Object
Catherine's Kitchen/Backyard Doorway
The doorway connecting Catherine's backyard to her kitchen and conservatory, serving as a transitional space where Catherine moves between outdoor and indoor spaces. This doorway is a key narrative element in scenes involving Catherine's emotional grounding (e.g., making tea after Clare shares Alison Garrs' confession) and her vigilance over Ryan (e.g., watching him play outside while discussing Frances Drummond's bail with Clare). The doorway's open frame allows sunlight to spill into the kitchen, symbolizing the fragile balance between domestic normalcy and the emotional turmoil of Catherine's professional life. It also functions as a narrative device to frame Catherine's protective instincts and her role as a mediator between family and investigative duties.
2 appearances
Purpose
Provides passage between backyard/conservatory and kitchen
Significance
Signals Catherine's abrupt pivot from confronting Alison's child-killing revelation to routine domesticity, underscoring her fractured composure and sharpening focus on Vicky Fleming's real killer
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used