Rereid
of the Dresden Files
Book
1: Storm Front
by
Jim Butcher
Part
3
Chapter
7
Harry
is startled by the appearance of the man with the sword. He almost
attacks the man with magic, but instead causally greets the man,
calling him Morgan. Harry explains that Toot had a choice and was not
a mortal, so it wasn't breaking the Fourth Law. Morgan calls that a
technicality. Morgan is a Warden of the White Council, assigned to
watch over Harry. Wardens are the police and executioners of the
White Council.
Harry
explains, he is on a missing person case and just called up the faery
to get some information. Since he is not using actual mind-control on
the faery, technically he did not violate the law, a technicality
Harry is prepared to hide behind. Morgan doesn't think it's worth the
effort of bringing it to the counsel, so sheathes his sword. Harry
starts to leave, when Morgan grabs his shoulder and tells Harry, he's
not finished with him yet.
I didn't dare mess around
with Morgan when he was acting in his role as a Warden of the White
Council. But he wasn't wearing that hat now. Once he'd put the sword
away, he was acting on his own, without any more official authority
than any other man—or at least, that was the technical truth.
Morgan was big on technicalities. He had scared the heck out of me
and annoyed the heck out of me, in rapid succession. Now he was
trying to bully me. I hate bullies.
So I took a calculated
risk, used my free hand, and hit him as hard as I could in the mouth.
Morgan
is incensed that Harry struck him. Harry tells him he is happy to
cooperate on Council business, but Harry doesn't have to put up with
this on personal business. Morgan calls Harry an arrogant fool and
Harry tenses himself for a fight. No law of magic protects Harry from
Morgan punching him back, and Morgan has more experience and 100 lbs.
on him.
Morgan
accuses Harry of killing the two people at the hotel with magic.
Morgan doesn't know how, but he will figure it out and bring the
evidence before the Council. Harry is taken aback that Morgan, and by
extension, the White Council, thinks Harry the two. Harry realizes as
the only wizard in Chicago that has killed with magic, albeit in
self-defense, Harry is the prime suspect for the Council.
Harry
protes, saying he is helping the police find the killer. Morgan is
dismisive of mortal authority, and thinks Harry is just setting
someone up to take the fall for the mortals.
“Good night, Morgan,”
I told him. I started to walk away again, before I could let my mouth
get me into more trouble.
He moved faster than I
would have given a man his age credit for. His fist went across my
jaw at approximately a million miles an hour, and I spun down tot he
dirt like a string-cut puppet. For several long moments, I was unable
to do anything at all, even breathe. Morgan loomed over me.
“We'll be watching you,
Dresden.” He turned and started walking away, the shadows of the
evening quickly swallowing up his black coat. His voice drifted back
to me. “We'll find out what really happened.”
As
Harry checks whether Morgan broke his jaw, his thoughts drift back to
the reason he is under the Doom of Damocles. When he was a teenager,
the wizard he was apprenticed to tried to seduce him to Black
wizardry. Harry resisted and his mentor tried to kill him. Harry, by
luck more than skill, managed to kill his mentor with his magic.
However, the First Law of Magic is “Thou shall not kill.” Harry
managed to convince the White Council it was self-defense, so instead
of the death penalty, they put him on parole. One slip up, and he
will be executed.
Finding
the real killer has become a lot more important for Harry and he is
now more resolved to go speak with Bianca the Vampire behind Murphy's
back.
My
Thoughts
Morgan
is a dick!
We
start to see why Harry has such a problem with authority figures. If
my mentor tried to seduce me to the dark side and then I was force to
kill him, I might have a similar problem. And of course, the other
wizards put him on trial instead of giving him a medal for getting
rid of a bad dude.
And
I'm glad Harry is learning that sometimes its better to shut up then
provoke the guy that just cold cocked you so hard he dropped you.
There
is also a lot more to the confrontation with Harry's mentor that we
get latter on. My understanding about Storm Front is Butcher wrote it
years before he started writing the rest of the Dresden novels and
there seem to be some inconsistencies in Storm Front from the latter
novels. For instance, Wardens always wear a gray cloak, it's the
symbol of their office. Morgan's description doesn't have him wearing
his in this chapter.
