Quote:There was nothing dumb about how Adalind used Hank to get Nick to bring her the key. The only dumb part was biting his lib. She know Nick could not kill her or it would kill Hank. She never expected Sean to protected her from Nick. until face off Nick was not even suppose to knew Sean knew Adalind.I wasn’t referring to the mechanics of her method. I was referring to her naïve belief that Renard would stand by her once the spell ran it’s course. Renard calculated every move to ensure he’d get the key while his identity remained hidden. And despite his obvious intentions, Adalind clung to his empty words rather than face the reality that he was using her.
Quote:At no time has Adalind ever been afraid of Nick. Even during the fight Adalind was holding her own against Nick. Even when he pinned her down Adalind was playing with him.I haven’t watched their fight scene since it aired, but I remember Adalind getting her whiny ass kicked by a novice Grimm then crying all the way home.
Quote:How was Adalind dumb going after Juliette. She had no idea the Juliette was a hexenbiest. What was dumb was once Juliette threw Adalind across the room, for Adalind to continue to fight.You’re referring to S4, I was referencing the cat-scratch spell after Nick killed Adalind’s Hexenbiest. At that point, Adalind had zero reasons to protect Renard and every reason to protect her own best interest. But naïve and immature, Adalind never betrayed Renard and only made things worse for herself.
Quote:There is no way she would go after Sean. No matter how much Sean hates his family he has their protection. After face off Nick was off limits.That Adalind can’t manage covering her tracks in order to take out Renard or at least hurt him, shows that she’s naïve, immature, and unable to take charge of her life. Adalind accomplished the cat-scratch spell without her Hexenbiest. There’s no reason to assume she couldn’t repeat the love spell without her Hexenbiest. She could have found a random stranger, completed the spell, and sent him to gun down Renard.
But she didn’t do anything to eliminate the person responsible for her predicament. Instead, she ran to the Royals. Naïve, immature, unable to take charge of her life, and sadly, the dumb blonde stereotype. And nothing's really changed. Adalind is as content to blindly follow Nick as she was Renard.
"If my devils are to leave me, I am afraid my angels will take flight as well." Rainer Maria Rilke