ParanetOnline

The Dresden Files => DF Spoilers => Topic started by: wildone654 on October 14, 2018, 05:11:36 PM

Title: Molly
Post by: wildone654 on October 14, 2018, 05:11:36 PM
So what's the deal with Molly and her new job? Is she still human? Does she still have a soul? Is she going to turn into a full fledged fairy?
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 14, 2018, 05:21:23 PM
So what's the deal with Molly and her new job? Is she still human? Does she still have a soul? Is she going to turn into a full fledged fairy?
Watch out. She is probably already Sidhe enough to seriously harm you if you call her fairy.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 14, 2018, 05:22:04 PM
From what I understand, the closest to answers we have from WOJ amount to:

1. *vague 'eh' hand gesture*
2. For now
3. *shrugging maybe?*
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 14, 2018, 05:27:47 PM
She did not suddenly lost her soul though, such things take time.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Paviel on October 14, 2018, 05:41:25 PM
And souls can be restored too. Harry doesn't have a finite amount of Soulfire for the rest of his life; he just has to make sure not to use too much, too quickly, and not give himself an opportunity to enjoy himself.

Though, as Winter Knight, he'll probably have very few opportunities to enjoy himself anyway, and Molly as Winter Lady will have even fewer...
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 14, 2018, 06:09:22 PM
I think Harry has instilled enough of himself in her to resist being full blown Sidhe...  To be a full blown Sidhe you need to fully embrace it...  She has in some ways but in others she seems resistant.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mira on October 14, 2018, 09:24:29 PM
I think Harry has instilled enough of himself in her to resist being full blown Sidhe...  To be a full blown Sidhe you need to fully embrace it...  She has in some ways but in others she seems resistant.

Agreed, at least while her parents are still alive, I cannot see her going all Sidhe.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 14, 2018, 10:45:26 PM
And souls can be restored too. Harry doesn't have a finite amount of Soulfire for the rest of his life; he just has to make sure not to use too much, too quickly, and not give himself an opportunity to enjoy himself.
The thing is, I don't know that souls can be restored.  I have an idea that the way it works with turning fae like that is that the process means that you can't restore your soul, and once you've used up what you've got, that's it.  That's how things work to turn you into a full on fae.  Something interferes with the process.  Molly can't bump uglies for example, which can be a soul replenishing activity.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Snark Knight on October 15, 2018, 12:38:29 AM
And souls can be restored too. Harry doesn't have a finite amount of Soulfire for the rest of his life; he just has to make sure not to use too much, too quickly, and not give himself an opportunity to enjoy himself.
Though, as Winter Knight, he'll probably have very few opportunities to enjoy himself anyway, and Molly as Winter Lady will have even fewer...

Well it's not like intimacy with another person is the only way to regrow the soul. Making art would probably do.

But I'm not sure there is a recharge option for somebody who's carrying one of the Queen mantles at all.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 15, 2018, 12:56:09 AM
Well, no soul points from Ramirez. What I wonder is, had Harry slept with her, could she have become the the Winter Lady? Or is the position only available to virgins? 
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Fcrate on October 15, 2018, 01:21:36 AM
Lily was by no means a virgin. Has nothing to do with becoming a Lady.
As for Molly, I don't see her becoming full fae anytime soon, but she's making a good start, and will get there, eventually. Especially since Harry pointed out that he's not her boss anymore.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 15, 2018, 02:28:57 AM
Keeping in mind that Lily was the Summer Lady, not Winter, there may be different criteria.  We don't know just how those rules work.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 15, 2018, 04:35:44 AM
Keeping in mind that Lily was the Summer Lady, not Winter, there may be different criteria.  We don't know just how those rules work.
Well, they're both the triple goddess -- the Maiden, the Mother and the Crone. A maiden is, by definition, virginal, so it's a pretty safe assumption.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 15, 2018, 07:28:44 AM
Well, they're both the triple goddess -- the Maiden, the Mother and the Crone. A maiden is, by definition, virginal, so it's a pretty safe assumption.
Well there is a whole bunch of translation issues here  ;D

Saying that I think Jim will probably go with the traditional one.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 15, 2018, 07:39:14 PM
The thing is, I don't know that souls can be restored.
They can or Harry's would shrink each time he used soulfire.  Bob said it can be restored as well.

Quote
I have an idea that the way it works with turning fae like that is that the process means that you can't restore your soul, and once you've used up what you've got, that's it.  That's how things work to turn you into a full on fae.  Something interferes with the process.  Molly can't bump uglies for example, which can be a soul replenishing activity.

As long as she has love, friendship, family she should be doing ok I would think.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 16, 2018, 02:22:02 AM
They can or Harry's would shrink each time he used soulfire.  Bob said it can be restored as well.

As long as she has love, friendship, family she should be doing ok I would think.
I meant the souls of those who are fae.  If they can't be restored, then it doesn't matter how much friendship, family, etc... Molly has, she's got no way to reap the benefits.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 16, 2018, 05:08:40 AM
I meant the souls of those who are fae.  If they can't be restored, then it doesn't matter how much friendship, family, etc... Molly has, she's got no way to reap the benefits.
That is what is sometimes said about the Sidhe but it is not always what is shown, what is shown is slightly more complicated even for someone like Mab or Titania. Even more so for Molly.

The human Molly is still there heavily restricted by the mantle but that does not mean the mantle dictates all her behavior and feelings.

Her weekly visits to her parents must help her in some way.




That is a hypothesis but because Molly is in a transition period and still has a soul it might work slightly different. Her weekly visits home probably do her something good.

At the moment the human is still there under the mantle
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 16, 2018, 05:11:35 AM
The human Molly is still there heavily restricted by the mantle but that does not mean the mantle dictates all her behavior and feelings.

Her weekly visits to her parents must help her in some way.

That is a hypothesis but because Molly is in a transition period and still has a soul it might work slightly different. Her weekly visits home probably do her something good.

At the moment the human is still there under the mantle
MUST the visits help her though?  Yeah, she's got some of her humanity left, but it's been a relatively short while, and she's got nigh on eternity to go.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 16, 2018, 12:02:53 PM
I imagine it's one of those things where every little bit helps
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 16, 2018, 01:02:21 PM
MUST the visits help her though?  Yeah, she's got some of her humanity left, but it's been a relatively short while, and she's got nigh on eternity to go.
Ladies are not that long living, the previous ones were not that old. Give her half a millennium or so and more than enough time to die in some Halloween during the next apocalypse. If she keeps good relations with Uriel he will keep a job open for her. 

Uriel did not seem that concerned for Molly and that is the same Uriel who was concerned for her in Ghost story.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 16, 2018, 05:50:06 PM
MUST the visits help her though?  Yeah, she's got some of her humanity left, but it's been a relatively short while, and she's got nigh on eternity to go.

She has most of her humanity left.  She's nothing like Mab, or Maeve at this point.  Remember what Harry was told be Uriel.  He still has a Choice.  So does Molly.  If she chooses to hold on to her humanity she will be ok.  At least in theory.  That being said, time is not on her side.  Time will pass, her loved ones will grow old and leave her one by one...  If and when she becomes isolated she will more than likely slip into the Winter Lady mantle entirely. 

Jim said Mab may still have some soul left (not a direct answer but left open to the possibility), and her humanity seems all but gone.  She embraces being Mab, and has so for a long time.  So if she can still have some left I think Molly still has most of hers since she still has a lot of ties to her humanity, doesn't really want to be Winter Lady, and has been a Lady for a short period of time.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mira on October 17, 2018, 06:44:16 PM
She has most of her humanity left.  She's nothing like Mab, or Maeve at this point.  Remember what Harry was told be Uriel.  He still has a Choice.  So does Molly.  If she chooses to hold on to her humanity she will be ok.  At least in theory.  That being said, time is not on her side.  Time will pass, her loved ones will grow old and leave her one by one...  If and when she becomes isolated she will more than likely slip into the Winter Lady mantle entirely. 

Jim said Mab may still have some soul left (not a direct answer but left open to the possibility), and her humanity seems all but gone.  She embraces being Mab, and has so for a long time.  So if she can still have some left I think Molly still has most of hers since she still has a lot of ties to her humanity, doesn't really want to be Winter Lady, and has been a Lady for a short period of time.

 Molly has only been at this for a year or so, let's wait until she has been at it a thousand years and see how her soul is doing...
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 17, 2018, 06:54:40 PM
Molly has only been at this for a year or so, let's wait until she has been at it a thousand years and see how her soul is doing...

lol I don't think we have to worry about her being Winter Lady for a thousand years. 
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Maz on October 17, 2018, 07:44:18 PM
For Molly to make it 1000 as winter lady would require Mab to make it to 1942... and that's not happening :)
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 17, 2018, 09:05:47 PM
For Molly to make it 1000 as winter lady would require Mab to make it to 1942... and that's not happening :)
No because Mab is going to die during or just before the apocalyptic triology. That is the way to make really hell break loose and shock everything. Molly will be totally unprepared for her new role but she will be able to bumb Ramirez and get a few nice changelings as spare ladies.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 18, 2018, 02:49:46 AM
No because Mab is going to die during or just before the apocalyptic triology. That is the way to make really hell break loose and shock everything. Molly will be totally unprepared for her new role but she will be able to bumb Ramirez and get a few nice changelings as spare ladies.

