Catherine confronts the sheep’s suffering alone

Catherine arrives at a quiet garden where a mauled sheep lies dying, its labored breathing a visceral reminder of the violence she’s sworn to contain. The elderly owner offers tea and departs, leaving Catherine to face the animal’s suffering unassisted. She searches for a tool to end its misery, settling on a sharp coping stone from the garden wall—a task that forces her to confront her own detachment, the weight of her duty, and the quiet isolation of her role. The scene underscores her emotional resilience and the moral compromises inherent in her work, where mercy and violence blur in the face of systemic decay. The sheep’s agony becomes a metaphor for the unspoken burdens she carries, both as a police officer and as a woman navigating a world that demands pragmatism over sentiment.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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Catherine arrives at a little old lady's garden where a sheep lies injured after being mauled by dogs. The old lady explains she scared the dogs away and called for help, setting a somber mood.

concern to resignation ['small back garden', 'house half way …

The Little Old Lady offers Catherine tea before going inside, leaving Catherine to contemplate the sheep's suffering and search for a way to end its misery, revealing her practical yet grim responsibility.

politeness to somber determination

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

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Steely resolve masking deep unease—Catherine operates on autopilot, her training overriding her empathy, but the weight of the stone (and the act) forces her to confront the cost of her duty. There’s a flicker of guilt in her apology, a rare crack in her professional armor.

Catherine arrives in the garden to find the sheep in its final throes, its ragged breaths a visceral soundtrack to her dilemma. She scans the environment with practiced efficiency, her eyes locking onto the coping stone as a makeshift tool. Her struggle to pry it loose is physical and symbolic—each heave mirrors her internal resistance to the task ahead. When the Little Old Lady offers tea, Catherine’s polite acceptance buys her a moment of reprieve, but her body language betrays her tension: shoulders squared, jaw set, fingers flexing around the stone’s weight. The act of raising it above the sheep is deliberate, almost ritualistic, her whispered apology lost to the wind.

Goals in this moment
  • To end the sheep’s suffering swiftly and mercifully, sparing it further pain.
  • To maintain her composure and professionalism in front of the Little Old Lady, avoiding any display of vulnerability.
Active beliefs
  • That suffering—whether human or animal—demands action, even when that action is morally ambiguous.
  • That her role as a police officer sometimes requires her to perform distasteful tasks for the greater good.
Character traits
Pragmatic under pressure Emotionally contained but burdened Physically capable yet morally conflicted Socially performative (polite despite distress) Symbolically attuned (recognizes the stone’s dual role as tool and metaphor)
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Agonized and resigned. The sheep’s pain is physical, but its stillness suggests an acceptance of fate, contrasting with Catherine’s internal turmoil. Its suffering is a mirror held up to the broader decay in Happy Valley—neglect, violence, and the absence of true justice.

The sheep lies motionless except for its labored, gurgling breaths, its body a map of torn flesh and matted wool. Its eyes, dull with pain, fix on nothing as it waits for death. The animal’s suffering is the emotional core of the scene—raw, unfiltered, and inescapable. It does not resist Catherine’s approach, its weakness rendering it helpless. The sound of its breathing dominates the quiet garden, a grim metronome counting down to the inevitable.

Goals in this moment
  • None (the sheep is beyond agency, its only ‘goal’ is cessation of pain).
  • To serve as a catalyst for Catherine’s moral confrontation.
Active beliefs
  • That its existence is now defined by pain, and death is the only relief.
  • That it is a casualty of a broken system (rural theft, feral dogs, indifferent authorities).
Character traits
Helpless and vulnerable A silent witness to human failure (the dogs’ attack, the thieves’ neglect) Metaphorical—embodies the unspoken pain of Catherine’s world (e.g., Becky’s suicide, Tommy Lee Royce’s victims)
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Supporting 1

Worried but resigned. She is concerned about the sheep’s fate but does not intervene, trusting Catherine to handle the grim task. Her offer of tea is a coping mechanism—normalcy as a shield against the brutality of the moment. There’s no judgment in her demeanor, only the quiet acceptance of a world where such violence is not uncommon.

