12-07-2016, 10:23 AM
(12-07-2016, 09:19 AM)irukandji Wrote:Like the idea of a enchanted ring and surprise I agree with that, but there will be a way to break it or a power like Diana, Eve , or the relic.(12-07-2016, 09:07 AM)Adriano Neres Rodrigues Wrote:(12-07-2016, 08:01 AM)irukandji Wrote:(12-07-2016, 07:48 AM)brandon Wrote: I think not. Sean aware that she is not interested in so. I do think make a proposition. Maybe before if she would have interested.before that was why society thought.you do not have to get married because you' re going to have a child. Would the mother's Adalind be married? I think not in part because of his character besides that she would prefer to be free.
This isn't a matter of preferences or interest. Grimm is a fantasy.
Conrad told her she was a princess and slipped a ring on her finger.
Adalind's not a princess by blood so there's only one thing left and that would be by marriage.
The question on my mind now is, if Adalind attempts to marry Nick, what will happen?
As you posted this in two threads, I will answer in both but with different perspectives…
Here I will focus the rule. When Adelaind put a spell on Hank Nick had to kill the Adelaind’s hexanbiest spirit to free Hank from the spell. It was never well explained how that rule really worked. So we end up with questions here:
Conrad is dead. Can we assume his zauberbiest is also dead? If that is case, is the ring still cursed? Or maybe Conrad died but not his spirit. How do deal with his spell in this case?
The rules of magic in grimm are not very well defined.
I have been giving this some thought, probably way more thought than Grimm ever would. First, Conrad may not have put the spell on the ring. I have often wondered if Diana isn't behind this. She was the one who used a spell via her dolls to get Adalind and Sean together in the first place.
I have also wondered if perhaps the ring is just enchanted, period and no one can break the spell. A hexenbiest version of the stick, so to speak.