Does it have to be Mab who dies?  Mother Winter could have something that happens that results in her stepping down/dying, Mab ascends, and we are again stuck with Molly as queen.

Also there is a chance that the Mantle will either go back to Mother Winter who will choose who deserves it such as Leah.  Or she could be the one who the Mantle goes to....  Molly might not get it just because she's a Lady....
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Carl on October 23, 2018, 10:12:58 AM
There's an actual WoJ on the soul thing somwhere. She;s ok but if she lets go too much she can lose it. From reading the short and doing a bit of reading between the lines i think basically the more she leans on the mantle the less "human" she becomes and the more bits of her soul get cut off. On the other hand WoJ confirmed that Mab may or may not still have a bit of hers left, he basically gave the shrug of god. And Mab is ancient given we've been told to look at celtic queens for hints as to her human identity.

Her response to mab at the end about not being done with the conversation vis a vis Tribute speaks strongly in her favour overall. She's not just giving in and going along with everything the fae way.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 23, 2018, 12:20:00 PM
There's an actual WoJ on the soul thing somwhere. She;s ok but if she lets go too much she can lose it. From reading the short and doing a bit of reading between the lines i think basically the more she leans on the mantle the less "human" she becomes and the more bits of her soul get cut off. On the other hand WoJ confirmed that Mab may or may not still have a bit of hers left, he basically gave the shrug of god. And Mab is ancient given we've been told to look at celtic queens for hints as to her human identity.

Her response to mab at the end about not being done with the conversation vis a vis Tribute speaks strongly in her favour overall. She's not just giving in and going along with everything the fae way.
It is really a long term issue. Great chances that it won't become an issue between now and the destruction of the dresdenverse in the next apocalypse.  ;D
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 24, 2018, 01:26:35 PM
It won't be an issue in the sense of the Story anyway. In terms of Molly's actual lifespan, 10-20 years (About what Bob gave Lily) isn't that 'long term' really.

Already we've seen her struggling with the Mantle literally body-jacking her to force her to fulfill her role as a good little robot, to the point where she can't even speak as she chooses.

But she 'chose' to be in the general vicinity of a faerie queen when they died, so it's not a breach of free will to be literally enslaved and have your body puppeted like a marionette! (Seriously, between that lame-ass excuse and Michael's House having holes in it's defences you could drive a Panzer Division through, Heaven needs to step up it's game).
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 24, 2018, 05:36:53 PM
It won't be an issue in the sense of the Story anyway. In terms of Molly's actual lifespan, 10-20 years (About what Bob gave Lily) isn't that 'long term' really.
Bob is somewhat pessimistic because he only saw weak willed knights, he did not give Harry any chance at all.

Quote
Already we've seen her struggling with the Mantle literally body-jacking her to force her to fulfill her role as a good little robot, to the point where she can't even speak as she chooses.
That is a restriction but she is supposed to work around it. Maeve did not fulfill her role as a good little robot for about 150 years before Nemesis got her.

Which is also a far too negative description based on Harry’s unreliable narrative. Molly has a purpose, an important job to do and fulfilling your purpose is not slavery. Ask Uriel. Ask Gard.

It is not a waste of her life. She actually has an important role in the defense of us all.
Quote
But she 'chose' to be in the general vicinity of a faerie queen when they died, so it's not a breach of free will to be literally enslaved and have your body puppeted like a marionette! (Seriously, between that lame-ass excuse and Michael's House having holes in it's defences you could drive a Panzer Division through, Heaven needs to step up it's game).
Well her parents decided to have children in that dangerous world so the rest is a result of their free willed choice.


Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 24, 2018, 09:28:17 PM
Bob is somewhat pessimistic because he only saw weak willed knights, he did not give Harry any chance at all.

Bob wasn't talking about the Knights when he said that though? He was talking about the Ladies.

Quote
That is a restriction but she is supposed to work around it. Maeve did not fulfill her role as a good little robot for about 150 years before Nemesis got her.

How does one work around a restriction of "My body is literally puppeted like I'm Kermit the Frog if I don't do this on my own?" exactly? Maeve got away with it because Mab was babying her and not asking her to actually do her job properly.

Quote
Which is also a far too negative description based on Harry’s unreliable narrative. Molly has a purpose, an important job to do and fulfilling your purpose is not slavery. Ask Uriel. Ask Gard.

Lets see... She was 'recruited' against her will without knowledge and consent, her mind, body and even her soul warped for this purpose. She is forced to serve to the point where if she tries not to, her body will literally do it on it's own. Sure sounds like enslavement to me, for all of Mab's claims otherwise.

Quote
It is not a waste of her life. She actually has an important role in the defense of us all. Well her parents decided to have children in that dangerous world so the rest is a result of their free willed choice.

Now this is actually true. She has an important task to complete that is vital to the security of reality. But she's still a slave, just like Mab might fill an essential role and still be a Monster.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 24, 2018, 10:27:22 PM
We are all slaves to duty.  A member of the military goes off to war.  He knows he can die, yet he goes anyway.  And that choice ruins all too many of them, either physically or mentally.  But most come home and go on with their lives.  For both Harry and Molly the mantle can be seen as a metaphor for that type of choice.  They have a chance to remain true to themselves and retain their essential humanity.

And I find Mab a much more sympathetic character than most.  Of the two Queens she has the harder task.  If she fails than reality itself is at risk.  It appears that she retains some essential part of whatever humanity she might have once had.  She suffered Maeve even at the cost to her task, and felt anger when her child was at risk.  Unlike Harry she did not have the luxury of roasting marshmallows in the fires of the apocalypse.  And even at the end she couldn't act herself.

Anyway for good or bad that is how I internalize this part of the story.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 25, 2018, 04:02:38 AM
The thing is, a member of the military does not have to go off to war.  They can desert, they can fake something, they can injure themselves, they can maybe just resign or muster out, they can even suicide.  Not great choices, with varying levels of dire consequences, but still a choice.

A Queen of the fae has no choice.  They have some flexibility in their actions, yes, they're not automatons.  But they cannot choose not to do those things.  There is no choice allowed.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 25, 2018, 04:14:08 AM
Exactly. Molly isn't much like a soldier adhering to duty at all, because soldiers aren't typically recruited by force and had their minds and bodies warped uptil it's physically impossible for them not to obey.

Seriously, the Mantles are some messed up shit. Like, we going all 1984 up in this.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 25, 2018, 11:55:19 AM
Obviously you have never stood for the draft.

Having said that.   Mab actually speaks to this.
Quote
To fulfill one's purpose is not to be a slave, my daughter.
Someone has to guard the gates.  And this is Winter's purpose.  And that purpose must be served at whatever cost.  And Harry's choices and Molly's, put her on that hill where what could happen did in fact happen.  And Mab shoves that fact in his face during that exchange on the hill.

Do you think that Harry has had any choice in what he has "chosen" to do?  In his own way he is bond by a mantle just as heavy as Mab's.  And yes the Winter Mantle is some messed up shit.  So is having to fight a war with no end.  Where you send your allies off to be slaughtered on a battlefield covered in the bones of it's victims.  Mother Summer explains it to Harry when shew takes him to visit the gates.  What the stakes are.

Anyway this is how I internalize the books.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 25, 2018, 02:51:29 PM
Obviously you have never stood for the draft.
Yeah, when people are drafted, they always show up and serve.  At no point does anyone have any chance to avoid it or otherwise refuse to serve.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 25, 2018, 04:09:22 PM
To preface, that wasn't intended as a personal attack or comment on your character, and if you feel it was than you have my sincere apologies.  But most people did go.  Because sometimes it is harder not to.  As in the book those choices all have a price tag, and sometimes the risk of death was less than the personal costs of refusing.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 25, 2018, 08:00:59 PM
A Queen of the fae has no choice.  They have some flexibility in their actions, yes, they're not automatons.  But they cannot choose not to do those things.  There is no choice allowed.

Jim said that Maeve hadn't been fulfilling her duties and Molly had about 100 years of work to complete.....  So there is a way for them to avoid their duties.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: KipIngram on October 25, 2018, 10:54:14 PM
I think whether or not Molly is "human" or not anymore depends on how you define human.  I'd assume her anatomy is all the same,
(click to show/hide)

We do know that she's immortal now, but I'm not sure if I've gotten that directly from the books or from "informed statements" from online.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 25, 2018, 11:04:00 PM
I think whether or not Molly is "human" or not anymore depends on how you define human.  I'd assume her anatomy is all the same,
(click to show/hide)

We do know that she's immortal now, but I'm not sure if I've gotten that directly from the books or from "informed statements" from online.
Biologically the Sidhe are just humans. They can after all breed with humans and that defines a species.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 26, 2018, 12:50:36 AM
But most people did go.  Because sometimes it is harder not to.  As in the book those choices all have a price tag, and sometimes the risk of death was less than the personal costs of refusing.
Most people did go, sure.  Because of the consequences.  But many did not.  Because they had a choice, to go or not and face the consequences. For some (albeit not all) of the things for the fae, the consequences are irrelevant.  It doesn't matter what price a choice makes because there is no choice.  A thing will be done.  Not "A thing will be done or..." but simply it will be done.  Period.  Full stop.

