Nat stabs Wicks with the devil knife
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
As Martha screams, drawing attention, Doctor Nat, using a handkerchief, retrieves a devil head knife from his jacket and removes the devil from Wick's vestments.
Doctor Nat plunges the knife into Wicks's back.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Feigned urgency masking potential complicity; her scream is a performance with an unclear motive—distraction for Nat’s benefit or an involuntary reaction to the chaos?
Martha Delacroix’s scream outside the closet door serves as the critical distraction, her voice cutting through the sacred silence like a blade. She is not physically present in the closet but her timing is impeccable—her cry draws all eyes away, creating the window Nat needs to act. Her role is that of the unwitting accomplice, her scream a tool in a larger conspiracy she may or may not fully grasp. The scream is sharp, deliberate, and calculated, though her emotional state is ambiguous—is she complicit, or merely a pawn in a game she doesn’t understand?
- • To create a distraction that allows Nat to act undetected, ensuring the murder proceeds without interruption.
- • To maintain her own plausible deniability by appearing as an unwitting participant in the chaos.
- • That the ends justify the means, particularly if it serves the church’s hidden agenda.
- • That her loyalty to the institution outweighs moral objections to violence, especially against a figure like Wicks.
A fragile facade of control giving way to raw panic; his initial calm is replaced by a visceral fear of exposure, compounded by the realization that he is no longer in charge of the conspiracy.
Doctor Nat Sharp kneels beside Monsignor Wicks’s body, his movements a chilling blend of clinical precision and mounting desperation. Wrapping his hand in a handkerchief, he retrieves the 'devil head knife' from his sleeve—a weapon chosen for its symbolic weight—and tears the matching devil emblem from Wicks’s vestments. The stab is swift and fatal, but his composure shatters when he realizes the tranquilizer flask, his intended alibi, is missing. His eyes dart frantically around the closet, his breath shallow, as the gravity of his actions—and the unseen forces now controlling the narrative—crash over him.
- • To execute Wicks without leaving traceable evidence, ensuring his own survival in the aftermath.
- • To locate the missing tranquilizer flask, his only leverage to frame another or cover his tracks.
- • That his actions are justified by the greater good—removing a corrupt leader to protect the church’s secrets.
- • That he can outmaneuver the investigation, but only if he retains control of the evidence.
None (post-mortem), but his death embodies the tragic irony of a man who preached about betrayal only to be undone by it. His absence looms large, his body a catalyst for the unraveling of the conspiracy.
Monsignor Jefferson Wicks lies motionless on the closet floor, his body a silent witness to the betrayal that has unfolded. The devil emblem torn from his vestments and the knife buried in his back are not just weapons—they are symbols of the treachery that has festered within his own flock. Wicks’s death is both a physical and symbolic act, his body reduced to a pawn in a game he once controlled. His final moments are marked by the irony of his own sermons on Judas and betrayal, now fulfilled by those he trusted.
Detached and methodical; Blanc’s role is that of the impartial observer, guiding the audience through the crime scene with clinical accuracy.
Benoit Blanc’s voiceover narrates the event with detached precision, his words painting a picture of Nat’s actions and the missing flask. Blanc is not physically present in the closet but his perspective frames the scene, highlighting the cold calculation of the murder and the desperation that follows. His narration acts as a lens, focusing the audience’s attention on the key details—the handkerchief, the knife, the vanished flask—and the implications they carry for the investigation.
- • To illuminate the key details of the murder for the audience, ensuring they grasp the significance of Nat’s actions and the missing flask.
- • To set up the next phase of the investigation by highlighting the inconsistencies and unanswered questions.
- • That the truth lies in the details, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant.
- • That the missing flask is a critical clue that will unravel the conspiracy.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The devil emblem sewn into Wicks’s vestments is torn away by Nat in a deliberate act of symbolic violence. The emblem, which matches the design of the devil head knife, represents Wicks’s authority and the dark legacy he has built within the church. By tearing it away, Nat not only desecrates Wicks’s vestments but also symbolically strips him of his power, reducing him to a mere victim of the conspiracy he once controlled. The torn emblem becomes a clue, a piece of the puzzle that Blanc and the audience must decipher.
The 'devil head knife' is the weapon of choice for Nat’s murder, its devil head hilt wrapped in a handkerchief to avoid leaving fingerprints. The knife is not just a tool but a symbol—its design mirrors the devil emblem sewn into Wicks’s vestments, reinforcing the theme of betrayal and the diabolical nature of the act. The knife’s presence in Nat’s sleeve suggests premeditation, as does its ritualistic design, which ties the murder to the church’s own iconography. Its use is swift and precise, driving home the finality of Wicks’s fate.
The handkerchief serves as Nat’s primary tool for avoiding detection, wrapped around his hand as he grips the knife and tears the devil emblem from Wicks’s vestments. It is a practical yet symbolic object—its use underscores Nat’s careful planning, but its presence also highlights the fragility of his alibi. The handkerchief is a temporary shield, one that cannot protect him from the consequences of his actions or the missing flask’s implications.
The knife in Wicks’s back is the culmination of Nat’s premeditated violence, its placement symbolic of the betrayal that has unfolded. The knife’s devil head hilt and the torn devil emblem from Wicks’s vestments create a visual and thematic link, reinforcing the idea that the murder is not just an act of violence but a ritualistic rejection of Wicks’s authority. The knife’s presence in his back is a stark reminder of the cost of his leadership and the lengths to which his flock will go to remove him.
The tranquilizer flask is Nat’s intended alibi and failsafe, a tool to subdue Wicks and frame another for the murder. Its absence in the closet is a critical detail, hinting at a third party’s interference and deepening the mystery. The flask’s disappearance forces Nat into a state of panic, as it was meant to be his insurance—proof that he acted in self-defense or under duress. Without it, he is exposed, his carefully laid plans unraveling before his eyes. The flask’s role is twofold: as a practical tool and as a narrative device, driving the tension and uncertainty of the investigation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The sanctuary storage closet is a claustrophobic, concrete-walled space that amplifies the tension of the murder. Its small size forces Nat and Wicks into an intimate, almost suffocating proximity, making the act of violence feel inevitable and inescapable. The closet’s isolation ensures that the murder can occur without immediate witnesses, but its proximity to the church sanctuary also makes it a symbol of the corruption festering within the institution. The bare floor, the closed steel breaker box, and the faint light filtering through the ajar door create an atmosphere of dread, where sacred space has been twisted into a chamber of betrayal.
The space outside the church storage closet is a tight, echoing corridor where Martha Delacroix’s scream slices through the hush, drawing all eyes away from the closet door. This distraction is the linchpin of Nat’s plan, creating the brief window he needs to act. The corridor’s concrete walls amplify the scream, blending the sacred stillness of the church with the abrupt chaos of the murder. Footsteps likely stir toward the sound, leaving Nat mere seconds to commit the act and search for the missing flask. The space is liminal—neither fully part of the sanctuary nor entirely separate, a threshold between the sacred and the profane.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude is the institutional backdrop against which this murder unfolds, its hierarchy and secrets driving the conspiracy. The church’s decline and Wicks’s authoritarian leadership have created a powder keg, where loyalty is tested and betrayal is inevitable. Nat’s murder of Wicks is not just an act of violence but a strike against the institution itself, a rejection of its corrupting influence. The closet, a space meant for storage and private rituals, becomes a microcosm of the church’s moral decay, where even the most sacred acts are tainted by power struggles and hidden agendas.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
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Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR NAT: "Oh oh.""
"BLANC (O.S.): "His final task - to remove the incriminating flask. But where was it? It was gone!""