Chapter
8
Harry leaves in a
basement apartment. Mister, a large tomcat that Harry found badly
injured three years ago, waited at the bottom of the stairs for Harry
to let in. Like most cats, Mister believed the apartment was his, and
tolerated the presences of Harry. Because Harry has such an effect on
technology, Harry has no power in his apartment. Luckily, there is a
fireplace that works.
Harry lights a fire for
Mister and then dons a flannel bathrobe. Harry heads down into the
subbasement where his lab is. The real reason wizards wear robes, to
stay warm in their labs. On the floor of his lab is a brass summoning
circle. The walls are lined with shelves full of various ingredients
in tupperware, jars, and other containers. Several books, a row of
his notebooks, and a human skull, also rest on the shelves. The first
thing Harry does is order Bob to wake up.
Bob the Skull grumbled
something in Old French, I think, though I got lost when he got to
the anatomical improbabilities of bullfrogs. He yawned, and his bony
teeth rattled when his mouth clicked closed again. Bob wasn't really
a human skull. He was a spirt of air—sort of like a faery, but
different. He made his residenced inside the skull that had been
prepared for him several hundred years ago, and it was his job to
remember things. For obvious reasons, I can't use a computer to store
information and keep track of the slowly changing laws of
quasiphysics. That's why I have Bob. He had worked with dozens of
wizards over the years, and it had given him a vast repertoire of
knowledge—that, and a really cocky attitude. “Blasted wizards,”
he mumbled.
Harry tells Bob that he
wants to make a couple of potions and explains the situation to Bob.
Bob tells Harry he could help, if Harry would let him out of the
skull. Harry refuses, remembering the trouble Bob caused at a
sorority last time. For a spirit of intellect, Bob is really obsessed
with sex. Bob calls it academic research, and Harry calls it
voyeruism. The pair argue, and Bob demands to know how long its been
since Harry has been on a date. Harry reveals his dinner plans with
Susan on Saturday.
Bob asks for a
description, and after Harry describes her, asks how Harry got such a
pretty girl to out with him. Harry changes the subject, and tells Bob
they're going to make an escape potion. Bob refuses to help Harry
with the escape potion, unless he also makes a love potion. Harry
threatens to throw Bob down the deepest well he can find, but Bob
knows he is far to valuable to get rid of.
Harry resists the urge to
smash the skull, and counts to 30 to calm down. Love potions are
cheap, and would give Bob a vicarious thrill. Harry doesn't have to
use it, after all. Harry tells Bob he'll make the love potion.
Bob's eye lights came up
warily. “You're sure? You'll do the love potion, just like I say?”
“Don't I always make
the potions like you say, Bob?”
“What about that diet
potion you tried?”
“Okay. That one
mistake.”
And the antigravity
potion, remember that?”
“We fixed the
floor! It was no big deal!”
“And the—“
“Fine, fine,” I
growled. “You don't have to rub it in. Now cough up the recipes.”
Every potion has eight
ingredients: a liquid base, something to engage all five sense,
something for the mind, and something for the spirit. Every potion is
different for every person making the potion and Bob is very good at
understanding which ingredients would be needed for which wizard
making it.
For the escape potion:
liquid base (Jolt cola), smell (motor oil), touch (bird's feather),
taste (chocolate covered espresso beans), sight (a shadow), hearing
(mouse scampers), mind (bus ticket), and spirit (broken chain). This
version of the escape potion will turn the imbiber into the wind for
a few minutes. Harry is unsure, never having heard of this potion
before. Bob says, it will work, he is an air spirit, after all.
For the love potion:
liquid base (tequila), smell (perfume), touch (shredded lace), taste
(dark chocolate), sight (candlelight), hearing (sigh), mind (fifty
dollar bill), and spirit (shredded pages of a romance novel). Harry
objects to this potion a lot. Usually, champagne is used as the base.
Harry thinks the tequila will produce a sleazier result. Bob wanted
the ashes of a love letter for the spirit and powdered diamond for
the mind, but Harry was fresh out of both. Luckily, Harry got a paid
in fifties by Monica today, and Bob has a collection of trashy
romance novels.
The next step was
infusing the ingredients with magic to transform them into potions.