Literally nothing a human does short of autonomic functions related to life (breathing, pumping blood, metabolizing) can compare.  Certainly nothing involving societal pressure or punishment.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 26, 2018, 02:06:30 AM
Most people did go, sure.  Because of the consequences.  But many did not.  Because they had a choice, to go or not and face the consequences. For some (albeit not all) of the things for the fae, the consequences are irrelevant.  It doesn't matter what price a choice makes because there is no choice.  A thing will be done.  Not "A thing will be done or..." but simply it will be done.  Period.  Full stop.

Literally nothing a human does short of autonomic functions related to life (breathing, pumping blood, metabolizing) can compare.  Certainly nothing involving societal pressure or punishment.

Except for the example I gave above.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 26, 2018, 02:08:31 AM
Yeah, but without context, that doesn't mean much.  We don't know how she got around it, or what the Mantle wanted her to do.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: groinkick on October 26, 2018, 05:51:59 AM
Yeah, but without context, that doesn't mean much.  We don't know how she got around it, or what the Mantle wanted her to do.

Just a guess but if Mab told Molly "Do this", Molly would have a choice.  But like what happened when she almost had sex, the Mantle reacted in such a way showing she did not have a choice in that circumstance.  So Molly isn't like a robot completely at the mercy of the Mantle 100% of the time.  She can make some actual choices.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 26, 2018, 10:38:53 AM
Harry actually covers this when he tells Mab at one point he can be an willing ally or a robot.  The mantle can enforce compliance, but it isn't intelligent.  Mab sets policy, so to speak.  So if she says jump you can make a choice about how high.  To see this effect raise a teenager. ;D

You can also see this in Proven Guilty, where the Summer Lady and Fix help Harry enter Winter.  She gives Harry those Summer butterfly thingees and later tells Fix that she didn't know that Harry would use them to throw Summer Fire at the Winter wellspring.  Wink, wink.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 26, 2018, 03:57:16 PM
Point of clarification: Molly's choice leading to her being the Winter Lady wasn't just "Be nearby when Maeve kicked."

She'd spent most of a year working with Lea, becoming more like Lea (i.e., more like a fae) the whole time -- slightly unhinged, enigmatic, avoiding her friends and family. Lea was grooming her, likely at Mab's direction, for the possibility.

Molly may not have known the consequences of her choice to continue associating with Lea, but she still made that choice.

Further, she made the choice to accept effective citizenship with the Svartalves -- i.e., Molly chose to become the member of a faerie nation.

She could have chosen differently -- she could have taken up her friends' offers for shelter and help instead.

Did she make an affirmative, informed decision to become the Winter Lady? No. But she made choices -- consistently over the course of several months -- that put her on, and kept her on, the path to becoming the Winter Lady.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Carl on October 27, 2018, 07:33:59 PM
Point of clarification: Molly's choice leading to her being the Winter Lady wasn't just "Be nearby when Maeve kicked."

She'd spent most of a year working with Lea, becoming more like Lea (i.e., more like a fae) the whole time -- slightly unhinged, enigmatic, avoiding her friends and family. Lea was grooming her, likely at Mab's direction, for the possibility.

Molly may not have known the consequences of her choice to continue associating with Lea, but she still made that choice.

Further, she made the choice to accept effective citizenship with the Svartalves -- i.e., Molly chose to become the member of a faerie nation.

She could have chosen differently -- she could have taken up her friends' offers for shelter and help instead.

Did she make an affirmative, informed decision to become the Winter Lady? No. But she made choices -- consistently over the course of several months -- that put her on, and kept her on, the path to becoming the Winter Lady.

Bearing in mind what mab had to say later there zero chance what Molly wanted would have had any effect on Lea. She was subbing for Mab in Subbing for Harry while he was incapacitated. Unless Molly figured that out and effectively quit out of being Harry's apprentice Lea was never going to leave Molly alone unless someone made her, and who exactly is there who could have done that?

Your also making a major assumption that Molly's reaction to people trying to help her was A) in any way a a free willed choice, B) would have worked out any better. Frankly without Lea running interference and her active hiding i doubt even Ramirez could have kept her from getting hunted down by the WC. And given human psychology, Lea's no doubt knowledge of it, Molly's emotional state and the general fae willingness to manipulate could have completely taken free will out of the equation. But since that Trauma was basically >90% a result of the manipulation of Harry it may be indirect enough of a way to take Uriel out of the can act picture. In fact that was my interpretation of the whole plot uriel pulled off in ghost story. Some aspect prevents him directly interfering, but somthing about the situation is off enough he can't act directly, (or it could just been the Fae Courts jobs means he's not allowed to interfere regardless of rules violations), so he has to work indirectly.

You could argue this was all a consequence of her decision to become Harry's apprentice, but you can't keep passing the buck back for forevermore, there comes a point at which it becomes inherently stupid because it requires someone to make a completely nonsensical decision that no normal mentally stable person is going to make because the whole point of being a normal mentally stable person is that our psychology is setup so that we cannot make such nonsensical decisions, our brain is inherently wired to disregard them. Hell even a not mentally stable person in most cases has a defined decision making limit set that constrains the decisions within their mental processes they're actually capable of making, (some mental disorders aside ofc).

That said as far as Mollys current will. Consider she can still go onto the Carpenter Property no issues. If she was bound by all the usual winter fae nastiness stuff there is no way in hell the guards would let her in, family or not.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 27, 2018, 07:48:15 PM
Bearing in mind what mab had to say later there zero chance what Molly wanted would have had any effect on Lea. She was subbing for Mab in Subbing for Harry while he was incapacitated. Unless Molly figured that out and effectively quit out of being Harry's apprentice Lea was never going to leave Molly alone unless someone made her, and who exactly is there who could have done that?

Your also making a major assumption that Molly's reaction to people trying to help her was A) in any way a a free willed choice, B) would have worked out any better. Frankly without Lea running interference and her active hiding i doubt even Ramirez could have kept her from getting hunted down by the WC. And given human psychology, Lea's no doubt knowledge of it, Molly's emotional state and the general fae willingness to manipulate could have completely taken free will out of the equation. But since that Trauma was basically >90% a result of the manipulation of Harry it may be indirect enough of a way to take Uriel out of the can act picture. In fact that was my interpretation of the whole plot uriel pulled off in ghost story. Some aspect prevents him directly interfering, but somthing about the situation is off enough he can't act directly, (or it could just been the Fae Courts jobs means he's not allowed to interfere regardless of rules violations), so he has to work indirectly.

You could argue this was all a consequence of her decision to become Harry's apprentice, but you can't keep passing the buck back for forevermore, there comes a point at which it becomes inherently stupid because it requires someone to make a completely nonsensical decision that no normal mentally stable person is going to make because the whole point of being a normal mentally stable person is that our psychology is setup so that we cannot make such nonsensical decisions, our brain is inherently wired to disregard them. Hell even a not mentally stable person in most cases has a defined decision making limit set that constrains the decisions within their mental processes they're actually capable of making, (some mental disorders aside ofc).

That said as far as Mollys current will. Consider she can still go onto the Carpenter Property no issues. If she was bound by all the usual winter fae nastiness stuff there is no way in hell the guards would let her in, family or not.
They will let Mab in. She is after all no danger. She will behave like a proper guest.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 27, 2018, 10:07:31 PM
Bearing in mind what mab had to say later there zero chance what Molly wanted would have had any effect on Lea. She was subbing for Mab in Subbing for Harry while he was incapacitated. Unless Molly figured that out and effectively quit out of being Harry's apprentice Lea was never going to leave Molly alone unless someone made her, and who exactly is there who could have done that?
Harry straight up told Molly to seek out Ebenezer. She could have done that. Instead, mainly out of guilt, she let herself live like a hobo and work under Lea instead.

Quote
Your also making a major assumption that Molly's reaction to people trying to help her was A) in any way a a free willed choice,
Multiple characters in Ghost Story offer Molly a place to stay and shower and get herself together. She outright refuses. Seems like a free-willed choice to me.

Quote
B) would have worked out any better.
It probably wouldn't have ended with her being Winter Lady.

Quote
Frankly without Lea running interference and her active hiding i doubt even Ramirez could have kept her from getting hunted down by the WC.
Ramirez was the sum total of the White Council's "efforts" to hunt down Molly, and he straight up admits to her in Cold Case that he was not really bothering. He wasn't hindering others from hunting her down -- he was the one tasked with hunting her down, and he went, "Oh, yeah, sure, top of my list wink wink."

