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S1E3 · WAKE UP DEAD MAN
S1E3
· WAKE UP DEAD MAN Flashback

Martha stages Nat’s murder as divine vengeance

In a chilling flashback, Martha Delacroix meticulously orchestrates the staged murder of Doctor Nat Sharp, framing Monsignor Wicks as the killer. After Nat collapses dead in his hallway—his body dragged to a bathtub—Martha arranges Wicks’s hands around Nat’s neck and triggers an acid tank to obscure evidence. The scene reveals her cold precision: she weaponizes the crime scene to tell a story of divine retribution, masking her own guilt. Her voiceover admission—‘These things I did with hatred in my heart’—exposes her hypocrisy, as she claims vengeance as God’s will while secretly acknowledging her personal rage. The flashback underscores Martha’s role as the conspiracy’s architect, using Nat’s death to eliminate a loose end and implicate Wicks, deepening the web of deceit that drives the central mystery.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Martha explains that she did terrible things motivated by vengeance, believing she was doing the Lord's work. She acknowledges that while the crime scene narrative will tell the world a story vengeance, inside her heart, she alone bears the weight of the full truth.

self-righteous to regretful

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Satisfied yet conflicted—externally, she is composed and methodical, but internally, her voiceover betrays a seething hatred and the cognitive dissonance of using God’s name to justify her personal vendetta. The satisfaction of her plan’s execution is tempered by the admission that her actions are driven by something far darker than divine will.

Martha emerges from the basement with a chilling satisfaction, her movements deliberate and unhurried. She drags Nat’s corpse through the ransacked living room, positioning it in the bathtub with Wicks’s hands staged around his neck. Her final act—triggering the acid tank—is performed with clinical precision, erasing all traces of her involvement. The voiceover reveals her internal conflict: she cloaks her personal hatred in divine rhetoric, but the admission of her true motives exposes her as a hypocrite and a master manipulator.

Goals in this moment
  • Frame Monsignor Wicks for Nat’s murder to eliminate a rival and consolidate power within the church.
  • Erase all physical evidence of her involvement by dissolving it in acid, ensuring her guilt remains undetectable.
Active beliefs
  • That vengeance can be justified under the guise of divine retribution, even when motivated by personal hatred.
  • That the ends (eliminating Wicks and Nat) justify the means (staging a crime scene and destroying evidence).
Character traits
Coldly calculating Theatrical in her vengeance Hypocritical (faith as a tool for justification) Physically dominant (drags a corpse with ease) Verbally precise (voiceover reveals subtext)
Follow Martha Delacroix …'s journey

Terrified and in agony—his final moments are a frenzied, painful struggle, but there is also a sense of inevitability, as if he knows his fate is sealed. The destruction he leaves behind is not just physical but symbolic of his unraveling life and the chaos Martha will exploit.

Doctor Nat Sharp staggers through his living room in his final moments, smashing framed pictures, upsetting lamps, and streaking dirt along the walls—a desperate, chaotic trail marking his collapse at the front door. His death is violent and undignified, his body later dragged by Martha to the bathtub. The physical destruction he leaves behind becomes crucial forensic evidence, but it is also a testament to his panic and vulnerability in his last moments.

Goals in this moment
  • Survive (though he fails, his instinctive struggle is a futile goal).
  • Leave some trace of the truth (the smashed pictures and dirt streaks inadvertently become clues, though Martha will use them to her advantage).
Active beliefs
  • That he is being poisoned or attacked (his erratic behavior suggests he knows something is wrong).
  • That his loyalty to Wicks or the church will not save him (his fate is sealed by Martha’s betrayal).
Character traits
Desperate and disoriented (his movements are erratic, destructive) Physically weak (collapses dead at the door) A victim of Martha’s premeditation (his death is part of her larger scheme)
Follow Nat Sharp's journey
Supporting 1

N/A (absent, but implied to be a victim of Martha’s scheme—his 'emotional state' is that of a pawn in her game, even in death).

