Catherine cares for Clare’s intoxicated collapse
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Clare collapses, heavily intoxicated, onto the bed at 3:27 AM. Catherine enters, prepared with a bucket and water, and proceeds to care for Clare, removing her shoes and placing her in the recovery position to ensure her safety.
After ensuring Clare's safety, Catherine has an idea and leaves a note by the glass of water, indicating forgiveness and urging Clare to contact her, in an attempt to mend their strained relationship.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Exhausted tenderness with underlying grief—Catherine’s actions are clinically efficient, but her emotional state is a mix of weariness, resignation, and a deep, unspoken love for Clare that she cannot fully express. The note she leaves is a fragile attempt to maintain connection without confrontation, revealing her emotional exhaustion and her inability to fully disengage from Clare’s struggles.
Catherine enters Clare’s bedroom at 3:27 AM, finding her sister already unconscious and collapsed on the bed. She methodically removes Clare’s shoes, positions her in the recovery position to prevent choking, and covers her with a blanket to counter shivering. Her movements are precise and efficient, betraying a practiced routine in handling Clare’s relapses. After ensuring Clare’s physical safety, she leaves a handwritten note by the bedside—‘Ring me. I’m not cross.’—a gesture that is both tender and emotionally exhausted, reflecting her complex role as Clare’s caretaker and her own unspoken grief.
- • Ensure Clare’s physical safety and comfort during her relapse
- • Avoid confrontation or recrimination to preserve their fragile relationship
- • Clare’s addiction is a cycle she cannot break alone, and Catherine’s role is to mitigate the harm
- • Direct confrontation will only drive Clare further away, so silent support is the only viable path
Comatose and emotionally detached—Clare is beyond conscious awareness, her state one of physical and emotional vulnerability. There is no internal conflict or awareness in her condition; she is simply the object of Catherine’s care, her unconsciousness a stark reminder of the addiction that continues to dictate her life and strain her relationship with Catherine.
Clare is found collapsed on the bed, already more or less comatose the second she hits the mattress. She is limp and unresponsive, her body a testament to the heavy intoxication that has rendered her oblivious to Catherine’s care. Her state is one of vulnerability, her unconsciousness a stark contrast to the quiet efficiency of Catherine’s actions around her. Clare’s presence in this scene is passive, her condition a silent plea for the care that Catherine provides without hesitation.
- • None (unconscious and unaware of her surroundings or Catherine’s actions)
- • N/A (Clare is not pursuing any goals in this state)
- • N/A (Clare is unconscious and incapable of holding beliefs or intentions in this moment)
- • N/A
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Clare’s shoes are removed by Catherine with quiet efficiency, a small but symbolic act of care. Their removal is practical—preventing discomfort or entanglement in Clare’s unconscious state—but also carries a deeper meaning, as they represent the discarded trappings of Clare’s night out, a night that has led to her relapse. The shoes lie discarded beside the bed, a silent testament to the cycle of addiction and the care that follows in its wake.
The blanket is draped over Clare’s limp body by Catherine, providing warmth and a sense of security amid the vulnerability of her unconscious state. The act of covering Clare is tender and practical, reflecting Catherine’s instinct to protect her sister from the physical discomfort of shivering. The blanket becomes a metaphorical shield, offering a small measure of comfort in an otherwise bleak moment, and underscoring the care that Catherine provides despite her exhaustion.
Clare’s radio alarm displays 3:27 AM, its glow cutting through the darkness of the bedroom. The time serves as a stark reminder of the late hour and the cyclical nature of Clare’s relapses, which often disrupt the night and force Catherine into her role as caretaker. The alarm’s steady tick is a metronome to the quiet efficiency of Catherine’s actions, its presence a silent witness to the unspoken grief and exhaustion that permeate the scene.
The bucket, placed by the bed by Catherine, serves as a practical yet grim reminder of Clare’s intoxicated state and the potential for bodily needs during her unconsciousness. While not explicitly used in this scene, its presence underscores the clinical nature of Catherine’s care and the unfortunate routine of managing Clare’s relapses. The bucket is a silent witness to the degradation of Clare’s condition, its functional role overshadowed by the emotional weight of the moment.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Clare’s bedroom in Catherine’s house is a private sanctuary that has become a stage for the cyclical drama of Clare’s addiction. The room is dimly lit, the only illumination coming from Clare’s radio alarm, which casts a soft glow over the scene. The atmosphere is one of quiet desperation, where the weight of Clare’s relapse and Catherine’s care collide. The bedroom, usually a place of rest, is now a site of unspoken tension and routine intervention, where the boundaries between care and exhaustion blur. The space is intimate yet fraught, a microcosm of the sisters’ fractured relationship and the lingering shadow of Tommy Lee Royce’s influence.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Clare's condition after collapsing heavily intoxicated onto the bed requires Catherine to find a replacement carer for Ryan and highlights the disruption Clare's alcoholism has caused."