So, I've been toying with an idea and wanted some feedback and advice lore-wise/believably-wise. If the community's knows of any potential plot-based conflicts that could arise from other more popular mods that I rarely use, that would help too. Some words of warning! I've never modded a thing in my life, and I'm not as familiar with the forgotten realms or DND as a whole as many of the mod-authors here. I'm learning it all as I go. But, I have an itch to write and plot bunnies that won't go away, so please be kind and patient. These are still very early stages and I'm open to ideas/critique. None of these details are set in stone and characterisation may be iffy still. Some of this may never make any cosmoligical sense, but I'd like to get it as close as possible, within this DNDverse
I intend for a player's first encounter with this NPC to be in one of the rooms of the Planar Sphere, maybe the one with the myconids/minotaur(? the one that isn't the lizard people). Part of this was borne out of a desire to give the planar sphere more plot beyond playing to Valygar's angst-ridden magic obsession, or to facilitate CHARNAME's questionable idea of a remote-learning apprenticeship. I'd posit it as something more than a planar-hopping space ship, and that by maintaining a balanced volume of species from different planes, demon-Lavok was able to use it not only for planar travel, but time travel as well. This didn't go down well with the powers that be, which is where said NPC comes in...
Aasimar(deva) // female // Neutral // mage(diviner)
STR:10
DEX: 13
CON: 14
INT: 17
WIS: 13
CHA: 12
"To look upon a person is to see a multitude of possibilities, one choice affecting another in a chain of occurrences, stretching out into infinity. Yet, no single one ever finds itself in the same place. It leads me to wonder if these decisions are ever even our own, or rather a collision of forces affected throughout a multiverse beyond one's control."
Theil is a Movanic Deva from some celestial plane, or other, assigned sometime in 1280DR(?), to balance Lavok’s planar sphere, which had inadvertently stumbled upon a means to time travel. Too powerful to let loose, but too valuable to destroy, a balance of primal forces would ultimately serve to maintain the sphere in stasis as the deva’s will served as a counterbalance to the malevolent presence that the necromancer has invited into his mind. Over the decades, her tenure with Lavok would see her role go from jailor to friend as they witnessed the planes and the passing of time from the confines of the sphere.
Eventually, her time spent in the sphere as a lone figure standing in opposition to her diametric counterpart would come to shake the young Deva’s beliefs, challenging her own moral preconceptions of goodness and order and the role it played in the wider multiverse. The shift of her moral centre jostles the tenuous equilibrium within the sphere, which, over time, begins to destabilise. Tolgerias, at some point, comes to understand the true nature of the sphere, and through his own machinations, succeeds in drawing the weakened sphere back to the prime material plane. Intent on using it for himself, and reluctant to alert more of his colleagues to his discovery, he contracts CHARNAME's scrappy band of mercenaries to obtain the means to entering the sphere, off the books.
Now, with the sphere deactivated and her ward dead. Thiel is a deva trapped out of time, and morally adrift. With no clear road set out before her, she signs on with [CHARNAME]’s band to explore her newfound freedom in foreign lands.
-- DESCRIPTION --
There's an enigmatic countenance to the woman before you, she who you found in the deeper regions of the sphere. Her features are young, her stature slight, yet she carries herself with the bearings of one who has met multiple lifetimes head on. An initial take would suggest that she is a human of thirty winters or less. Her skin is pale with few markings, and her hair is like the autumn leaves. Most notably, however, is the veil that ever hides her eyes. Perhaps she is blind, and her perceptions are a result of divination, which she claims to be in her blood. The rest of her is otherwise nondescript. Quiet and aloof, she hangs at at the back of the group on your marches.
--FIRST ENCOUNTERS--
Theil: Bhaalspawn.
T: Hold. There's no need for alarm. 'Twas a statement, not accusation. What brings you here, I wonder.
You know what I am? How?
(She tugs her cowl lower) Some things are more apparent than others... Fewer things are impossible to ignore.
Another demon! Kill it! (Attack)
Oops, that's my exit. (disappear) {end}
Adventure, excitement and treasure! Especially the treasure.
Indeed? I suppose you won't be disappointed. This ship has seen many planes, and its owner a magpie of sundries, living or otherwise.
The sphere locked us in.. But who are you?