Monsignor Wicks is not physically present in the scene, but his hands—staged around Nat’s neck—serve as the centerpiece of Martha’s frame. His absence is a narrative device, emphasizing how easily he can be manipulated post-mortem into the role of a murderer. The implication is that his authoritarianism and moral failings make him a perfect patsy for Martha’s scheme, as his reputation is already tarnished in the eyes of the church.

Goals in this moment
  • N/A (Wicks is not an active participant, but his staged involvement serves Martha’s goals of framing him).
Active beliefs
  • N/A (Wicks’s beliefs are irrelevant here, as he is not present or acting).
Character traits
Symbolic of institutional corruption (even in death, he is a tool for others’ schemes) Vulnerable to post-mortem manipulation (his hands are used as props) Representative of hypocrisy (his downfall is orchestrated by someone who shares his flaws)
Follow Jefferson Wicks …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
Rectory Main Door

The rectory door is not physically present in this scene, but its symbolic weight looms over the action. Martha’s actions here—staging a murder to frame Wicks—are a direct challenge to the authority he once wielded behind that door. The door represents the institutional power Martha is now usurping, and her ability to manipulate events within Nat’s home (a space once under Wicks’s indirect control) underscores her rise as the true power behind the church’s operations.

Before: N/A (not physically present in this scene, but …
After: N/A
Before: N/A (not physically present in this scene, but its symbolic role is implied).
After: N/A
Doctor Nat Sharp's Corrosive Steel Bathtub (Including Rubber Hose Feeding System)

The steel bathtub is the centerpiece of Martha’s staged crime scene. Nat’s corpse is dragged into it and positioned with Wicks’s hands around his neck, creating the illusion of strangulation. The bathtub’s cold, industrial nature contrasts with the domestic chaos of the living room, emphasizing the calculated violence of the frame. It serves as both a literal and symbolic vessel for Martha’s deception—containing the 'truth' she wants the world to see.

Before: Empty and pristine, located in Nat’s basement. Its …
After: Filled with Nat’s corpse and Wicks’s staged hands, …
Before: Empty and pristine, located in Nat’s basement. Its steel surface is clean, awaiting the grotesque tableau Martha will create.
After: Filled with Nat’s corpse and Wicks’s staged hands, the acid tank’s corrosive liquid begins to dissolve evidence. The bathtub is now a crime scene, its contents a lie designed to implicate Wicks.
Martha Delacroix's Acid Dissolution Tank (Nat Sharp's Basement)

The acid tank is the final tool in Martha’s erasure of evidence. After staging the crime scene, she triggers the valve, releasing a corrosive liquid that dissolves fingerprints, DNA, and other physical traces linking her to the murder. The tank’s presence is a metaphor for Martha’s own corrosive nature—she destroys not just evidence, but the moral fabric of the church she claims to serve. The sound of the acid pouring and the chemical fumes add to the scene’s claustrophobic tension.

Before: Full of corrosive liquid, positioned near the bathtub. …
After: Empty or nearly empty, its contents now dissolving …
Before: Full of corrosive liquid, positioned near the bathtub. It is a silent but menacing presence, awaiting Martha’s command to unleash its destructive power.
After: Empty or nearly empty, its contents now dissolving the evidence in the bathtub. The tank is a symbol of Martha’s thoroughness—she leaves nothing to chance.
Nat Sharp's Living Room Lamps (Including Overturned Fixture)

The lamps in Nat’s living room are toppled during his death throes, their shattered glass and displaced fixtures contributing to the illusion of a violent struggle. Martha does not clean up the debris; instead, she uses it to her advantage, allowing the lamps to serve as 'clues' that support her narrative of Wicks’s guilt. The lamps’ destruction is a microcosm of the larger chaos Martha has unleashed—domestic order shattered by her manipulation.

Before: Intact and functional, illuminating Nat’s living room. Their …
After: Shattered and scattered across the floor, their broken …
Before: Intact and functional, illuminating Nat’s living room. Their presence is mundane, a part of the everyday scenery.
After: Shattered and scattered across the floor, their broken forms part of the staged crime scene. They are no longer sources of light but symbols of the darkness Martha has introduced.
Dirt Streaks from Nat’s Staged Death

The dirt streaks left by Nat as he collapses are a crucial but unintentional part of Martha’s plan. These marks, smeared along the walls and floor, suggest a struggle and provide forensic evidence that Martha repurposes to frame Wicks. The dirt is a physical manifestation of Nat’s desperation, but in Martha’s hands, it becomes another tool in her deception. The streaks are a silent witness to the truth—one she ensures will never be heard.

