Squire Demands Answers Over Doctor’s Fate
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Polly urgently tries to alert the Squire to the Doctor's kidnapping, but the Squire, influenced by Kewper's suspicion, focuses on Ben's injury and demands to know their identities.
Despite Polly's plea for assistance, the Squire disregards her, demanding she reveal who she, Ben ,and the Doctor are, highlighting his distrust and Kewper reinforces this distrust.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Desperately anxious, with a growing sense of helplessness as her pleas are ignored. Her loyalty to the Doctor fuels her persistence, but the Squire’s dismissive authority leaves her feeling powerless and trapped.
Polly stands in the center of the inn, her voice trembling with urgency as she pleads for the Squire to prioritize rescuing the kidnapped Doctor. She is physically and emotionally drained, her modern clothing starkly contrasting with the 17th-century setting. Her hands clutch at her sides, her posture tense and pleading, as she interrupts the Squire’s interrogation to emphasize the Doctor’s peril. Despite her desperation, she is repeatedly silenced and dismissed, her frustration palpable as she struggles to make the Squire understand the immediacy of the threat.
- • Convince the Squire to prioritize rescuing the Doctor over interrogating her and Ben.
- • Ensure Ben receives medical attention while also securing help for the Doctor.
- • The Squire and Kewper are the only ones who can help save the Doctor, so she must appeal to their authority.
- • The Doctor’s life is in immediate danger, and every moment of delay increases the risk of his death.
Coldly authoritative, with a sense of righteousness in his demand for the truth. He is unmoved by Polly’s desperation, viewing her urgency as a distraction from his primary goal of uncovering the strangers’ identities. His emotional state is one of detached control, using institutional power to override human urgency.
The Squire dominates the scene, standing with an air of unshakable authority as he interrogates Polly. His posture is rigid, his tone dismissive and commanding. He prioritizes extracting information about the strangers’ origins over addressing the immediate threat to the Doctor, using Ben’s injury as a pretext to delay action. His insistence on ‘the truth’ reveals his deep skepticism of outsiders, and his power dynamic with Kewper and Tom reinforces his control over the situation. He speaks with measured precision, cutting off Polly’s pleas to assert his dominance.
- • Extract the truth about the strangers’ origins and identities, regardless of the immediate threat to the Doctor.
- • Assert his authority over the situation, reinforcing his role as the village’s judicial figurehead.
- • Outsiders are inherently suspicious and must be scrutinized before any aid is offered.
- • The law and order of the village take precedence over individual emergencies, especially those involving strangers.
Hostile and distrustful, with a sense of loyalty to the Squire’s authority. He is unmoved by Polly’s pleas, viewing the strangers as a threat to the village’s stability. His emotional state is one of defensive alignment with the Squire, using his role to reinforce the village’s insularity.
Kewper stands beside the Squire, reinforcing his authority with interjections that silence Polly. His posture is defensive, his tone hostile as he aligns himself with the Squire’s skepticism. He hesitates briefly when the Squire orders medical supplies for Ben, but ultimately complies, showing his deference to the Squire’s commands. His role is to support the Squire’s interrogation, using his position as innkeeper to enforce the village’s distrust of outsiders. His hostility is palpable, contributing to the oppressive atmosphere of the scene.
- • Support the Squire’s interrogation to uncover the strangers’ true identities.
- • Reinforce the village’s distrust of outsiders, protecting the local community from perceived threats.
- • Strangers are a danger to the village and must be controlled or expelled.
- • The Squire’s authority must be upheld, even at the expense of immediate humanitarian concerns.
Not applicable (off-screen), but inferred to be in grave danger, with his life hanging in the balance. His absence creates a sense of urgency that is repeatedly ignored by the Squire and Kewper.
The Doctor is not physically present in this event but is the central focus of Polly’s desperate pleas. His kidnapping is the catalyst for the confrontation, as Polly urges the Squire to prioritize his rescue. The Doctor’s absence looms large over the scene, his peril serving as the emotional and narrative driving force behind Polly’s frustration. His fate is treated as secondary to the Squire’s interrogation, highlighting the institutional indifference to his plight.
- • Null (off-screen, kidnapped).
- • Null (off-screen, kidnapped).
Neutral and compliant, with no visible emotional reaction to the tension around him. His focus is solely on fulfilling the Squire’s orders without question.
Tom, the stable boy, is a passive participant in this event, receiving orders from the Squire to fetch medical supplies for Ben. He stands slightly apart from the main confrontation, his posture submissive and obedient. His role is functional rather than dramatic, serving as an extension of the Squire’s authority. He does not speak or react beyond his compliance, reinforcing the Squire’s control over the situation.
