[She looks at her and then shakes her head a little, vaguely dismissive, slightly superior.]
You can't see? Getting rid of her would fix nothing, because there's nothing to say that if she was gone anything would change. What would, or could, I think, fix things is to make her change her mind.
In the end, all that matters of people is what they choose to do. Who or where they are is less important than what they decide, in most cases.
This situation is all her fault, maybe, we don't know how much of it is the fault of her servant, but she is the one who can probably do something about it. Getting rid of her cat would be more likely to fix everything than getting rid of her, I think. Either way she'll need to face responsibility sooner or later.
no subject
You can't see? Getting rid of her would fix nothing, because there's nothing to say that if she was gone anything would change. What would, or could, I think, fix things is to make her change her mind.
In the end, all that matters of people is what they choose to do. Who or where they are is less important than what they decide, in most cases.
This situation is all her fault, maybe, we don't know how much of it is the fault of her servant, but she is the one who can probably do something about it. Getting rid of her cat would be more likely to fix everything than getting rid of her, I think. Either way she'll need to face responsibility sooner or later.