by Mistress Siana » Wednesday 27 July 2005 4:11:23am
I've thought the hole thing through again from yet another point of view: That of Voldemort. It might be a bit long, but please bear with me, I think I came to an interesting but scary conclusion.
Firstly, we know how incredibly vain Voldemort is. He believes himself to be the greatest wizard that ever existed, one who went further exploring Dark Magic than anyone else, and yet he failed to defeat Dumbledore in their duel at the MoM. His Death Eaters already guessed that Draco wasn't really meant to succeed, but was Snape? I honestly doubt that Lord Voldemort, with all his megalomania, would have thought Snape capable of fulfilling a task he himself has failed at. And personally, I don't think that, under normal circumstances - that means without DD being weakened - Snape would have stood a chance. I think that, during their duel, Voldemort must have come to the conclusion that there was only one person that could defeat Dumbledore: Dumbledore himself. And Voldemort must have seen what, in his eyes, was Dumbledore's greatest weakness, namely his nobility, his willingness to sacrifice his own life for the course. When Dumbledore told him that death was nothing, he immediately reacted by challenging him to prove it and kill Harry in order to kill him, Voldemort. I believe that Voldemort must have come to the conclusion that the only way to get rid of Dumbledore was to set up a scenario that would make Dumbledore sacrifice himself for someone else. You can see that this is the way Voldemort thinks by the way he used Harry's feelings for Sirius to lure him into the DoM.
Now, he needed someone DD trusted, someone so valuable in DD's eyes that he, under certain circumstances, would chose that person's life over his own; and seeing how things turned out last time Voldemort used Harry, preferably somebody else this time. This is where Snape comes in.
I honestly wonder what Wormtail was in this book for, other than to show that the Dark Lord does not trust Snape. The rat, *assisting* Snape? Of course...especially considering his habit to listen at doors. So, shouldn't we assume that Wormtail told Voldemort about Narcissa and Bella's visit, and depending on how much he heard, the Vow? And wouldn't Voldemort react to such an act of treachery if he wasn't up to something else?
On explaning his behaviour to Bellatrix, Snape asks: "Do you really think that, had I not been able to give satisfactory answers, I would be sitting here talking to you?"
Well, actually, I dare to say the answer is yes. Think about it! If I were Lord Voldemort and if I knew that my favourite Death Eater had betrayed me and run off to my worst enemy, what would I do? Would I kill him in an instant? No, I'd rather use the fact that Dumbledore trusts him unconditionally for my own advantage. I'd find his greatest weakness, his soft spot, and use it against him, I'd find a way to control him and be at my mercy, I'd make him pay, make him regret he ever betrayed me and make DD regret he ever trusted him, I'd take everything he has away from him - and then, I'd kill him.
Seeing that the Malfoys are very clearly a soft spot of Snape's, can't it have been that what Voldemort was up to: Revenge on Snape, rather than Lucius? If it was only to punish Lucius, it would have been far wiser to just kill Draco. Sending Draco after DD but expecting him to fail was a rather stupid thing to do, because it would alert DD to Voldemort's plan to kill him now rather than chasing after Harry. And DD of course is not stupid, it was only too logical that Snape was Voldemort's "plan B" should Draco fail. And Voldemort, a second class strategist? I don't buy that.
Now, take those two points - the realisation that only Dumbledore himself can defeat Dumbledore and the revenge on Snape -, combine them and you have the perfect plan. If Snape has a soft spot, I think it's clearly the Malfoys. You can tell that by the way he flinches when Harry accuses Lucius of being a Death Eater (GoF), by the obvious mutual affection between him and Narcissa and the quite un-snapish patience with which he treats Draco. So...lean back, count on Snape not willing to stand aside and watch as Draco is sacrificed to hurt Lucius, count on Snape confiding in dear Dumbledore, count on Dumbledore heroically sacrificing himself for his precious spy and an innocent boy, and you'll get everything you ever wanted. And even if things go wrong, you don't really have anything to lose. If Draco dies, you at least have you revenge on Lucius, if Snape dies, so what?
Now that sounds more like Voldemort, I think. The Vow was very convenient, but it might have worked without it, too. Or perhaps Voldemort knows Narcissa well enough to know what she would be doing.
Anyway, I think Voldemort used Snape deliberately to make Dumbledore sacrifice himself. And thinking about it...as I don't really buy Lord "I do not forgive" Voldemort's unshakable trust in Snape, I can very well see him kill Snape after he's fulfilled his purpose.
Possible or far-fetched?