- • Fulfill the Squire’s command to fetch medical supplies for Ben.
- • Avoid drawing attention to himself in the midst of the confrontation.
- • The Squire’s authority must be obeyed without question.
- • His role is to serve the inn and its patrons, regardless of the circumstances.
Ben is not physically present or speaking in this event, but his condition is a focal point. He is described …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Longfoot’s brandy is referenced indirectly in this event as part of the Squire’s order to Tom to fetch medical supplies for Ben. While not explicitly mentioned by name, the brandy is implied to be part of the 17th-century remedies being offered—alongside cloth and water—to tend to Ben’s wound. Its inclusion in the Squire’s command underscores the primitive medical practices of the era, but it also serves a narrative purpose: the brandy, like the other supplies, is a distraction, a way for the Squire to delay addressing the more pressing issue of the Doctor’s kidnapping. The brandy’s role here is symbolic, representing the Squire’s prioritization of institutional protocol over human urgency.
The cloth to bind Ben’s wound is explicitly ordered by the Squire in this event, marking its central role in the scene’s medical subplot. Tom is tasked with fetching it, along with water and brandy, to tend to Ben’s injury. The cloth’s involvement here is functional, serving as a practical tool to address Ben’s condition. However, its role is also narrative: the Squire’s command to fetch the cloth is a way to assert control over the situation, using Ben’s injury as a distraction from the more urgent matter of the Doctor’s kidnapping. The cloth symbolizes the tension between immediate care and institutional obstruction, as its retrieval is prioritized over action to save the Doctor.
Polly’s glass of water is not explicitly mentioned in this event, but it is implied as part of the Squire’s order to Tom to fetch supplies for Ben. While Polly does not directly request water here (as she did earlier in the scene), the water is part of the medical aid being prepared for Ben’s wound. Its presence in the Squire’s command reflects the practical, if rudimentary, efforts to tend to Ben’s injury. However, like the brandy and cloth, the water’s role is secondary to the Squire’s interrogation, serving as a pretext to delay action on the Doctor’s kidnapping. The water symbolizes the tension between immediate humanitarian needs and the Squire’s bureaucratic priorities.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Village Inn serves as the primary setting for this event, its dimly lit, oppressive atmosphere amplifying the tension between Polly’s desperation and the Squire’s authority. The inn, which should be a place of refuge, becomes a site of institutional obstruction, where the Doctor’s peril is secondary to the Squire’s need to assert control. The wooden beams and flickering firelight cast long shadows, creating a mood of suspicion and unease. The inn’s role in this event is multifaceted: it is the stage for the confrontation, a barrier to the strangers’ safety, and a symbol of the village’s insularity. The Squire’s authority is reinforced by the inn’s environment, where his commands echo off the walls, and the strangers are trapped in a space that offers no escape from his scrutiny.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Polly seeking help for Ben and the Doctor results in further suspicion because of Kewper convincing the Squire to focus on Ben (beat_cf661d38a4d26bcd)."
Polly’s frantic plea for help"The Squire disregards Polly's plea and demands she reveal who they are, leading directly to the arrests of Ben and Polly. The situation is escalated to a point where they are trapped."
Ben and Polly arrested for murder"The Squire disregards Polly's plea and demands she reveal who they are, leading directly to the arrests of Ben and Polly. The situation is escalated to a point where they are trapped."
Ben defies the Squire’s authority"The Squire disregards Polly's plea and demands she reveal who they are, leading directly to the arrests of Ben and Polly. The situation is escalated to a point where they are trapped."
Squire arrests Ben and Polly for murderThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"POLLY: Ben."
"SQUIRE: Now then. So these are your strangers, eh?"
"KEWPER: Aye, Squire, and this one's wounded."
"SQUIRE: Hmm? Oh, aye. He'll need binding. Tom. Fetch cloth and water, and a drop of brandy, eh."
"POLLY: Will he be all right?"
"SQUIRE: Aye, boy, he will. Now, tell me, where's your Master?"
"POLLY: He's been kidnapped. You've got to save him."
"SQUIRE: Kidnapped? And who are the ruffians who did this, ay?"
"POLLY: Well, there were four of them."
"SQUIRE: Before you tell me this tale, tell me about yourself."
"POLLY: Me? But the Doctor's the—"
"SQUIRE: Doctor? Oh, aye him. Well, let's not beat about the bush. I want to know who the three of you are and where you've come from?"
"POLLY: But the Doctor will be killed if you don't do—"
"KEWPER: Speak when the Squire tells you."
"SQUIRE: If you want help, I want the truth. Sit a minute. Well?"