Prentice consumes Eve's Apple in ritual
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
From Off Screen Young Martha spies on Prentice, alone in the empty church, taking his final communion.
Prentice notices Young Martha, beckons her to the altar, and reveals "Eve's Apple," a massive diamond, explaining it is his cursed fortune trapped from evil hands.
Mesmerized, Young Martha watches with awe and reverence as Prentice consumes the diamond, declaring "The body of Christ.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A mix of childlike wonder and creeping reverence, her initial curiosity giving way to a deep, almost spiritual awe as she witnesses Prentice’s ritual. There’s a hint of fear beneath the surface, but it’s overshadowed by fascination and the desire to be part of something grand—even if it’s heretical.
Young Martha begins as a hidden voyeur, spying on Prentice from the shadows of the empty church. When Prentice notices her and beckons, she joins him at the altar, her curiosity piqued. As she watches Prentice perform the ritual with 'Eve’s Apple,' her expression shifts from cautious fascination to mesmerized reverence. She stands motionless, her wide eyes reflecting the diamond’s sparkle, her posture rigid with awe. Her silence speaks volumes—she is both witness and unwitting accomplice to Prentice’s heresy, her young mind already being shaped by the spectacle of power and corruption.
- • To understand what Prentice is doing and why it feels so significant.
- • To be acknowledged by Prentice and included in his secret, as evidenced by her joining him at the altar after being beckoned.
- • That Prentice is a figure of unquestioned authority, deserving of her trust and admiration.
- • That the ritual she is witnessing is sacred, even if it defies the church’s teachings—her young mind cannot yet reconcile the heresy with the reverence she feels.
A heady mix of triumph, reverence, and dark satisfaction. He is in his element, performing a ritual that blends blasphemy with devotion, and he relishes the power it gives him. There’s a sense of ownership—over the diamond, over the church, and now, over Young Martha’s impressionable mind. His pain as he swallows the diamond is secondary to the ritual’s significance; it’s a small price to pay for the control he wields.
Prentice Wicks dominates the scene with a theatrical, almost performative energy. He begins by noticing Young Martha spying on him, his smile suggesting he is not displeased by her presence—quite the opposite. He beckons her forward, inviting her to witness his ritual. With deliberate slowness, he unveils 'Eve’s Apple,' holding it up like a sacred relic. His voice is a mix of reverence and triumph as he declares the diamond his 'cursed fortune' and the 'body of Christ,' before swallowing it whole. The act is painful—his expression twists briefly—but he maintains an air of triumph, as if he has just consummated a sacred pact. His body language is that of a man who has trapped sin itself, and his smile as he looks at Martha is one of dark satisfaction, as if he has just secured her complicity.
- • To solidify his control over the 'cursed fortune' by performing a ritual that binds it to him—literally and symbolically.
- • To indoctrinate Young Martha into his inner circle, ensuring her future loyalty and complicity in protecting his secrets.
- • That he is above the church’s teachings, capable of redefining sacrament to suit his own ends.
- • That power—over people, over institutions, over even sin itself—is his birthright, and that rituals like this one reinforce his authority.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The church serves as both the stage and the witness to Prentice’s heretical ritual. The empty sanctuary, usually a place of quiet devotion, becomes a space of sacrilege as Prentice repurposes the altar—a symbol of holiness—into a site for his twisted communion. The sunlit shadows cast across the altar heighten the sense of transgression, as if the very light of the church is complicit in this act. The altar’s ornate crucifix looms in the background, a silent judge to the blasphemy unfolding beneath it. The church’s atmosphere is thick with the weight of violated sanctity, the scent of old wood and incense now tinged with the metallic tang of the diamond and the heresy of Prentice’s act. The location is not just a setting but an active participant, its sacredness undermined and perverted by the ritual.
Narrative Connections
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Key Dialogue
"PRENTICE: This is Eve's Apple, Martha. My entire cursed fortune. All the sin in the world. All that Eve hungers for. But I have trapped it. It shall never again be plucked by evil hands."
"PRENTICE: The body of Christ."