The Weight of Grief: A Mother’s Detachment
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Mike expresses his belief that Tommy Lee Royce is hiding nearby and it's only a matter of time before they find him, before leaving Catherine's house; Clare tries to engage Catherine in picking up Ryan, but Catherine asks Clare to drive her to Heptonstall instead, showing her continued focus on Becky's death and a reluctance to engage with Ryan.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A feigned emotional numbness masking a storm of guilt, rage, and self-loathing. Surface-level: detached, apathetic. Beneath: consumed by the belief that she failed Becky and thus deserves no peace, no honor, no future. The mention of Ryan briefly cracks her armor, revealing a flicker of shame before she retreats into her fixation on Heptonstall—a place where she can wallow in her grief without confronting the living.
Catherine sits slumped in her kitchen, chain-smoking with mechanical detachment. Her physical presence is diminished—shoulders hunched, movements sluggish—as she absorbs Mike’s updates with blank indifference. When Clare mentions Ryan, her gaze flickers with guilt before hardening into resolve as she fixates on Heptonstall, her voice flat and unyielding. The Queen’s Police Medal news barely registers; her only reaction is a dismissive ‘Right,’ followed by a demand to return to Becky’s grave. Her body language screams emotional withdrawal, a woman drowning in self-imposed penance.
- • To avoid emotional engagement with Clare and Mike, preserving her self-imposed isolation.
- • To return to Heptonstall, where she can indulge her grief and obsession with Becky’s death without interference.
- • To reject external validation (e.g., the Queen’s Police Medal) as undeserved, reinforcing her self-punishment.
- • She is unworthy of happiness or recognition because she failed to protect Becky.
- • Her primary role is as an avenger, not a grandmother—Ryan’s needs are secondary to her quest for closure.
- • Institutions (police, honors, therapy) are meaningless in the face of her personal failure.
A mix of concern, anger, and deep sadness. She is pissed off at the system’s failures (Tommy’s escape, Ashley’s deal) but channels it into desperate attempts to reach Catherine. Her voice cracks with exhaustion when she says ‘Not again,’ revealing her fear that Catherine is spiraling beyond help. She loves her sister but is at a loss for how to pull her back.
Clare acts as the emotional bridge between Catherine and the outside world, her frustration palpable as she tries to coax Catherine into engagement. She reacts viscerally to Mike’s updates (angry at the tabloid, horrified by Kevin’s assault), but her primary focus is on Ryan, pleading with Catherine to reconnect with him. Her gentle but firm ‘Not again’ when Catherine demands Heptonstall reveals her exhaustion with her sister’s obsession. Clare’s role is to ground Catherine in reality, but her efforts are met with deflection, underscoring the depth of Catherine’s emotional paralysis.
- • To reconnect Catherine with Ryan, restoring a sense of normalcy and maternal responsibility.
- • To prevent Catherine from retreating further into her obsession with Heptonstall.
- • To vent her frustration at the institutional failures that perpetuate Catherine’s suffering.
- • Catherine’s fixation on Heptonstall is self-destructive and unhealthy.
- • Ryan needs his grandmother, and Catherine owes it to him to try.
- • The police and system have failed Catherine, but family is her last lifeline.
Surface-level: professional, measured. Beneath: slightly awkward, hopeful, and frustrated by Catherine’s refusal to engage. He genuinely wants to lift her spirits but is stymied by her emotional withdrawal, leaving him to retreat with a defeated ‘Tata.’
Mike Taylor serves as the embodiment of institutional optimism, delivering updates with professional detachment but underlying hope. He shows Catherine the Express tabloid, downplays Tommy’s escape, and shares her Queen’s Police Medal nomination—each an attempt to reanchor her in the system’s values. His body language (lingering, hoping for a reaction) betrays his frustration at her indifference. He represents the police’s desire to restore order, but his efforts clash with Catherine’s nihilism, highlighting the gulf between institutional expectations and her personal collapse.
- • To reassure Catherine that Tommy Lee Royce is still within reach, maintaining her trust in the police.
