two niggling plot points
Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2005 12:33 pm
1) In WGW, either Linden or Covenant asks Findail why Foul hasn't simply awakened the Worm himself, to which Findail responds that, lacking the ring, Foul would be destroyed along with everyone else if the Worm awoke. Yet Findail also says that the point of Foul's machinations was to set up a no-win situation for Covenant facing the Worm, in which Covenant would either rouse the Worm or destroy the Arch defeating the worm. But only one of those scenarios (destruction of the Arch) would actually work out for Foul, according to Findail's own logic...
2) At the end of WGW, after Covenant has defeated Foul, Linden reaches for the ring but Findail says "Chosen, withhold!" and tries to reach the ring first. I had thought that in terms of the priorities of the Elohim, the best scenarios were 1) Linden has the ring, so she can merge vision and power, 2) Findail gets the ring, and 3) Covenant has the ring, but is silenced from exerting power. Now, given that scenario #1 was about to happen, was Findail actually acting in a way that was contrary to the will of the Elohim, and simply trying to save his own existence?
2) At the end of WGW, after Covenant has defeated Foul, Linden reaches for the ring but Findail says "Chosen, withhold!" and tries to reach the ring first. I had thought that in terms of the priorities of the Elohim, the best scenarios were 1) Linden has the ring, so she can merge vision and power, 2) Findail gets the ring, and 3) Covenant has the ring, but is silenced from exerting power. Now, given that scenario #1 was about to happen, was Findail actually acting in a way that was contrary to the will of the Elohim, and simply trying to save his own existence?