Quirrell is cold. It looks like he gave Rita Skeeter a tip that something would be happening in Mary’s Room so that she’d go there as a beetle and he could (literally) crush her. Is Harry going to start to figure him out (like he did with Draco after his reaction to that other newspaper headline)?
Also, does anyone know if Q/V’s habit of whistling/humming a tune (appearing in both chp. 25 & 26) is based on something in canon? It sounds like a tell, when his plotting against Skeeter/Potter is going according to plan, but I’m wondering if there’s anything more to it.
I don’t know about the canon, but the narrator calls it a ‘small tune’ or ‘little tune’, so I’d guess it’s the Little Fugue in G Minor which Eliezer’s mentioned several times here.
The idea appealed to me because it meant you were protesting that the villain was not an author mouthpiece at the same time as he was whistling your favourite piece of music while contemplating murder. As an act of contrariness, it would’ve been of a kind with writing “colder than zero Kelvin” when you were still arguing with the reviewers who didn’t get the “divided by zero” joke.
Chapters 25 & 26
Quirrell is cold. It looks like he gave Rita Skeeter a tip that something would be happening in Mary’s Room so that she’d go there as a beetle and he could (literally) crush her. Is Harry going to start to figure him out (like he did with Draco after his reaction to that other newspaper headline)?
Also, does anyone know if Q/V’s habit of whistling/humming a tune (appearing in both chp. 25 & 26) is based on something in canon? It sounds like a tell, when his plotting against Skeeter/Potter is going according to plan, but I’m wondering if there’s anything more to it.
I don’t know about the canon, but the narrator calls it a ‘small tune’ or ‘little tune’, so I’d guess it’s the Little Fugue in G Minor which Eliezer’s mentioned several times here.
You don’t think it’s a canon?
In fanfiction? Not likely.
Perhaps it’s Pachelbel’s canon in D. ;-)
...I am not sure if Professor Quirrell whistles Bach. I shall have to think about it.
The idea appealed to me because it meant you were protesting that the villain was not an author mouthpiece at the same time as he was whistling your favourite piece of music while contemplating murder. As an act of contrariness, it would’ve been of a kind with writing “colder than zero Kelvin” when you were still arguing with the reviewers who didn’t get the “divided by zero” joke.