Catherine Delivers the Bad News
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Catherine and John Wadsworth have a near miss on the stairs at the police station, exchanging brief greetings. John, pleased, informs Catherine that the man she tipped them off about has been charged in relation to the recent murders.
Catherine somberly informs John that another body has been found, which conflicts with John's assumption that they have caught the man responsible. John is shocked by this news.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Feigned professionalism masking deep frustration and a quiet, simmering anger at the case’s relentless setbacks. Her emotional labor is evident in the way she carries the news—like a weight she’s grown accustomed to, but one that still presses down.
Catherine Cawood moves with purpose down the corridor toward the briefing, her posture rigid but controlled. She intercepts John Wadsworth mid-stride, their near-collision a physical metaphor for the investigation’s collision with reality. Leaning in conspiratorially, she delivers the news of the new body with clinical precision—her voice steady, her gaze unflinching—but the slight hesitation in her 'Oh, [but] —' betrays a flicker of frustration. Her physical proximity to John during the revelation underscores the intimacy of the bad news, as if she’s sharing a burden rather than just relaying information. She exits swiftly afterward, leaving John to process the weight of her words alone.
- • To swiftly communicate the critical update about the new body, ensuring John (and by extension, the team) understands the investigation is far from closed.
- • To maintain her composure as the steady hand in the storm, even as she privately grapples with the frustration of another obstacle.
- • That false hope is more dangerous than no hope at all—this case demands brutal honesty, even if it deflates morale.
- • That her role as the bearer of bad news is a necessary part of her leadership, however unglamorous or emotionally taxing.
Crushing disillusionment. His initial optimism shatters into a raw, almost childlike shock—like a child who’s had a toy snatched away just as they were about to play with it. There’s a hint of self-doubt beneath the surface, as if he’s questioning whether he’s up to the task of solving this case.
John Wadsworth arrives at work with the energetic stride of a man riding the high of a recent victory—Sean Balmforth’s arrest. His initial 'Sorry!' is reflexive, his 'Morning!' cheerful, and his congratulations to Catherine are offered with unguarded enthusiasm. But the moment Catherine pivots to the news of another body, his entire demeanor collapses. The 'oh shit' reaction is visceral, his body language slackening as if the wind has been knocked out of him. He’s left standing in the corridor, stunned, as Catherine walks away, the weight of her words sinking in. His shock isn’t just professional—it’s personal, a reflection of his investment in the case’s resolution and his fear of failure.
- • To process the devastating news and regain his professional footing before the briefing.
- • To silently grapple with the implication that their progress was an illusion, and the killer is still out there.
- • That the arrest of Sean Balmforth was a turning point—one that would lead to closure. This belief is now shattered.
- • That his emotional reactions to the case are a liability, but he can’t help but take it personally when things go wrong.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The corridor at Norland Road Police Station serves as a liminal space—a threshold between the personal and the professional, the hopeful and the devastating. Its fluorescent lighting casts a sterile, almost clinical glow, stripping away warmth and amplifying the rawness of the characters’ emotions. The tight quarters force Catherine and John into close proximity, making their exchange feel intimate despite its professional context. The hum of the station’s morning bustle (footsteps, distant voices) creates a white noise that underscores the isolation of their moment. The corridor is neither a private sanctuary nor a formal setting; it’s a space of transit, where unguarded reactions slip through. Here, the institutional mask of the police station cracks, revealing the human cost of the investigation.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Sean's arrest leads him to run into Catherine. Then they reveal another body."
Key Dialogue
"JOHN: Sorry!"
"CATHERINE: Morning!"
"JOHN: Oh, congratulations. He’s been charged, you’ll have heard. That fella you tipped us off about."
"CATHERINE: Oh, [but] - ((she gets closer to be confidential)) Have you not heard? Apparently another body’s turned up."
"CATHERINE: ((clearly not)) Did you not know?"
"CATHERINE: It’s what I’ve just been told."