins (a discarded cigarette packet) contrast sharply with its narrative weight: it preserves evidence that the system nearly ignored, symbolizing both the desperation of the moment and Catherine’s refusal to let bureaucracy obstruct justice. The packet’s crumpled state mirrors Leonie’s fractured psyche, while its utility underscores the resourcefulness required to navigate institutional failures.
Leonie’s stiletto heel, though not physically present in this scene, is invoked as a symbol of her desperate resistance. She recounts jamming its sharp point into the attacker’s steering wheel, triggering the van’s horn—a moment of luck and defiance that saved her life. The object’s narrative role is dual: it represents Leonie’s agency in the face of violence (her ability to fight back) and the fragility of her survival (the horn’s blare as a fluke). Its absence in the scene is felt; the shoe’s potential as evidence (fibers, DNA) is noted but not yet acted upon, leaving its full significance as a clue unresolved.
The lipstick-smeared registration number (SP55) on Leonie’s arm is the scene’s pivotal clue. Written in haste with shaking hands, the red letters—smudged but legible—serve as the first concrete lead in identifying the attacker. Catherine photographs it with her phone, her jaw tightening as she recognizes the plate as Sean Balmforth’s. The object’s narrative function is twofold: it bridges Leonie’s trauma to the investigative process, and it foreshadows the confrontation with Balmforth. The lipstick’s temporary, fragile nature (easily washed away) mirrors the ephemeral nature of justice for victims like Leonie, making its preservation a race against time.
The white van (SP55 UMV) is the attacker’s vehicle and the linchpin of the investigation. Though absent from the scene, it is vividly described by Leonie and Annette, and its license plate (SP55) is the breakthrough clue. Catherine’s recognition of the plate as Balmforth’s triggers a flashback to his aggressive driving in Episode 1, linking him to the crime. The van’s role is symbolic: it embodies the predator’s mobility and impunity, as well as the system’s failure to track dangerous individuals. Its presence in the narrative is spectral, haunting the scene through Leonie’s trauma and Catherine’s determination to hunt it down.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Annette’s house is a fragile sanctuary in the aftermath of Leonie’s assault. Its dimly lit, cluttered interior—echoing Lynn Dewhurst’s home from Series 1—amplifies the raw tension of the moment. The living room, where Leonie sits shattered on the settee, becomes a confessional space for her trauma. The hallway, where Annette greets Catherine, is a threshold between the outside world’s dangers and the fragile safety within. The house’s modesty (local authority housing) underscores the vulnerability of its inhabitants, while its role as a gathering place for Catherine, Annette, and Leonie turns it into a temporary command center for justice. The location’s atmosphere is one of urgency and emotional exposure, where every detail—from the plastic bag preserving evidence to the fag packet notepad—feels improvised yet vital.
The Sowerby Bridge street outside Annette’s house is a liminal space between danger and refuge. Catherine’s car, parked haphazardly, suggests her urgency in arriving. The poor lighting and empty roads at 4:00 AM amplify the isolation of the moment, mirroring Leonie’s emotional state. The street is not just a route but a stage for the contrast between Catherine’s professionalism and the raw vulnerability of the women she serves. Its role is functional (a path to safety) and symbolic (a reminder of the dangers lurking just beyond the doorstep). The location’s mood is one of quiet desperation, where every shadow could hide a threat like Sean Balmforth.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Calderdale Police is the overarching institution that Catherine represents, though she is technically ‘not on duty’ in this scene. Her arrival at Annette’s house blurs the line between personal and professional, as she takes on the role of advocate for Leonie. The organization’s presence is felt in her authority (e.g., promising a female officer will handle the evidence kit) and her critique of the Special Constables’ failures. Catherine’s vow to ‘deal with’ them signals her intent to enforce Calderdale’s protocols, even as she operates outside official channels. The organization’s goals—justice for Leonie, accountability for negligent officers, and the pursuit of Balmforth—are aligned with her actions, though the system’s bureaucracy threatens to undermine them.
The Special Constables (Steph and Bryony) represent the failures of Calderdale Police’s auxiliary forces. Their dismissive handling of Leonie’s report—mocking her as a ‘payment dispute’ and abandoning her at the hospital—is the catalyst for Catherine’s rage and Leonie’s distrust. The organization’s presence in the scene is indirect but pervasive, embodied in Annette’s sarcastic mimicry: ‘Oh has he not paid yer, love? Boo hoo.’ Their negligence forces Catherine to step in, ensuring Leonie receives proper care (e.g., Bradford unit) and vowing to ‘deal with’ them. The Special Constables’ actions highlight the tension between frontline responders and institutional accountability, exposing how part-time officers can exacerbate systemic failures.
The Bradford Rape Crisis Unit is invoked as the antidote to the Special Constables’ failures. Catherine directs Leonie there after the station visit, emphasizing its role as a ‘proper unit’ where she can receive medical care, counseling, and safety. The organization’s presence in the scene is aspirational—it represents the care Leonie deserves but hasn’t yet received. Its contrast with the negligent Specials underscores the event’s critique of institutional priorities. The unit’s promise of a ‘doctor’ and ‘someone to see to her’ offers Leonie a lifeline, though its effectiveness hinges on Catherine’s ability to navigate the system and hold others accountable.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The dismissive behavior of the Special Constables towards Leonie CAUSES Catherine to confront them at the station."
"The dismissive behavior of the Special Constables towards Leonie CAUSES Catherine to confront them at the station."
"Leonie provides Sean Balmforth's registration number which LEADS Catherine to inform Andy Shepherd, escalating the investigation."
Key Dialogue
"LEONIE: Just. I was down on Stoneyroyd Lane. And there were three of us. And he come along in his van. And I said - I told him - it’s five pound with, and without, it’s double. So he knew. And he said he were fine with that, so I got in and we went down to t’cricket club. Car park. He stank, he’d been drinking, [but] - ... And then anyway when he gets going, he decides he wants to do it without. And I said well I need t’money up front if that’s what’s happening and he goes 'I’ll pay y’after', but they only ever say that - when they haven’t enough. So I said well it’s not happening then. But he were - you know - and he just. And I couldn’t stop him. So I was struggling and then he had his hand on my throat. Pressing down on me and he’s inside me - without a condom - and I can’t breathe, and he’s a big fella and I could feel meself going red in t’face. And he goes 'If y’don’t stop wriggling I’ll shove a brocken bottle up yer ffff...'"
"ANNETTE: They didn’t take a statement, they didn’t write owt down. Basically they’re goin’ - ((daft voice)) Oh has he not paid yer, love? Boo hoo."
"CATHERINE: No. No, Leonie. It won’t be them two. I’ll be dealing wi’ them two."