Clare’s Drunkenness Inquiry
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Clare, sounding worried, is baking and speaking on the phone with Catherine, inquiring about someone's level of drunkenness, indicating concern over a situation involving alcohol.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Unseen but presumed to be a mix of exhaustion and resolve—Clare’s call would likely reinforce her determination to maintain control, even as it stokes her underlying paranoia about external threats.
Catherine is the recipient of Clare’s call, her presence implied through the one-sided dialogue. Though not physically visible, her role as the family’s protector is invoked—Clare’s question about Neil’s intoxication indirectly ties to Catherine’s broader struggle to shield her family from chaos, particularly Ryan’s influence. Her absence in the scene makes her a silent but critical figure, the unspoken anchor of Clare’s concern.
- • To uphold the family’s stability despite external pressures (e.g., Ryan, Neil’s arrest).
- • To serve as a steadying force for Clare, even when not physically present.
- • That vulnerability in one family member (Neil) can destabilize the whole unit.
- • That her own actions (e.g., policing, protecting Ryan) are the only things standing between order and collapse.
Sickened and anxious, with a underlying current of resignation. Her question is not just about Neil’s current state but about the cyclical nature of addiction and its potential to disrupt the fragile peace they’ve built.
Clare is midway through baking when she pauses, her hands floury and her expression sickened. She dials Catherine with urgency, her voice tight as she delivers the single, loaded question: ‘How drunk?’ The baking—once a grounding activity—is abandoned as her focus shifts entirely to her fear for Neil. Her physical state (flour-dusted, mid-task) contrasts sharply with the gravity of her emotional state, highlighting the domestic fragility of their lives.
- • To assess the immediate threat posed by Neil’s drinking (and by extension, his arrest).
- • To prepare Catherine for potential fallout, ensuring she isn’t blindsided by another crisis.
- • That alcoholism is a family disease, not just an individual failing.
- • That Catherine, despite her strength, is not invincible and needs support—even if it’s just a warning.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Clare’s baking ingredients and equipment—flour-dusted counters, half-mixed batter, paused utensils—serve as a poignant contrast to the emotional weight of her call. The domestic ritual, usually a source of comfort and normalcy, is interrupted mid-flow, symbolizing how family crises can derail even the most mundane moments. The abandoned baking also reflects Clare’s own state: she is incomplete, her attention diverted from the task at hand by her fear for Neil. The objects are not just props but silent witnesses to the tension, their stagnation mirroring the family’s suspended sense of security.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine's presence at the disturbance at The Moorings and arresting Neil leads to Clare calling Catherine about someone's level of drunkenness."
Key Dialogue
"CLARE: How drunk?"