- • To validate her through the Queen’s Police Medal nomination, hoping it will reignite her sense of purpose.
- • To convey institutional updates (Kevin’s assault, Ashley’s deal) without overwhelming her.
- • The system, though flawed, is the best tool for justice.
- • Catherine’s trauma can be mitigated through recognition and support from her colleagues.
Not directly observable, but inferred as a source of Catherine’s nihilism and Clare’s frustration. His indirect presence amplifies the room’s tension, acting as a silent antagonist whose very existence validates Catherine’s self-destructive focus.
Tommy Lee Royce is physically absent but spectrally present, his influence permeating the scene through news updates, the Express tabloid, and Catherine’s fixation on Heptonstall. His suspected escape looms as an unspoken threat, while his past crimes (Becky’s rape, Kirsten’s murder) cast a shadow over every interaction. The grainy photo in the tabloid triggers Clare’s anger and Catherine’s silent rage, reinforcing his role as the catalyst for Catherine’s emotional collapse. His name alone is a trigger, a reminder of the trauma that has fractured her.
- • To remain free, evading capture and continuing to exert control over Catherine’s psyche.
- • To undermine institutional trust (police, NCA) by exploiting loopholes (e.g., Ashley’s deal).
- • He believes he is untouchable, above the law.
- • He derives power from the suffering he inflicts, particularly on Catherine.
Not directly observable, but inferred as calculating and detached. His deal-making is a transactional act, devoid of empathy for the victims (like Catherine) whose suffering it perpetuates.
Ashley Cowgill is mentioned indirectly through Mike’s update about his impending bail and suspected NCA deal. His name is a spark that briefly jolts Catherine out of her apathy, her irritable reaction (‘How come? Has he done a deal?’) revealing her disdain for institutional compromises. His deal symbolizes the systemic rot that allows predators like Tommy to evade justice, reinforcing Catherine’s cynicism. Though absent, his actions ripple through the scene, underscoring the corruption that enables her suffering.
- • To secure his freedom and reduce his sentence through cooperation with the NCA.
- • To protect his own interests, regardless of the consequences for others (e.g., Catherine, Ryan).
- • The system is rigged, and he must play by its rules to survive.
- • Information is power, and he will leverage it to his advantage.
Inferred as anxious, lonely, and hopeful. His repeated asks for Catherine to pick him up reveal a child clinging to the fragile hope that things can return to how they were before the trauma.
Ryan is physically absent but looms large in Clare’s dialogue, his longing for ‘normalcy’ and his grandmother’s attention serving as a counterpoint to Catherine’s fixation on the past. His indirect presence highlights the emotional cost of Catherine’s withdrawal: a living, breathing child who needs her, but whom she cannot—or will not—prioritize. Clare’s plea (‘He just wants everything to get back to normal’) is a stark reminder of what Catherine is sacrificing in her pursuit of vengeance.
- • To reconnect with his grandmother and restore a sense of family normalcy.
- • To be seen and valued by Catherine, not overshadowed by her grief.
- • Catherine’s love for him is unconditional, even if her actions suggest otherwise.
- • Normalcy is possible if she would just try.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Express tabloid serves as a visceral catalyst for the scene’s tension, its grainy photo of a man resembling Tommy Lee Royce acting as a visual punch to the gut. Mike reluctantly shows it to Catherine and Clare, and the image—paired with the headline Police Killer Seen In Spain—triggers Clare’s anger and Catherine’s silent rage. The newspaper is more than a clue; it’s a symbol of the media’s sensationalism and the police’s perceived incompetence. Its presence forces the women to confront the reality that Tommy may still be free, amplifying Catherine’s nihilism and Clare’s frustration with institutional failures.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Catherine’s kitchen is a claustrophobic battleground where her emotional paralysis collides with the outside world. The sunlit counters and steeping tea offer fleeting normalcy, but the space is suffocating—filled with cigarette smoke, unspoken grief, and the weight of Ryan’s absence. The front-door knocks (Mike and Clare’s arrival) pierce her emotional paralysis, forcing her to confront realities she’d rather ignore. The kitchen’s tight confines mirror Catherine’s psychological state: a place where past and present clash, and where her refusal to engage with Ryan or her own healing becomes painfully evident.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
West Yorkshire Police is represented through Mike Taylor’s updates and the Queen’s Police Medal nomination, but its presence is more institutional than personal. Mike acts as its mouthpiece, delivering news about Tommy’s suspected escape, Kevin’s assault, and Ashley’s bail—each update a reminder of the system’s limitations. The nomination, meant to honor Catherine, instead highlights the gulf between institutional recognition and her personal suffering. The organization’s power dynamics are complex: it wields authority (manhunts, honors) but is also constrained by bureaucracy (e.g., Ashley’s deal with the NCA) and public perception (tabloid speculation).
