Subject: Outlines and Notes Part 1
Author:
Posted on: 2015-04-02 14:21:00 UTC

[commented for the convenience of readers who didn’t live in my head for the last two years; these expositionary comments aren’t actually a part of the real outline I would do if this weren’t for the workshop.]

Pre-mission
Hieronymus (and Androia’s?) first mission, sequel to First Encounter [which should be fleshed-out and ends with a BEEP]; or may start with fleshed-out version of "First Encounter”.

Wide-eyed "veteran" Androia Avatar [She has the advantage of having been a warrior and healer fighting demons in World of Warcraft before she was snatched out of the game. She may even have gathered some experience in training missions, if I find co-writers for these. But since she never did anything else, she is still trying to figure out what life, free-will and everything is about.]

Over-confident rookie Hieronymus [He pretends to remember everything he read in the archives, and to have seen everything that’s there. But he has no idea how it really feels to leave his reading chair and go on a mission to fight the Mary Sues.]

Neither is prepared to lead the team. [Androia was not designed to be a team player and she never made an important decision on her own (except joining the PPC, but even then she might have been talked into it). She doesn’t know how to lead. Hieronymus should have seen the reports of her training missions in the archives, where she probably mentioned that she hates the guy who manipulated her whole life in World of Warcraft. If this didn’t happen, he is at least not the jerkass of the badfic games and can imagine (non-capital "i") how she feels. Anyway, he believes that telling her what she should do would not help to win her trust and that actually only telling her that he is her creator would be worse.]

BEEP! Hieronymus checks Intelligence report, summarizes the fic’s first paragraph and suggests going in as random inhabitants of Hogsmeade. Androia agrees, programs Disguise Generator.

Mission: Breaking the Loop
(Numbers in parentheses refer to paragraphs of the badfic.)

(1) Decision: Skip, already summarized in pre-mission.
After the battle of Hogwarts, mourning in the Great Hall. Half-sentence flashback to Hermione kissing Ron, then scene shift to Harry lying on his bed.


  • I’m not sure how much this will throw the agents around until they realize that this just establishes Harry’s POV and we have seen his thoughts about the situation. [May bring some dynamic into a story mostly located in the dormitory, and Hieronymus’ reaction might be funny. But it doesn’t do much for the rest of the mission. Hieronymus’ first experience with such effects should be saved for another mission.]


(2 – 5) Enter the agents. Hide under Dean’s bed.
Harry and Hermione had left the Great Hall and went to their respective dormitories, but they cannot sleep, so Hermione visits Harry and occupies Ron’s bed. They chat for a while. Just before they doze off, an old woman appears in a bright silver light.

  • Hermione should be in the Great Hall with the Weasleys? Actually, the canon chapter ends with Harry, Ron and Hermione in the Headmasters office, Harry contemplating to go to bed, and to ask Kreacher to serve him a sandwich in the dorm.
  • H. and H. cannot see the agents arriving, but since "Rose" is a Sue, the agents should hide before she appears. Under a bed across the room from Harry and Ron’s beds? Dean’s bed, identified by the Westham United poster?


(6 – 9)
The Sue identifies as 143 years old Rose Weasley and claims that she used Hermione’s "notes to get back" in time because she wanted to talk to her parents.

  • No idea what this means. Did Hermione leave her daughter notes about time travel?
  • H. and H. are on the floor (rolled off their beds), wands drawn. Sue sits on Harry’s bed (She may or may not be facing the agent’s hiding place, depending on the layout of the dorm, which has not been described in canon, nor in the badfic. Pottermore, movies(?) and common sense suggest that the beds are arranged with bed-head at the wall of the circular(?) room and foot pointing to centre of room. My attempts to visualize H and H and the Sue’s positions and moves don’t make sense.
  • The badfic may suppose that the beds are lined up along the wall, H. and H. rolled off the sides of their respective beds towards the room’s centre, Sue is sitting on the side of Harry’s bed facing the room’s centre, Harry is in front of Sue and Hermione somewhere at his side. This layout doesn’t make much sense, because it doesn’t leave much space for windows, lockers and the like between beds, or it leaves an unnecessarily wide empty space in the centre of an unreasonably big room.
  • Actually, in this scenario it would have been better to stay on the beds, just drawing wand, rather than rolling off towards the potential danger (although it’s not entirely clear where the bright silver light appeared).
  • The agents may experience a transformation from what they expected to what the badfic supposed, when the word world realizes that common sense is not applicable. [I would try to draw maps, but learning how to post them here is too tedious.]


