And since we know no one has the idiot ball, that suggests that the fealty vow (or possibly wedding vow) to Harry was totally unexpected. My impression was that the Wizengamot was stunned by the events.
what McGonagall did was a totally obvious solution to every wizard in the room except Harry; everyone in the room not on Malfoy’s side probably even came in expecting Lucius to extract this fealty vow or something similar from Hermione
Yes, they expected Lucius to extract something similar from Hermione. They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
I meant that it should have occurred to everyone immediately after Lucius’s statement ”...The girl is no part of House Potter...”
True. Maybe they were just so stunned by everything.
On the other hand, Lucius gets 100,000 gold and Potter in his debt, which apparently gives him some kind of control. And maybe he realized Hermione wasn’t the actual killer, but couldn’t back down at that point because he’d lose face. So it’s not like he ends up with a bad deal.
Alternatively, if he thinks Harry is his real enemy and Hermione just a minion, maybe having Harry in his debt is just as good as putting Hermione in the clank, according to his utility function.
And since we know no one has the idiot ball, that suggests that the fealty vow (or possibly wedding vow) to Harry was totally unexpected. My impression was that the Wizengamot was stunned by the events.
Yes, they expected Lucius to extract something similar from Hermione. They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
I meant that it should have occurred to everyone immediately after Lucius’s statement ”...The girl is no part of House Potter...”
True. Maybe they were just so stunned by everything.
On the other hand, Lucius gets 100,000 gold and Potter in his debt, which apparently gives him some kind of control. And maybe he realized Hermione wasn’t the actual killer, but couldn’t back down at that point because he’d lose face. So it’s not like he ends up with a bad deal.
Alternatively, if he thinks Harry is his real enemy and Hermione just a minion, maybe having Harry in his debt is just as good as putting Hermione in the clank, according to his utility function.