Marta’s Emotional Collapse and Walt’s Call
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Marta searches for jobs online as her mother and sister are in the kitchen. Her sister, Alice, watches a crime show, prompting their mother to demand she turn it off due to its insensitive nature given Harlan's recent death.
Marta, overwhelmed by her family's concern, initially laughs at the absurdity of the situation, however, she then breaks down crying. Alice, realizing her insensitivity, expresses her sympathy and hugs Marta.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frayed but determined—her anger at Alice is a front for deeper anxiety about Marta’s state and the family’s instability. The sobs trigger a moment of protective tenderness, but her focus quickly shifts to the next threat (the phone call), revealing her relentless, if overwhelmed, caretaking.
Marta’s mother stands at the table, her body coiled with protective fury. She fixes Alice with a glare, her voice rising in rapid-fire Spanish-inflected English as she demands the iPad be turned off, framing it as an act of cruelty (‘They’re talking about murder on it!’). Her concern for Marta is visceral—she doesn’t just scold Alice; she yells, her hands gesturing emphatically, her face flushed. When Marta sobs, her mother’s expression softens into sympathetic concern, though she’s already pivoting to the next crisis (the phone call). Her role is that of a shield, but her methods are blunt, her patience worn thin by grief and the weight of her family’s precarious status.
- • To shield Marta from further emotional harm (shutting down the crime show)
- • To maintain family stability (managing Alice’s defiance, monitoring Marta’s reactions)
- • That sensitivity is a luxury they can’t afford (pragmatic about grief)
- • That the Thrombeys are a danger to her family (distrust of Walt’s call)
Raw and exposed—grief and exhaustion surface as laughter that curdles into sobs, her body betraying the numbness she’s tried to maintain. The call from Walt reignites her confusion, tinged with dread, as she’s forced to engage with the Thrombeys again.
Marta sits hunched over her laptop, fingers moving listlessly across job listings, her eyes deadened by grief. When her mother and sister’s conflict erupts, she initially reacts with hollow laughter—an involuntary, almost manic response to the absurdity of Alice’s crime show playing amid her mourning. The laughter dissolves into sobs as she covers her face, her body shaking with the weight of Harlan’s loss. She offers Alice a fragile absolution (‘it’s alright’), but her voice is thin, her composure paper-thin. The call from Walt Thrombey jolts her upright; her confusion (‘What?’) is palpable, her grip on the phone tightening as she’s pulled back into the Thrombey saga against her will.
- • To process her grief privately (job listings as distraction)
- • To avoid further emotional upheaval (suppressing reactions to family conflict)
- • That she can’t afford to break down (financial instability, undocumented family)
- • That the Thrombeys will only bring her more pain (reluctance to engage with Walt’s call)
Initially defiant and detached, but her emotional shift is swift—guilt and sympathy overtake her when Marta sobs. The hug is her way of reclaiming control, offering comfort while acknowledging her role in the conflict.
Alice leans against the counter, iPad propped up, her attention split between the screen and the brewing storm. She resists her mother’s demands with teenage bluntness (‘it’s almost over’), her tone laced with eye-rolling defiance. When her mother escalates, Alice slams the iPad shut—less out of obedience than frustration—but her apology to Marta is immediate and sincere (‘I guessed who did it anyway. I’m sorry’). She hugs her sister tightly, her body language shifting from defiance to remorse. The hug is brief but fierce, a wordless acknowledgment of shared pain. Her pragmatism (‘I guessed the ending’) masks a deeper awareness of Marta’s fragility.
- • To assert her autonomy (resisting her mother’s demands)
- • To repair the moment with Marta (apologizing, hugging)
- • That her mother’s rules are arbitrary (chafing at restrictions)
- • That Marta’s grief is more important than her own needs (prioritizing the hug)
Unsettling and calculating—his tone is designed to confuse and compel, leveraging Marta’s vulnerability. He’s not present, but his power dynamic is clear: he expects obedience.
