Active Users:163 Time:17/05/2024 05:23:42 AM
Also, he's trying to press the issue with Charity. Cannoli Send a noteboard - 09/01/2011 02:50:18 AM
I know there isn't a worldwide black magic detector- that's why Harry's assertion that another Warden would definitely investigate and find Molly's handiwork seemed a bit bizzare.

There are never other Wardens poking around Chicago, checking on Harry's work.

You could handwave it by saying "Oh, the Gatekeeper knew there was black magic here, so he'd get suspicious if he didn't hear anything." But if the black magic just stopped, he'd probably just assume it had something to do with the Arctis Tor assault, or the Black Council (if he even knows about the BC, but he's pretty on the ball. He's either aware of it or on it)



It makes for a better story this way, so I'm not that annoyed by it. But it does seem like a bit of a plot hole. Remember, if Harry hadn't accidentally glanced at (what was his name? Nathan?) he wouldn't have even suspected Nathan had been mind-tampered.


When Harry is talking to Charity about Molly turning herself in, he says that there are things in the Nevernever that can sense black magic, and that they had already tipped off the White Council about it. So if Harry hadn't done anything, the White Council is going to wonder why the regional commander of the Wardens isn't investigating a use of black magic. In that case, other Wardens probably would come in and start investigating.


I think what Harry was doing was trying to impress on Charity the need to make a clean breast. Thinking of the immediate issue, she might have been right that Molly could get away with it, but that was not viable in the long-term. For a mother facing the possibility of her daughter's execution is much worse than a nebulous danger down the road, that she cannot really grasp, being warned of by a man she reflexively mistrusts especially where her loved ones' safety is concerned. No matter how certain Molly's fall to darkness might have been if they hid her from the Council, that is a problem for tomorrow, and infinitely preferable to the suggestion that she surrender her daughter for a capital trial today.
For someone with a more objective viewpoint, however, Molly needed to stand trial. Having already started down the path of black magic, and attracted the attention of powerful dark entities of the Nevernever, the only hope she had was staying on the straight and narrow. She needed the supervision of a proper wizard with the strength and proper magical training to protect her from her own worst impulses until she gained enough control and maturity to sink or swim on her own. An underground apprenticeship and attempt to stay off the Council's radar would almost certainly lead her to full blown warlock-hood, and even if it did not, as she grew in power and ability she would eventually come to their attention one way or another and in such a circumstance, even the scant mercy she did receive would never have been offered. Look at the career of Elaine as an example: she did not have Molly's taint, and was forced to take refuge with the faeries and induced to assist in a plot to drasticaly upset the balance of power in the supernatural world. Even Harry himself had to turn to the Leanansidhe to survive Justin's attempt to exploit him, and does not seem all that sanguine about his chances of survival without the sponsorship and tutelage of Ebenezer. Even if Molly never again violated one of the Laws, and still managed to evade the notice of the Council, how long before something worse tried to exploit her as Justin, Lea and Aurora took advantage to attempted to take advantage of Harry & Elaine?

Note too, that Forthill, whose obligations as a priest were first to the Carpenters, no matter how highly he might think of Harry (and he would almost certainly pick Michael over Harry every time anyway), supported Harry's position despite his presumptive lack of knowledge about the Council and their inner workings. That almost certainly means that he felt it was the best choice for Molly's moral and spiritual well-being, regardless of the issues of getting away with it or not.

While Harry's statement might have been factually incorrect about the immediate disposition of Molly's offenses, for all intents and purposes, he was right that she could not get away with it forever, and would certainly face a fate as bad or worse than what she might get from the Council if she surrendered at that point.
Cannoli
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*
Reply to message
/Dresden Files: I think Proven Guilty is the weakest of the "newer" books - Beware SPOILERS - 06/01/2011 05:07:23 PM 566 Views
I liked Proven Guilty - spoilers - 06/01/2011 09:11:56 PM 470 Views
Is it Wight or White? - 07/01/2011 02:37:10 AM 460 Views
It's White *NM* - 07/01/2011 06:36:32 AM 241 Views
Re: /Dresden Files: I think Proven Guilty is the weakest of the "newer" books - Beware SPOILERS - 08/01/2011 12:46:26 AM 550 Views
The "black magic detector" - 08/01/2011 09:39:47 AM 510 Views
Re: The "black magic detector" - 08/01/2011 07:41:18 PM 526 Views
Also, he's trying to press the issue with Charity. - 09/01/2011 02:50:18 AM 506 Views

Reply to Message