But why would Harry's junior be managing security AND giving him orders?
How is the Western Regional Commander the junior of the Eastern Regional Commander? Harry was appointed as a regional commander when he got his cloak. Ramirez got the job as the "other regional commander in America" sometime after the second to last chapter of
Dead Beat. Carlos has been a warden longer. Carlos probably has more points under any system based on superiors' evaluations. Harry is the Warden as opposed to a warden, but the Council, maybe even Senior Council, seems to be largely in the dark on that. So it's a toss up as to who is senior under whatever tie breaker the Council uses.
Tell me that the Council doesn’t want me to be our emissary.”
Ramirez blinked. “Wait, what? Oh . . . oh God, no, Harry. I mean . . . no. Just no.”
...
Ramirez cleared his throat before continuing. “But they will expect you to be the Council’s liaison with Winter, if needed, and to provide security for the Senior Council members in attendance.
That's why Carlos is in charge instead of Harry. 1. Harry would be a terrible choice because there's bad blood between him and just about everyone else, and Harry's a hot head. 2. If anyone was worried about offending Harry by putting someone else in charge of something in his territory, using Carlos, the person Harry asked to be in charge of security at the last official Council activity in Chicago, and the excuse that Harry is in a unique position to serve as the liaison to Winter would be enough to satisfy the protocol droids.
Former Captain of the Wardens, Senior Council Member Blackstaff McCoy, is going to be on the ground there, so I don't think the SC is going to be to worried about the young hotheads going off half cocked. It also pays to note that Carlos is one of the oldest wardens, not counting any who may or may not have been pulled out of retirement, because almost all of the active wardens were killed off in
Dead Beat. At this point, the old guard can't be more than 50 or so. Probably less. I want to say the number of wardens was around 300 last time the number came up, but I'm not sure.
Being a part-time artist and Summer Knight is a long way from Harry. Harry Dresden, who actively gets involved in every struggle him can stumble into. Who starts and ends wars, who fights duels, who storms the enemy strongholds and assassinates key people and otherwise causes chaos and destruction (in the name of saving the world from worse).
Being a part-time artist takes up way more time than one weekend a year.
I can't remember the last time Harry has had any free time (except for a bite at BK or IHOP).
During the 363 days out of the year he isn't having the worst weekend of the year?
S.I. is both small and chronically, critically underfunded. Without Murphy to advocate for it and protect it I am sure it's more of a political exile than ever. Even before Murphy left they were being clamped down on and gutted. She's been gone a few years now and I doubt it does very much at all.
Stallings was said to be quite competent, so I'm not so sure it's going to be worse off without Murphy. Murphy hadn't been the one fighting turf wars since
Proven Guilty. Honestly, S.I. might be better off. Even accepting your premise, that doesn't mean they aren't going to get all the weird cases in search of a scape goat dumped in their lap anyway. It's been around in one form or another for at least 40 years. It's still going to be a valuable source of information.
All that said, that response is a dodge of my question of if you were a warden in a city of millions, would you want S.I. to keep you in the loop? I ask that question because the answer is an obvious "yes." Harry doesn't have to keep his p.i. business to be kept in the loop, but he does have to offer something of value in return.
What's the BSF? Did you Brighter Future Society?
Yes. I don't think all the other parties we see meeting in GS are just going to quit fighting the good fight if Marcone cuts ties with their "Chicago Alliance." Maybe they loose out on Castle Dresden, but Harry doesn't need that. But if the BFS/Chicago Alliance/whatever does collapse and go away, that's a reason why Harry should re-open his office, not a reason that he shouldn't.
All I'm saying is that advertising as a wizard for hire in the yellow pages is a good way to:
protect mortals in this area. To be vigilant against supernatural threats in your region.
Luccio describing (some of) the duties of a warden,
Dead Beat, Ch. 31.
I could see Harry not reopening his business. I just think it would be a really dumb move from an in universe perspective. It's a good way to have information show up on your door step. It's also a good way to launder his diamond money, but I doubt that will even come up in the books. He may or may not need more money than the money from the diamonds and his warden pay depending on how much he can get for the diamonds and a bunch of other factors we have little to no information on. As such, I'd want a good in universe explanation of why he's not doing it. (Just as a side note, the last in text job Harry had as Harry Dresden, P.I. was one month before
Changes).
As for the
Ghost Story discussion, GS is currently ranked as number 14 on my best to worst case file list. (Which still puts it higher on my overall best book list than most books I've read). There wasn't a whole lot wrong with it. It was just too slow for my taste. I also think it was mostly unnecessary. My first time through the books, I accidentally skipped it and didn't realize I missed anything until about a third of the way into
Cold Days or wherever it was that characters started talking about Harry running around Chicago as a ghost. If you add three or four chapters to
Cold Days and
Skin Game showing the effect of Harry's suicide on everyone, then you've probably completely covered the themes of
Ghost Story. It's always the book that takes me the longest to get through.
Ghost Story was padding. It introduced nothing that could have not be done in Cold Days, without adding more than a chapter or so. Cold Days sets up everything going forward. The Outsiders, the forever war at the Gates and the final trilogy. And Jim had been pushing it since at least Proven Guilty.
Skin Games is a great book that is one third fluff, dedicated to the idea that to be a hero you need a sword. And that the writer can push something that on it's face is ridiculous, and that fan boys will buy it. And it does a disservice to Butters character arc in the series.
To whoever I just insulted I apologize, without surrendering the point. Having said that, the other two thirds is a pretty rousing heist plot with a very nice twist.
I basically agree except I think you need more than one chapter to cover the points from
Ghost Story. I think it's fine for Butters to end up a Knight, but I have trouble with his and Murphy's inverse faith in Harry plot arcs over GS to SG and Butters ending up as the Knight of Faith after his repeated doubting Thomas routines.
I don't think the point is that one needs a sword to be a hero. I do think that one does need the power to affect the outcome of events to be a hero if the end result is to be anything other than having "died heroically" on a tombstone.