Nave
Detailed Involvements
Events with rich location context
The nave is the space where the congregation would have sat during Wicks' sermon, but in this scene, it is empty—a void where witnesses once were. Blanc references it explicitly ('witnesses in the nave') to explain why a device behind Wicks would have been hidden from view. The nave's absence of people underscores the isolation of the investigation; the church, once a place of communal worship, now feels like a crime scene. Its wooden pews and vaulted shadows create a sense of abandonment, as if the building itself is complicit in the secrecy surrounding Wicks' death.
Eerily empty, the nave's silence amplifies the weight of the investigation, as if the absence of the congregation is a judgment on the church's sins.
Witness blind spot—its layout explains why a device behind Wicks would have been unseen by the congregation.
Emptiness symbolizes the church's moral void, where the 'flock' has been replaced by investigators picking apart its lies.
Open but unoccupied, save for the investigators. The nave's emptiness mirrors the church's spiritual bankruptcy.
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