Quote
And given human psychology, Lea's no doubt knowledge of it, Molly's emotional state and the general fae willingness to manipulate could have completely taken free will out of the equation. But since that Trauma was basically >90% a result of the manipulation of Harry it may be indirect enough of a way to take Uriel out of the can act picture. In fact that was my interpretation of the whole plot uriel pulled off in ghost story. Some aspect prevents him directly interfering, but somthing about the situation is off enough he can't act directly, (or it could just been the Fae Courts jobs means he's not allowed to interfere regardless of rules violations), so he has to work indirectly.
Whether or not someone took advantage of her emotional issues, she still had a choice.

She could have gone to Harry's friends and allies and taken shelter there, or she could've gone murderhobo and studied under Lea.

She chose the latter.

Quote
That said as far as Mollys current will. Consider she can still go onto the Carpenter Property no issues. If she was bound by all the usual winter fae nastiness stuff there is no way in hell the guards would let her in, family or not.
Remember what Cait Sith said.

As long as a Faerie doesn't mean or cause harm, they can cross through a threshold no problem.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 28, 2018, 02:46:33 AM
I question if someone who appears to be suffering from severe PTSD can make good choices. Since Molly acted for "love" of Harry, Uriel couldn't intervene to help her. And one of the symptoms of PTSD is avoidance of friends.  The only way to help her was to help Harry.  And he could help Harry because a fallen had influenced Harry's choice. 

You can argue that Mab was responsible for Molly not crossing the line into Black Magic, since she had to act as Harry would have because of the nature of her responsibility.  As evil as Harry paints her, she keeps her word.

Forgive me if I'm wrong, but isn't this what Ghost Story was about?  About how our choices can both help and hurt those around us.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 28, 2018, 02:58:00 AM
Who says they were good choices?  Bad choices are choices still.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Carl on October 28, 2018, 06:48:25 AM
Harry straight up told Molly to seek out Ebenezer. She could have done that. Instead, mainly out of guilt, she let herself live like a hobo and work under Lea instead.
Multiple characters in Ghost Story offer Molly a place to stay and shower and get herself together. She outright refuses. Seems like a free-willed choice to me.
It probably wouldn't have ended with her being Winter Lady.
Ramirez was the sum total of the White Council's "efforts" to hunt down Molly, and he straight up admits to her in Cold Case that he was not really bothering. He wasn't hindering others from hunting her down -- he was the one tasked with hunting her down, and he went, "Oh, yeah, sure, top of my list wink wink."
Whether or not someone took advantage of her emotional issues, she still had a choice.

She could have gone to Harry's friends and allies and taken shelter there, or she could've gone murderhobo and studied under Lea.

She chose the latter.
Remember what Cait Sith said.

As long as a Faerie doesn't mean or cause harm, they can cross through a threshold no problem.

Multiple points.

1. Your making a key assumption here. That someone in a sufficiently fragile state is capable of making certain choices. One of the big things about many types of psychological disorder, (and the kind of state Molly was in in GS definitely counts), is that they're quite literally incapable of doing certain things or not doing others because they've got a hard psychological block in place as a result of their disorder. Given Mollys state at the end of GS the odds that she doesn't have some somwhere are virtually nil. For somthing to be the result of a free willed choice there has to be choices the individual is actually capable of making that produce different end results.

2. Ramirez in CC explicitly says he spoked operations by other wardens against her. Are you seriously telling me he managed to spoke every single op they mounted?

3. I'm talking about the angelic Guardians, not the threshold, there's no question that Grey would have meant no harm, but because of what he is they'd still have been obligated to stop him if he'd tried to come in.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 28, 2018, 07:14:06 AM
Harry straight up told Molly to seek out Ebenezer. She could have done that. Instead, mainly out of guilt, she let herself live like a hobo and work under Lea instead.
Harry was deceiving himself to make his choice to abandon Molly easier and Molly might even have picked up on it. The Merlin wanted her dead and Ebenezar who was barely able to save his grandson would not have taken more risk for a girl he did not know.
Quote
Multiple characters in Ghost Story offer Molly a place to stay and shower and get herself together. She outright refuses. Seems like a free-willed choice to me.
Every choice you make is free willed and somehow influences your fate even if it is based on wrong information in this case an overestimation of the white councils effort to look for her. It was also based on mental instability which became better after ghost story as we see in bomb shells. She did take showers at Butters.
Quote
It probably wouldn't have ended with her being Winter Lady.
If you prefer dead warlock above that, I do not.

If you prefer being dead to save your soul above the duty of defending reality your soul is not really saved either. It is like seeking salvation at the cost of everyone you know, it does not work. It is actually one of the lessons of ghost story and Molly’s burden is just biggen than Harry’s.

I am not sure it is bad either, just different. I do not see Uriel in tears over her and he was concerned in ghost story. Concerned enough to arrange ghost story partly for her which is a waste if she was already doomed.


Quote
Ramirez was the sum total of the White Council's "efforts" to hunt down Molly, and he straight up admits to her in Cold Case that he was not really bothering. He wasn't hindering others from hunting her down -- he was the one tasked with hunting her down, and he went, "Oh, yeah, sure, top of my list wink wink."
Whether or not someone took advantage of her emotional issues, she still had a choice.
Or you are just a victim of someone else’s choices. Free will does not even guarantee the possibility of good outcomes. It might guaranty the possibility of keeping your conscience clear but I am not sure of that either.
Quote
She could have gone to Harry's friends and allies and taken shelter there, or she could've gone murderhobo and studied under Lea.
Lea would have forced her to study under Lea. She was practically doing so when Harry met them in ghost story. She had the duty to do so and an apprentice running away from her duties is hardly a reason to stop teaching her? Lea does not get rid of her duties that easily.
Quote
She chose the latter.
She chose to cooperate. People make all sort of choices without knowing the consequences.

And it might have been the best choice at that moment. People make all kind of choices that influence their lives but other people do so as well. In thuis case Harry’s choice to kill himself and to involve Molly in it did far more damage than Uriel could fix with seven words and some non intervention.

Quote
Remember what Cait Sith said.

As long as a Faerie doesn't mean or cause harm, they can cross through a threshold no problem.
There are fairies living in the carpenters house, they are making shoes. Mab can walk in without any problem and if Charity is smart she just makes tea for her. The Sidhe seem to live outside the whole heaven-hell thing, they have other duties.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 28, 2018, 07:43:59 AM
Multiple points.

1. Your making a key assumption here. That someone in a sufficiently fragile state is capable of making certain choices. One of the big things about many types of psychological disorder, (and the kind of state Molly was in in GS definitely counts), is that they're quite literally incapable of doing certain things or not doing others because they've got a hard psychological block in place as a result of their disorder. Given Mollys state at the end of GS the odds that she doesn't have some somwhere are virtually nil. For somthing to be the result of a free willed choice there has to be choices the individual is actually capable of making that produce different end results.
That is your interpretation of free will. In my interpretation nobody has complete free will anyway and the only thing that matters is if somebody had enough of it to be held responsible for his choices and of these choices had enough influence to make her (partly) responsible for the outcome.

Angels tend to be quite harsh on both accounts.
Quote
2. Ramirez in CC explicitly says he spoked operations by other wardens against her. Are you seriously telling me he managed to spoke every single op they mounted?
He warned her via Murphy and told her to hide, not explicitly but clear enough. he knew what he was telling Murphy would have been told to Molly and he did not have to tell Murphy. Ramirez saw no way to save Molly inside the council. He used the power he had and could not have done anything more.
Quote
3. I'm talking about the angelic Guardians, not the threshold, there's no question that Grey would have meant no harm, but because of what he is they'd still have been obligated to stop him if he'd tried to come in.
Grey is the equivalent of a scion of a fallen angel. He is half fallen. And Uriel had to think about it and did not give Harry an answer, he was glad he did not have to answer that question. Grey is a completely different case because he is more involved in the conflict between heaven and hell.

Uriel had no problem with Molly in the house. Besides the angels are not there to interfere with free will. The Carpenters can probably invite everyone they want. There are big holes in that defense system.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Avernite on October 28, 2018, 10:38:59 AM
Point of clarification: Molly's choice leading to her being the Winter Lady wasn't just "Be nearby when Maeve kicked."

She'd spent most of a year working with Lea, becoming more like Lea (i.e., more like a fae) the whole time -- slightly unhinged, enigmatic, avoiding her friends and family. Lea was grooming her, likely at Mab's direction, for the possibility.

Molly may not have known the consequences of her choice to continue associating with Lea, but she still made that choice.

Further, she made the choice to accept effective citizenship with the Svartalves -- i.e., Molly chose to become the member of a faerie nation.

She could have chosen differently -- she could have taken up her friends' offers for shelter and help instead.

Did she make an affirmative, informed decision to become the Winter Lady? No. But she made choices -- consistently over the course of several months -- that put her on, and kept her on, the path to becoming the Winter Lady.

