Ben exploits Tom’s terror for freedom
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Tom, terrified for his life, begs Ben to save him from the spell, leading Ben to reveal that the spell can only work if they are held prisoner, thus manipulating Tom into releasing them.
Tom, after initial hesitation, succumbs to Ben's manipulation and frees Ben and Polly, who promise to put in a good word for him and provide a trinket to protect him from the Doctor's 'magic'.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Feigned urgency masking calculated control. Ben is fully in command of the situation, his surface panic a tool to manipulate Tom, while internally he remains focused and strategic. There’s a hint of dark satisfaction in his success, but also a pragmatic awareness of the stakes—this is survival, not sport.
Ben takes the lead in a calculated psychological manipulation of Tom, fabricating a story about the Doctor’s magical powers to exploit Tom’s superstition. He knocks urgently on the gaol cell door, luring Tom inside with feigned panic, then spins a tale of the Doctor as a warlock torturing Tom’s soul through a straw doll. Ben’s dialogue is rapid, insistent, and laced with urgency, escalating Tom’s fear until he begs for mercy. His physical presence is dominant—leaning in, gesturing emphatically—as he pressures Tom into compliance, ultimately securing their release. Ben’s performance is a masterclass in tactical deception, blending charm, threat, and false camaraderie to break Tom’s resolve.
- • Break Tom’s resistance through psychological manipulation
- • Secure their immediate release from the gaol cell
- • Tom’s superstition can be weaponized for their escape
- • The Doctor’s reputation as a ‘warlock’ is a useful lie to exploit
Intense focus with an undercurrent of adrenaline. Polly is fully invested in the deception, her trance-like state a performance that requires her to disconnect from her usual self. There’s a quiet determination in her actions—she knows this is their only chance, and she’s willing to play the part, no matter how unsettling.
Polly plays a crucial supporting role in the deception, feigning a trance-like state and swinging the straw doll to reinforce Ben’s fabricated story. Her performance is subtle but effective—she wails and sways, creating an eerie atmosphere that heightens Tom’s terror. When the moment calls for it, she offers Tom a hollow protective trinket, sealing the deal. Polly’s contributions are physical (the doll, the wailing) and symbolic (the trinket), grounding Ben’s verbal manipulation in tangible, supernatural-seeming evidence. Her focus is unwavering, her commitment to the ruse absolute.
- • Reinforce Ben’s story through physical and symbolic actions
- • Exploit Tom’s fear to secure their freedom
- • Tom’s superstition is their key to escape
- • The straw doll and trinket will make the lie feel real
Terrified, then desperate. Tom’s emotional state spirals from cautious skepticism to paralyzing fear as Ben’s story takes hold. His begging and pleading reveal a man unmoored by his beliefs, his usual resolve replaced by a childlike need for protection. There’s a pathetic quality to his surrender, a man who has been broken by the suggestion of supernatural retribution.
Tom is the target of Ben and Polly’s manipulation, his initial skepticism rapidly unraveling into abject terror. He enters the cell cautiously but is quickly overwhelmed by Ben’s tale of the Doctor’s magical torture. Tom’s fear escalates as Ben claims his soul is trapped in the straw doll, reducing him to a begging, trembling mess. His loyalty to Kewper and the Squire crumbles under the weight of his superstition, and he agrees to release Ben and Polly in exchange for a hollow promise of safety. Tom’s arc in this event is a study in psychological breakdown, his agency stripped away by fear.
- • Avoid the perceived magical torture described by Ben
- • Secure his own safety through compliance
- • The Doctor is a warlock capable of soul torture
- • The straw doll contains his soul and will kill him if it falls
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The protective trinket, offered by Polly to Tom as a hollow promise of safety, is a symbolic gesture meant to seal their deception. While its physical form isn’t described, its role is to give Tom a sense of security—something to hold onto that he believes will protect him from the Doctor’s magic. The trinket is a lie, but it serves as the final piece of the companions’ manipulation, convincing Tom to fully comply with their demands. Its power lies in its symbolism: it represents the false bargain they strike with Tom, a temporary alliance built on fear and deception.
