Fabula
S26E5 · Ghost Light Part 1

Gwendoline’s haunting ballad of the zoo

In the dimly lit music room of Gabriel Chase, Gwendoline sings a nursery rhyme about Regent’s Park Zoo, her voice drifting with an eerie sweetness that belies the sinister subtext. The Doctor and Ace pause in their investigation, recognizing the song as more than innocent verse—its lyrics carry coded warnings and threats about the supernatural entity trapped within the house. The ballad’s repetitive cadence seems designed to wear down barriers, a deliberate ritual to invite the encroaching horror into the mortal world. Gwendoline’s detached performance masks deeper involvement in Josiah’s experiments, her gentle demeanor belying a role in the unfolding terror.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Gwendoline sings a haunting song about the zoo, indirectly guiding someone to Regent's Park, possibly drawing a connection to the supernatural events unfolding.

calm to unease ['music room']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

1
Alice
Ward
primary

Feigned serenity masking concealed purpose and private disquiet

Gwendoline stands singing in the music room, her voice calm and controlled, hands resting at her sides. She appears the picture of quiet domesticity yet sings lyrics that function less as comfort and more as ritual. Her gaze remains neutral, neither confronting nor avoiding the unseen, suggesting practiced concealment of her true role in Josiah’s designs.

Goals in this moment
  • Perform the nursery rhyme as a coded ritual to weaken thresholds between worlds
  • Maintain her genteel facade to avoid suspicion during the Doctor and Ace’s presence
Active beliefs
  • Believes silence and compliance ensure personal safety amid Josiah’s dangerous work
  • Accepts that domestic ritual can serve darker, supernatural ends
Character traits
Practiced politeness masking deeper involvement Detached but deliberate performance Concealed complicity in occult activity
Follow Alice's journey

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Music Room (Gabriel Chase)

The music room, with its faded grandeur and dim light from guttering candles, becomes the stage for a ritual disguised as domesticity. Its worn Persian rug and silent piano absorb the weight of Gwendoline’s song, which refuses to stay merely lyrical. The chamber’s atmosphere thickens as the nursery tune unfolds, muting mundane time and summoning something older, colder, closer to the edges of hearing.

Atmosphere Ominous tranquility masking creeping dread, a cultivated stillness that trembles with unseen force
Function Sacred space masquerading as drawing room, used to conduct covert ritual through cultural artifact
Symbolism Represents the infiltration of the supernatural into the domestic sphere, where comfort and threat intertwine …
Access Limited to household members and invited guests; closed to outsiders without explanation
Flickering candle stubs pooling wax like old tears Moonlight fracturing through faded velvet drapes into pale, uneven strips

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

No narrative connections mapped yet

This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph


Key Dialogue

"GWENDOLINE: That's the way to the zoo, that's the way to the zoo. The monkey house is nearly full but there's room enough for you. Take a bus to Regent's Park, make haste before it shuts. Next Monday I will come and bring you such a lot of nuts."