Let $A$ be the $\mathbb{C}$-algebra generated by elements $i,j$ with relations $i^2=j^2=0$ and $ij=-ji$, i.e. we have $A=\mathbb{C}\oplus\mathbb{C}i\oplus\mathbb{C}j\oplus\mathbb{C}ij$.
Let $\mathcal{B}\mathcal{S}(A): Sch_{\mathbb{C}}^{op}\rightarrow Sets$ be the functor that sends the $\mathbb{C}$-scheme $X$ to the set of left ideals $I\subset A\otimes\mathcal{O}_X$ such that $(A\otimes\mathcal{O}_X)/I$ is a locally free sheaf of rank 2 on $X$. Then this functor is representable by a $\mathbb{C}$-scheme $BS(A)$.
Why is $BS(A)$ given by the double line $Proj(\mathbb{C}[u,v,w]/(w^2))$?
I see that we have a $\mathbb{P}^1$ lurking around: if $I$ is an ideal in $A$ such that $A/I$ is of dimension 2, then $I$ cannot contain elements from the copy $\mathbb{C}$ because $i$ and $j$ are nilpotent. Also because of the relations, every ideal needs to contain $ij$ and hence the whole copy $\mathbb{C}ij$. So it remains to find a one dimensional subspace in the two dimensional space $\mathbb{C}i\oplus\mathbb{C}j$, whch is parametrized by a $\mathbb{P}^1$.
But I don't see where the non-reduced structure comes from. Does any one see this? I found the claim, that $BS(A)$ is the double line in Lemma 7.11 in the article [1], where it just says "we know that BS(A) is the double line", without proof. Or is this obvious?