Thank you, thank you. (Bows) The only thing I missed was the Horcrux aspect of the equation, but I knew there would be something in there that made the idea of Dumbledore ordering Snape to kill him (and in the end, pleading) make perfect sense.
As soon as I read Chapter Two, I knew I was right. It was an enormously satisfying thought, not to mention all the articulate, eloquent Snape we got in that chapter. Among other things, it almost made me want to kill off Lucius and ship Snape/Narcissa.
The book was definitely wicked, I just got finished reading it (I had to wait to pry it out of my kids hands since he slept with it last night). All I can say is OMG, but... your theory does make so much sense.
Look to the posts done just after this one. I figured it was easier to answer over here than to muck through all the responses on RJ's other posts.
She basically breaks it down to thinking that Dumbledore made Snape do the dirty deed because of a pledge or a plan. Snape is still an evil git, but at least his not an un-redeemable evil git.
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You were so right.
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As soon as I read Chapter Two, I knew I was right. It was an enormously satisfying thought, not to mention all the articulate, eloquent Snape we got in that chapter. Among other things, it almost made me want to kill off Lucius and ship Snape/Narcissa.
Need more Snape icons now.
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I'm looking forward to Book Seven so much. :)
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She basically breaks it down to thinking that Dumbledore made Snape do the dirty deed because of a pledge or a plan. Snape is still an evil git, but at least his not an un-redeemable evil git.
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Erm. *hands it over*
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