The Unraveling: Catherine’s Violent Truths and the Weight of Grief
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The therapist initiates the session by referencing Catherine's questionnaire, specifically noting her admission of contemplating killing herself or others, probing her to discuss it. Catherine deflects, refusing to elaborate.
The therapist questions Catherine further about suicidal tendencies and past counseling, leading Catherine to tersely reveal she had a breakdown instead of seeking therapy after her daughter's suicide. She sarcastically recounts her destructive behavior and the dissolution of her marriage following the tragedy.
The therapist gently probes how her daughter's death changed her, and Catherine admits to feeling a persistent sadness that defines her, contrasting with her public persona. The therapist suggests that Catherine's colleagues view her as the 'life and soul of the party', furthering the suggestion that Catherine covers up the sadness she feels.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A volatile mix of anger, grief, and exhaustion, with moments of dark humor serving as a coping mechanism. Her surface defiance masks a deep well of sadness and self-loathing, particularly when discussing her daughter Becky’s suicide and her family’s fractures.
Catherine sits rigidly in the therapist’s room, her body language a mix of defiance and exhaustion. She wears civvies that suggest discomfort—clothes meant for the moors, not this confined space. Her responses are initially terse, but as the therapist probes, her facade cracks, revealing a torrent of repressed rage and grief. She confesses violent impulses toward her grandson, son, and sister, her voice laced with dark humor and self-awareness. The admission about her outburst at Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral is delivered with a mix of defiance and resignation, hinting at the breaking point that led her here.
- • To maintain control over her emotions and avoid further vulnerability
- • To deflect the therapist’s probing without fully shutting down the conversation
- • To acknowledge her rage and grief without fully confronting their roots (e.g., Becky’s suicide, Tommy Lee Royce’s influence)
- • That her grief and anger are justified but must be contained to function in her role as a police sergeant and family matriarch
- • That her outburst at the funeral was a necessary release, even if it led to mandatory therapy
- • That her family’s problems (her son’s infidelity, her sister’s relapse) are partially her responsibility, fueling her guilt and rage
Calm, focused, and professionally empathetic. He shows no judgment, only a steady determination to uncover the truth beneath Catherine’s defenses. His demeanor suggests he has seen this pattern before—grief, rage, and the struggle to reconcile them—and knows how to navigate it without pushing too hard.
The therapist sits calmly across from Catherine, his demeanor unshaken by her defiance or dark humor. He methodically guides the conversation, using her 'happy sheet' responses as a starting point to peel back layers of her emotional armor. His questions are gentle but persistent, homing in on her violent impulses and the unspoken trauma beneath them. He allows silence to linger, creating space for Catherine to fill the gaps herself. His note that they will 'come onto' the funeral outburst signals his strategic approach—saving the most volatile topic for later to avoid overwhelming her.
- • To help Catherine confront her repressed rage and grief in a structured, safe environment
- • To establish trust so she will continue to engage in therapy (despite her resistance)
- • To prepare her for deeper revelations (e.g., the funeral outburst) by first addressing her violent impulses
- • That Catherine’s violent impulses are symptoms of unresolved trauma, not true malice
- • That her defiance is a coping mechanism to avoid facing her pain
- • That the funeral outburst is the key to unlocking her emotional breakdown
Not applicable (absent), but her relapse is framed as a betrayal that deepens Catherine’s sense of failure. Catherine’s confession about wanting to strangle Clare reveals her internal conflict—she loves her sister but resents her inability to stay sober, seeing it as a reflection of her own inability to 'fix' her family.
Clare is mentioned but not present, her relapse at the funeral serving as a flashpoint for Catherine’s guilt and rage. Catherine admits to wanting to strangle Clare for her relapse, which she partially blames herself for. The therapist’s probing forces Catherine to acknowledge the complex mix of love, frustration, and responsibility she feels toward her sister, as well as the way Clare’s addiction mirrors her own family’s unraveling.
- • N/A (absent), but her relapse is used by the therapist to expose Catherine’s repressed emotions
- • That Clare’s relapse is a personal failure on Catherine’s part (she ‘should’ have prevented it)
- • That addiction is a weakness Clare could overcome if she tried harder (a belief Catherine projects onto herself)
Not applicable (absent), but his infidelity is framed as the final straw in Catherine’s perception of her family’s moral decay. Her confession about wanting to throttle him reveals her black-and-white view of right and wrong, as well as her frustration with her own powerlessness to enforce her values.
Daniel is mentioned as the target of Catherine’s rage for his infidelity during his wife’s labor. His actions are framed as a betrayal that deepens Catherine’s sense of family collapse. She admits to wanting to ‘throttle’ him, her voice dripping with disdain (‘he’s a liar’). The therapist’s probing forces her to acknowledge that her anger at Daniel is tied to her broader grief—another failure in a family already fractured by Becky’s suicide and Tommy Lee Royce’s crimes.