Harry gather's his emotional energy (worry, annoyance, and
stubbornness) and focus them on the potions while muttering
quasi-Latin phrases. Finished, and tired from the effort, Harry puts
the potions into squeezable sports bottles and clearly labels them.
Bob assures Harry that these are top notch potions.
Exhausted, Harry climbs
up the ladder and stumbles to his bed and lies down. Mister, as
usual, climbs up on his bed, gets settle, and begins “purring like
a miniature outboad motor.”
My
Thoughts
Mister the cat is very
much a cat. Arrogant, thinks he is in charge, and that Harry is there
to serve him. I'm not a cat person for the reasons listed above, but
Harry likes his cat, and he is useful in some of the latter books.
Bob the Skull is awesome.
He and Harry make a great odd couple, always bickering, Bob always
criticizing his love life. Harry almost always has to bribe Bob to
get him to help out. And Bob knows when Harry is really desperate, to
really get what he wants.
The method Butcher came
up with for potions is really great and creative. And the fact that
harry has such weird things stored: “a flickering shadow in a
handkerchief” or a jar of sighs. The potions are made out of such
mundane items, though a few are magical held. It is really neat. I
wish he used potions more often in the later books, because I always
enjoyed the ingredients he comes up with for them.
Chapter
9
Harry is awoken late
Friday afternoon by a call from Murphy. Despite having no power, he
does have a phone. She asks for a progress report, and he says
nothing yet, lying that he worked on it all last night. The case is
not going well, and Murphy needs the info pronto. Murphy, and her
unit, were the scapegoats of the department. Any unsolvable crime was
dumped in their laps. Harry asks if she spoke to Bianca yet.
Another swear word. “That
bitch won't talk to us. Just smiles and nods and blows smoke, makes
small talk, and crosses her legs. You should have seen Carmichael
drooling.”
Harry floats the option
of him speaking with Bianca, and Murphy shuts the down and explicitly
tells him not to go to the Velvet Room. Harry lies, but Murphy hears
it in his voice (Harry is a bad liar), and threatens to lock him up.
Harry pulls the old bad connection gag and hangs up on her.
Harry eats, and gets
ready for his visit to Bianca after nightfall. The most important
part of wizardy is preparation. Harry gets his cane, puts a silver
knife up his sleeve, grabs the escape potion, a white handkerchief
containing sunlight, and a silver, pentacle talisman that belonged to
his mother. Harry leaves behind his staff and blasting rod, not
wanting to spook Bianca by bringing the equivalent of a flamethrower
and machine gun.
The Velvet Room resided
in a mansion on the lake. Harry pulls up to the gate and his car
brakes down. A guard comes out and Harry tells him he's hear to see
Bianca and asks if the guard can call his mechanic, Mike, to get his
car towed. Harry walks up the driveway, where another guard searches
him and confiscates his knife and cane.
Harry has to rely solely
on magic now. Luckily, the guard didn't take his pentacle, not
realizing to Harry it is a symbol of his faith in magic, and like a
crucifix to a believer, will have the same effect on a vampire.
Bianca the Vampiress
appears to be a very beautiful women in a black dress with a plunging
neckline. They exchange pleasantries and Bianca asks him what he
wants from her. Harry puts his hand in his pocket, grabbing the
handkerchief. Harry tells her he's hear about Jennifer Stanton's
murder.
I had all of a second's
warning. Bianca's eyes narrowed, then widened, like those of a cat
about to spring. Then she was coming at me over the table, faster
than a breath, her arms extended toward my throat.
Harry pulls out the
handkerchief and the sunlight hits Bianca like a sledgehammer,
throwing her back. Even though Harry moved first, her fingernails
still managed to graze his throat. The sunlight sent burned skin
flying off Bianca and her true form is revealed.
I had never seen a real
vampire before. I would have time to be terrified later. I took in
the details as I tugged my talisman off my neck. It had a bat-like
face, horrid and ugly, the head too big for its body. Gaping, hungry
jaws. Its shoulders were hunched and powerful. Membranous wings
stretched between the joints of its almost skeletal arms. Flabby
black breasts hung before it, spilling out of the black dress that no
longer looked feminine. Its eyes were wide, black, and staring, and a
kind of leathery, slimy hide covered its flesh, like an inner tube
lathered with Vaseline, though there were tiny holes corroded in it
by the sunlight I had brought with me.
