Squire warns of Avery’s curse
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Squire warns Cherub about Avery's curse, suggesting supernatural dangers tied to the treasure, but Cherub dismisses it as superstition, focusing solely on the gold.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Calmly focused, with underlying urgency to buy time for Blake’s militia to arrive or for an opportunity to disarm Cherub.
The Doctor engages Cherub in a verbal duel, stalling for time by posing a riddle about Avery’s crew—Ringwood, Smallbeer, Gurney, and Desmond. He exploits Cherub’s nostalgia, knowing the pirate’s history with these men, while subtly reassuring Ben and Polly with glances. His calm demeanor contrasts with Cherub’s aggression, and he pleads for mercy for the Squire, though his primary goal is to delay the inevitable confrontation.
- • Delay Cherub’s demands to create an opening for escape or intervention.
- • Appeal to Cherub’s humanity (or at least his nostalgia) to reduce violence.
- • Cherub’s greed can be temporarily redirected through distraction or emotional leverage.
- • The curse is a real psychological and moral threat, even if supernatural elements are exaggerated.
Terrified but focused, her fear tempered by a desire to help the Squire and trust in the Doctor’s plan.
Polly, grabbed by Cherub with a pistol pressed to her head, pleads for water for the dying Squire, her voice trembling but determined. She listens intently as the Doctor and Cherub exchange riddles about Avery’s crew, her curiosity piqued by the names and the Squire’s warning. Her concern for the Squire and fear for her own life are palpable, but she remains alert, ready to act if an opportunity arises.
- • Survive Cherub’s threats by staying compliant but attentive.
- • Use the Squire’s warning and the riddle to understand the larger stakes of the conflict.
- • The curse is a real danger, not just superstition, given the Squire’s sincerity.
- • The Doctor’s strategies are their best chance of escape, even if she doesn’t fully understand them.
Feigned indifference masking deep impatience and underlying fear of the curse’s power, though he refuses to acknowledge it.
Cherub kneels over the mortally wounded Squire, his knife—still dripping with Kewper’s blood—clutched in one hand while the other presses a pistol to Polly’s temple. He interrupts the Squire’s warning about Avery’s curse with a sneer, dismissing superstition as weakness, but his obsession with the treasure drives him to demand answers from the Doctor. His aggression is tempered by a flicker of nostalgia as the Doctor invokes the names of Avery’s crew, revealing Cherub’s deep ties to the pirate past.
- • Extract the location of Avery’s gold from the Doctor using threats and intimidation.
- • Assert dominance over the group to prevent rebellion or escape attempts.
- • Superstition is a tool for the weak; only gold and power are real.
- • Loyalty to Avery’s crew is a point of pride, but greed outweighs sentiment.
Desperate and remorseful, with a flicker of defiance as he tries to warn Cherub of the curse’s consequences.
The Squire, mortally wounded and bleeding out on the crypt floor, interrupts Cherub’s interrogation to deliver a desperate warning about Avery’s curse. His voice is weak but urgent, recounting Avery’s rum-soaked madness and the legend of his soul being bargained for the souls of treasure-seekers. He admits his own folly in seeking the gold, his regret evident as he pleads with Cherub to heed the warning. His intervention creates a brief but pivotal distraction in the tension between Cherub and the Doctor.
- • Warn Cherub (and the group) of the curse’s real dangers before he dies.
- • Seek redemption for his past greed by preventing others from repeating his mistakes.
- • The curse is a tangible, supernatural force that dooms those who seek the treasure.
- • His warning may be the only thing that can save the Doctor and his companions from sharing his fate.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Avery’s gold is the MacGuffin driving the entire conflict, though it remains unseen in the crypt. The Squire’s warning about its curse and Cherub’s obsession with its location frame it as a supernatural and moral threat. The Doctor’s riddle about Avery’s crew—Ringwood, Smallbeer, Gurney, and Desmond—hints at the gold’s hidden location, while the Squire’s tale of Avery’s doomed bargain adds layers of dread. The gold’s absence makes it all the more potent, a specter haunting the crypt.
Cherub’s knife, ‘Thomas Tickler,’ is the instrument of Kewper’s death and a constant, bloodied threat in the crypt. Still dripping with Kewper’s blood, it symbolizes Cherub’s ruthlessness and the violent stakes of the treasure hunt. The knife is wielded as both a weapon and a psychological tool, reinforcing Cherub’s dominance over the group. Its presence looms over the Squire’s warning, a tangible reminder of the curse’s real-world consequences.
