That said, remember that Lasciel and Nicodemus know about Bonnie. If Harry dies right then and there, they're going to capture her for themselves. That's Lasciel's stated intent in Hades, remember.
Hm, that's right. And they'd catch her, too, unless Mab were to literally appear at Harry's death. Which may be possible... While we don't
know for certain where Mab is between the meeting with Kringle and Harry's confrontation with her at the BFS, I have a hunch that she stays in Chicago. Mostly due to the fact that the weather remains icky. If she's in Chicago, that would mean that Harry's mantle would return to Mab, not Molly, on Harry's death, which would tell her that her knight is no more.
A measure of safety, yes. This doesn't confirm that Mab has accurate spies everywhere that will give her such a detailed account of the whole chase that she'll completely reject Nicodemus's version of events.
I hear what you say about Mab's recreation of the scene in Small Favor. Correct me if I'm wrong - that was what Mab was able to do with
no forewarning, without any initial invested means of knowing that the movement of these Denarians would be important to her. To me, that doesn't say "wow, she's limited." Imagine what she could do if she was prepared.
No, I mean really, imagine. She DOES have this band of elite spies and assassins at her beck and call, who can witness events play out through reflective surfaces. And in the icy, sleety environment, there's plenty of reflective surfaces. Heck, Harry even has some on him, one of which sits on his earlobe. Nick is holding another for most of the confrontation.
I mean, she's been putting together this plan for ages. She's spending the weekend making sure everything goes to plan. Is it really improbable that she wouldn't task a Fetch with watching Harry's back, and alerting her when things got dicey? I mean, I know that Harry fought some Fetches a while back, but he's all winter and stuff now.
Besides, Harry's words to Nicodemus when he closes the gate talk about Mab watching
directly. They are fighting in Mab's element.
I've given you evidence that Mab may be watching herself, and provided a good number of other witnesses who could have done the job. (and yes, the Cobbs Harry met at Shoegasm wouldn't have been watching, but that was mostly just an example that not all little folk have heads as full of corn silk as the Major General and his colonels). But at the end of the day, the question remains: even if Nicodemus only has a
reasonable chance that Mab might not be watching closely,
would he really risk killing Dresden if it wasn't 100% obvious and clear that Harry had betrayed him? Especially on a job that is so important, he is willing to sacrifice his daughter over?
Nicodemus wouldn’t really have betrayed Harry unless he killed him, and Harry wouldn’t really have betrayed Nicodemus
The later part of the sentence is blatantly false. Both Harry and Nick knew that Harry truly intend to help Butters, sabotaging Nick's attempt in the process whether Harry really intended to do so or not.
The equation is not balance. The scales are not satisfied.
It should be Nick truly intend to kill Harry and Harry truly inted to help Butters. Harry succeed, while Nick fail. Which is another inbalance that must be covered. Someone has to pay the price for this inbalance.
Again, please note my earlier arguments over intent vs. deed, or as you put it, intent vs. what is actually done. We agreed that intent does not signify a betrayal, as you might remember. What matters is if Harry
actually betrays Nicodemus. That means that what matters in the beginning is whether Dresden actually ushers Butters off to safety or not. After Nicodemus gives the order to Harry to kill Butters, what matters is if Harry actually kills Butters or not. And at this scene, everything is not played out, so Harry has not yet for certain saved Butters. Harry has not succeeded where Nicodemus has failed.
It does not matter a bit what he intends to do, but what he actually does. Otherwise, Nick could have just killed Harry as he ran toward the Carpenters' house in the beginning. Instead, Nicodemus shows up, acts as if Harry was obviously pursuing Butters, and then makes him choose between allowing Butters' death or fighting them and betraying Mab.
Nicodemus wants to make sure Dresden is
clearly breaking the truce.
About gen. Gen does not directly crush Harry's head, because Nick has fid on his throat at the time. If Gen crush Harry's head, Murphy will be fully justify to smite Nick down. She'll only be too happy to cut his head off. Nick need to disarm Murphy first before anything else. It is sheer personal safety.
After he succeeded in disarming Murphy and breaking fid, Harry is again saved from head crushing because Nick is gloating.
After that Harry is saved by Michael.
... you DO realize that you're completely arguing in favor of my point, yet again?
I mean, you just stated that when Nicodemus told the Genoskwa to kill Harry, that he wasn't actually trying to have Harry killed, because he would lose the piece of leverage he was using. This
literally means that you are saying that this was all a ploy in order to get Karrin to expose the sword. It
literally means that you are agreeing with Nicodemus.
You have just provided a logical, well-thought-out reason that Nicodemus was being accurate when he said that this was a ploy.
And furthermore, you provided extra evidence that I hadn't even thought of. If Karrin is completely justified in killing Nicodemus if he has the Genoskwa killed, there's only one reason for that to be the case. It would mean that Nicodemus had taken an action which contradicted his submission and relinquishment of the coin. This would imply that Nicodemus did
not truly "relinquish his claim on the blood of the innocent." Because that would mean in this case that
Harry was innocent and Nicodemus truly did not have a right to his blood under the agreement.
I mean, come on. Don't you see this? At all? You just literally agreed to me. I've shown several times in this thread that I'm not allergic to admitting when I'm wrong and adjusting my beliefs based off of it - after all, I'm not arguing to Mr. Death anymore that Murphy must be under some evil influence. Come on.
Second... Harry is safe from Genoskwa after the sword breaks, because... what, Nicodemus is
gloating? I don't understand your reasoning there. I mean, sure, the Genoskwa probably doesn't have friends with Internet access, so he probably hasn't read that Evil Overlord list, either. But come on. The Genoskwa is a vicious, brutal, carnal predator. When he decides to kill something, he kills it. He doesn't just hang there and wait so that Harry can feel
emotional pain.If Nicodemus' life being in danger was holding him back before, it sure isn't now. Pretty sure that Gen would then drink his blood like a bottle of pop.
This is a more believable reason compare to Nicodemous instructing his people not to kill Harry because Harry is so irreplaceable.
That wasn't quite my argument. Harry is totally replaceable if Mab offers another Winter Sidhe. Harry's agility compared to the grace of a sidhe is like comparing a toddler to a housecat. The big question is,
will Mab replace Harry if Nicodemus is betraying their agreement?
Again, intentions don't matter. What matters is what actually happens.Here is the thing. It is obvious to Nick that Harry is going to betray him. So the idea that Nick won't risk killing Harry unless Nick is certain about his betrayal is again another false assertion. He is already certain, he only need a pretext, an excuse.
And again, this is another strawman, and you know why. It is Mab's opinion, not Nicodemus', that matters. You cannot make the same argument if it is said "So the idea that Nick won't risk killing Harry
unless Nick is certain that Mab would see Harry's act as betrayal is again another false assertion." Mab doesn't just dole out replacements if Nicodemus
felt justified in killing Dresden; she would only do so if Harry actually had broken Mab's word.