The straw doll, crafted by Polly from loose straw in the gaol cell, is the centerpiece of the deception. She swings it to and fro in a trance-like state, claiming it contains Tom’s soul and is being used by the Doctor to torture him. The doll is a symbolic prop, its simplicity belied by the power Ben and Polly attribute to it. It serves as tangible evidence of the Doctor’s supposed magic, grounding their lie in a physical object that Tom can see and fear. The doll’s role is purely narrative—it doesn’t exist in reality, but its presence in the scene is what breaks Tom’s resolve.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The gaol cell is a claustrophobic, oppressive space that amplifies the tension of the deception. Its stone walls and damp straw create an atmosphere of confinement and despair, mirroring Tom’s emotional state as he is manipulated. The cell’s small size forces the characters into close proximity, making the psychological manipulation feel more intimate and intense. The loose straw on the floor, which Polly uses to craft the straw doll, becomes a tool of deception, while the rats scurrying in the shadows add to the eerie, supernatural atmosphere Ben and Polly exploit. The cell’s role is both practical (a prison) and symbolic (a space of transformation, where fear and desperation reshape relationships and outcomes).
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Polly's plan to use local superstitions to exploit them lead to Ben and Polly enacting their escape plan by calling for Tom to their cell while Polly pretends to be in a trance with a straw doll."
Polly’s Superstition Gambit"Polly's plan to use local superstitions to exploit them lead to Ben and Polly enacting their escape plan by calling for Tom to their cell while Polly pretends to be in a trance with a straw doll."
Polly exploits Tom’s superstition for escape"Polly's plan to use local superstitions to exploit them lead to Ben and Polly enacting their escape plan by calling for Tom to their cell while Polly pretends to be in a trance with a straw doll."
Polly exploits superstition for escape"Tom is terrified in his life from the "possession" and begs Ben to be saved from the spell which then leads to Ben to manipulate Rom into releasing them."
Ben and Polly manipulate Tom with a fake possession"Polly's realization that she can exploit local superstitions (beat_e82707163ca3e26a) leads directly to her and Ben enacting their plan, preying on Tom's fears and convincing him of the Doctor's magical abilities."
Polly exploits Tom’s superstition for escape"Polly's realization that she can exploit local superstitions (beat_e82707163ca3e26a) leads directly to her and Ben enacting their plan, preying on Tom's fears and convincing him of the Doctor's magical abilities."
Polly exploits superstition for escape"Polly's realization that she can exploit local superstitions (beat_e82707163ca3e26a) leads directly to her and Ben enacting their plan, preying on Tom's fears and convincing him of the Doctor's magical abilities."
Polly’s Superstition Gambit"Tom is terrified in his life from the "possession" and begs Ben to be saved from the spell which then leads to Ben to manipulate Rom into releasing them."
Ben and Polly manipulate Tom with a fake possession"Tom releases Polly and Ben from their cell, it is then uncertain of what their next move should be the next thing they do is search the old church for clues to uncover the Churchwarden's murder."
Ben proposes the church searchKey Dialogue
"BEN: Tom! Thomas me ol' mate. Tom! Come quick! Tom! Quick!"
"TOM: No. Such things ain't to be seen by human souls."
"BEN: The old Doctor's a wizard, no less, Tom, and us two's his apprentices. You see the gibbet? You see the fellow what's swinging here? It's our master, Tom. He's captured the soul of someone he holds responsible for us being here, and he's gonna do him in!"
"TOM: Oh, sir, save me, save me. I swear it weren't my doing."
"BEN: The spell can only work if we're held prisoners. Now, if we were free?"
"TOM: Oh, sir, I'll do it. I'll do it! Wait a minute, sir. I'll free you."
"POLLY: Take this, Tom. While you hold it my master will know you and nothing will happen"