Wicks’ Cryptic Resurrection Sermon
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
An off-screen Wicks speaks a passage about rising again, foreshadowing his supposed resurrection and the bizarre events that follow, deepening the mystery and religious undertones of the narrative.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Solemn and conflicted, his loyalty to Wicks at odds with his growing moral unease. He is a man caught between his role as an enforcer and his own creeping doubts about the church’s direction.
Jud, alongside Nat and Lee, carries the coffin into the crypt, his movements heavy with the weight of his role as Wicks’ enforcer. His participation is a mix of duty and discomfort, his loyalty to Wicks tempered by the growing unease of the conspiracy unraveling around him. The identical pine box is a silent accusation, a reminder of the lies he has helped perpetuate.
- • To uphold the church’s rituals and maintain order, despite his private reservations.
- • To distance himself from the fallout of Wicks’ schemes without openly challenging his authority.
- • That Wicks’ resurrection is a dangerous gamble that could destroy the church from within.
- • That his own survival depends on staying one step ahead of the conspiracy.
Tense and uneasy, caught between his role as a pillar of the community and his growing guilt over his involvement in Wicks’ schemes. His silence speaks volumes, a man drowning in secrets.
Doctor Nat Sharp carries the coffin into the crypt alongside Jud and Lee, his movements deliberate but tense. His participation in the funeral procession is a performance of loyalty, masking his internal conflict—his knowledge of Wicks’ secrets and his own complicity in the conspiracy. The presence of the identical pine box beside Wicks’ coffin unnerves him, a silent reminder of the lies he is entangled in.
- • To maintain the facade of loyalty to Wicks and the church, avoiding suspicion.
- • To avoid drawing attention to his own role in the conspiracy, particularly regarding the hidden diamond and Wicks’ resurrection.
- • That his participation in the funeral will buy him time to distance himself from the fallout of Wicks’ plans.
- • That the church’s power structures are fragile, and his own survival depends on navigating them carefully.
Contemplative and increasingly uneasy, his faith in Wicks’ divinity wavering. The sermon’s cryptic references gnaw at him, planting seeds of doubt beneath his performative loyalty.
Lee Ross carries the coffin with a mix of reverence and unease, his rugged exterior belying a growing skepticism. The sight of the identical pine box unsettles him, a detail that clashes with the sermon’s grandiosity. His participation is mechanical, his mind likely racing with questions about Wicks’ resurrection and the ‘wealth of his kingdom’—hints that challenge his blind loyalty.
- • To maintain the appearance of loyalty while privately questioning Wicks’ motives.
- • To uncover the truth behind the identical pine box and the sermon’s hidden meanings.
- • That Wicks’ resurrection is not divine but a carefully staged deception.
- • That the church’s secrets are a ticking time bomb, and his own survival depends on navigating them carefully.
Solemn and subdued, their emotions a mix of genuine mourning and unease. They are a flock under the thumb of a shepherd they both revere and fear, their silence a testament to their collective complicity.
The Congregation, represented by the townsfolk carrying the coffin, moves in solemn unison, their collective silence reinforcing Wicks’ control. Their participation in the funeral is both a ritual and a display of submission, their faces a mix of grief, fear, and blind faith. The presence of the identical pine box goes unremarked, a detail lost on them—or deliberately ignored—as Wicks’ voice booms from outside, binding them further to his narrative.
- • To uphold the traditions of the church and honor Wicks, despite their private doubts.
- • To avoid challenging the status quo, fearing the consequences of dissent.
- • That Wicks’ death is part of a divine plan, and their loyalty will be rewarded.
- • That questioning the church’s leadership would invite chaos and personal ruin.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Monsignor Wicks’ pine coffin is carried into the crypt by Jud, Doctor Nat, Lee, and the townsfolk, its presence a focal point of the funeral procession. The coffin is placed beside an identical, unopened pine box—a deliberate mirroring that foreshadows deception and the staged nature of Wicks’ death. The coffin’s symbolic weight is amplified by Wicks’ disembodied sermon, which frames the burial as part of a larger, divine narrative. Its placement in the crypt is both a ritual and a clue, hinting at the conspiracy beneath the surface.
The identical pine box sits unopened beside Wicks’ coffin in the crypt, its presence a silent but deliberate clue. Its exact duplication of Wicks’ coffin foreshadows the deception at the heart of the funeral—Wicks’ staged death and resurrection. The box’s unopened state creates tension, inviting speculation about its contents (possibly Prentice’s remains or the hidden diamond) and its role in the conspiracy. Its placement beside the coffin is a visual metaphor for the duality of Wicks’ narrative: death and rebirth, truth and lies.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The crypt of Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude serves as the claustrophobic, underground heart of the funeral, its stone walls and dim light amplifying the tension of the moment. The pallbearers carry Wicks’ coffin into this sacred space, where it is placed beside the identical pine box—a juxtaposition that underscores the deception unfolding. The crypt’s atmosphere is one of solemnity and unease, the air thick with the weight of ritual and the unspoken questions surrounding Wicks’ death. Outside, Wicks’ sermon echoes, transforming the crypt from a place of mourning into a stage for his messianic performance.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude is the institutional backbone of the funeral, its rituals and hierarchies dictating the proceedings. The congregation’s participation in carrying the coffin and the sermon’s delivery from Wicks (even in death) reinforce the church’s authority and the messianic narrative it has constructed around him. The crypt, as a sacred space, underscores the church’s control over life, death, and resurrection—both literal and metaphorical. The presence of the identical pine box, however, hints at the church’s complicity in deception, a crack in its facade of divine infallibility.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"WICKS (O.S.): "For behold though he is struck down, the righteous Son of God will rise again! Eve's apple restored to the tree and the wealth of his kingdom and his rising reign,""