Before: Absent or minimal, the living room floor and …
After: Visible streaks mark the walls and floor, trailing …
Before: Absent or minimal, the living room floor and walls are clean. The dirt is not yet part of the scene.
After: Visible streaks mark the walls and floor, trailing from the hallway to the front door. They are now part of the crime scene, their origin obscured by Martha’s staging.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Doctor Nat's Living Room

Nat’s living room is the primary battleground for Martha’s crime scene staging. The space, once a sanctuary of domestic normalcy, is transformed into a theater of violence and deception. Nat’s erratic death throes—smashing pictures, toppling lamps, streaking dirt—create a chaotic tableau that Martha exploits. The living room’s disarray becomes a canvas for her lies, with every overturned object and smear of dirt serving as a 'clue' that points to Wicks. The room’s atmosphere is one of suffocating tension, where the air is thick with the scent of sweat, broken glass, and the impending stench of acid.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic and oppressive, with a sense of impending doom. The destruction is not just physical …
Function The stage for Martha’s meticulous framing of Wicks. The living room’s domestic setting is subverted …
Symbolism Represents the corruption of the church’s inner sanctum. What was once a place of refuge …
Access Restricted to Martha and Nat (and later, the investigators who will discover the scene). The …
Dim, flickering lighting that casts long shadows across the ransacked room. The acrid scent of sweat and the metallic tang of blood (from Nat’s collapse). The sound of breaking glass and the thud of Nat’s body hitting the floor. The eerie silence that follows, broken only by Martha’s voiceover.
Doctor Nat Sharp's Basement

The basement is the preparation area for Martha’s crime. It is where she likely poisoned Nat (or where the poison took effect) and where the acid tank is stored. The basement’s darkness and isolation make it the perfect place for Martha to operate without interference. The ajar door leading to the living room serves as a threshold between the private horror of the basement and the public deception of the staged crime scene. The basement’s role is functional—it is the space where Martha’s plan is set in motion—but it is also symbolic of the hidden corruption within the church.

Atmosphere Dark, damp, and foreboding. The basement’s atmosphere is one of secrecy and violence, where the …
Function The hidden workspace where Martha executes her plan. It is where Nat dies (or is …
Symbolism Symbolizes the hidden, unseen corruption within the church. The basement is a metaphor for the …
Access Restricted to Martha and Nat (and possibly others who know of its existence). The ajar …
The faint glow of a single bulb casting long shadows. The damp, earthy smell of the basement mixed with the chemical tang of the acid tank. The sound of dripping water or the occasional creak of the floorboards. The eerie silence that amplifies the horror of what has taken place.
Nat Sharp's House Exterior (Night)

Nat’s house, as a whole, is the containment unit for Martha’s crime. The front door, hanging ajar, marks the violation of this private space, turning it into a crime scene. The house’s layout—hallway, living room, basement, bathtub—becomes a narrative map of Nat’s final moments and Martha’s manipulation. The house is no longer a home but a stage for Martha’s performance, where every room and object plays a role in her deception. The house’s atmosphere is one of violation and dread, where the domestic has been twisted into something sinister.

Atmosphere Violated and unsettling. The house feels like a crime scene even before the investigators arrive, …
Function The physical container for Martha’s crime scene staging. The house’s layout allows her to move …
Symbolism Represents the invasion of the personal by the institutional. Nat’s home, once a private sanctuary, …
Access The front door is ajar, suggesting forced entry, but the chaos within ensures that no …
The front door, scarred by a dirt smudge from forced entry. The eerie silence of the house, broken only by the occasional sound of Martha’s movements. The scent of sweat, blood, and the acrid tang of chemicals. The dim lighting that casts long shadows across the walls.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"MARTHA: ((O.S.)) These things I did with hatred in my heart. Vengeance is mine says the Lord. And that is the story the crime scene will tell the world. But inside my heart I know."