Jud’s authority crumbles under scrutiny
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jud bursts into the room with Blanc, attempting to take control and announce that everyone will answer their questions about Wicks's murder.
Doctor Nat derails Jud's attempt to establish control by bringing up Jud's past admission of killing a man, and Lee escalates the conflict with insults and accusations, dismissing Jud as a "PINO".
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Composed and analytically detached, observing the group’s dynamics with clinical precision. His emotional state is one of quiet confidence, as if he’s already several steps ahead of them and is merely waiting for the right moment to strike.
Blanc follows Jud into the rectory, initially supporting his declaration before smoothly redirecting the conversation to the Palm Sunday meeting. His calm, methodical approach exposes Jud’s confusion and the group’s distrust, using psychological pressure to uncover inconsistencies in their stories. His redirection underscores his role as the only outsider with a clear objective: solving the murder.
- • Uncover the truth about Wicks’ murder by exposing the group’s contradictions and secrets.
- • Maintain control of the investigation despite the group’s hostility and Jud’s attempts to dominate.
- • The group’s emotional outbursts and personal conflicts are obstacles to be navigated, not distractions from the truth.
- • Jud’s authority is a facade, and his past transgressions are relevant to the present investigation.
Hostile and emotionally volatile, teetering between righteous indignation and desperate denial. Her reaction to Simone’s revelation is one of betrayal, as if the miracle she sought was the final pillar of her belief system.
Martha rejects Jud’s presence outright, calling him unwelcome, and reacts with visceral emotion when Simone stands, screaming 'It's a miracle!' despite Simone’s clarification that she can walk but it hurts. Her outburst reveals her deep investment in the supernatural narrative, which she clings to as a last defense against the unraveling of her faith in Wicks’ authority.
- • Uphold the church’s supernatural narrative to maintain her own faith and authority within the group.
- • Suppress any challenges to Wicks’ legacy, which she sees as the foundation of the church’s power.
- • Miracles are real and essential to the church’s legitimacy, and any evidence to the contrary is a lie or deception.
- • Jud and Blanc are outsiders threatening the church’s stability and must be resisted at all costs.
Defensive and exposed, masking deep frustration with feigned composure. His emotional state oscillates between indignation at the group’s hostility and self-doubt about his own hypocrisy.
Jud bursts into the rectory with Blanc, attempting to assert control by declaring a joint interrogation of the group to uncover Wicks’ murderer. His authority immediately unravels as Nat exposes his fatal boxing altercation, and Lee publicly humiliates him as a 'PINO' (Priest in Name Only). Jud stumbles through explanations, his confusion deepening when Blanc redirects the conversation to the Palm Sunday meeting, leaving him visibly flustered and off-balance.
- • Reclaim authority over the investigation to prove his innocence and redirect suspicion away from himself.
- • Avoid further exposure of his violent past, which threatens his moral standing in the group.
- • The group’s loyalty to Wicks’ legacy is stronger than their distrust of him, allowing him to regain control through shared purpose.
- • His past transgressions are irrelevant to the present crisis and can be dismissed or downplayed.
Cynically confrontational, using humor and sarcasm to mask his underlying anxiety about the group’s unraveling. His emotional state is one of defensive aggression, as if he’s lashing out to preempt further attacks on his own credibility.
Lee mocks Jud as a 'PINO' (Priest in Name Only) and accuses him of covering up his past, criticizing the investigation as a sensationalist stunt that will end up on Netflix. His confrontational tone exposes the group’s paranoia about exposure and their deep-seated distrust of outsiders, particularly Blanc.
- • Undermine Jud’s authority to redirect suspicion away from himself and his own potential involvement in Wicks’ death.
- • Expose the group’s hypocrisy to justify his own cynicism and distance himself from their collective downfall.
- • The investigation is a farce designed to sensationalize the church’s scandals for public consumption.
- • Jud is a hypocrite who doesn’t deserve the group’s respect or loyalty.
Conflict between defiance and vulnerability, raw and exposed. Her emotional state is one of painful honesty, as if she’s finally shedding a burden she’s carried for too long, even at the cost of her own comfort.
Simone stands to retrieve a lighter, prompting Martha’s cry of 'miracle.' She calmly corrects Martha, admitting she can walk but it hurts, then denounces Wicks as a con man while confessing her lingering desire to believe in miracles. Her revelation exposes the fraudulence at the heart of the church’s narrative, leaving the group in stunned silence.
- • Expose Wicks’ fraudulence to free herself and others from his manipulative grip.
- • Reconcile her desire for faith with the reality of his deception, even if it means embracing disillusionment.
- • Wicks’ miracles were a lie, and the church’s narrative is built on deception.
- • Her physical pain is a small price to pay for the truth, even if it destroys her faith.
Sarcastically detached, masking her disdain for the group’s melodrama with dry humor. Her emotional state is one of weary amusement, as if she’s seen this play out before and finds it beneath her.
Vera Draven delivers a cutting remark about 'idiot versions' of them appearing on Netflix, her sarcasm serving as a sharp rebuke to Lee’s paranoia. She remains physically detached but uses her wit to underscore the group’s self-awareness of their impending scandal, reinforcing her role as an outsider to their drama.
- • Maintain her distance from the group’s infighting to protect her own reputation and legal standing.
- • Use humor to deflate the group’s self-importance and redirect attention away from her own potential involvement.
- • The group’s drama is a distraction from the real issues at hand, and their behavior will only lead to further scandal.
- • Her legal acumen and detachment make her immune to the emotional manipulations of the others.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Simone’s lighter serves as the catalyst for the rectory’s unraveling. When she stands to retrieve it, Martha’s cry of 'miracle!' exposes the group’s desperate clinging to supernatural narratives. Simone’s calm correction—admitting she can walk but it hurts—dismantles the illusion, turning the lighter into a symbol of the church’s fraudulence. Its retrieval is not just a physical action but a metaphorical act of truth-telling, forcing the group to confront the lies they’ve built their faith upon.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The rectory’s main room, once a sanctuary of shared delusion, becomes a battleground of exposed secrets and collapsing alliances. The firelight flickering across the walls casts long shadows, mirroring the group’s moral ambiguity and the unraveling of their faith. The space, which has hosted prayer groups, confrontations, and Wicks’ violent outbursts, now bears witness to the group’s self-destruction, its intimate confines amplifying their hostility and vulnerability.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude is the invisible puppeteer of this event, its influence manifesting in the group’s desperate attempts to uphold its narrative of miracles and divine authority. Martha’s outburst over Simone’s 'miracle' and the group’s collective resistance to Blanc’s investigation reveal their deep-seated loyalty to the church’s institutional power, even as it crumbles. The organization’s legacy of control and deception is laid bare, with Simone’s revelation acting as a direct challenge to its fraudulent claims.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR NAT: You mean the time Jud admitted to all of us that he's killed a man?"
"LEE: And now he's covering his ass by attacking us. He's a PINO."
"BLANC: Well actually I was inquiring not about Jud's prayer group, but about the shadowy meeting with Wicks that took place in this room on Palm Sunday."