This would be a good argument, except the Harry/Uriel convo pretty much mentions Molly as having been harmed by the Fallen breaking the rules. And from that talk it seems this was not so much free choice as not-impossible-to-correct-later-by-free-choice.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 28, 2018, 12:11:16 PM
Yeah that and the fact that the rule of Jim is make Harry suffer, and Molly is just one more layer of guilt.  To quote Jessica Rabbit,  "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way.".  Molly is written that way.

In the  story Mab wanted someone for something.  But Mab could only see what someone showed her.  Harry shined a flashlight on his apprentice and said, lookee here.  It couldn't end well.  It remains to be seen, if the Mantle, in context, is a plus or a minus. 
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Carl on October 28, 2018, 04:57:47 PM
That is your interpretation of free will. In my interpretation nobody has complete free will anyway and the only thing that matters is if somebody had enough of it to be held responsible for his choices and of these choices had enough influence to make her (partly) responsible for the outcome.

Angels tend to be quite harsh on both accounts.He warned her via Murphy and told her to hide, not explicitly but clear enough. he knew what he was telling Murphy would have been told to Molly and he did not have to tell Murphy. Ramirez saw no way to save Molly inside the council. He used the power he had and could not have done anything more.Grey is the equivalent of a scion of a fallen angel. He is half fallen. And Uriel had to think about it and did not give Harry an answer, he was glad he did not have to answer that question. Grey is a completely different case because he is more involved in the conflict between heaven and hell.

Uriel had no problem with Molly in the house. Besides the angels are not there to interfere with free will. The Carpenters can probably invite everyone they want. There are big holes in that defense system.

1. Um no thats my facts on how the human mind actually works under some circumstances. Free Will as it exists in the Dresdenverse is pretty clearly laid out as well. But unless JB is basically saying that humans in the Dresdenverse aren't really human they're still constrained by the normal limits of human mental workings as to the range of choices they can make. And under some circumstance they really cannot make a range of choices, they're limited very narrowly.

2. I don't have a clue what your talking about there. You seem to be talking about Ghost Story, i'm talking about the later short story when Ramirez explicitly tell Molly he spoked several operations mounted by groups of other wardens.

3. Uriel specifically uses the phrase tried in relation to Gray coming in, given that he can cross thresholds no problem (and the threshold is at the house door in any case), the only way he cold not come in if he wanted is if he was stopped. His very use of try tells us Uriel would be obligated to stop him.

Also he's a scion of a skinwalker, not a fallen Angel. Skinwalkers have no relation to christian mythology and thus Lucifer. It also doesn't matter if that would have made the difference. In fact thats really the core of my argument. There's no question his heritage is from the bad side of the street despite the fact that he'd never actually do any harm under the circumstances in question. Yet Uriel was obligated to not let him in. Are you seriously telling me Winter Fae are better than him under those circumstances.

In effect for whatever reason riel is being forced to exclude him under the basis of what he is, not whether he's an actual danger. There's no reason the same thinking wouldn;t apply to Molly as the Winter Lady.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 28, 2018, 05:13:09 PM
Multiple points.

1. Your making a key assumption here. That someone in a sufficiently fragile state is capable of making certain choices. One of the big things about many types of psychological disorder, (and the kind of state Molly was in in GS definitely counts), is that they're quite literally incapable of doing certain things or not doing others because they've got a hard psychological block in place as a result of their disorder. Given Mollys state at the end of GS the odds that she doesn't have some somwhere are virtually nil. For somthing to be the result of a free willed choice there has to be choices the individual is actually capable of making that produce different end results.
I don't agree. She was given options. She made choices /before/ Ghost Story started. She decided to stay out in the cold with Lea instead of being with her family and friends. That is a choice she made.

Whether there were other factors influencing that choice doesn't matter much.

Quote
2. Ramirez in CC explicitly says he spoked operations by other wardens against her. Are you seriously telling me he managed to spoke every single op they mounted?
I'm saying that the Wardens honestly weren't trying very hard to find her. She wasn't Public Enemy Number One, Top Priority. She was "Another warlock out there, somewhere, Ramirez, go look for her when you have a chance."

Quote
3. I'm talking about the angelic Guardians, not the threshold, there's no question that Grey would have meant no harm, but because of what he is they'd still have been obligated to stop him if he'd tried to come in.
Grey is a very different type of being from the fae. His father is something that the books and the angels in particular, if I recall correctly, describe as the nearest thing to pure evil that there is.

And, as pointed out, Harry has a bunch of cobbler elves set up shop there.

Harry was deceiving himself to make his choice to abandon Molly easier and Molly might even have picked up on it. The Merlin wanted her dead and Ebenezar who was barely able to save his grandson would not have taken more risk for a girl he did not know.
I think you're really underselling Ebenezer here. She's not just some random girl he doesn't know, he's his grandson's apprentice, and I find it seriously hard to believe that Ebenezer would toss aside his memory so quickly as to turn her out or turn her in.

Quote
If you prefer dead warlock above that, I do not.
Those are not the only two outcomes here. Heck, it's an unlikely outcome, considering the Warden tasked with tracking her down isn't trying too hard, and is, in fact, deliberately stalling any other efforts to do so.

Quote
If you prefer being dead to save your soul above the duty of defending reality your soul is not really saved either. It is like seeking salvation at the cost of everyone you know, it does not work. It is actually one of the lessons of ghost story and Molly’s burden is just biggen than Harry’s.
Again, that is not the only other possible outcome, and I daresay if Molly had made different choices, ones that would not have made her eligible for Lady-hood, Mab would have figured something else out.

Quote
I am not sure it is bad either, just different. I do not see Uriel in tears over her and he was concerned in ghost story. Concerned enough to arrange ghost story partly for her which is a waste if she was already doomed.
That's a point, but people are talking about how unfair it is that she was made Lady against her will without making that choice. I'm not arguing whether or not her being a Lady is good or bad for her or for reality -- just that it's a result of choices she made that put her in that position, in that capacity.

Quote
Or you are just a victim of someone else’s choices. Free will does not even guarantee the possibility of good outcomes. It might guaranty the possibility of keeping your conscience clear but I am not sure of that either.
Yeah, free will doesn't happen in a vacuum.

Quote
Lea would have forced her to study under Lea. She was practically doing so when Harry met them in ghost story. She had the duty to do so and an apprentice running away from her duties is hardly a reason to stop teaching her? Lea does not get rid of her duties that easily.
Lea is obligated to step in for Harry, but Molly is not obligated to accept that help, any more than she was obligated to accept Harry's help.

Lea is the one bound by Faerie Law, not Molly. You can't give help to someone who does not want it, and what, pray tell, was Lea going to do if Molly decided to move back in with her parents?

Quote
She chose to cooperate. People make all sort of choices without knowing the consequences.

And it might have been the best choice at that moment. People make all kind of choices that influence their lives but other people do so as well. In thuis case Harry’s choice to kill himself and to involve Molly in it did far more damage than Uriel could fix with seven words and some non intervention.
Fair points.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 28, 2018, 07:47:17 PM
A few points.

Quote
“Why?” Molly asked, her voice barely more than a whisper. “Why are you doing this to me?”

Harry meets Lea and Molly in Ghost Story. Read the rest of the conversation. It seems to me extremely likely that Lea did not give Molly that much of a choice. The white councils arrangements are probably extremely strict and archaic especially with a proven warlock and Lea would have had the powers Harry had over Molly and that was life and dead. Harry was not supposed to let a warlock run away, he was supposed to teach her to become not a warlock or to kill her. According to Lea his kindness had not been good for her and Lea acted accordingly.

It was not just about giving help. It was about all the obligations Harry had and some of those were not that nice. Remember Molly could not just have walked away from Harry either. Yes he offered in turncoat but I think he was breaking the rules. This is not the same as getting some swimming lessons from a guy who lives next door.

About skinwalkers in turncoat:
Quote
“He’s the real deal, all right,” Bob replied, his quiet voice growing more serious. “According to some of the stories of the Navajo, the naagloshii were originally messengers for the Holy People, when they were first teaching humans the Blessing Way.”
“Messengers?” I said. “Like angels?”
“Or like those guys on bikes in New York, maybe?” Bob said. “Not all couriers are created identical, Mr. Lowest-Common-Denominator. Anyway, the original messengers, the naagloshii, were supposed to go with the Holy People when they departed the mortal world. But some of them didn’t. They stayed here, and their selfishness corrupted the power the Holy People gave them. Voila, Shagnasty.”

Uriel recognised Mouse as a similar being. Angels and Fallen are not restricted to the abrahamic religions, the naagloshii are a sort of fallen angel. Evil. They are totally different from a Sidhe who is more outside this struggle and has his own duties.

Murphy in Ghost Story:
Quote
“She says they were as much psychic as physical. And that hit to her leg was pretty bad. I don’t understand how your disappearance makes her a criminal to the White Council, but apparently it has. Ramirez has told us that the Wardens are looking to pass sentence on her—but he didn’t seem to be working his ass off to find her, either. I know what it looks like when a cop is slacking.”