- • N/A (absent), but his actions serve as a catalyst for Catherine’s confession of rage
- • That his infidelity is a personal betrayal of her values
- • That his actions are a sign of the family’s moral collapse
Not applicable (absent), but his prank is framed as a microcosm of Catherine’s larger fears—that her family is spiraling out of control, and she cannot stop it. Her confession about wanting to strangle him reveals her internal conflict: she loves him but resents the burden of his care, especially given his connection to Tommy Lee Royce.
Ryan is mentioned in passing as the target of Catherine’s violent impulse—she admits to wanting to 'string him up' for a school prank involving a fire extinguisher. The incident is framed as a minor but symptomatic act of defiance that pushes Catherine’s buttons, revealing her thinly veiled frustration with her role as a grandmother. Her dark humor (‘that’s me hauled in and being made to feel this big’) masks her deeper fear: that Ryan, like Becky, is slipping through her fingers, and she is powerless to stop it.
- • N/A (absent), but his prank serves as a catalyst for Catherine’s raw confession
- • That Ryan’s defiance is a sign of deeper issues (like Becky’s trauma)
- • That she must control him to prevent another tragedy
Not applicable (absent), but his presence is felt as a dark force driving Catherine’s emotions. Her rage is not just personal—it is tied to her inability to protect Becky and her fear of what Royce represents (unpunished evil, cyclical trauma).
Tommy Lee Royce is never mentioned by name in this scene, but his presence is the elephant in the room. Catherine’s outburst at his mother’s funeral—the event that triggered her mandatory therapy—is the unspoken catalyst for this session. The therapist’s note that they will 'come onto that' later signals that Royce’s influence is the next layer to be peeled back. His crimes (Becky’s rape, Ryan’s conception) are the root of Catherine’s trauma, fueling her rage and her protective instincts toward her grandson.
- • N/A (absent), but his legacy is to force Catherine to confront her powerlessness and rage
- • That Royce’s crimes went unpunished (or were punished insufficiently)
- • That his influence will always haunt her family, no matter how hard she tries to protect them
Not applicable (absent), but her presence is felt as a specter of grief, shame, and unanswered questions. Catherine’s emotions fluctuate between anger (at the world, at Tommy Lee Royce) and sorrow (for what might have been).
Becky is never physically present in the scene, but her absence looms large. She is the unspoken catalyst for Catherine’s grief, rage, and guilt. Her suicide is referenced as the defining trauma that shattered Catherine’s marriage, her family dynamics, and her sense of self. The therapist’s questions about counseling after Becky’s death force Catherine to confront the void left by her daughter’s absence, even if she deflects with dark humor or sarcasm.
- • N/A (absent), but her legacy drives Catherine’s confessions and the therapist’s probing
- • N/A (absent), but her death is believed to have been preventable (or at least mitigated) if Catherine had intervened differently
- • Her memory is tied to Tommy Lee Royce’s crimes, making her a symbol of unresolved justice
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Catherine’s 'happy sheet' is the catalyst for this entire exchange. The therapist uses her terse 'Yes' response to the question about contemplating harm to others as a wedge to pry open her emotional defenses. The sheet lies between them on the desk, a physical manifestation of her resistance and the therapist’s persistence. Its presence symbolizes the institutional requirement for her to confront her trauma, even as she resists it. The therapist’s reference to it (‘the happy sheet’) underscores the irony of its name—there is nothing happy about the admissions it contains.
The fire extinguisher is mentioned as the object of Ryan’s school prank—a bet over a bag of crisps that spirals into chaos. Catherine’s confession about wanting to ‘string him up’ for this incident reveals how mundane triggers (a child’s defiance) become flashpoints for her repressed rage. The extinguisher symbolizes the unpredictability of her emotional state: what should be a minor disciplinary issue becomes a metaphor for her fear of losing control, both over Ryan and her own violent impulses. Its mention is brief but loaded, tying her grandmotherly frustration to her broader trauma.
The bag of crisps is the prize in Ryan’s bet to set off the fire extinguisher. Catherine mentions it with dark humor (‘someone bet him a bag of crisps he couldn’t’), framing the prank as a trivial but symptomatic act of defiance. The crisps serve as a narrative shorthand for the banality of the trigger that sets off her rage. Their mention underscores the disconnect between the small stakes of Ryan’s actions and the enormous weight of Catherine’s emotional response, revealing how her grief and trauma distort her perception of ordinary events.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The moors are invoked by Catherine as the place she’d rather be—‘out on the moors’—than trapped in the therapist’s room. They serve as a symbolic escape, a vast and isolating space where she can breathe, think, and avoid the emotional labor of therapy. The moors represent freedom, solitude, and the ability to process her grief on her own terms, without the therapist’s probing or the institutional pressure of the police force. Their mention underscores her resistance to the therapy session and her longing for a return to her ‘normal’ coping mechanisms (avoidance, work, the open sky).
