The Misfits’ Pact: Tommy’s Gaslighting and Ryan’s Existential Trap
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Tommy dismisses Ryan's request to inform his grandmother of their whereabouts, claiming she does not love him as Ryan begins to tear up.
Tommy ominously reveals his plan involves a different, unexpected kind of journey, his hands shaking as he holds a petrol canister.
Ryan, sensing danger, no longer wants to accompany Tommy, who insists they're both misfits and that death is preferable to suffering.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Terrified and desperate, oscillating between childlike pleading and a futile attempt at defiance as he realizes the full extent of his entrapment. His emotional state is a mix of betrayal (by Tommy’s sudden hostility) and abandonment (by his grandmother’s perceived indifference).
Ryan stands in the narrow boat, his fear escalating as Tommy’s behavior grows erratic and threatening. He attempts to contact his grandmother for reassurance, his voice trembling and tears welling in his eyes. When Tommy blocks the door and unscrews the petrol canister, Ryan’s panic peaks—he jumps up to flee but is violently shoved back by Tommy, his escape route cut off by the bolted rear door. His body language—wide eyes, clenched fists—reveals his terror and helplessness.
- • To escape the narrow boat and return to his grandmother’s care
- • To regain a sense of safety and control over his situation
- • His grandmother is his only source of protection and love
- • Tommy’s promises of paternal care are genuine (until this moment)
A volatile mix of predatory excitement and self-pitying desperation. He derives sadistic pleasure from Ryan’s fear but is also driven by a twisted sense of paternal duty—believing he’s 'saving' Ryan from the same suffering he endured. His emotional state is unstable, oscillating between cruelty and feigned concern.
Tommy Lee Royce, drunk and erratic, weaponizes psychological manipulation to break Ryan’s resistance. He dismisses Ryan’s plea to contact his grandmother, gaslighting the boy by claiming Catherine doesn’t love him. His trembling hands and the unscrewed petrol canister foreshadow violence, while his monologue about their shared 'misfit' identity reveals his narcissistic need to control Ryan. Physically, he blocks the door, shoves Ryan back, and creates an inescapable trap, his actions escalating from verbal abuse to physical threat.
- • To assert complete control over Ryan, both psychologically and physically
- • To manipulate Ryan into compliance with his murder-suicide plan, framing it as a 'journey' for their shared 'misfit' identity
- • Ryan is his son and rightfully belongs under his control
- • Catherine Cawood is a heartless figure who doesn’t deserve Ryan’s love or loyalty
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The narrow boat’s door, blocked by Tommy’s body, becomes a literal and symbolic barrier to Ryan’s escape. Tommy positions himself squarely between Ryan and the door, cutting off the only visible exit. Ryan’s desperate gaze locks onto the door, only to find Tommy’s frame filling it completely. The door’s obstruction is not just physical—it represents the collapse of Ryan’s hope for escape, mirroring Tommy’s psychological domination. The door’s worn frame and the boat’s rocking motion amplify the sense of entrapment, making the space feel even more claustrophobic and inescapable.
Tommy’s cigarette serves as a visceral atmospheric detail, highlighting the tension in the scene. Initially, it’s a prop of his erratic behavior—his trembling hands and the smoke curling in the tight space amplify the claustrophobic mood. When he abruptly stubs it out and treads it underfoot, the action mirrors his shifting demeanor: the moment of calm (smoking) gives way to violent intent (unscrewing the petrol canister). The cigarette symbolizes the fleeting normalcy before the trap closes, and its extinguishing marks the transition to outright threat.
The petrol canister is the most overt symbol of Tommy’s lethal intent. Initially resting on his knee, it becomes the focal point of the scene as he unscrews the lid with deliberate slowness. The act of unscrewing it is a clear threat—Ryan’s realization of the danger is immediate, triggering his failed attempt to flee. The petrol’s volatile nature and the fumes it emits (implied by the description) create a tangible sense of impending doom, transforming the narrow boat into a potential death trap. Its unscrewing is the moment of no return, where psychological manipulation crosses into physical threat.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The narrow boat is the claustrophobic epicenter of Tommy’s predatory gambit and Ryan’s terror. Its cramped interior—dimly lit, rocking with the canal’s motion, and thick with the smell of smoke and petrol—amplifies the sense of entrapment. The boat’s layout, with doors at both ends (one blocked by Tommy, the other bolted), turns the space into a prison. The atmosphere is suffocating, with the fumes from the petrol canister and the tension between the two characters filling the air. The boat’s squalor and septic decay mirror Tommy’s physical and moral decay, while its stagnation (no engine, no movement) symbolizes the stasis of Ryan’s trapped fate.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Tommy dismisses Ryan's request to inform his grandmother, then ominously reveals his plan."
"Tommy dismisses Ryan's request to inform his grandmother, then ominously reveals his plan."
Key Dialogue
"RYAN: *I’m thinking. If I am coming with yer. I had better tell me granny, otherwise she’ll be worrying about where I am.* TOMMY: *Nar. I doubt it.* RYAN: *No, she will.* TOMMY: *She doesn’t love you, you know. She thinks you’re a frigging nuisance.*"
"TOMMY: *This journey we’re going on. It’s... it might not be what you were expecting. It’s a different sort of a kind of journey.*"
"TOMMY: *We’re always going to be misfits, you and me. I don’t want you to have to go through all the shit I’ve been through. And you will.*"