Wicks expels Jud from the rectory

Jud storms into the rectory during a gathering of Wicks’ flock, his anger palpable as he disrupts the tense atmosphere. Wicks, already hostile, immediately commands Jud to leave, escalating the confrontation by hurling a book at him—a violent, symbolic act that forces Jud out of the room. The expulsion marks a critical rupture in their power struggle, stripping Jud of any remaining authority within the church hierarchy and publicly humiliating him in front of the congregation. This moment solidifies Wicks’ control over the flock while pushing Jud further toward instability, foreshadowing his eventual unraveling and the unraveling of the conspiracy itself. The physical expulsion underscores the irreparable breakdown of trust between them, with Wicks’ aggression serving as both a personal vendetta and a strategic move to isolate Jud from the group’s influence.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Jud angrily enters the rectory main room, interrupting Wicks and the flock. The flock responds to Jud's forceful entrance with anger.

anger to confrontation ['rectory main room']

Wicks demands Jud leave, escalating the conflict. Wicks throws a book at Jud, driving him out of the room.

confrontation to expulsion

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Furious and desperate, but the expulsion leaves him emotionally shattered and physically forced into isolation.

Jud storms into the rectory with palpable anger, his entrance disruptive and confrontational. He is met immediately with Wicks' violent expulsion, the book striking him and forcing him backward out the door. His physical reaction—falling back and slamming the door—underscores his humiliation and the sudden loss of any remaining authority. His emotional state is one of fury and desperation, but the expulsion leaves him isolated and vulnerable, foreshadowing his unraveling.

Goals in this moment
  • To confront Wicks and assert his own authority or challenge Wicks' control over the flock.
  • To reclaim some sense of power or agency in the face of Wicks' dominance.
Active beliefs
  • Wicks' authority is illegitimate and must be challenged.
  • The flock's loyalty to Wicks is misplaced, and he can expose the truth to break their unity.
Character traits
Confrontational Humiliated Desperate Defiant Isolated
Follow Jefferson Wicks …'s journey
Flock
primary

Collectively angry and aligned with Wicks' authority, their emotions mirroring his contempt for Jud.

The flock sits in unified silence around the main room, their faces hardening into masks of anger as Jud enters. Their collective gaze follows Wicks' command, and their alignment with him is absolute. They do not intervene or react individually, instead functioning as a single, silent entity that reinforces Wicks' authority through their presence and shared hostility toward Jud. Their anger is not personal but institutional, a reflection of their loyalty to Wicks and their rejection of Jud's defiance.

Goals in this moment
  • To support Wicks' authority by demonstrating their unwavering loyalty and rejection of Jud.
  • To reinforce the flock's collective identity as a unified force under Wicks' leadership.
Active beliefs
  • Jud's actions are a direct challenge to Wicks' authority and, by extension, their own sense of order.
  • Their loyalty to Wicks is non-negotiable, and any threat to him is a threat to them.
Character traits
Unified Hostile Loyal Silent Judgmental
Follow Flock's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Book Hurled by Monsignor Wicks at Jud

The book hurled by Wicks serves as a violent and symbolic weapon, transforming an ordinary object into an instrument of expulsion and humiliation. It strikes Jud squarely, driving him backward and out of the rectory, marking the physical and metaphorical severing of his connection to the flock. The book's use underscores the raw physicality of the confrontation and the irreparable breakdown of trust between Wicks and Jud. Its improvised nature—grabbed in the heat of the moment—highlights the spontaneity and brutality of Wicks' reaction.

Before: A book resting on a nearby surface in …
After: The book lies discarded on the floor of …
Before: A book resting on a nearby surface in the rectory, likely part of Wicks' personal or liturgical collection.
After: The book lies discarded on the floor of the rectory after being hurled at Jud, its pages potentially disheveled from the force of the throw.
Rectory Main Door

The rectory door functions as a physical and symbolic boundary, dividing the controlled interior space of the rectory from the dark exterior night. Jud shoves it open with force, disrupting the gathering, while Wicks' violent expulsion and the subsequent slamming of the door by Jud amplify the confrontation's raw aggression. The door's rough handling—first pushed open by Jud and then slammed shut—underscores the volatility of the moment and the finality of Jud's expulsion from the flock's presence.

Before: Closed, separating the rectory's main room from the …
After: Closed with force by Jud as he exits, …
Before: Closed, separating the rectory's main room from the exterior, with the flock gathered inside under Wicks' control.
After: Closed with force by Jud as he exits, marking the end of his presence in the rectory and his isolation from the flock.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Rectory - Main Room (Great Room)

The rectory's main room serves as the battleground for this violent confrontation, its intimate confines amplifying the tension and aggression between Wicks and Jud. Firelight flickers across the space, casting shadows that deepen the room's sense of moral ambiguity and hypocrisy. The room, usually a place of prayer and reflection, becomes a pressure cooker of hostility, where Wicks' authority is both challenged and reasserted through brute force. The flock's presence turns the sacred setting into a stage for public humiliation and institutional power dynamics.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with flickering firelight casting long shadows, the air thick with hostility and the weight …
Function Battleground for the confrontation between Wicks and Jud, where authority is challenged and reasserted.
Symbolism Represents the hypocrisy and moral decay within the church, where sacred spaces become arenas for …
Access Restricted to Wicks' flock and those granted permission to enter; Jud's forced expulsion underscores his …
Flickering firelight casting long, shifting shadows across the room. The flock seated in a unified semicircle around Wicks, their faces hardened in anger. A discarded book on the floor, pages askew from being hurled at Jud.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
The Flock (Wicks’s Inner Circle / Radicalized Online Following)

The Flock, as an organizational entity, is represented through its unified reaction to Jud's intrusion and Wicks' violent expulsion. Their collective alignment with Wicks—expressed through their masks of anger and silent solidarity—reinforces the organization's role as a tool for enforcing Wicks' authority. The flock's presence and reaction serve as a reminder of their loyalty to Wicks and their rejection of Jud, underscoring the organization's function as both a moral enforcer and a mechanism for exclusion.

Representation Via collective action of members, whose unified reaction reinforces Wicks' authority and excludes Jud.
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over individuals (Jud) through collective action and alignment with Wicks' commands.
Impact The flock's role in this event solidifies Wicks' control over the church hierarchy and marks …
Internal Dynamics No internal tensions are visible; the flock operates as a single, cohesive unit under Wicks' …
To demonstrate unwavering loyalty to Wicks by rejecting Jud's defiance. To reinforce the flock's role as a unified force that enforces Wicks' control over the church. Collective silence and unified anger to signal disapproval of Jud. Physical presence as a show of force, backing Wicks' authority.

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

"WICKS: GET OUT."
"WICKS: (HURLS A BOOK AT JUD)"