Prozorov draws on the evacuees
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Prozorov appears, aiming his rifle at Jean and Phyllis, and orders them not to come closer.
Jean and Phyllis turn and move away from Prozorov, ignoring his command.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Confident and teasing initially, shifting to nervous compliance when confronted by force
Jean spots a jagged metal fragment and picks it up, feeling its unnatural electric charge before playfully offering it to Phyllis. Her casual bravado crumbles when she notices Phyllis’s discomfort and realizes they are being watched. She attempts to salvage the moment but is silenced by the sudden imposition of violence.
- • To maintain control over the social dynamic with Phyllis
- • To avoid confrontation with authority despite her curiosity
- • Their presence at Maidens Point is harmless and should not attract attention
- • Authority figures like Miss Hardaker overreact to minor transgressions
Tense and commanding, prioritizing mission parameters over human interaction
Prozororov stands above Jean and Phyllis with his rifle firmly leveled, his body language rigid and authoritative. His voice cuts through their retreat with a sharp command, freezing their movement mid-stride. He embodies uncompromising control over territory, indifferent to the girls' juvenile fears.
- • To prevent unauthorized personnel from approaching Maidens Point at all costs
- • To assert control over the immediate area following a recent Soviet seizure
- • Any approach to the base constitutes a threat that must be stopped immediately
- • Rigid adherence to orders ensures survival and mission success
Initially hesitant and slightly repulsed by the artifact, then startled and submissive under armed threat
Phyllis assists Jean with dressing after their beach excursion but freezes when offered the charged metal fragment, recoiling at its texture and electrical sensation. Her natural timidity intensifies when Prozorov’s rifle emerges, prompting her to urge immediate retreat without further hesitation.
- • To avoid confrontation or punishment for their trespassing
- • To distance herself from anything that feels dangerous or unnatural
- • The base is a forbidden place that should not be entered
- • Unexplained phenomena signal danger that must be avoided
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Soviet rifle serves as the instrument of sudden control, its metallic presence transforming a childish moment into dire consequence. Prozorov wields it without hesitation, using its physical authority to enforce the boundary between his domain and the girls’ retreat. The weapon’s readiness reflects the base’s militarized state.
A jagged Viking-era metal fragment uncovered in the sand, its surface carrying an unnatural electric charge that tingles the hands of those who touch it. Jean picks it up curiously but drops it when Phyllis reacts with aversion. It lingers on the ground as a portent of the dormant curse, ignored in the immediate crisis.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Maidens Point provides the rugged coastal backdrop for this confrontation, its decaying wartime infrastructure offering concealment for Prozorov and revealing the vulnerability of intruders like Jean and Phyllis. The narrow beach where the girls stand becomes a stage for their innocent transgression and swift punishment, linking geology to generational conflict.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Both Phyllis' nervousness about the cliff and Jean/Phyllis' innocence in handling an 'electric' metal object highlight vulnerability to unseen forces. Their youth mirrors the historical children buried in the graveyard, all caught in a cycle of terror and loss linked to the curse."
Phyllis takes the plunge at Maidens Point