What do you mean by “goes to check on them”? I just meant he could set aside an hour every Sunday to cast “view-of-space, view-of-sky, view-of-dirt, view-of-magma, view-of-ocean” for five seconds each. Presumably the spell would fail or something if the viewpoint Horcrux had been destroyed.
ETA: Quirrell states to Harry (so take with an entire shaker of salt, but still) that the spell takes a lot out of him to cast, so he couldn’t cast it again “today, or tomorrow either”. Even assuming that’s true, that just imposes a three-day break between individual checks, so the longest a Horcrux would go unexamined would be two weeks. Or he could leave the Spacecrux out of the usual lineup because it’s relatively unreachable, just check it on special occasions (and to show off for Harry).
What do you mean by “goes to check on them”? I just meant he could set aside an hour every Sunday to cast “view-of-space, view-of-sky, view-of-dirt, view-of-magma, view-of-ocean” for five seconds each. Presumably the spell would fail or something if the viewpoint Horcrux had been destroyed.
ETA: Quirrell states to Harry (so take with an entire shaker of salt, but still) that the spell takes a lot out of him to cast, so he couldn’t cast it again “today, or tomorrow either”. Even assuming that’s true, that just imposes a three-day break between individual checks, so the longest a Horcrux would go unexamined would be two weeks. Or he could leave the Spacecrux out of the usual lineup because it’s relatively unreachable, just check it on special occasions (and to show off for Harry).
That’s the type of thing I was referring to with “goes to check on them”, I didn’t mean to imply that he moved his physical body.
Dualism makes for stupid problems with grammar.