Ramirez knew Murphy would pass this information. It ruined every chance the white council had to get her by surprise. He told Murphy on purpose to warn Molly.

Quote
Lea is obligated to step in for Harry, but Molly is not obligated to accept that help, any more than she was obligated to accept Harry's help.
Lea is the one bound by Faerie Law, not Molly. You can't give help to someone who does not want it,
and what, pray tell, was Lea going to do if Molly decided to move back in with her parents?

Molly could not hide with her parents because that would make it too easy for Carlos to find her and that would blow any plausible deniability Carlos had. The same for Murphy actually.

You can teach people who do not want to learn if you are prepared to force it upon them. Lea is very good at that. She was exactly doing that in Ghost Story.

And she could do so because of deals Molly had made with Harry, because of the authority Harry was given over her to save her life.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Avernite on October 28, 2018, 10:00:07 PM
That's a point, but people are talking about how unfair it is that she was made Lady against her will without making that choice. I'm not arguing whether or not her being a Lady is good or bad for her or for reality -- just that it's a result of choices she made that put her in that position, in that capacity.
Any choices she made were made at the behest of one of the literal Fallen Angels breaking the rules. Uriel did what he could through Harry, but he could not correct everything. Free Will, it certainly was not.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 28, 2018, 10:37:27 PM
Having things done to you does not violate any Free Will.  Otherwise Uriel would be able to intervene literally every time the Denarians killed anybody.  Likewise being forced to become a Queen doesn't violate your Free Will.  Any issues with connections to the fae courts/bargains/consent are fae issues, not free will issues.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 28, 2018, 11:08:15 PM
A few points.

Harry meets Lea and Molly in Ghost Story. Read the rest of the conversation. It seems to me extremely likely that Lea did not give Molly that much of a choice. The white councils arrangements are probably extremely strict and archaic especially with a proven warlock and Lea would have had the powers Harry had over Molly and that was life and dead. Harry was not supposed to let a warlock run away, he was supposed to teach her to become not a warlock or to kill her. According to Lea his kindness had not been good for her and Lea acted accordingly.

It was not just about giving help. It was about all the obligations Harry had and some of those were not that nice. Remember Molly could not just have walked away from Harry either. Yes he offered in turncoat but I think he was breaking the rules. This is not the same as getting some swimming lessons from a guy who lives next door.
Sure, Molly could have walked away from Harry. She could have done so in Proven Guilty, too. It would probably have ended badly for her, Harry and a number of other people, but that is still a choice she had.

Lea might not have "given" Molly a choice, but that does not mean that Molly didn't have a choice. Lea is not inclined to tell Molly of alternatives -- if Molly can't figure that out on her own, that's Molly's problem, from Lea's perspective.

Just because other choices might have negative consequences (immediate or otherwise) or might not be laid out explicitly for you by someone who has negative incentive to tell you about other choices doesn't mean that the choice isn't there.

Quote
Molly could not hide with her parents because that would make it too easy for Carlos to find her and that would blow any plausible deniability Carlos had. The same for Murphy actually.
Nah. All Carlos has to do is say, "Come on, guys, I spoke to Michael already and he said Molly wasn't there, I don't have to go back and bother that poor family again and again."

Quote
You can teach people who do not want to learn if you are prepared to force it upon them. Lea is very good at that. She was exactly doing that in Ghost Story.
Lea's good at making you think there isn't a choice.

Just like Mab made Harry think he didn't have a choice ... until Uriel whispered in his ear.

Again: Mab and Lea both benefit greatly from Molly and Harry thinking they have them over a barrel without any choice in the matter. It's in Mab and Lea's interest to make it seem as if they don't have a choice, but Harry clearly does, so I don't see why Molly wouldn't either.

Think about it -- how many times did Lash try to make it seem like Harry had no choice but to accept power from her?

Someone with an agenda telling you that you don't have a choice doesn't mean it's true -- it means they benefit from you not choosing differently.

Quote
And she could do so because of deals Molly had made with Harry, because of the authority Harry was given over her to save her life.
Molly made no deals with Fae. She didn't even swear on her power as far as we know.

How is Lea going to force her to learn? Is she going to mess with Molly's mind to make her more pliable? Well, that ruins any point in teaching her because you're scrambling her brain. Ditto with threatening to kill her.

In reality? Lea has no leverage to "force" Molly to do anything. Molly has choices -- there is always a choice -- but her guilt and Lea's manipulation put her in denial
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 28, 2018, 11:47:50 PM
I notice that people only talk about fairness when bad things happen. 

To answer the question for Molly, first answer the question for Mab.  Mother Summer has told Harry the stakes.  You have read Harry's description of the battlefield at the gates.  And if you have read Cold Case you have read the cost to Winter to fight that  war.  Does Mab have free will?
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 29, 2018, 06:12:17 AM
No. Only humans so, Faeries and other Monsters do not, this is explicitly in the text.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 29, 2018, 06:27:49 AM
No. Only humans so, Faeries and other Monsters do not, this is explicitly in the text.
That is said. But what is shown is more complicated than what is said, both for some humans as for some monsters.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 29, 2018, 02:00:20 PM
That is said. But what is shown is more complicated than what is said, both for some humans as for some monsters.
What I think it comes down to is that some monsters are more human than others, and some humans are more monstrous than others.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mira on October 29, 2018, 04:43:51 PM
What I think it comes down to is that some monsters are more human than others, and some humans are more monstrous than others.

So true...
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 29, 2018, 10:15:21 PM
Sure, Molly could have walked away from Harry. She could have done so in Proven Guilty, too. It would probably have ended badly for her, Harry and a number of other people, but that is still a choice she had.
You can always fall on your sword. Usually people only consider suicidal choices if nothing better is available and we have seen in Ghost story that it was the suicidal choice that actually caused a lot of problems.
Quote
Lea might not have "given" Molly a choice, but that does not mean that Molly didn't have a choice. Lea is not inclined to tell Molly of alternatives -- if Molly can't figure that out on her own, that's Molly's problem, from Lea's perspective.
Lea could call the servitors to attack Molly to check her progress. Test her shields with knifes and just attack her. She could litterarily force her and she did, that is what was shown in Ghost Story. She did not just make it seem like, she did. And she got that power and obligation because of Harry.
Quote
Just because other choices might have negative consequences (immediate or otherwise) or might not be laid out explicitly for you by someone who has negative incentive to tell you about other choices doesn't mean that the choice isn't there.
If an option has a clear negative outcome it tends to be disregarded. I am not talking about choices given by Lea, Molly is smart enough to look at her own options. I am talking about the options open to her that have any realistic chance to end well.


Quote
Nah. All Carlos has to do is say, "Come on, guys, I spoke to Michael already and he said Molly wasn't there, I don't have to go back and bother that poor family again and again."
Lea's good at making you think there isn't a choice.
Until somebody else from the white council sees her there and informs people.
Quote
Just like Mab made Harry think he didn't have a choice ... until Uriel whispered in his ear.
Just because Mab sometimes operates that way does not mean they always do.
Quote
Again: Mab and Lea both benefit greatly from Molly and Harry thinking they have them over a barrel without any choice in the matter. It's in Mab and Lea's interest to make it seem as if they don't have a choice, but Harry clearly does, so I don't see why Molly wouldn't either.

Think about it -- how many times did Lash try to make it seem like Harry had no choice but to accept power from her?

Someone with an agenda telling you that you don't have a choice doesn't mean it's true
Again it is not about what Lea or Mab was telling to Molly. It is about the choices she actually had. There is a great difference.

Quote
-- it means they benefit from you not choosing differently.
That is fine for them but this is about what choices would benefit Molly.
Quote
Molly made no deals with Fae. She didn't even swear on her power as far as we know.

How is Lea going to force her to learn? Is she going to mess with Molly's mind to make her more pliable? Well, that ruins any point in teaching her because you're scrambling her brain. Ditto with threatening to kill her.
She will send lessons her way like she did with the servitors. She even combined it with a lesson for Harry. She is very good in that sort of thing.
Quote
In reality? Lea has no leverage to "force" Molly to do anything. Molly has choices -- there is always a choice -- but her guilt and Lea's manipulation put her in denial
There are probably oaths involved in the apprenticeship and certainly heavy obligations. These were not oaths sworn to any Sidhe at all but Mab was bound to it.

That means Lea was bound to the full obligation Harry had to Molly as Mab would interpret it. This can not be just the obligation to give some free lessons.

Lea could not leave Molly alone and that means she could and would have followed her everywhere. Easy for Lea.

 
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 30, 2018, 12:47:08 AM
You can always fall on your sword. Usually people only consider suicidal choices if nothing better is available and we have seen in Ghost story that it was the suicidal choice that actually caused a lot of problems.
Like I said -- it was a choice. Bad choices are still choices, and if Molly had decided to tell Harry to screw off, there isn't anything he could have done to make her take his tutelage.