The Little Old Lady moves with the slow, deliberate pace of someone long accustomed to rural life’s harsh realities. She recounts the dogs’ attack with detached practicality, as if describing the weather, and offers tea to Catherine with the same hospitality she might extend to any visitor. Her departure to prepare the tea leaves Catherine alone with the sheep, a choice that underscores her emotional detachment from the animal’s suffering. She does not look back as she steps inside, her role in the scene complete—she has fulfilled her duty by calling for help and now retreats to the safety of routine.

Goals in this moment
  • To fulfill her role as a responsible rural resident by reporting the incident and offering aid (tea, shelter).
  • To avoid witnessing the sheep’s euthanasia, preserving her own emotional equilibrium.
Active beliefs
  • That some tasks are best left to those with the stomach for them (e.g., police, veterinarians).
  • That life in the countryside is inherently harsh, and one must adapt or be broken by it.
Character traits
Practically detached (rural resilience) Hospitable but emotionally distant Respectful of authority (defers to Catherine’s expertise) Averse to direct confrontation with suffering
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Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Little Old Lady's Garden Dry Stone Wall (Including Coping Stone)

The coping stone is the pivotal object in this event, serving as both a practical tool and a heavy metaphor. Catherine’s struggle to pry it from the garden wall—her fingers straining, her muscles tensing—mirrors her internal resistance to the act of euthanasia. Once freed, the stone’s jagged edge and substantial weight transform it into an improvised weapon, its purpose shifted from structural integrity to mercy killing. When Catherine raises it above the sheep, the stone becomes a symbol of the burden she carries: the necessity of violence to end suffering, the blurring of lines between protector and executioner. Its final state—clutched in her hand after the deed—is a tangible reminder of the moral cost she bears.

Before: Embedded in the top course of the dry …
After: Loosened from the wall, now held in Catherine’s …
Before: Embedded in the top course of the dry stone wall, stable and functional as part of the garden’s structure. Its sharp edges are unnoticed until Catherine’s gaze locks onto it as a potential tool.
After: Loosened from the wall, now held in Catherine’s grip, its surface possibly smeared with the sheep’s blood. It lies abandoned in the garden afterward, a silent witness to the act.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Little Old Lady's Back Garden

The Little Old Lady’s back garden is a liminal space—caught between the decay of the housing estate and the wild, untamed hills where the sheep was stolen. It is a place of contradictions: pastoral beauty marred by violence, hospitality overshadowed by suffering. The garden’s isolation amplifies the weight of Catherine’s task, as there are no distractions or witnesses to share the burden. The dry stone wall, the coping stone, and the dying sheep all become part of the garden’s temporary stage, where mercy and brutality collide. The space is small and enclosed, trapping Catherine with her thoughts and the sheep’s labored breaths, creating an intimate yet oppressive atmosphere.

Atmosphere Tense and melancholic. The garden is deceptively peaceful, but the sheep’s ragged breathing and Catherine’s …
Function A stage for moral confrontation and a sanctuary of forced solitude. The garden becomes a …
Symbolism Represents the isolation of duty and the moral ambiguities inherent in Catherine’s work. The garden …
Access Open but private. The garden is accessible to those invited (Catherine, the Little Old Lady), …
The sheep’s labored, gurgling breaths dominate the audio landscape, a grim counterpoint to the garden’s usual quiet. The dry stone wall casts long shadows, its jagged edges mirroring the moral sharpness of Catherine’s dilemma. The coping stone, once part of the wall, now lies in Catherine’s hands, its weight a physical manifestation of her emotional load. The distant hills loom in the background, a reminder of the sheep’s origin and the vast, indifferent world beyond the garden.

Narrative Connections

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Key Dialogue

"LITTLE OLD LADY: I managed to shoo ‘em off. The dogs. I said “Shoo!” see, then I got our Andrew round. And he said to call you."
"LITTLE OLD LADY: Would you like some tea?"
"CATHERINE: Yes. Tea. Perfect. Thank you."