Narrative Connection
How these two moments in the story relate
Why These Connect
The narrative assertion
"Daryl’s dying words—'I didn’t mean to... I couldn’t stop'—echo in Jodie’s report that he confessed to killing 'those women' but insisted he didn’t do Vicky Fleming (E6). His plea for absolution ('I didn’t mean to') haunts both Alison’s act and the reopening of the case."
inferred by llm_cross_episode_character
Why This Matters Across Episodes
The longer arc this connection carries
This emotional echo underscores the tragic miscommunication at the heart of the Garrs tragedy. Daryl’s confession is both true and partial: he did kill, but not Vicky Fleming. This tragic discrepancy drives both Alison’s violence and John Wadsworth’s guilt, linking the two mothers—one killer, one accomplice—through their sons’ fractured truth.
About Callback Connections
B explicitly references A. A later moment deliberately echoes an earlier one, creating a sense of narrative completeness and rewarding memory.