Catherine forced to confront mercy killing
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Catherine prepares to euthanize a sheep when an old woman interrupts, offering milk and sugar, creating an awkward pause in the grim task. Catherine, flustered, accepts, delaying the unpleasant act.
Catherine, alone again, steels herself and kills the sheep, muttering apologies as she does so. The act is deemed too unpleasant to show directly.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A fragile mix of guilt, disgust, and resignation—feeling the weight of her role as both enforcer and caretaker, her professional resolve cracking under the personal horror of the act.
Catherine stands frozen in the garden, the coping stone raised above her head, her body tense with revulsion as she prepares to deliver the killing blow. The interruption by the Little Old Lady forces her to lower the stone awkwardly, her hands trembling as she fumbles with the offer of tea. Her whispered apologies to the sheep—'I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I am sorry'—reveal her internal conflict: a woman who enforces justice but is haunted by the necessity of violence. Later, in the conservatory, she relives the act with Clare, her voice raw with disgust, her body language betraying the emotional toll of the act.
- • To perform the euthanasia swiftly and mercifully, despite her personal revulsion
- • To maintain her composure and professionalism in front of the Little Old Lady, avoiding any display of weakness
- • That violence, even when necessary, is an evil that stains the soul
- • That her role as a police officer requires her to make difficult, morally ambiguous choices
Amused yet understanding—she finds the situation darkly funny, but her underlying concern for Catherine’s well-being tempers her humor, revealing a sisterly bond built on shared trauma and resilience.
Clare listens to Catherine’s recounting of the euthanasia in the conservatory, her initial smile at the absurdity of the situation quickly giving way to a more empathetic stance. She uses dark humor—'All right as in... dead?'—to deflect the grimness of the moment, but her support for Catherine is evident in her tone and the way she engages with her sister’s distress. Her laughter is not cruel but a coping mechanism, a way to process the horror of Catherine’s world while offering her sister a moment of levity.
- • To lighten the mood and help Catherine process the horror through humor
- • To reassure Catherine that she is not alone in facing the moral ambiguities of her job
- • That laughter, even in the face of darkness, is a necessary survival tool
- • That Catherine’s strength lies in her ability to balance compassion with the harsh realities of her work
Awkward and relieved—she recognizes the need for the act but is glad it’s not her responsibility, her retreat indoors a clear signal of her discomfort with the moral weight of the situation.
The Little Old Lady interrupts Catherine’s grim task with an offer of tea, her demeanor a mix of awkwardness and relief that she doesn’t have to witness or perform the euthanasia herself. She retreats indoors immediately afterward, shutting the door to avoid the sound of the act, her presence serving as a silent acknowledgment of the necessity of violence while also highlighting the moral isolation of those who must carry it out. Her offer of tea is a small, human gesture in an otherwise inhuman moment.
- • To offer Catherine a moment of normalcy (tea) amid the horror
- • To avoid witnessing or participating in the euthanasia, preserving her own moral comfort
- • That some tasks are necessary but distasteful, and it’s better to let others handle them
- • That small acts of kindness can mitigate the brutality of life
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The injured sheep is the catalyst for Catherine’s moral crisis, its suffering forcing her into the role of executioner. Its labored breaths and pained noises haunt Catherine, making the act of euthanasia not just a physical task but an emotional and spiritual burden. The sheep’s death is both a mercy and a violation, its body a silent witness to the violence inherent in Catherine’s world. Its role in the event is symbolic—representing the vulnerability of the innocent and the inevitability of suffering in a harsh landscape.
The coping stone is the instrument of mercy and violence, its jagged edge a brutal reminder of the tools at hand in Catherine’s world. She wrestles with it physically and emotionally, her trembling hands reflecting the internal struggle between duty and compassion. The stone becomes a symbol of the moral weight she carries—an object that must be used but leaves her feeling complicit in an act she despises. Its presence in her hands underscores the tension between her role as an enforcer of justice and her personal humanity.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The garden is a battleground of moral conflict, its pastoral quiet shattered by the act of violence Catherine is forced to commit. The dry stone wall, the coping stone, and the suffering sheep create a scene that is both isolated and intimate, a space where Catherine’s internal struggle plays out in physical terms. The garden’s role is to amplify the tension between nature’s cruelty and humanity’s attempts to mitigate it, its quietude a stark contrast to the brutality unfolding within it.
The conservatory in Catherine’s house is a sunlit haven where the sisters process the horror of the day, its glass walls enclosing a space of raw emotion and dark humor. The conservatory’s role is to serve as a neutral ground where Catherine can unburden herself, its light and openness a contrast to the moral darkness she carries. Here, the absurdity of the situation is acknowledged, and the bond between the sisters is reinforced through shared laughter and understanding.
The Little Old Lady’s house serves as a domestic refuge, a space of normalcy that contrasts sharply with the violence in the garden. Her retreat indoors after offering tea is a clear signal of her discomfort with the moral weight of the situation, her home a sanctuary from the harsh realities outside. The house’s role is to underscore the divide between those who must act and those who can retreat, highlighting the isolation of Catherine’s position.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
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Key Dialogue
"LITTLE OLD LADY: Do you take milk and sugar?"
"CATHERINE: No. Yes. Milk. Thank you. And yeah, go on, sugar. Two sugars. One sugar. Thank you."
"CATHERINE: ((she mumbles it, like a prayer that will protect her from the consequences of doing this evil thing)) I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I am sorry."
"CATHERINE: ((horrible, nauseating)) It made this noise, it was like... God knows. So then I had to do it again. Cos it was still alive. And then... It seemed to be all right after that."
"CLARE: ((she can’t help smiling)) All right as in... dead?"
"CATHERINE: I’m so thrilled that you’re finding this funny."