To kill off the Reds Martin used everybody. And Harry uses that knowledge he gains from the soul gaze just as ruthlessly as Martin. Jim lays to out clearly.
Just as ruthlessly? Really? Martin had a plan, but would it have worked? Just what was his plan? He was willing to kill off all of his followers, he was willing to kill off an innocent little girl and her family and did murder her adopted family.. You compare that with what Harry did?
I knew how angry she was. I knew how afraid she was. Her child was about to die only inches beyond her reach, and what I did to her was as good as murder.
I focused my thoughts and sent them to Susan. Susan! Think! Who knew who the baby’s father was? Who could have told them?
Her lips peeled away from her teeth.
Yes, he may look at it that way, but at the same time
it was the only way to save their daughter. You think Susan shouldn't have known the truth that it was Martin who set up her child to be coldly sacrificed to kill her father and grandfather. And if Harry wasn't so ruthless as you put it, what would have happened do you suppose? I can tell you how it stood in that moment and if Harry hadn't told Susan the truth or helped her to see the truth.. Five minutes later, dead Maggie, dead, Harry, dead Eb, Susan turning once she sees her child murdered, and failing and still dead..
His knife can’t hurt you, I thought, though I knew damned well that no faerie magic could blithely ignore the touch of steel.
Yeah, he said that but do you really think it made any difference to Susan whether or not a knife could hurt her once she went over the edge, began to turn and rip Martin's throat out.. Or say, Harry didn't say the knife couldn't have hurt her, do you think it would have changed anything once Susan saw her baby's throat being cut and she realized who staged it?
Well he lied. If you are an all lies are equally and terrible wrong type of person then the discussion is over.
Yeah, but that kind of belief is a bit hypercritical or falls into the "he who is without sin cast the first stone," category. No one is that pure and truthful 100% of the time..
If you go for a utilitarian morality then I do not think Harry did anything wrong at that moment. Destroying the red court brought the greatest good for the most people.
It did, and Harry made some very difficult choices, his main aim was to save his daughter. And even though one can argue with plenty of certainty that his decisions were right given the outcome. Harry still feels guilty because a lot of people still died.
So who is the hero of the story?
I don't think there is one hero of this story.