Quote
Lea could call the servitors to attack Molly to check her progress. Test her shields with knifes and just attack her. She could litterarily force her and she did, that is what was shown in Ghost Story. She did not just make it seem like, she did. And she got that power and obligation because of Harry.
And if Molly is staying at the BFS building, which has a threshold and a crapload of Einherjar to defend the place? Or if she's staying at her parents' house, and replace the Einherjar with angels? She could only "force" Molly to do anything because Molly eliminated her other choices herself.

The other thing? As Harry points out, among the obligations Lea took on from Harry are to protect and take care of Molly, which is why I think she'd hold back from actually killing her or bringing her real harm.

Quote
If an option has a clear negative outcome it tends to be disregarded. I am not talking about choices given by Lea, Molly is smart enough to look at her own options. I am talking about the options open to her that have any realistic chance to end well.
You are talking about choices Lea gave Molly:

Quote from: You
It seems to me extremely likely that Lea did not give Molly that much of a choice.

And Molly is smart enough? When she's half brain-fried from malnutrition and she's on the Self-Flagellation Express? Molly post Changes is very much not a Molly who's in charge of all her critical thinking and objective, rational thought faculties.

She's not calmly laying out all her options and rationally deciding on the best course of action. She's crippled with guilt because she just murdered the man she loves and she probably feels like she deserves all the crap Lea puts on her.

Quote
Until somebody else from the white council sees her there and informs people.
Remember the part about how the Fomor are only a big presence in Chicago because there isn't a White Council presence? Seriously, that's a whole thing, that things are so bad because there aren't wizards there, and the one that bothers showing up is Carlos.

Quote
Just because Mab sometimes operates that way does not mean they always do.
Yeah, it's not like Mab sets the tone for her kingdom, or like Lea is explicitly taking Mab's role for the sake of acting in Mab's place the way Mab would or anything.

Mab isn't unique in that respect. That's what all faeries do, it's how they get you into those deals.

I mean, let's look at Lea herself. Her "deal" with Harry to give him power to beat HWWB... which amounted to a magic feather and getting Harry to swear to give himself over to her. Harry absolutely had a choice there, considering Lea's "help" didn't actually do anything tangible, but she certainly didn't put it that way, now did she?

Quote
Again it is not about what Lea or Mab was telling to Molly. It is about the choices she actually had. There is a great difference.
Yeah. They weren't telling her she had any options, so in her guilt-riddled mind, she assumed there weren't any, or explicitly rejected the ones she was aware of.

Quote
That is fine for them but this is about what choices would benefit Molly.
Yes, like opening up to her friends and allies and seeking shelter from people not grooming her for a job that will eventually eat away at her soul.

Choices that she has, but doesn't realize she has or has rejected because she's racked with guilt.

Quote
She will send lessons her way like she did with the servitors. She even combined it with a lesson for Harry. She is very good in that sort of thing.
Again: I'd like to see her try it when Molly's at the BFS or her parents' house.

Quote
There are probably oaths involved in the apprenticeship and certainly heavy obligations. These were not oaths sworn to any Sidhe at all but Mab was bound to it.

That means Lea was bound to the full obligation Harry had to Molly as Mab would interpret it. This can not be just the obligation to give some free lessons.

Lea could not leave Molly alone and that means she could and would have followed her everywhere. Easy for Lea.
Mab was bound to her vassal's obligations.

If Molly walks away and declares she's no longer Harry's apprentice, it's no longer Mab's obligation. Molly is an adult with free will, and she absolutely has other choices besides starving, sleeping in the snow and letting Lea throw knives at her.

She's just not in a place where she sees those choices, and Lea is not going to go out of her way to let her newest plaything think she actually has a choice in the matter.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 30, 2018, 01:52:12 AM
No. Only humans so, Faeries and other Monsters do not, this is explicitly in the text.
I assume this is a response for me.  Here's the WOJ.
Quote from: Jim Butcher
Mab, for example, is Mab.  She /can’t/ show up and suddenly be merciful, generous, patient and kind.  It would never so much as occur to her to do so, because it isn’t a fundamental part of her nature, and she /can’t/ choose to change it.  She simply isn’t capable.  She doesn’t have free will in the same way that people do.  It’s related to the difference between having a soul and not having a soul, as well.  Without a soul, you aren’t free to choose how you will shape that soul.  You just stay what you are.
A couple of observations. 

1. Despite JB's quote Mab shows regret as well as compassion on Demonreach. 

2.  Mab had a soul since at one point she was mortal.  And Molly had a soul, at least until she got hung with the Mantle.    So the question wouldn't seem to be, did she make a choice to accept the Lady's Mantle? The question might more rightly be, did the Mantle remove her ability to make the choice to keep her soul? 

If the second Uriel would seem to have cause to set the situation right.  You can ask a similar question about Mab.(well at least I can, YMMV.)  So, is it possible that Molly can remain true to herself and fulfill the obligations to the Mantle at the same time? And if she can, will she keep her soul?
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 30, 2018, 04:41:09 AM
That's the soul, not free will. Does Mab have a soul? Maybe a shadow of one. Does she have Free Will? No. Same with Molly, except she hasn't been Sidhe for as long so her soul isn't shriveled like a prune yet.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 30, 2018, 05:06:06 AM
Except that he's saying they're the same thing.  A soul is what allows you to go against your Nature.  Without it, you have no Free Will with which to override your Nature.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 30, 2018, 05:52:27 AM
Like I said -- it was a choice. Bad choices are still choices, and if Molly had decided to tell Harry to screw off, there isn't anything he could have done to make her take his tutelage.
And if Molly is staying at the BFS building, which has a threshold and a crapload of Einherjar to defend the place? Or if she's staying at her parents' house, and replace the Einherjar with angels? She could only "force" Molly to do anything because Molly eliminated her other choices herself.

The other thing? As Harry points out, among the obligations Lea took on from Harry are to protect and take care of Molly, which is why I think she'd hold back from actually killing her or bringing her real harm.
You are talking about choices Lea gave Molly:

And Molly is smart enough? When she's half brain-fried from malnutrition and she's on the Self-Flagellation Express? Molly post Changes is very much not a Molly who's in charge of all her critical thinking and objective, rational thought faculties.

She's not calmly laying out all her options and rationally deciding on the best course of action. She's crippled with guilt because she just murdered the man she loves and she probably feels like she deserves all the crap Lea puts on her.
Remember the part about how the Fomor are only a big presence in Chicago because there isn't a White Council presence? Seriously, that's a whole thing, that things are so bad because there aren't wizards there, and the one that bothers showing up is Carlos.
Yeah, it's not like Mab sets the tone for her kingdom, or like Lea is explicitly taking Mab's role for the sake of acting in Mab's place the way Mab would or anything.

Mab isn't unique in that respect. That's what all faeries do, it's how they get you into those deals.

I mean, let's look at Lea herself. Her "deal" with Harry to give him power to beat HWWB... which amounted to a magic feather and getting Harry to swear to give himself over to her. Harry absolutely had a choice there, considering Lea's "help" didn't actually do anything tangible, but she certainly didn't put it that way, now did she?
Yeah. They weren't telling her she had any options, so in her guilt-riddled mind, she assumed there weren't any, or explicitly rejected the ones she was aware of.
Yes, like opening up to her friends and allies and seeking shelter from people not grooming her for a job that will eventually eat away at her soul.

Choices that she has, but doesn't realize she has or has rejected because she's racked with guilt.
Again: I'd like to see her try it when Molly's at the BFS or her parents' house.
Mab was bound to her vassal's obligations.

If Molly walks away and declares she's no longer Harry's apprentice, it's no longer Mab's obligation. Molly is an adult with free will, and she absolutely has other choices besides starving, sleeping in the snow and letting Lea throw knives at her.

She's just not in a place where she sees those choices, and Lea is not going to go out of her way to let her newest plaything think she actually has a choice in the matter.
The idea that Molly can cust end her apprenticeship is false, she would be just the apprentice who ran away and Harry would be obliged to run after her and kill her as a warlock or bring her back to him. Suicidal choices are free willed choices but I do not expect people to go for them.

Molly could have visited her friends more than she did probably but staying with them was not smart. The white council is not a unified block and some of them have different ways of looking and Carlos looking away would have become difficult if he got specific information.

The angelic guards would not and the bff could not defend against a group of wardens.

And when Molly started training with Lea Winter Lady was not the most likely outcome she could have expected. It was not what Mab had planned.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 30, 2018, 11:18:23 AM
Quote
The angelic guards would not and the bff could not defend against a group of wardens.
Yep. I don't know that the bff would protect Molly, why would they?  Marcone pays them and he is a signatory of the accords, if the council asks he would have to give her up.  And Molly would be safe at home only in the sense that a prisoner on death row is safe from street crime.  Assuming she still shares in the angelic protection as an adult.  And the council needn't act directly to find her.  They can do what they did for Morgan.  Put a bounty on her.  If they want her they will keep coming until they get her.  You could almost call them the spooky FBI.  Who never stop looking.

