Yeah, I agree. She did ask Esmer about the urviles, but of course his answers are ever so cryptic. She was continuing to ask herself about these things, to keep her eyes open and see what's happening to try to descry the truth. The problem for her was that she was firstly blinded by Jeremiah's presence and the dire need to free him from the Despiser's torture (or so she then believed). Second, all that's happening in the Land these days is just so confusing. There are so many players with power, it was difficult for her to keep it all straight, to nail down a hard answer to a desprerate question. She was trying, but she was just not adequate in and of herself to figure it out. But then, that's what this LC is about largely--Linden Avery still having something to say about the redemptive potential of inadequacy.First she failed to question the false puzzlement of the Demondim, even though she recognized it clearly. She failed to ask why the evil ur-viles are helping her at every desperate need. She failed to ask why Covenant/Roger was not affected by Berek's touch of Earthpower. And so on.
You know, I've been thinking more and more about Unbelief. In the first Chronicles, it was extantly the key to unraveling Lord Foul's malice. In the Second Chronicles, it didn't really play that much of an overt part, but was still present in the undertones of TC's actions. Linden's going to have to come to her own Unbelief about all this situation. (Where's lurch? would like him to chime in here about surreality/unreality and how they're connected!) We haven't heard the last of Unbelief; it'll play an important role before this is all said and done.Again, I ask WWCD? What would Covenant do? In the long run, his methods never failed him, even when he didn't know he was applying any method except Unbelief.
Unbelief is the key to unraveling Despite.
And as for her choice to keep her unbelief about Roger and Jeremiah to herself until that culminating moment deep within Melenkurion Skyweir, I don't see that she had much choice. She didn't have anybody to confide in. I thought her choice of Commands from the Earthblood was quite sensible; it was the one way she could find the truth that she needed. But with Commanding Earthblood, there's always some backlash. Her heart was transformed into stone, hardened against crumbling in the despair of learning, seeing the truth of her son's plight. And the staff was altered as well, turned black as a result of her expression of railing against despite. The Staff's transformation and her's in those moments are one.