Narrative Web

Steven questions the City’s borders

Steven stands at a window overlooking the City’s pristine communal square, momentarily awestruck by its beauty—fountains, music, and apparent perfection. His admiration is cut short by a nagging inconsistency: why such ideal conditions exist only within the City’s walls. When Avon deflects with vague assurances ('We have everything here that we need'), Steven presses further, his question about the world beyond the City’s borders exposing the first crack in its facade. The tension escalates as Dodo, distracted, notices Exorse emerging from a concealed doorway—a detail that suggests the City’s 'perfection' is actively policed. Steven’s probing marks the moment the group’s initial wonder curdles into suspicion, foreshadowing the darker truth they will uncover: the City’s prosperity is built on exclusion and exploitation.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Steven expresses admiration for the City's apparent perfection, questioning why such ideal conditions are limited to within its boundaries and not extending outward.

admiration to suspicion ['communal square', 'fountain']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Cautiously curious, transitioning to suspicious as the City’s inconsistencies become apparent.

Steven stands at a window, initially captivated by the City’s communal square—its fountains and music creating an illusion of utopia. His admiration quickly shifts to skepticism as he voices the first critical question about the City’s borders, pressing Avon for answers. His posture and tone suggest a mix of curiosity and growing unease, signaling his role as the group’s moral compass.

Goals in this moment
  • Uncover the truth behind the City’s self-contained perfection and its borders.
  • Protect Dodo and the group from potential deception by challenging Avon’s vague assurances.
Active beliefs
  • Utopias often hide darker truths, especially when their boundaries are rigidly enforced.
  • The City’s residents are either willfully ignorant or complicit in its secrets.
Character traits
Inquisitive Skeptical Protective Observant
Follow Steven Taylor's journey
Avon
primary

Anxious and defensive, masking his unease with feigned confidence to uphold the City’s facade.

Avon guides Steven and Dodo through the City but becomes visibly defensive when Steven questions its borders. His abrupt cutoff of Flower and vague reassurance ('We have everything here that we need') reveal his role as a gatekeeper of the City’s narrative. His body language and tone suggest discomfort, hinting at his complicity in maintaining the illusion.

Goals in this moment
  • Suppress Steven’s questions to prevent the group from uncovering the City’s secrets.
  • Maintain the illusion of perfection by deflecting scrutiny and controlling the conversation.
Active beliefs
  • The City’s prosperity depends on outsiders never questioning its boundaries.
  • Curiosity about the outside world is a threat to the established order.
Character traits
Defensive Evasive Authoritative Loyal (to the City’s narrative)
Follow Avon's journey
Supporting 3

Suspicious and alert, her curiosity piqued by the City’s contradictions.

Dodo, though initially distracted, notices Exorse emerging from a concealed doorway—a detail that sharpens the group’s unease. Her observation serves as a visual counterpoint to Steven’s verbal challenge, reinforcing the City’s hidden enforcement. Her presence adds a layer of youthful perceptiveness to the group’s growing suspicion.

Goals in this moment
  • Support Steven’s investigation by validating his concerns with her own observations.
  • Uncover the truth behind the City’s hidden operations, particularly its enforcement mechanisms.
Active beliefs
  • The City’s perfection is too good to be true, and its secrets are worth exposing.
  • Exorse’s presence suggests the City’s 'utopia' is maintained through control and exclusion.
Character traits
Perceptive Observant Supportive (of Steven’s skepticism) Quick to notice inconsistencies
Follow Dorothea Chaplet …'s journey
Exorse
secondary

Neutral and detached, fulfilling his duty without emotional investment.

Exorse emerges from a concealed doorway, his presence unnoticed by Avon but observed by Dodo. His silent, armed figure symbolizes the City’s hidden enforcement, reinforcing the tension between its public facade and private operations. His role here is purely symbolic, serving as a visual cue to the group’s growing suspicion.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain the City’s order by patrolling and enforcing its boundaries.
  • Ensure no outsiders (like Steven and Dodo) disrupt the established system.
Active beliefs
  • The City’s prosperity justifies its methods, even if they involve exclusion or exploitation.
  • His role is to uphold the system, not question it.
Character traits
Disciplined Authoritative Ominous Unquestioning (of the City’s orders)
Follow Exorse's journey
Flower
secondary

Uncomfortable and conflicted, torn between loyalty to the City and the urge to reveal its truths.

Flower attempts to respond to Steven’s question but is cut off by Avon, her aborted dialogue ('Well...') suggesting internal conflict or suppressed knowledge. Her role here is passive but revealing, hinting at the City’s controlled narrative and the residents’ complicity in maintaining it.

Goals in this moment
  • Avoid challenging the City’s narrative to maintain her place within it.
  • Subtly hint at the City’s secrets without directly betraying its authority.
Active beliefs
  • The City’s perfection is fragile and depends on silence and compliance.
  • Questioning its boundaries could disrupt the harmony she’s conditioned to value.
Character traits
Conflict-avoidant Suppressed (curiosity or dissent) Dutiful (to the City’s narrative)
Follow Flower's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
City's Forbidden Passageway (Concealed Doorway)

The concealed doorway, from which Exorse emerges, acts as a visual punctuation to the City’s facade. Its hidden nature underscores the duality of the City—public harmony versus private enforcement. Dodo’s observation of Exorse’s exit from this doorway serves as a silent but potent counterpoint to Avon’s verbal defenses, reinforcing the narrative’s tension between illusion and reality.