The National Crime Agency (NCA) is invoked indirectly through Mike’s mention of Ashley Cowgill’s impending bail and suspected deal. Its presence looms as a shadowy force that undermines local police efforts, exemplifying the systemic rot that allows predators to evade justice. The NCA’s willingness to cut deals (implied by Ashley’s bail) is a direct contrast to Catherine’s black-and-white moral code, reinforcing her cynicism. While the NCA is not physically present, its influence is felt through the ripple effects of its actions—Ashley’s potential freedom, the erosion of trust in institutions, and the frustration it sparks in Catherine and Clare.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine remains apathetic and indifferent towards the medal (beat_02d97f0861ee8ef3) which is followed by her continuing pattern of indifference in beat_ce95bc8fc45c20e2 when Clare tries to engage Catherine in picking up Ryan, but Catherine asks Clare to drive her to Heptonstall instead, showing her continued focus on Becky's death and a continued reluctance to engage with Ryan."
"Catherine remains apathetic and indifferent towards the medal (beat_02d97f0861ee8ef3) which is followed by her continuing pattern of indifference in beat_ce95bc8fc45c20e2 when Clare tries to engage Catherine in picking up Ryan, but Catherine asks Clare to drive her to Heptonstall instead, showing her continued focus on Becky's death and a continued reluctance to engage with Ryan."
"Clare arrives at Catherine's house in beat_0f5d9bcf41f56f29, the next scene reveals that Mike and Clare arrive at Catherine's house, meaning this follows narratively. Also the news that Tommy might be in Spain is significant."
"Catherine is told that Tommy and Lewis have not been caught (beat_319777b069a02000) which is paralleled by Clare informing Catherine that she has been nominated for the Queen's Police Medal for bravery, but Catherine shows stunning indifference, highlighting her apathetic mental state."
"Catherine remains apathetic and indifferent towards the medal (beat_02d97f0861ee8ef3) which is followed by her continuing pattern of indifference in beat_ce95bc8fc45c20e2 when Clare tries to engage Catherine in picking up Ryan, but Catherine asks Clare to drive her to Heptonstall instead, showing her continued focus on Becky's death and a continued reluctance to engage with Ryan."
"Catherine remains apathetic and indifferent towards the medal (beat_02d97f0861ee8ef3) which is followed by her continuing pattern of indifference in beat_ce95bc8fc45c20e2 when Clare tries to engage Catherine in picking up Ryan, but Catherine asks Clare to drive her to Heptonstall instead, showing her continued focus on Becky's death and a continued reluctance to engage with Ryan."
Key Dialogue
"CLARE: *Oh you’re up!* CATHERINE: *(sullen, indifferent)* I’m all right."
"MIKE TAYLOR: *Kevin Weatherill’s having a bad time on remand. His cell mate took a shine to him... He’s been hospitalised with his injuries.* CLARE: *Jesus.* CATHERINE: *(irritable, zero empathy)* How come? Has he done a deal?"
"CLARE: *Will you pick Ryan up at tea time? He asked again this morning. ‘When’s Granny going to start picking me up again?’ He just wants everything to get back to normal.* CATHERINE: *(nodding thoughtfully, but evasive)* Can you drive me up to Heptonstall?"