The First Crack: Catherine’s Protocol Collapses
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Catherine, agitated and having made a decision, asks Shafiq to find out who owns number sixty-two, Milton Avenue.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A volatile mix of rage and determination, barely contained beneath a professional veneer. Her emotional state is one of unchecked obsession, where her personal trauma has overridden her professional instincts.
Catherine enters the scene already agitated, her decision made. She delivers her directive to Shafiq with clipped urgency, her body language tense and her focus unwavering. She doesn’t wait for a response, immediately moving toward Mike’s office to report her actions, her posture radiating determination and obsession. Her actions are a clear violation of protocol, driven by her personal vendetta against Tommy Lee Royce.
- • To uncover the ownership of 62 Milton Avenue as a means to locate and confront Tommy Lee Royce.
- • To bypass institutional protocol to accelerate her personal vendetta, regardless of the consequences.
- • That the institutional system is too slow and ineffective to bring Royce to justice, necessitating her own actions.
- • That her personal connection to Royce gives her the right to override standard procedures.
Uneasy and slightly conflicted, caught between his loyalty to Catherine and his awareness of the procedural irregularities in her request.
Shafiq receives Catherine’s abrupt directive with a moment of hesitation, as evidenced by his question about the location. His tone is cautious, reflecting his unease with the lack of context or justification for the request. He doesn’t challenge her directly, but his hesitation implies a quiet recognition of the impropriety of her actions.
- • To fulfill Catherine’s request while maintaining professional integrity.
- • To subtly signal his discomfort with the lack of justification, hoping she might provide context or reassurance.
- • That Catherine’s request, though unusual, is driven by a legitimate investigative need.
- • That questioning her directly could strain their professional relationship or undermine her authority.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The address 62 Milton Avenue is the focal point of Catherine’s directive, serving as both a clue and a catalyst for her obsession. It is the derelict house tied to Tommy Lee Royce, the man responsible for her daughter’s suicide and the kidnapping of Ann Gallagher. The address is not just a piece of information but a symbol of Catherine’s unresolved trauma and her determination to confront Royce, regardless of the consequences. Its mention in this scene marks the moment Catherine’s personal vendetta overtakes her professional duties.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Mike’s office is the next destination in Catherine’s path, representing the institutional authority she is about to challenge. The office is a stark contrast to the stairwell—cluttered with reports and the detritus of ongoing investigations, it embodies the bureaucratic machinery of the police force. Catherine’s approach to this space is not one of deference but of determination, as she prepares to report her actions (or lack thereof) to her superior. The office becomes a battleground for her professional integrity and personal obsession.
The stairs at Norland Road Police Station serve as a transitional space where Catherine’s professional facade begins to crack. The enclosed, fluorescent-lit stairwell amplifies her tension and isolation, acting as a metaphor for her emotional descent. It is a liminal space—neither fully part of the bustling station below nor the authority hub of Mike’s office above—where her decision to bypass protocol takes shape. The stairwell’s confined atmosphere mirrors the narrowing of her focus and the constraints she is willing to break.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Norland Road Police Station is the institutional backdrop against which Catherine’s defiance unfolds. The station embodies the bureaucratic and procedural constraints that Catherine is actively bypassing. Its presence in this scene is felt through the stairwell’s institutional atmosphere, the cluttered office, and the unspoken rules of conduct that Catherine is violating. The station is not just a setting but an active force—one that Catherine is challenging in her pursuit of personal justice.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine investigates the property on Milton Avenue, without permission. That leads to Catherine informing Mike about her illegal entry and the blood and gaffer tape she found, indicating a potential crime."
"Catherine investigates the property on Milton Avenue, without permission. That leads to Catherine informing Mike about her illegal entry and the blood and gaffer tape she found, indicating a potential crime."
"Catherine investigates the property on Milton Avenue, without permission. That leads to Catherine informing Mike about her illegal entry and the blood and gaffer tape she found, indicating a potential crime."
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"**CATHERINE** *(agitated, decisive)*: *'Shaf, can you get onto the council and find out who owns number sixty-two, Milton Avenue?'* **SHAFIQ** *(hesitant, implied by Catherine’s preoccupied nod)*: *'Sowerby Bridge?'* **CATHERINE** *(affirms with a nod, already moving on)*: *[No verbal response—her body language speaks for her: urgency, impatience, the unspoken command to *just do it*.]"