On top of that, she didn’t consult with anyone, because of the mind-reading issue.
I think this is the thing that bothers me most about Bella’s plan. It’s plot-induced stupidity (but I don’t blame Alicorn for it, since Meyer came up with Aro’s power). If Bella vocalized or wrote down her plan, even once, I find it hard to believe she wouldn’t have subconsciously examined its assumptions and been struck by its idiocy. Maybe that benefit is particular to me- I find the moment I try to explain my thoughts to someone, the holes become readily visible in a way they wouldn’t be if I just examined them myself- but I imagine many people experience that.
If Edward weren’t lovestruck (and/or optimistic), he might have warned Bella “look, I trust you, but just in case you’re planning to make Aro, the guy we’ve been talking about, unhappy in any way, he has the experience and the history and the malice necessary to ruin all of our lives. Don’t mess with Aro.”
If Alice weren’t blocked by the La Push shapeshifters, then she might have noticed horrible events on the horizon when Bella decides to activate the werewolves. “Bella, is there a reason I suddenly can’t envision myself?” Not sure about the future-blocking and the temporal range of Alice’s visions, but it seems likely she would note blankness spreading from Bella to everyone and say “hey, Bella, what’s going on?”
It seems likely, from the way it works in canon at least, that Alice would be able to figure out something horrible is going to happen- she sees Bella jump off a cliff (and doesn’t see Jacob catching Bella). Similarly, she might see Bella burning in a pit (but not Leah hunting Bella), but the similarities there are somewhat strained.
(Also, sudden thought: what if the “this one” they killed was Alice? Seems tremendously unlikely- Edward is the only one the follow-up statement makes sense for- but isn’t contradicted by any evidence so far.)
Useful concept. On analysis, I find that a lot of my own stupidity occurs because, if I had thought it out a bit more, my more rational choices would spoil the dramatic narrative that I construct by behaving more intuitively and less rationally.
Edward is the only one the follow-up statement makes sense for
It also makes sense for Irina. She would be dead set on eradicating the very useful new servants of the Volturi, a sufficient reason to kill her. I haven’t read the Twilight books but I think that in canon they kill her for wasting their time.
I’m also fairly sure Irina was the one burned above the pit. Alicorn provided many hints that Edward may still be alive: he is never mentioned after Bella is shredded by the wolves; Bella can find none of his jewellery, in the ashes or anywhere else; Bella’s widowed depression is by comparison far from as extreme as Jasper’s, Marcus’ or even Irina’s.
Bella’s widowed depression is by comparison far from as extreme as Jasper’s, Marcus’ or even Irina’s.
This is not to be taken as evidence for Edward’s survival. Vampires do not have mate-sensing ESP above and beyond their normal ability to detect the world around them.
I was under the impression it was for the more serious offense of bearing false witness, but really, those are just different ways to spin the same thing.
I think this is the thing that bothers me most about Bella’s plan. It’s plot-induced stupidity (but I don’t blame Alicorn for it, since Meyer came up with Aro’s power). If Bella vocalized or wrote down her plan, even once, I find it hard to believe she wouldn’t have subconsciously examined its assumptions and been struck by its idiocy. Maybe that benefit is particular to me- I find the moment I try to explain my thoughts to someone, the holes become readily visible in a way they wouldn’t be if I just examined them myself- but I imagine many people experience that.
If Edward weren’t lovestruck (and/or optimistic), he might have warned Bella “look, I trust you, but just in case you’re planning to make Aro, the guy we’ve been talking about, unhappy in any way, he has the experience and the history and the malice necessary to ruin all of our lives. Don’t mess with Aro.”
If Alice weren’t blocked by the La Push shapeshifters, then she might have noticed horrible events on the horizon when Bella decides to activate the werewolves. “Bella, is there a reason I suddenly can’t envision myself?” Not sure about the future-blocking and the temporal range of Alice’s visions, but it seems likely she would note blankness spreading from Bella to everyone and say “hey, Bella, what’s going on?”
It seems likely, from the way it works in canon at least, that Alice would be able to figure out something horrible is going to happen- she sees Bella jump off a cliff (and doesn’t see Jacob catching Bella). Similarly, she might see Bella burning in a pit (but not Leah hunting Bella), but the similarities there are somewhat strained.
(Also, sudden thought: what if the “this one” they killed was Alice? Seems tremendously unlikely- Edward is the only one the follow-up statement makes sense for- but isn’t contradicted by any evidence so far.)
Upvoted for the phrase “plot-induced stupidity”.
Useful concept. On analysis, I find that a lot of my own stupidity occurs because, if I had thought it out a bit more, my more rational choices would spoil the dramatic narrative that I construct by behaving more intuitively and less rationally.
Plot Induced Stupidity is a trope.
Dooohhh!
Does that mean I should take back my upvote? But it seemed so right to make a big deal of how cool the phrase was.
It also makes sense for Irina. She would be dead set on eradicating the very useful new servants of the Volturi, a sufficient reason to kill her. I haven’t read the Twilight books but I think that in canon they kill her for wasting their time.
I’m also fairly sure Irina was the one burned above the pit. Alicorn provided many hints that Edward may still be alive: he is never mentioned after Bella is shredded by the wolves; Bella can find none of his jewellery, in the ashes or anywhere else; Bella’s widowed depression is by comparison far from as extreme as Jasper’s, Marcus’ or even Irina’s.
He only had the one ring.
This is not to be taken as evidence for Edward’s survival. Vampires do not have mate-sensing ESP above and beyond their normal ability to detect the world around them.
I was under the impression it was for the more serious offense of bearing false witness, but really, those are just different ways to spin the same thing.