Praveen forces Catherine into therapy ultimatum
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Praveen initiates the conversation by suggesting Catherine consider medical retirement, prompting Catherine to bristle at the notion that something is wrong with her. Praveen cites Catherine's near-death experience eighteen months prior as a cause for concern.
Catherine insists that she is physically fine, despite acknowledging the lingering pain in her wrist from the attack. Praveen argues that the trauma has likely taken a mental toll, referencing the previous consideration of medical retirement and Catherine's attendance at Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Defiant and tense, masking deep resistance to confronting her trauma. Her physical reactions (hand flexing) betray her internal turmoil, while her dialogue reveals a mix of sarcasm and financial pragmatism.
Catherine stands defiantly in Mike’s office, her body language rigid with tension. She flexes her injured right hand—a physical tell of her agitation—while Praveen outlines the ultimatum. Her responses are clipped, her voice laced with sarcasm and resistance, as she interrupts Praveen to reject both therapy and retirement. The hand flexing becomes more pronounced as the confrontation intensifies, symbolizing her internal struggle between duty and trauma.
- • Maintain her professional identity and operational status at all costs.
- • Avoid forced retirement to protect her financial stability (three years’ salary).
- • Therapy is a sign of weakness and will not help her cope with her trauma.
- • Her work is the only thing keeping her grounded, and losing it would unravel her completely.
Clinical and firm, masking any personal sympathy for Catherine’s plight. His focus is on institutional integrity and procedural correctness.
Praveen stands firm behind Mike’s desk, his posture authoritative and clinical. He delivers the ultimatum with measured precision, citing Catherine’s trauma and institutional protocol. His tone is detached, emphasizing the bureaucratic necessity of his demands. He does not waver, even as Catherine interrupts and defies him, instead doubling down on the options: therapy or retirement. His demeanor underscores the systemic pressure to remove her from active duty.
- • Ensure Catherine complies with force psychological treatment to address her unresolved trauma.
- • Avoid a repeat of her boundary violations (e.g., attending Royce’s funeral) by leveraging institutional pressure.
- • Catherine’s trauma is a liability to the force and must be managed.
- • Medical retirement is a viable and dignified option for her, despite her resistance.
N/A (absent but invoked as a source of tension and trauma).
Tommy Lee Royce is not physically present but looms over the confrontation as the catalyst for Praveen’s ultimatum. His influence is invoked through references to his mother’s funeral, Catherine’s injured hand (crushed by Royce), and her unresolved trauma tied to him. Praveen uses Royce as a justification for Catherine’s instability, framing him as the root of her professional unraveling.
- • N/A (not physically present, but his past actions drive the conflict).
- • N/A (not physically present, but his existence is used to justify institutional intervention).
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Catherine’s injured right hand—crushed by Tommy Lee Royce—becomes a physical manifestation of her trauma and defiance. She flexes it repeatedly during the confrontation, the cracking joints a visceral reminder of her past violence and unresolved rage. The hand is both a vulnerability (a sign of her physical and emotional fragility) and a symbol of her resistance (she clenches it into a fist, refusing to yield). Praveen references it indirectly by invoking Royce’s assault, using it as evidence of her instability.
The medical retirement paperwork is wielded by Praveen as a bureaucratic weapon, representing the institutional option to sideline Catherine permanently. He references it as a ‘case conference with HR’—a formalized threat to advance her retirement if she refuses therapy. The paperwork symbolizes the cold, impersonal machinery of the police force, ready to dismantle her career with a signature. Catherine’s visceral reaction (‘You’re not gonna do that to me’) underscores its power as a tool of control.
The force psychologist’s treatment plan is the carrot-and-stick of Praveen’s ultimatum. It is referenced as a mandatory condition for Catherine to remain operational, framing therapy as the ‘lesser evil’ compared to retirement. Praveen positions it as a professional necessity, tying it to Catherine’s past trauma and her recent funeral attendance. The plan hangs unspoken in the room, symbolizing the institutional expectation that she confront her demons—whether she wants to or not.
The full pension benefit is dangled by Praveen as an incentive for Catherine to accept medical retirement, framing it as a financial safety net. However, Catherine dismisses it outright, prioritizing her operational status and future earnings over immediate financial security. The pension becomes a bargaining chip in Praveen’s ultimatum, highlighting the institutional calculus of trade-offs: stability vs. duty, trauma vs. professionalism.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Mike Taylor’s office at Norland Road Police Station serves as the battleground for this institutional showdown. The sterile, fluorescent-lit space—cluttered with case files and bureaucratic detritus—amplifies the tension, its formality underscoring the gravity of Praveen’s ultimatum. The office is a microcosm of the police force itself: rigid, hierarchical, and unyielding. Catherine’s defiance feels claustrophobic here, hemmed in by the weight of institutional authority.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine, due to her attendance at Royces mother's funeral and being unable to attend any more therapy after release, is mandated to retire early or attend therapy. This is a direct consequence of previous events and Catherine's subsequent actions."
Key Dialogue
"PRAVEEN: Have you thought about retirement? CATHERINE: No. Sir. PRAVEEN: Medical retirement. CATHERINE: Why? What’s wrong with me?"
"PRAVEEN: A thing like that takes its toll mentally as well as physically, Catherine. We did go some way down the medical retirement route last time. CATHERINE: Yeah, and it wasn’t what I wanted then, and it isn’t what I want now. Sir."
"PRAVEEN: You’ll see the force psychologist, you’ll remain operational, but this time you will complete whatever course of treatment he suggests to you. CATHERINE: You’re not gonna do that to me. PRAVEEN: There is no stigma attached. You’d retire on a full pension, you’d— CATHERINE: Yeah, and I’d miss the next three years’ salary."