Vera’s smoking relapse and Cy’s abrupt exit
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Vera is found smoking inside, a habit she previously gave up after Cy rushes in, visibly agitated by Lee's recent call.
Cy, learning Vera is aware of the situation, declares he is going to 'witness a miracle' before leaving quickly, leaving Vera alone, deep in thought.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A fragile, unraveling composure masking deep distress and a sense of betrayal—both by the truth about Wicks and Cy’s cruelty. Her silence is not strength but the last defense against a complete emotional breakdown.
Vera sits alone in the kitchen, her posture rigid yet defeated, as she smokes a cigarette—a habit she abandoned years ago—her phone lying face-down on the table, untouched. She is the picture of emotional collapse, her usual composure shattered by the revelations from Lee Ross’s call. When Cy bursts in, she responds with a single, heavy ‘Yes,’ her voice barely above a whisper, betraying the depth of her distress. She remains motionless as Cy dismisses her, her silence speaking volumes about her isolation and the weight of the secrets she has carried for so long.
- • To process the revelations about Wicks’ paternity of Cy without further confrontation or exposure.
- • To maintain some semblance of control over her emotions, even as she is visibly falling apart.
- • That her loyalty to the church and her family has been misplaced, especially in light of Cy’s manipulation and Wicks’ hypocrisy.
- • That she is alone in bearing the weight of these truths, with no one to turn to for support or understanding.
A volatile mix of agitation and self-righteousness, driven by a need to assert control and suppress any threats to his plans. His emotional state is one of entitlement, with no room for Vera’s pain or the moral weight of his actions.
Cy bursts into the kitchen in a state of agitated haste, his jacket half-pulled on as if he is already mentally elsewhere. His demeanor is one of entitlement and impatience, demanding answers from Vera without a shred of empathy for her obvious distress. He fixates on the call from Lee Ross, his questions sharp and accusatory, revealing his obsession with controlling the narrative around Wicks’ paternity. His parting words—‘I’m gonna go witness a miracle’—are laced with smugness and a hint of menace, suggesting he is not just a bystander but an active participant in the unfolding conspiracy.
- • To confirm the extent of Vera’s knowledge about Wicks’ paternity and Lee Ross’s role in revealing it, ensuring he can mitigate any potential fallout.
- • To assert his dominance over Vera, reinforcing his position as the one in control of the family’s secrets and the church’s narrative.
- • That the truth about his paternity is a tool he can wield to his advantage, particularly in his quest for power and the hidden fortune.
- • That Vera’s emotional state is irrelevant compared to his own ambitions, and that her distress is a weakness he can exploit.
Not directly observable, but inferred to be one of moral urgency or opportunistic satisfaction—given his history of loyalty to Wicks and his own precarious position, his call likely stems from a mix of guilt, desperation, or a desire to expose the hypocrisy he sees in the church.
Lee Ross is not physically present in the scene but is a looming, off-screen presence whose call to Vera has set the event in motion. His revelations about Wicks’ paternity serve as the catalyst for Vera’s emotional collapse and Cy’s aggressive interrogation. While unseen, his influence is palpable, acting as the unseen hand that has disrupted the fragile balance of power within the Draven family.
- • To force the truth about Wicks’ paternity into the open, potentially as a way to undermine Cy’s influence or to seek allies in his own moral crisis.
- • To use the revelation as leverage, either to protect himself or to gain some measure of control in the power struggles within the church.
- • That the truth about Wicks’ paternity is a moral failing that cannot be ignored, and that exposing it is a necessary act of defiance or redemption.
- • That Vera, as a figure of authority within the church, deserves to know the truth, even if it causes her pain.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Vera Draven’s cell phone lies face-down on the kitchen table, a silent but potent symbol of the revelations that have just upended her world. Its position—untouched and face-down—suggests that Vera is avoiding confronting the call’s contents head-on, a physical manifestation of her emotional avoidance. The phone serves as a narrative device, its presence hinting at the off-screen drama of Lee Ross’s call and the secrets it has uncovered. It is both a clue and a catalyst, setting the stage for Cy’s aggressive interrogation and Vera’s subsequent collapse.
Cy Draven’s jacket is a dynamic prop that underscores the haste and aggression of his entrance. Pulled on mid-stride as he bursts into the kitchen, the jacket symbolizes his rushed, almost frantic state—he is a man with somewhere urgent to be, someone who cannot afford to linger in the emotional fallout of his actions. Its presence also serves as a visual contrast to Vera’s stillness, reinforcing the divide between their states of mind: Cy is all motion and entitlement, while Vera is frozen in distress. The jacket is a silent but telling detail, hinting at Cy’s deeper entanglement in the conspiracy and his eagerness to ‘witness a miracle.’
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Vera Draven’s kitchen is a claustrophobic yet intimate space that serves as the perfect crucible for the emotional explosion between Vera and Cy. The kitchen, typically a place of domestic warmth and shared meals, becomes a battleground of unspoken tensions and raw vulnerability. The confined space amplifies the intensity of the confrontation, with nowhere for Vera to escape Cy’s aggressive questioning or the weight of her own emotions. The kitchen’s familiar surfaces—the table where Vera sits, the deck visible through the window (where Cy lingers dismissively in earlier scenes)—are now charged with symbolic significance, representing the erosion of the family’s facade and the secrets that have festered within these walls.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"CY: Did you - what are you doing you don't smoke"
"VERA: I did. I smoked for fifteen years."
"CY: Did Lee call you? Did he tell you?"
"VERA: Yes."
"CY: Ok - I'm gonna go witness a miracle, you enjoy your cigarette indoors."