
I found no scene like this in book
PS: Whereas the house has an owner and he needs permission to enter.




I not think is an intoxication, but an effect of the drugs in blood. Around, we conclude that Eli has metabolism. This also explains why Eli has heartbeat.jkwilliams wrote:I can remember at least a couple of times in the novel where Eli becomes intoxicated from someone's blood.(Once from morphine and the other from alcohol in Lacke's blood.) That made me wonder if the invitation rule would still apply if Eli were so incapacitated he didn't know what he was doing?
Yeah I know, Eli seems to absorb whatever is in the blood of his victims.ElisLove wrote: I not think is an intoxication, but an effect of the drugs in blood. Around, we conclude that Eli has metabolism. This also explains why Eli has heartbeat.
On top of that it seems to me Eli chose a rather unusual entrance at the pool. I might be wrong but I had the impression Eli asked to be invited at something like an emergency exit? At a door you’re not supposed to enter the pool house, hence requesting an explicit invitation. Skipping the entrance hall and lockers, the route people usually take, and lastly smashing through a window – better be invited, public place or not.Ash wrote:I think it has been mentioned before that Eli didn't ask permission to enter the hospital, but did ask at the pool house. While both being similar public amenities.
It was thought to be a little slip-up by John/Tomas.
However, meetoo's s-curve might be in play - at the hospital Eli only needed to enter and talk, but at the pool house she needed to be locked and loaded with her full powers at disposal. Works for me anyway.
Nah, that should not be ignored, it’s an interesting question.jkwilliams wrote: In the old woman's house, he becomes so messed up on the morphine in her blood he starts hallucinating and can barely function. It makes me wonder what would have happened in that situation if he'd passed out and been discovered? If paramedics took him to the hospital, would an "unconscious" Eli still begin bleeding when they wheeled him through the doors?
I was just wondering if needing permission was really a physical thing or something else. Eliform vampires bleed but I'm not sure what causes it.
I think about silly things like that. Just ignore me.
Since Eli is offering to show Oskar what happens, we know that breaking the invitation rule isn't necessarily fatal because it's happened at least once before. So, I'm guessing that if it became obvious Oskar wasn't going to give him permission to stay, he could have just run from the apartment and stopped the process. Right?..."But seriously. What happens if I don't do it?"
"Don't. Start." Eli gave a thin smile. "You want to see? What happens? Do you? Is that what you want?"
Eli said it in a way that was clearly intended for Oskar to say no: the promise of something terrible. But Oskar swallowed and said: "Yes. I do. Show me."