Before: Seamlessly integrated into the City’s architecture, its concealed …
After: Now a symbol of the City’s hidden operations, …
Before: Seamlessly integrated into the City’s architecture, its concealed nature masking its functional role in enforcement.
After: Now a symbol of the City’s hidden operations, its revelation sharpens the group’s suspicion and foreshadows the darker truths they will uncover.
Window Overlooking Communal Square (Public Observation Point)

The window serves as Steven’s observation point, framing the City’s communal square and its illusory perfection. Its vantage allows him to contrast the City’s internal beauty with its external mysteries, symbolizing the group’s shifting perspective from awe to suspicion. The window’s role is both literal (a physical viewpoint) and metaphorical (a lens through which the City’s contradictions become visible).

Before: Unoccupied, offering an unobstructed view of the communal …
After: Now associated with Steven’s skepticism, the window becomes …
Before: Unoccupied, offering an unobstructed view of the communal square’s fountains and music.
After: Now associated with Steven’s skepticism, the window becomes a symbol of the group’s growing distrust of the City’s narrative.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
City's Communal Square

The communal square, with its fountains and music, is the City’s most visible symbol of perfection—a curated space designed to impress and distract. Steven’s observation of it from the window frames his initial awe, which quickly curdles into skepticism as he questions its exclusivity. The square’s role shifts from a backdrop of beauty to a stage for the group’s growing unease, its splendor now tinged with irony.

Atmosphere Initially idyllic and soothing, but increasingly unsettling as the group’s questions expose its artificiality.
Function A public space designed to reinforce the City’s utopian narrative and distract from its darker …
Symbolism Embodies the City’s controlled perfection, but also its fragility—its beauty depends on exclusion and enforcement.
Access Open to residents and approved visitors, but its true purpose is to maintain the City’s …
Fountains spraying water in rhythmic arcs, creating a sense of order and control. Lively music filling the square, masking any sounds of dissent or enforcement. Pale stone paving, gleaming under clear skies, symbolizing the City’s polished surface.
The City

The City’s interior, with its sweeping arches and elegant columns, serves as the physical embodiment of its utopian narrative. However, this event reveals its dual role: a stage for public perfection and a vessel for private control. The contrast between Steven’s verbal challenge and Dodo’s visual discovery of Exorse creates a narrative friction that exposes the City’s hypocrisy, turning its pristine setting into a site of emerging conflict.

Atmosphere Initially serene and harmonious, but growing tense as the group’s questions disrupt the City’s controlled …
Function A controlled environment where the City’s residents and visitors are guided, observed, and subtly manipulated …
Symbolism Represents the tension between public utopia and private exploitation, with its walls both protecting and …
Access Restricted to those who accept the City’s narrative; outsiders or dissenters are excluded or policed.
Fountains and music creating an aura of artificial harmony. Elegant architecture masking the City’s enforcement mechanisms. Concealed doorways hinting at hidden operations.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
The Elders

The City of the Elders is the unseen force behind this event, its influence manifesting through Avon’s evasive responses and Exorse’s silent enforcement. The organization’s power dynamics are on full display: its residents (like Avon and Flower) act as willing or conditioned spokespeople, while its soldiers (like Exorse) ensure compliance. Steven’s question and Dodo’s observation directly challenge the City’s narrative, foreshadowing the conflict to come.

Representation Through Avon’s defensive guidance and Exorse’s silent enforcement, the City’s authority is asserted without direct …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over its residents and visitors, suppressing dissent, and maintaining the illusion of perfection …
Impact The City’s ability to maintain its facade depends on residents’ silence and outsiders’ ignorance, both …
Internal Dynamics Residents like Flower may harbor doubts, while enforcers like Exorse operate without question, creating a …
Prevent outsiders (like Steven and Dodo) from uncovering the City’s reliance on external exploitation. Uphold the narrative of self-sufficiency and perfection to maintain resident compliance. Controlled information dissemination (e.g., Avon’s evasive answers). Visible enforcement (e.g., Exorse’s presence and concealed doorways). Environmental manipulation (e.g., the communal square’s curated beauty).

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 1

"Steven questioning the City's limited perfection (beat_3e4a2d60c146c934) thematically mirrors Jano's discussion of perfecting their race (beat_a17def1cb5fbf40f), highlighting the City's elitist and exploitative nature."

Jano’s Evolutionary Justification
S3E38 · The Savages Episode 1

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"STEVEN: "This city really is fantastic. You've got fountains, music, everything.""
"AVON: "Yes, we're very proud of it.""
"STEVEN: "Why is it only within the confines of the City itself that you have such ideal conditions? What about beyond?""
"AVON: "We've told you before. We have everything here that we need.""