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.
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."
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
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.