@eva4hidden @ _thestranger_
@icekatze @RainEStar @thyraclyne
I feel like the discussion is getting tangled because we are trying to debate different topics like modern vs. Medival social aspects, law vs. Justice vs. Morality, etc. I also feel like there are some vital nuances you are missing, as well as some unsupported assumptions you are making. I will try to address them but i am on a phone...
I find many of
@icekatze 's statements to be flawed and unconvincing. Yes, teens can definetly be intelligent and heroic, and certainly have an understanding of what is wrong. However, in this situation she didnt know what the right course of action was. She wasnt malicious, and we know that she was emotionally distressed and conflicted. There is no evidence that she put her family in danger, but we know she believed that if she didnt kidnap the kid right then, then her sick/dying brother would not get the expensive medicine he needed to live. Not only that but she believed that there was a threat to her mother. There is no evidence that she believed that she would "get away" with it, just that she didnt know she was to going with the kid. For all we know she was going to wait and confess (which is probably why they brought her along to prevent that from happening).
The long rehibilitation/not working with children doesnt make sense. I am not saying she is "exonerated," but that she was young, and in a situation in which she didnt know the right move. She either believed she was talking to her family or she was unable to talk to them, and didnt feel like she could turn to anyone who she worked for/with. If you think about it, she shouldnt have been in that situation to begin with. Even if she was an adult by that society, she was only fifteen, but the main nanny for a dukes daughter, in a kingdom that depends on the nobles magic power for survival. Not only that, but she is shown to be an outsider, and yet there were no support, and a lack of guards watching over her and the mc. I guess it shows how much the lords not caring about his daughter affected the servants if they became that complacent and careless. Hannah was unqualified and untrained for that position, and mostly was "successful" because she knew some of the basics of childcare and the baby had an adult mind. Heck the MC took advantage of that in order to sneak out and whatnot...
Hannah wasn't evil. Just a poor kid likely caught in up in the plots of nobles. Had she lived, she likely would have been traumatized by the whole ordeal. However, at the end, when she was exhausted, scared, and lost, she showed her character by sacrificing her own life for the child she cared for would have a sliver of a chance at surviving.