I really don't know what the angelic guards are good for.  Except for sounding "cool". As close as I can figure it all they do is keep the fallen from acting directly. That fight at the house was pretty dramatic.  But Nick should have called in a drone strike.  To paraphrase a paraphrase, it was the only way to be sure. And the angels wouldn't have done anything.(You might guess I am rereading PG) :)
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 30, 2018, 02:26:31 PM
Yep. I don't know that the bff would protect Molly, why would they?  Marcone pays them and he is a signatory of the accords, if the council asks he would have to give her up.  And Molly would be safe at home only in the sense that a prisoner on death row is safe from street crime.  Assuming she still shares in the angelic protection as an adult.  And the council needn't act directly to find her.  They can do what they did for Morgan.  Put a bounty on her.  If they want her they will keep coming until they get her.  You could almost call them the spooky FBI.  Who never stop looking.

I really don't know what the angelic guards are good for.  Except for sounding "cool". As close as I can figure it all they do is keep the fallen from acting directly. That fight at the house was pretty dramatic.  But Nick should have called in a drone strike.  To paraphrase a paraphrase, it was the only way to be sure. And the angels wouldn't have done anything.(You might guess I am rereading PG) :)
Cool is very important. See them as Michael's honor guard.

Molly takes care of the real protection now  ;D
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 30, 2018, 02:48:53 PM
The idea that Molly can cust end her apprenticeship is false, she would be just the apprentice who ran away and Harry would be obliged to run after her and kill her as a warlock or bring her back to him. Suicidal choices are free willed choices but I do not expect people to go for them.
And her apprenticeship would be over, so yes, she can just end her apprenticeship.

I'm not saying it's a good idea -- whether it's good or bad is entirely beside the point. THe point is, she has a choice. Just like she has a choice with Lea.

Quote
Molly could have visited her friends more than she did probably but staying with them was not smart. The white council is not a unified block and some of them have different ways of looking and Carlos looking away would have become difficult if he got specific information.
And who's going to give him this specific information? Molly's friends are already not telling him where she is, and do you think it's public information what goes on inside Marcone's literal fortress?

And how much resources do you really think the White Council is putting toward finding Molly? To date, the resources we've seen "looking" for her is Carlos.

Quote
The angelic guards would not and the bff could not defend against a group of wardens.
Because the White Council is going to be willing to go to war against another signatory of the accords just to track down a single warlock?

Seriously, guys. Molly is not that important to the White Council. If they were willing to put that kind of resources into getting to her, they would have done so already.

As is, they sent Carlos.

Quote
And when Molly started training with Lea Winter Lady was not the most likely outcome she could have expected. It was not what Mab had planned.
So? Do you think Lea or Mab were preparing Molly for something for Molly's good out of the simple charity of their frostbitten hearts?

Yes, Mab commented that she had a slightly different role for Molly in mind, but whatever specific title she wanted to slap on Molly, the point is Mab and Lea were deliberately grooming her for something, among which was the Winter Lady role, and I doubt the other possibilities were great choices, either.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 30, 2018, 03:30:17 PM
Your in the position of the audience.  Molly's POV is the world hates me and I've got to hide.  Or to go all biblical.  The wicked flee though no one pursues, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.  Although Molly isn't wicked.(although after Cold Case Ramirez may doubt that) ;)
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 30, 2018, 03:54:07 PM
Your in the position of the audience.  Molly's POV is the world hates me and I've got to hide.  Or to go all biblical.  The wicked flee though no one pursues, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.  Although Molly isn't wicked.(although after Cold Case Ramirez may doubt that) ;)
Yes, she has choices that she cannot and will not see because of her POV, guilt and mental issues, that is my point exactly, thank you!  :)
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 30, 2018, 09:21:51 PM
If Harry was dead  Molly was no longer an apprentice.  Your apprenticed to a person or maybe a guild, Lea is neither.

If Molly had no deal with the fey, than the fey couldn't harm her.  That would have been the Winter Knights job and he was busy being dead.  But if the fey had a channel through Harry than Lea could make Molly a sock puppet. Thus says Mab in Summer Knight.

And if anybody can come up with a coherent explanation about how souls actually work, would they share it with me?
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mira on October 30, 2018, 09:51:10 PM


   Molly has free will or had, she made her choice freely to train with Lea.   Now she will have to deal with the consequences of that choice.  Question, does Molly still have free will?  Presumably Mab no longer has it, but do the Ladies?
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 30, 2018, 11:33:30 PM

   Molly has free will or had, she made her choice freely to train with Lea.   Now she will have to deal with the consequences of that choice.  Question, does Molly still have free will?  Presumably Mab no longer has it, but do the Ladies?

Obviously not, seeing as the Mantle Bodyjacked her on several occasions in Cold Case because she wanted to act in a way she wasn't allowed to.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 31, 2018, 12:15:12 AM
It isn't an all or nothing proposition.  There are two types of events, one where the mantle rules and others where it doesn't care.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: forumghost on October 31, 2018, 12:25:55 AM
I am aware. Not having FREE Will =/= not having Will at all. Mab for example can still make plans and decisions within her purview, but she lacks free will because there are times and places where she literally cannot take certain options.

The most obvious example is Killing. Mab can't kill someone unless they leave themselves open to her by involvement with the Courts. (Which is why she has a Knight to do it via loopholes)
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: cptnspldng on October 31, 2018, 01:24:30 AM
Well it's not like intimacy with another person is the only way to regrow the soul. Making art would probably do.

But I'm not sure there is a recharge option for somebody who's carrying one of the Queen mantles at all.

But making Art with a capital "A" implies the exercise of one's free will and as a being of the Nevernever, The Winter Lady is presumed to have surrendered the exercise of free will. Or is she also like Harry; a being both of mortal individuality and of predetermined Fae existance?

Discuss.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: peregrine on October 31, 2018, 02:32:05 AM
Just because Art could replenish the soul (and I'm not sure that it can, without another soul there to interact with) doesn't mean it requires a soul to be done.  Hugging replenishes the soul, you want to try to argue that a fae can't hug someone?  Maybe not Mab, but Summer almost certainly can, with all the comfort and empathy of a regular human.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mr. Death on October 31, 2018, 02:36:30 AM
Just because Art could replenish the soul (and I'm not sure that it can, without another soul there to interact with) doesn't mean it requires a soul to be done.  Hugging replenishes the soul, you want to try to argue that a fae can't hug someone?  Maybe not Mab, but Summer almost certainly can, with all the comfort and empathy of a regular human.
Now I kind of want to see Mab try to hug someone, for how hilariously awkward and stilted it probably is.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 31, 2018, 02:41:10 AM
WOJ has talked about this.  He says Mab might still have some part of her soul, Molly almost certainly does.  But his use of the concept of soul and  free will are twisted.  Which makes it difficult to evaluate the behavior of the Queens and the Ladies.  Mab feels anger because Maeve is corrupted, which implies that she shares feelings about her children similar to Harry. As does Titania, shown by her anger when talking to Harry after the events of Summer Knight.  Titania tells Harry that Elder Gruff has convinced her that Harry should be forgiven.  They aren't immutable.  They feel grief and can make complex moral judgements.  This would imply to me that they have some free will left.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Arjan on October 31, 2018, 06:23:33 AM
I am aware. Not having FREE Will =/= not having Will at all. Mab for example can still make plans and decisions within her purview, but she lacks free will because there are times and places where she literally cannot take certain options.

The most obvious example is Killing. Mab can't kill someone unless they leave themselves open to her by involvement with the Courts. (Which is why she has a Knight to do it via loopholes)
If she wants to do something but she can not do something she still has the will to do it. As long as the mantle is seen as something different from herself it blocking her actions is outside interference not fundamentally different from someone else stopping you.

That can of course also be your own nature that is not aligned with the mantle yet.

If we see your nature as a set of instincts that generate emotions and is closely linked or identical to your power and life force the mantle is a more powerful set of instincts. It takes a lot of will to (want to) handle against those instincts and you need your soul to do so.

But the mantel stopping you to do or say certain things is actually not a sign you lost free will and it might be a sign that you still have it. When you have lost your free will completely it does not even occur to you to choose an option against your nature. You don’t see that option.

Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Mira on October 31, 2018, 11:31:52 AM


  My point is being human or not...  Humans have free will, knights are still human and have free will to make choices, the fae not so much..
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: Avernite on October 31, 2018, 08:41:19 PM
I guess there's also a once-removed option.

Perhaps Molly-the-Lady has no Free Will, but Molly-the-Soul still has the Choice to ditch the lady mantle (and from there get all her human will back). Her discussion about the necessity of the Lady would then be a significant in that it is her choosing the Lady and all its restraints.
Title: Re: Molly
Post by: morriswalters on October 31, 2018, 09:09:12 PM
The way I'm going to look at this way for my reading experience.  There are two parts to her, the mantle and the thing that makes her human.  They are in contention for control.  Either she will retain her humanity or lose it to the mantle.

Butcher has used this metaphor a couple of times now. For Thomas and Susan as an example.  He seems to like to reuse things.......a lot.