(10 – 14)
Rose-Sue begins with the Weasley-bashing and claims that Harry is her father. She talks in breathless run-on sentences, and this spills over to the narrative.

  • Reread check: was the narrative this way from the start? It starts bad and becomes worse.
  • How does this affect the agents? No idea, actually. There is not much narrative anyway, and playing with the badly defined environment is more fun,
  • Also, a misspelled Horcrux’s (meant to be plural) may give the agents something to do while they hide under the bed.
  • The room may still be a bit twitchy, unsure concerning its size and layout.
  • H and H sit now on either side of the Sue on Harry’s bed.
  • The agents try to get C-CAD readings, but the C-CAD doesn’t work (explained later).


(15 – 16)
Rose-Sue gets an armchair to sit now facing H and H on the bed, then announces that H and H will not like what she has to say.

  • She conveniently turns her back to the agents now.
  • The word world may decide to fill the room’s empty centre with a table and some assorted chairs never mentioned in canon.
  • Since Rose-Sue never turns to look at what’s behind her, the agents may leave their hiding place whenever it’s convenient to intersperse the sporking with some action.
  • Hieronymus will definitely prefer to sit at this convenient table while he writes the charge list.


(17 – 18) I have to quote this:
Harry and Hermione turned to look at each other; nodded and then turned back to listen to what Rose had to say.

"Can you please keep in mind what you just did, that talking with out words..."

  • Does she imply that Harry and Hermione did this in canon all the time, and that this is a sign of their true love? I thought I know my canon, but I don’t remember a single incident where this happened. (I do remember a scene in the third book where it happened with Harry and Ginny!) Unfortunately the Sue doesn’t quote canon lines I could argue with. Must I now reread the entire seven books to see whether she may have a point somewhere, or can I just charge her with blatantly lying about canon and be right because she doesn’t defend her position?


(18 – 19)
Rose-Sue claims that Harry, after seeing Hermione kissing Ron, was so devastated that he intended to commit suicide by Voldemort, because "he had no more reason to fight", and somehow she holds the Dursleys responsible for this, because Hermione of all people was too stupid and too un-empathic to understand how badly living with the Dursleys had affected Harry.

  • Canon check: Harry’s thought’s while he walked to his sacrifice. Agent Hieronymus would love to quote them at the Sue, if he finds the time to do it.
  • Alas he won’t.
  • Is this the place to joke about this version of Hermione having the emotional range of a tea spoon?


(20 – 21)
Rose-Sue claims that Harry doesn’t know how to show love, and that what he feels for Hermione is love, and that he couldn’t stand being touched by people, except Hermione, whose hand he hold every night while she was petrified.

  • This didn’t happen in CS, so she is blatantly lying about canon. Harry touched petrified Hermione just once, when he took the piece of parchment out of her hand.


(22)
Rose-Sue is foretelling the future now. "In the not to distant future" Rose will be conceived when Hermione and Harry will realise their "real true love" and promptly have sex. Hermione wrote about it in her journals, but she didn’t reveal what caused the big realisation. Harry asked Hermione to marry him. Also, Harry never asked Ginny, somehow she just pushed him into marriage.

  • Canon check: how old is Rose in the epilogue. I’m sure she should be conceived several years after the battle of Hogwarts. Since this probably doesn’t qualify as not too distant future, Rose-Sue probably isn’t the canonical Rose.
  • Obviously Stupid!Hermione didn’t consider that Ron might read her journal and find out that she slept with Harry. But aren’t you supposed to put your thoughts into your diary, not just a plain description of the day’s events? Why didn’t she say anything about how she and Harry realised their "real true love"? (Because Rose-Sue has no imagination and just wants it to happen, but that’s beside the point.)
  • Since we already established that Rose-Sue lies, I suppose that Hermione’s journals say actually nothing about the big realisation, because it will not happen. But since Rose-Sue exists, something must have happened, so the secret that Hermione doesn’t reveal in her journal is probably that she and Harry had sex and Harry asked her to marry him just because a time traveller had told them that this had to happen because it had already happened.
  • Also, I have some problems with tenses in these notes. We may need a Time-Lord to sort this out.


(23)
Further foretelling the future, Hermione, following a misguided sense of loyalty and obligation, will disregard her newly discovered "real true love" and marry Ron anyway, because she already promised and doesn’t want to hurt the Weasleys’ feelings.

  • Being a Gryffindor, Hermione should actually be guided by honour (she’s a sort of knight, right?), and her sense of honour might misguide her in a Victorian way. But I can’t blame her for being stupid here. A time traveller told her that she will marry Ron because it already happened in the future, and Hermione is not as stupid as to temper with history. (Time-Lords, help me!)

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