Walt Thrombey is only heard in this event—his voice on the phone, cryptic and unsettling, disrupts the kitchen’s tension. Marta’s reaction (‘What?’) suggests his tone is off-kilter, his words carrying weight or threat. He doesn’t appear, but his presence looms: the call is a summons, a reminder that the Thrombey world won’t let Marta grieve in peace. His influence is indirect but potent, pulling her back into their orbit.
- • To re-engage Marta in Thrombey affairs (summoning her back)
- • To assert control (using cryptic communication to disorient)
- • That Marta is still useful to the Thrombeys (despite her grief)
- • That secrecy and ambiguity are tools of power
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Marta’s laptop is a symbol of her futile attempt to escape the Thrombey world through mundane distractions. She scrolls job listings with mechanical precision, the screen’s glow casting a pallid light on her exhausted face. The laptop is both a tool (for survival) and a metaphor (her grief is too heavy for even work to distract her). It remains untouched as the family conflict unfolds, abandoned when Walt’s call pulls her back into the Thrombeys’ orbit. Its presence underscores the tension between Marta’s desire for normalcy and the inevitability of her re-engagement with Harlan’s legacy.
Alice’s iPad is the catalyst for the kitchen’s explosion. The CSI episode blaring from its screen—a graphic murder investigation—is the ultimate insensitivity, a jarring contrast to Marta’s grief. Alice’s defiance (‘it’s almost over’) turns the iPad into a battleground, and when her mother demands it be turned off, Alice slams the cover shut with a thud, the sound a punctuation mark to the conflict. The iPad’s role is dual: it’s both a trivial distraction and a brutal reminder of the violence that’s disrupted Marta’s world. Its sudden silence marks the shift from family squabble to emotional breakdown.
Marta’s phone is the narrative pivot of the scene. It rings abruptly, its screen lighting up with Walt Thrombey’s name—a jarring intrusion into the family’s raw moment. Marta’s confusion (‘What?’) as she answers reveals the phone’s role as a conduit for the Thrombey world’s demands. The call is brief but loaded, its cryptic tone hinting at secrets and dangers to come. The phone doesn’t just connect Marta to Walt; it symbolizes her inability to escape the Thrombeys, even in grief. Its ring is a summons, and Marta’s reluctant engagement marks her re-entry into their orbit.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Cabrera kitchen is a pressure cooker of domestic tension, its small space amplifying every conflict. Morning light streams in, but the atmosphere is thick with grief and unspoken fears. The laptop, iPad, and phone—objects of distraction and disruption—clutter the counter, while the table becomes a battleground for the family’s emotions. The kitchen’s warmth contrasts with the coldness of Marta’s grief, making the eruption of conflict feel even more violent. It’s a sanctuary that’s been invaded by the outside world (the crime show, Walt’s call), a place where Marta can’t escape the Thrombeys, even in her own home.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Marta's emotional breakdown after Alice's insensitivity leads directly to Walt's confusing phone call, setting up her return to Thrombey estate."
"Marta's emotional breakdown after Alice's insensitivity leads directly to Walt's confusing phone call, setting up her return to Thrombey estate."
"Walt's phone call directly leads Marta drives her car towards the Thrombey estate on the private road"
Key Dialogue
"MOM: Alice, turn that off now. ALICE: Why it's almost over, what— they're finding out who did it and the wifi sucks in my room so it doesn't play it's like two minutes left what there isn't even anything bad on it, it's just normal tv and they're just talking ok ok goddddd whatever ok whatever. MOM: Now please just turn it off. Turn it off. Now. Alice. Off. They're talking about murder on it, your sister just had a friend she loves slit his throat open she doesn't need to be hearing that right now let's be sensitive!"
"MARTA: Alice you can keep watching your show it's alright. ALICE: No, I guessed who did it anyway. I'm sorry Marta."
"MARTA: It's Harlan's son. [listens, face shifting in confusion] MARTA: What?"