Title really says it all, let's just get into the meat of things...
The Gatekeeper:
The mystery of PG really starts with the Gatekeeper and his cryptic warning to Harry about "Black Magic" in Chicago. Bob comes up with the interpretation that the Gatekeeper cannot give any more information because it will lead to paradoxeggedon - i.e. that
even more black magic is potentially coming to Chicago and this warning is the best the Gatekeeper can do.
But when you think about it, other than Molly's mind-control stuff, is there any other Black Magic going on in Chicago? What exactly is the Gatekeeper trying to prevent? Initially, Harry thinks that the psychic mauling of Pell (the theater owner) is black magic, but this turns out to merely be a Fetch. Somehow, this feels more "animalistic" to me rather than "evil". Is the blackout that the Fetch induced any more "black magic" than the Myrk that the Hobs bring during SmF?
The other (and to me, more plausible) explanation is of course that the Gatekeeper is foreseeing Molly's greased (by the mind control she's already attempted) slide into black magic, and is getting Harry to prevent that.
Which leads me to my next point...
Black Council actions in PG:
Talk to anyone about BC activity in Proven Guilty and they'll immediately think about the attack on Arctis Tor. It was swift, powerful, and it very clearly implied that there were forces at work that had their own agenda. However, two things always bothered me:
1)
The frontal assaultThe BC is a group that has consistently worked from the shadows and through layers of cats-paws. Why would they conduct a full-scale frontal assault on one of the most powerful creatures in the DV
in her place of power (i.e. we've seen that Erlking thought he had a chance against her should she be summoned to his domain)? Furthermore, we have the WoJ that any assault by the like of Namshiel would not only be defeated, but
utterly crushed. Sanya excepted, why would any intelligent creature (and nigh-immortals count, certainly once they are at least a century old) pursue such a futile course of action? This smacks as either desperation (i.e. Harry), or temporary insanity (i.e. Harry).
I've seen the various theories that they had some hold or bargain over Mab, or that maybe this was a strike to remove the Athame from Mab's possession (heck, I made that one myself at some point), but then this never really explained why Harry needed to come to Arctis Tor - the real attack was already defeated.
2)
BC in Chicago:
Fact is, we have circumstantial evidence of Black Council activity in Chicago during PG:
- Madrigal is a known cats-paw for the BC. Someone invited him over a year before the convention started. Speculation is that he covering for **something**
- Sandra Marlin is the one who gets Molly thinking about using magical fear to stop a drug addiction. She also used to work at a homeless shelter (Marva warning bells here). If we believe the RPG as cannon, she also disappeared shortly after the events of PG.
---------------->
The TheoryThe answer struck me that the whole PG story might just have been an attempt to "turn" Molly.
Consider that:
- We've already seen that the general BC mode of operation is to give powerful-but-dangerous black magic tools to various people and let them run loose:
- Victor Sells
- Hexunwulf FBI
- Kravos
...you might also include the Athame, the device from Love Hurts, and possibly even the Word of Kemmler itself.
Now we have Molly, who unlike Victor Sells, actually has the power to make the White Council, and she's rebellious enough to be touched by darkness. All one needs to do is to nudge her in the right direction and give her a bit a of power and she could make a scary diversion from whatever you're trying to actually accomplish. For extra points:
- If Marva is on the BC, corrupting the daughter of the guy who "killed your children" is certainly a bonus.
- If you are a Denarian (Namshiel?), then getting the magically-powered daughter of a Knight to take up a coin is certainly a bonus.
- Maybe Molly is
special (I'll speculate more about this at the end)
As a last thought, consider the following:
If Harry hadn't stepped in and taken Molly to her parents, she would have gone with Nelson to greet "Darby Crane". Given who he really is and Molly's looks, don't you think he would have tried (and probably succeeded) to "shake hands" with her? If he did shake hands, isn't it a reasonable assumption that he would have realized her potential, given his ability to feed on fear and Molly's recent fear-inducing magic?
Enter Mab:
Mab sees the BC trying to turn Molly and she decides to intervene. The actual reason for intervention doesn't quite matter:
- Perhaps it's retaliation for infecting Lea with the Athame.
- Perhaps she sees a them as threat to her Accords.
- Maybe it's some sort of Intellectus.
- or perhaps Molly is
special.