Harry uses his pentacle
to keep her at bay and tells her he just came to talk. The vampire
accusses Harry of killing Jennifer, one her girls. Harry tries to
explain that he is just helping the police. The pair are at a
standoff, and both agree to stand down. Harry agrees and lowers his
amulet and she resumes her disguise. Harry can't get the image of the
true Bianca out of his head, and she is not quite as beautiful to him
anymore.
Bianca explains that
Tommy Tomm was just a regular here at the Velvet room. Bianca is
protective of her girls and Tommy was a good guy. She sent Jennifer
to him that night. Harry asks if anyone saw Jennifer on a regular
basis, someone who would want to kill her. Bianca says no.
Bianca is still furious
at Harry, and he realizes she is embarrassed that he saw her real
form. Bianca wants to be seen as beautiful, and Harry had destroyed
that illusion. Bianca swears that she would kill him if they hadn't
agreed on a truce. Harry warns her that would be dangersous, that she
has something to lose. Even if she did kill him, his death curse
would get her.
Bianca breaks and begins
to cry and Harry feels bad. Dully, she tells Harry that Jennifer had
a friend, Linda Randall. Linda used to work at the Velvet room, but
know works for a rich couple that wanted a servant who does more than
just clean. Bianca offers to get Harry her phone number and Harry
thanks her.
Bianca smells the blood
from Harry's neck wound and orders him to leave, trying to control
her hunger. She tells him Paula will bring down the numbers. Harry
gets up and as he leaves, Bianca swears she will get revenge on
Harry. As Harry exits Bianca's office, Paula, a lovely young woman,
passes Harry and enters Bianca's office. Harry watcher her pull up
the sleave of her blouse and offer her wrist to Bianca.
Horrified and fascinated,
Harry watches Bianca feed on Paula and notices the the girl act like
she's on a narcotic. Bianca cuts her wrist open with her fangs and
laps up the blood with her tongue. Paula begins moaning in pleasure.
Harry quickly heads outside, disturbed how Paula willingly went to
Bianca and allowed her to feed off her like Bianca was her lover.
Harry speculates, that Bianca's saliva was a narcotic.
Outside, the security
guard returns Harry's weapons and a tow truck has arrived and is
hooking up the blue beetle. A call comes to the guardhouse, and the
guard hands Harry a piece of paper. Harry asks why Paula
didn't bring it down.
He [the guard] didn't say
anything. But his jaw tightened, and I saw his eyes flick toward the
house, where his mistress was. He swallowed. Paula wasn't coming out
of the house, and Fido was afraid.
I took the paper. I kept
my hand from shaking as I looked at it.
On it was a phone number.
And a single word. Regret.
I folded the piece of
paper in half and put it away into the pocket of my duster. Another
enemy. Super. At least with my hands in my pockets, Fido couldn't see
them shaking. Maybe I should have listened to Murphy. Maybe I should
have stayed at home and played with some nice, safe, forbidden black
magic instead.
My
Thoughts
An intense chapter.
Bianca
is not your typical vampire. In latter books, Butcher will call her
type a Red Court vampire. He appearance, tuning into a bat monster,
and how in latter books you kill a Red Court vampire, are very
similar to
chiropteran
of Blood the Last Vampire. Both Blood and Storm Front came out the
same year, so I can only assume they both drew on a similar monster
from mythology or both came up with same creature independently of
each other.
Harry's
encounter with Bianca will have repercussions down the road. Butcher
is very good at making Harry experience the consequences of his
actions, whether they were the right thing to do or not. Harry will
make a lot of messes through the series and they always come to bite
him in the ass.
Bianca
is an interesting character. She is very protective of her employees,
making sure her johns will not hurt them. She tries to kill Dresden
because she thinks he is the only one in Chicago who could have
killed her. When Harry hurts her and she reveals her true form, she
is embarrassed. She is a vain vampire, one who prides herself on
appearing seductive and beautiful.
Supernatural
creatures, especially ones that have been around a few centuries, are
very big on old world hospitality. When oaths are sworn for truces,
they are usually honored. Although when dealing with such creatures,
they tend to hold to the letter of their oaths.
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