The Hebden Bridge Primary School corridor is mentioned as the setting for Ryan’s fire extinguisher prank. Catherine recalls it with boiling frustration, describing the chaos of white powder coating the walls and the institutional clamor of staff and students. The corridor serves as a microcosm of her larger fears: that Ryan’s defiance is a sign of deeper issues (like Becky’s trauma) and that she is powerless to stop the cycle. Its mention is brief but loaded, tying her grandmotherly frustration to her broader trauma. The corridor’s fluorescent-lit, institutional setting contrasts with the moors, underscoring the clash between Catherine’s personal life and her professional role.
The therapist’s room is a confined, intimate space that amplifies Catherine’s discomfort and the therapist’s probing. Its four walls create a pressure cooker effect, trapping her grief and rage in a way the open moors cannot. The fluorescent lighting and neutral decor strip away her usual defenses, leaving her raw and exposed. The room’s small size forces her to confront the therapist (and herself) without the usual distractions of her work or the moors. Its atmosphere is tense, with Catherine’s body language suggesting she’d rather be anywhere else—yet she is compelled to stay, if only to prove she can endure it.
The hospital is mentioned as the setting for Daniel’s infidelity during his wife’s labor. Catherine recalls it with disdain, describing it as a place where ‘newborn cries and monitor beeps’ clashed with the irony of life’s beginning shadowed by betrayal. The hospital serves as a metaphor for the moral collapse of her family—where joy (a birth) is undermined by pain (infidelity). Its mention underscores Catherine’s black-and-white view of right and wrong, as well as her frustration with her inability to enforce her values. The sterile, clinical setting contrasts with the raw emotions it evokes.
Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral is mentioned as the site of Catherine’s outburst—the event that triggered her mandatory therapy. The funeral is evoked as a place of collective grief, where Catherine’s rage boiled over, exposing the raw fractures in her family. The therapist’s note that they will ‘come onto that’ later signals that the funeral is the next layer of trauma to be unpacked. The funeral’s pall of suppressed violence and unresolved accusations looms over the session, hinting at deeper revelations to come. Its mention underscores the cyclical nature of Catherine’s grief and rage, tied to Royce’s enduring influence.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Occupational Health (Police Force) is the institutional force behind Catherine’s mandatory therapy. Their policies and protocols are the reason she is in the therapist’s room, forced to confront her emotional breakdown. The therapist’s reference to her ‘clearance offhand’ and the mention of ‘desk duty’ hint at the bureaucratic machinery that governs her return to work. Occupational Health’s involvement is felt in the therapist’s structured approach, the ‘happy sheet,’ and the unspoken threat of further restrictions if she does not comply. Their influence is passive but pervasive, shaping the session’s tone and Catherine’s resistance.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Catherine explicitly links her contemplation of violence against family members to the triggering event of Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, making her attend therapy."
"Catherine explicitly links her contemplation of violence against family members to the triggering event of Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, making her attend therapy."
"The therapy session is driven by Catherine's violent impulses and unresolved issues, specifically her connection to Tommy Lee Royce. This connects directly to her anger, the questions of her mental health, and the event that mandated therapy."
"The therapy session is driven by Catherine's violent impulses and unresolved issues, specifically her connection to Tommy Lee Royce. This connects directly to her anger, the questions of her mental health, and the event that mandated therapy."
"Catherine explicitly links her contemplation of violence against family members to the triggering event of Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, making her attend therapy."
"Catherine explicitly links her contemplation of violence against family members to the triggering event of Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, making her attend therapy."
"The therapy session is driven by Catherine's violent impulses and unresolved issues, specifically her connection to Tommy Lee Royce. This connects directly to her anger, the questions of her mental health, and the event that mandated therapy."
"The therapy session is driven by Catherine's violent impulses and unresolved issues, specifically her connection to Tommy Lee Royce. This connects directly to her anger, the questions of her mental health, and the event that mandated therapy."
"Catherine's mandated therapy session, triggered by the Tommy Lee Royce case, leads to John's own unraveling as the Vicky Fleming case intensifies. Both characters are dealing with the psychological consequences of past events and their own actions."
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"**THERAPIST**: *‘Have you ever contemplated killing others? Does the ‘yes’ apply there?’*"
"**CATHERINE**: *‘Oh yes.’* (She hesitates, then locks eyes with him.) *‘Day before yesterday I could’ve merrily strung my grandson up for setting off a fire extinguisher in a corridor at school... Then last Thursday I could’ve happily throttled my son... And two weeks ago? I could’ve cheerfully strangled my sister. Clare.’*"
"**THERAPIST**: *‘How did [Becky’s death] change you?’*"
"**CATHERINE**: *‘I’m sad. I never used to be sad. It didn’t define who I am... But now? It does.’* (She pauses, then adds bitterly:) *‘They all know about Becky. They all know what happened. But they don’t know this.’*"
"**CATHERINE**: *‘And in fact... that was the same day that I did this thing that’s meant I’m having to do this. Business. Here. With you.’*"
"**THERAPIST**: *‘Ah. Yes. Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral. We will come onto that.’*"