In any case, her intervention is to send in the Fetches to kidnap Molly. From Mab's point of view, this makes perfect sense. It messes up the goal of the BC plans (i.e. recruiting Molly), it puts a blinding spotlight (Wizards/mortal authorities/etc) on BC operations, and has potential for just the type of mayhem that Mab can later take advantage of.
And that is the neat part of it. Harry is not the only person in the dark about what is really going on. The BC operatives are also not sure who is
summoning the Fetches (remember that Harry also initially dismisses the thought that the fetches are actually being sent). Glau and the rest of the operatives (maybe Marva/Namshiel) are not sure what is going on, except that the fetches (on their own) have kidnapped their target and taken her to Winter.
So they mount an attempt to take Molly back from the fetches wherever they may have stashed her. Lucky them, Mab happens to have put the entirety of her forces on her border (and doesn't even appear to be home). "This snatch-and-grab is so elegant in its simplicity it cannot fail"...
Mab thus succeeds in bringing a portion of the BC into the open, and bringing the smack-hammer down on them (though apparently Namshiel managed to get away).
Now, to complete her victory, she only needs to get Harry to come and claim Molly so that he can stop her from turning to the dark side, and then she can call her army back from the border and stomp on the Reds in concert with Summer. So why does she let Harry battle it out with Scarecrow?
1) Scarecrow is not
that important to her that she wouldn't risk him in an attempt to gain something.
2) Maybe Molly is not that important, so she doesn't care if Molly dies (think Hobs from SmF).
3) Harry had the means to kill Scarecrow (the butterfly). Mab was *right there* - I'm sure she considered the possibility (Lily certainly did).
4) Harry battle with the Scarecrow was a situation where Mab had absolute control. I'm sure she could have stopped Scarecrow from killing Harry if she needed to. It was a perfect opportunity to see if Harry would take the mantle of Winter Knight under external pressure.
Perfect solution, except for one thing....
Harry accidentally blows up the wellspring of Winter during the fight - wounding Mab (that's right,
Harry wounded Mab, not the Hellfire attack), and calling back the hosts of Winter.
Oops...
Now, re-read this WoJ with my theory in mind:
Yeah. It sure looks that way from here, don't it. Smiley
But to correct some minor stuff: the fetches aren't even /close/ to her strongest servitors. They're her couriers, harassers, spies and occasional assassins. Captain Kudzu was a being that was deemed more-or-less sufficient on the badassometer, but nothing to write home about. The fetches main use, to Mab, isn't as battlefield thugs. She's got /plenty/ of other things for that. Another mild correction: who says Mab /lost/ the battle at Arctis Tor, before Harry and Company arrived? At the end of the day, the Winter Queen was still in her fortress--but you didn't see anyone standing around assaulting the place, did ya. Smiley Also, it has probably occurred to more than one of you that if Mab was /really/ in trouble, she could have had the entire military might of Faerie back at the fortress in moments--exactly the way they *did* come back when Harry smacked the Winter Well with the fires of Summer.
(Which goes to show that while Mab may be canny to an inhuman degree, she isn't infallible. Just way closer to infallible than us.)
See above regarding "the question is *why*?"
Ask yourself why Mab had Molly brought in. What chain of events did that set in motion? What secondary effects came about because of it?
P.S.
I bold-faced the part that I think implies that Harry's "pour Summer Fire into Winter's heart" was not by design.
....
Darn Tootin' it works!!
And finally:
Some speculation about the importance of Molly:
I'll leave the really crazy theories to the "quacks", but I think we have some evidence that Molly is important.
- Lea attempts to bargain with Michael for Molly in PG.
- Father Forthill's "hunch" at the end of PG -> it implies that the WG wanted Harry to teach Molly.
- The fact that there was a BC operation targeting her.
Here's my final thought:
- We know that Harry is an "outsiderbane".
- We have the WoJ that he's not that unique and that there are others.
What if all it takes to make an outsiderbane is a Mother who is a Wizard and a Father who is a "Good Man"?
- It makes sense from a wizard+cleric dnd point of view
- That would certainly make Harry an outsiderbane (it's certainly explains why people keep telling Harry "Your father was a good man")
- It would make
Molly an outsiderbane, and therefore doubly attractive as a BC recruit...