Susan’s cryptic evasion exposes deeper secrets
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Barbara enters and questions Susan about the music she is listening to. Susan identifies the band, and Ian surprises her by revealing his knowledge of the band's stage name history.
Ian subtly mocks Susan and asks where she lives, offering a ride. Susan declines, citing her enjoyment of walking in the dark.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Concerned yet determined, with a growing sense of unease as Susan’s cryptic responses and unusual behavior deepen the mystery.
Barbara Wright approaches Susan in the classroom, engaging her in conversation about the music and the book she lends her. She offers Susan a ride home, warns her about the fog, and exchanges a cryptic farewell, her concern for Susan’s safety and growing suspicion about her behavior becoming increasingly evident. Barbara’s probing questions and protective instincts are central to the scene’s tension, as she senses Susan’s unease and the unspoken mysteries surrounding her.
- • To uncover the truth behind Susan’s unusual behavior and living situation.
- • To ensure Susan’s safety, given her preference for walking in the dark and the foggy conditions.
- • Susan is hiding something significant about her background and home life.
- • Her investigation into Susan’s behavior is justified and necessary, despite ethical boundaries.
Intrigued and increasingly uneasy, as Susan’s unusual behavior and cryptic responses deepen the mystery surrounding her.
Ian Chesterton surprises Susan with his knowledge of the obscure band John Smith and the Common Men, which unsettles her and leads her to shut off the radio. He offers Susan a ride home, which she refuses, and engages in a tense exchange with her about her living situation and nocturnal habits. Ian’s ‘enquiring mind’ and ‘sensitive ear’ drive his investigation, as he probes Susan’s behavior with a mix of curiosity and growing suspicion, leaving the classroom with Barbara as Susan mutters her final cryptic line.
- • To uncover the truth behind Susan’s unusual knowledge, behavior, and living situation.
- • To protect Barbara and himself from potential dangers associated with Susan’s secrets.
- • Susan’s behavior is not merely academic but tied to something far more significant and possibly dangerous.
- • His role as an investigator is justified, even if it means challenging Susan’s privacy.
Uneasy and defensive, masking deeper anxiety and a sense of being cornered by the teachers’ growing suspicions.
Susan Foreman is listening to an obscure rock band on her transistor radio when Barbara and Ian enter the classroom. Ian’s unexpected knowledge of the band’s history unsettles her, leading her to abruptly shut off the radio. She engages in cryptic dialogue with Barbara and Ian, refusing a ride home and expressing an unsettling enthusiasm for walking in the dark. Her eerie confidence in finishing the borrowed book quickly and her muttered final line (‘But that’s not right’) suggest she is processing something beyond the teachers’ understanding, possibly a realization that their investigation has crossed a line.
- • To maintain control over the information shared about her background and living situation.
- • To deflect the teachers’ probing questions while avoiding direct confrontation.
- • Her secrets must be protected at all costs, even if it means behaving unusually.
- • The teachers’ investigation is a threat to her and her grandfather’s safety or anonymity.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Barbara Wright’s book on the French Revolution serves as a symbolic object in this scene, representing the normalcy of academic life that Susan is both a part of and apart from. When Barbara lends the book to Susan, it becomes a point of tension, as Susan’s eerie confidence in finishing it ‘tomorrow’ contrasts with the teachers’ expectations of a typical student. The book underscores the disconnect between Susan’s apparent academic prowess and her mysterious, otherworldly behavior, hinting at her deeper secrets.
Susan’s transistor radio is the catalyst for the scene’s tension, as her casual listening to the obscure rock band John Smith and the Common Men is disrupted by Ian’s unexpected knowledge of the band’s history. The radio symbolizes Susan’s connection to the modern world, yet its sudden silence—triggered by Ian’s probing—highlights her discomfort with being scrutinized. The radio’s role in the scene is twofold: it reveals Susan’s unusual tastes and triggers the exchange that exposes her guarded nature, setting the stage for the teachers’ growing suspicions.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Coal Hill School classroom serves as a neutral yet tense meeting point for Susan, Barbara, and Ian. The empty classroom, with its rows of desks and chalked blackboards, contrasts sharply with the unusual behavior unfolding within it. The space, typically associated with learning and routine, becomes a stage for Susan’s guarded interactions and the teachers’ growing suspicions. The classroom’s atmosphere is one of quiet unease, as the ordinary setting highlights the extraordinary nature of Susan’s secrets and the teachers’ investigative probing.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Susan senses something is wrong with the book. Foreshadows her connection to something beyond normal reality."
The Police Box Hides Susan’s Truth"Susan senses something is wrong with the book. Foreshadows her connection to something beyond normal reality."
The Doctor’s Lies Collapse Under Susan’s VoiceThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"IAN: John Smith is the stage name of the Honourable Aubrey Waites. He started his career as Chris Waites and the Carollers, didn’t he, Susan?"
"SUSAN: You are surprising, Mister Chesterton. I wouldn’t expect you to know things like that."
"IAN: I have an enquiring mind. And a very sensitive ear."
"SUSAN: (She turns the radio off.) Oh, I’m sorry."
"BARBARA: Be careful, Susan, there’ll probably be fog again tonight."
"SUSAN: Mmm."
"SUSAN: (after they leave) But that’s not right."