The pannikin—a simple tin cup—becomes a symbol of fleeting mercy in the crypt. Cherub thrusts it into Polly’s hands with false kindness, ordering her to give water to the dying Squire. The object’s mundane nature contrasts sharply with the violence around it, highlighting the Squire’s humanity and Polly’s compassion. Its use is a cruel irony, as Cherub’s ‘mercy’ is performative, serving only to heighten the terror of his threats.
Cherub’s pistol is the primary tool of his coercion, jammed against Polly’s temple as he demands answers from the Doctor. It embodies the immediate, lethal threat hanging over the group, forcing compliance through fear. The pistol’s presence amplifies the tension, as Cherub’s finger on the trigger represents the thin line between life and death. Its cold metal contrasts with the Squire’s supernatural warnings, grounding the scene in brutal reality.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The church crypt serves as a claustrophobic, shadowed battleground where greed, superstition, and violence collide. Its dimly lit stone walls and looming tombs create an oppressive atmosphere, amplifying the tension between Cherub’s threats and the Squire’s warnings. The crypt’s secrecy—hidden beneath the village church—mirrors the hidden nature of Avery’s treasure, while its sacred space is profaned by bloodshed and betrayal. The Squire’s dying words echo off the stones, lending his curse a supernatural weight.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Cherub’s faction of pirates is represented through his ruthless interrogation and violent dominance in the crypt. His actions—shooting Kewper, threatening Polly, and dismissing the Squire’s warnings—embody the organization’s brutal methods and obsession with Avery’s gold. The faction’s power dynamics are on full display, with Cherub asserting his authority as the de facto leader in Pike’s absence. His nostalgia for Avery’s crew reveals a deeper, almost familial bond among the pirates, though greed ultimately overrides loyalty.
Blake’s militia is implied but not yet present in the crypt, though their impending arrival is critical to the Doctor’s stall tactics. The organization’s role is off-screen but looms large over the event, as the Doctor subtly signals his reliance on their intervention. The militia’s disciplined, tactical approach contrasts with the pirates’ chaos, representing the lawful counterbalance to Cherub’s faction. Their absence in this moment creates dramatic irony, as the Doctor and his companions are unaware of how close rescue is.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Cherub's initial threat to Ben and Polly escalates to a direct threat to Polly's life, increasing the tension and urgency of the scene."
Cherub’s lethal ultimatum over Polly"Cherub's initial threat to Ben and Polly escalates to a direct threat to Polly's life, increasing the tension and urgency of the scene."
Doctor stalls Cherub with Avery’s crew riddle"The riddle involving names of Avery's crew members, initially presented by the Doctor to stall Cherub, later becomes the key to identifying the flagstone hiding the treasure."
Pike Uncovers Avery’s Pearls"The riddle involving names of Avery's crew members, initially presented by the Doctor to stall Cherub, later becomes the key to identifying the flagstone hiding the treasure."
Militia ambush disrupts treasure discovery"Cherub's initial threat to Ben and Polly escalates to a direct threat to Polly's life, increasing the tension and urgency of the scene."
Cherub’s lethal ultimatum over Polly"Cherub's initial threat to Ben and Polly escalates to a direct threat to Polly's life, increasing the tension and urgency of the scene."
Doctor stalls Cherub with Avery’s crew riddle"The Squire's warning about Avery's curse mirrors the Doctor's and Pike's later acknowledgement of it, both contributing to the theme of greed and its potential consequences."
Pike Uncovers Avery’s Pearls"The Squire's warning about Avery's curse mirrors the Doctor's and Pike's later acknowledgement of it, both contributing to the theme of greed and its potential consequences."
Militia ambush disrupts treasure discoveryThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"SQUIRE: Avery's curse, what of that, ay?"
"CHERUB: Avery's curse. You can have that for the sharks."
"SQUIRE: It's a curse men fear. Remember Avery's end? Did he not die a pauper? They say he bargained for his life. His soul in return for the souls of those who come after, seeking and finding the cursed treasure."
"CHERUB: And if you so believed it, why did you seek the gold, ay sir Squire?"
"SQUIRE: Because I was a fool and ill led. Answer enough lies there, surely."