Fabula
S17E26 · Shada Part 6
S17E26
· Shada Part 6

Wilkin insists on the impossible room theft

Wilkin and the Constable investigate the baffling disappearance of a room at St Cedd's College, where the former insists a chamber vanished entirely except for an unnatural blue haze. The encounter heightens the absurdity of the incident while exposing the skepticism of established authority. As local officials grapple with illogical evidence, their confusion underscores the supernatural disruption Skagra’s machinations have wrought, hinting that mundane order cannot contain forces beyond comprehension.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Wilkin and the Constable discuss the peculiar incident of the 'stolen room' at St. Cedd's College, exchanging skeptical remarks about the feasibility of stealing a room.

skepticism to curiosity ['the college', 'the next courtyard']

The Constable questions Wilkin about the details of the incident, focusing on the presence of a blue haze beyond the door.

confusion to slight understanding

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Feigned indifference masking underlying discomfort with any challenge to mundane order, though not entirely immune to the mystery.

The Constable maintains a posture of polite disbelief, peppering Wilkin’s account with sarcastic interjections and procedural reductions of the supernatural to jurisdictional absurdity, his skepticism rooted in habitual bureaucratic framing.

Goals in this moment
  • To rationalize the inexplicable within existing frameworks of investigation and authority.
  • To defuse Wilkin’s insistence with bureaucratic banter to avoid admitting incomprehension.
Active beliefs
  • Only tangible, legally classifiable acts belong within policing purview.
  • Prioritizing procedural mockery over sustained engagement with the absurd.
Character traits
sarcastic dismissive procedurally rigid humorously obtuse
Follow Constable's journey
Wilkin
primary

Pressured but resolute, oscillating between professional composure and mounting irritation as skepticism dismisses clear evidence.

Wilkin walks with the Constable through the college corridors and next courtyard, repeatedly asserting the logical necessity of the vanished room despite mounting sarcasm and procedural dismissal, his insistence fueled by witnessed impossibility rather than drunkenness.

Goals in this moment
  • To compel the Constable to acknowledge the room's disappearance based on direct observation.
  • To prevent the incident from being reduced to bureaucratic triviality or intoxication.
Active beliefs
  • Direct observation should override institutional skepticism when faced with the inexplicable.
  • Physical reality cannot be dismissed due to procedural inconvenience.
Character traits
persistent frustrated methodical grounded in observation
Follow Wilkin's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
The Blue Haze Clue

The blue haze is the only remnant of the vanished room, observed clinging to the corridor’s wavelength where the chamber once existed, serving as Wilkin’s crucial — and only — physical evidence against the Constable’s derision.

Before: Non-existent as a standalone phenomenon, now materialized as …
After: Remains suspended where the room detached, now central …
Before: Non-existent as a standalone phenomenon, now materialized as a residue marking the room’s theft.
After: Remains suspended where the room detached, now central to the Constable’s reluctant acknowledgment of an anomaly.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Next Courtyard at St Cedd's College

The next courtyard provides a transitional space for further investigation and dialogue between Wilkin and the Constable, its open expanse contrasting with the enclosed corridors and serving as a neutral ground for escalating confrontation.

Atmosphere Cool and damp, with muted reflections of pale afternoon light on wet cobblestones, belying the …
Function Pathway and neutral zone for continued probing of the impossible, facilitating movement while symbolizing the …
Symbolism Embodying the gap between surface order (regulated courtyards) and disruptive anomalies (vanished rooms).
Rectangular expanse of weathered cobblestones marked by shadows of battlements Damp stone and old books carried from tutorial room doorway
St Cedd's College

St Cedd's College forms the claustrophobic backdrop for the confrontation between institutional skepticism and witnessed impossibility, its ancient corridors and worn cobbles amplifying the absurdity of a vanished chamber amid centuries of unchallenged solidity.

Atmosphere Tense with institutional dissonance, where the scent of old paper and wood polish competes with …
Function Investigative site for the encounter, resisting the integration of supernatural evidence into mundane jurisdiction.
Symbolism Represents the fragility of institutional order when confronted with forces beyond temporal and spatial comprehension.
Gothic arches fracturing sunlight into sharp geometric patterns on worn cobbles Persistent winter chill permeating ancient stone despite afternoon light

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 1

"The local investigation into the 'stolen room' (beat_13a12f74cc37b64b) leads to the arrival of Wilkin and the Constable at Chronotis's rooms (beat_696eda9db4270fc4), where the facade of normalcy must be maintained despite supernatural events."

Time box vanishes under authority noses
S17E26 · Shada Part 6

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"WILKIN: That is the only way I can describe it."
"CONSTABLE: Stolen a room?"
"WILKIN: I got to the door of the room and I opened it, and beyond it there was nothing."