Joyce Delivers Second Body News
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Calm and caring, with a underlying tension—she balances personal concern for Catherine with the professional weight of the case’s escalation.
Joyce enters the locker room with a casual demeanor, her presence a grounding force amid Catherine’s storm. She probes Catherine’s therapy session with gentle persistence, then pivots to an unexpected invitation for a drink and meal—a gesture that momentarily disarms Catherine’s defenses. Her delivery of the Brighouse body news is matter-of-fact, but the timing reframes the scene, shifting from personal connection to professional urgency. Joyce’s role is that of the steady colleague, offering both emotional support and case updates, her care for Catherine evident in her 'Cos I feel like chucking my brass about' line.
- • To connect with Catherine on a personal level (inviting her out, offering support).
- • To update Catherine on the case (delivering the Brighouse body news).
- • To ease Catherine’s emotional burden (her invitation is a gesture of solidarity).
- • Catherine needs emotional support but resists it (her invitation is a test of trust).
- • The Brighouse body is a critical development (her casual delivery masks its gravity).
- • Catherine’s trauma is tied to the case (her care is both personal and professional).
Indirectly radiates malice and control—his absence is a void that Catherine and the case revolve around, his trauma a catalyst for the scene’s tension.
Tommy Lee Royce is physically absent from the scene but his presence is a palpable force, casting a long shadow over Catherine’s actions and emotions. His influence is felt in Catherine’s seething rage as she gears up, her dark humor about therapy ('talking wank') serving as a deflection from the trauma he inflicted. The mention of Brighouse—where the second body is found—hints at his continued, insidious reach, even from prison. His role here is as the unseen antagonist, his crimes and legacy driving the case’s escalation and Catherine’s internal conflict.
- • To maintain psychological dominance over Catherine (his influence looms, even unspoken).
- • To sabotage Catherine’s stability (his crimes and legacy threaten to unravel her).
- • To assert his claim on Ryan and the case (the Brighouse body may be tied to his network).
- • Catherine is weak and can be broken (his taunting from prison reinforces this belief).
- • The system is corrupt and can be exploited (his crimes suggest he operates beyond institutional reach).
- • Ryan is his property (his obsession with his son drives his actions and Catherine’s rage).
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The locker itself is a semi-private space within the station, a transitional zone where Catherine can briefly shed or don her professional and personal identities. In this scene, it serves as the setting for her gearing up, a ritual that mirrors her emotional state—her sharp, angry movements as she retrieves her kit reflect her internal storm. The locker’s metallic clank as she opens and shuts it underscores the tension, while its contents (the robocop kit, personal items) symbolize the duality of her life: the cop and the grieving mother. Joyce’s entrance disrupts this private moment, turning the locker into a space of unexpected connection and professional urgency.
Catherine’s 'robocop kit'—her police armor—serves as a symbolic and functional extension of her emotional state. The heavy gear clatters as she straps it on, the sound echoing her internal turmoil. Physically, it transforms her from a vulnerable woman to an armored officer, but thematically, it represents her emotional armor, the layers of protection she wears to shield herself from the trauma of Tommy Lee Royce. The kit is both a tool of her profession and a metaphor for her resistance to vulnerability, its presence a constant reminder of the dual roles she must balance: the wounded mother and the hardened cop.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Norland Road Police Station locker room is a liminal space—neither fully private nor entirely public—a place of transition where officers prepare for duty or decompress after shifts. In this scene, it becomes a crucible for Catherine’s emotional and professional tensions. The stark, utilitarian setting (metallic lockers, fluorescent lighting) mirrors the rawness of her state, while the semi-privacy allows for a rare moment of vulnerability with Joyce. The locker room’s functional role shifts from a space of solitary preparation to a site of unexpected connection (Joyce’s invitation) and professional urgency (the Brighouse body news). The atmosphere is charged with unspoken tension, the clatter of gear and the echo of voices amplifying the stakes.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Calderdale Police is the institutional backdrop of this scene, its presence felt in the locker room’s utilitarian design, the case updates Joyce delivers, and the professional roles Catherine and Joyce occupy. The organization’s influence is subtle but pervasive—Catherine’s gearing up in her 'robocop kit' is a ritual of institutional readiness, while Joyce’s delivery of the Brighouse body news reflects the police force’s investigative machinery. The locker room, though semi-private, is still part of the station’s operational space, and the case’s escalation (the second body) is a direct product of the force’s work. The organization’s goals here are twofold: to solve the case and to support its officers, though the latter is often secondary to the former.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"JOYCE: How was it?"
"CATHERINE: You can hear yourself talking wank. It’s dripping off the ceiling and crawling down the walls, the room’s so full of it by the time you’ve finished you’ve to wade through it in your wellies to get out."
"JOYCE: They think they’ve found another body. So that’s big."
"CATHERINE: Where?"
"JOYCE: Going over to Brighouse. Again. Same as first one."