You've probably already thought of this in mentioning "alternative explanation" so forgive me if I'm mansplaining, but in this new "Hoard" version it is the loss of the Girdle, whether it collapsed or was removed, that set up the circumstances in which Thingol was killed, not, as you note, his death which motivates Melian to remove the Girdle or, more likely, to leave Doriath causing the Girdle to fall.Eldy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 08, 2022 5:33 pm if (like me) you're inclined to interpret her as a sovereignty goddess of sorts, whose significance to Doriath lay largely in the conferring of authority upon the now-former King. ... Melian couldn't do much for Doriath after Thingol's death, since otherwise her abandoning the realm to its fate sits poorly with me. On the other hand, if the significance of the dragon's curse really was that great, it could provide an alternative explanation.
The dragon-curse caused Thingol to become a different person than he had been and to act in a way - and it must be recognized that it didn't possess him, but merely worked upon proclivities already within him - in which he forfeited the authority that Melian had conferred upon him. We can't know just how pervasive and long-lasting the dragon-curse was, but there's reason to believe that once the dragon-sickness has been contracted that it might be permanent. Having become unworthy of Melian's authority, he was already "dead to her" before he was actually slain and, according to your idea, her purpose in Doriath was ended.
This is really getting speculative, but one reason she didn't take the news of the Ruin and death of Thingol to Beren and Lúthien could have been that she was already gone from Doriath and on her way back to Aman before the Dwarf-host even invaded. Indeed, it could have been her departure that caused the Girdle to fall, not a specific act of removal on her part.