Morgan had never assumed he had any power at seeing the future -- well, nothing beyond the common sense that keeps a Warden arrive. But after Dresden nearly got himself killed battling a sorcerer using thunderstorms to kill people, and the White Council had lifted the Doom of Damocles, Morgan had just assumed it was misgivings about the pardon. After all, Dresden had broken the First Law of Magic and was known for doing dangerous things that weren't technically illegal. Even if the Senior Council was going to be merciful -- or foolish -- enough to let him live, letting him off the hook completely seemed excessively foolhardy.
But now, after he had figured out that what he thought was a rotten streak in Dresden was just a dose of excessively recklessness and not thinking through actions at all, Morgan went through the man's reports on supernatural activity on the Eastern Coast of the United States of America -- Dresden somehow managed to run into more dark magic than a wizard three times his age, even before Wardan Luccio had been desperate enough to give him a job as Warden. Either it was very lucky for us that we got a wizard in Chicago right when it became the magical center of the world, or something is up with Dresden, whether Dresden knew it or not, and Victor Sells's storms on the horizon were just the beginning of it. Morgan suspected the latter -- he never liked relying on luck.