Narrative Connection
How these two moments in the story relate
Why These Connect
The narrative assertion
"Jane Rochford's role shifts from silent enabler of Anne's paranoia (handing her the beheaded drawing) to active, pragmatic advisor in the Boleyn crisis (suggesting Anne flee to Kent)."
inferred by llm_cross_episode_character
Why This Matters Across Episodes
The longer arc this connection carries
Jane Rochford's trajectory from passive observer of Anne's fears to a vocal, self-preserving participant in family strategy reveals her growing disillusionment and independence, foreshadowing her eventual betrayal.
About Character Continuity Connections
A character's state in A evolves into their state in B. The same person, changed by time-- tracking how experience shapes identity across the narrative.