I am no danger to you. Not without cause. Did you finally come for Lavok? Yes. I feel him fading beyond the door... Yet it lingers, barely. The sphere is unstable. I should remain here. But, beware the lower levels. Two others of the prime have found their way there. (A smile) Though I doubt they'll be a match for you. Perhaps we will speak again after.
.
Theil: Faerûn… (She looks up from the map upon your approach) That’s where we are, yes? I have only seen snippets.
What do I care? Get out of my sphere, you’re on your own.
So be it. [dimension door(?)]
It is. We’re in Athkatla, specifically, in the Amnish regions.
I see. I am unfamiliar with these lands beyond his musings. But, it seems this is where I must be. Should you be willing, my magic is yours. For a time, at least.
No, I have no need for your help right now.
Hm. I’ll remain here then, till I’ve gathered my bearings. [end]
Yes, join with me. [end]
Are you sure? You should know, I intend to track down an old friend. The journey to her may prove treacherous.
Indeed? She must be special, for one to go to such lengths for her return. To a child of Bhaal no less.
She is like a sister to me. I won’t leave her to rot in a Cowled Wizard’s prison.
She is family. It’s my duty to keep her safe.
Then let us tarry here no longer.
Are you sure? I’m hunting a powerful mage. It will be dangerous. This is not a journey for the faint of heart.
(smile) I believe I’ll prove up to the task.
I couldn’t care less about the whelp. It’s Irenicus I’m after, and where she is, he’ll be as well.
Do you count all your friends so lightly? Fear not, I can hold my own till we part ways.
--SAMPLE DIALOGUE--
T: I wish to thank you, for what you did for Lavok.
It wasn’t a problem.
You say that so easily… Is it kindness or apathy that makes it so?
I could hardly deny a dying man’s last wish.
Even for one such as he?
He seemed remorseful in the end.
He was… or so he would claim. Can you trust the remorse of one who could be so cruel?
I did what anyone would have done, wouldn’t you?
Once, I might have. But for myself moreso than for him.
The demon in him made him do those things.
Will it change anything to know that he let it in? Lavok knew his crimes. Eternity was to be his penance.
He’s dead, there’s little point in speculating as to why.
Our choices make ripples. Nothing truly ends, not even in death.
I did it for the loot. Kicking him out like it was a good deed was just a bonus.
Practical. A sentiment that he would have no doubt appreciated. May I ask how you found yourself in that place to begin with?
I didn’t want an old necromancer’s corpse rotting in my sphere.
Practical. He would have appreciated that, if wasteful. May I ask how you found yourself in that place to begin with?
The Cowled Wizards tasked me with seeking out a murderer. But it was not as it seemed. Valygar convinced me to help end his family’s curse instead.
Another bounty, another day. The Cowled Wizards sent me to hunt a murderer, but it was a lie, so I took to the sphere myself instead.
You mean the two who were in the lower levels? I see… A fitting end.
--PID--
(Her gaze seems fixed on a point beyond the horizon)
(Watch her.)
(She moves with an easy grace of one well accustomed to the road - arms swaying gently at her sides, her gait even and measured. She is quiet but for the muffled thuds of heels to dirt and the soft rustling of her robes.)
(Absently humming an errant tune, she picks, at her right sleeve, some dirt and ash from the fight before, and you catch a whiff of singed rose petals, cinnamon, and something medicinal.)
(She's scratching at skin under her blindfold, pushing it higher than you've seen, and you catch a glimpse of turqoise underneath. Her hand slides away when she catches your gaze.) Did you need something [CHARNAME]?
I'd like your opinion of someone. (depending on influence)
Truely? (she watches you, her expression wry) We have better things to do than gossip like a weaver's circle, yes?
So, ask.
Aerie > Her anger is young and bright. Only time will tell where it will lead her.
Anomen > The young cleric doesn't lack for enthusiasm.
Cernd > For a stalwart guardian of nature, he goes to great lengths to run from his own.
Edwin > (laughs) He is chaos.
Haer'dalis > Yon sparrow is like the wind, afeared to stand still 'lest he cease to exist.
Imoen > How do you feel? To find your two fates so intertwined?
Jaheira > She grieves.
Jan > That curious little man... I wonder if he's aware of the truth in his tall tales.
Keldorn > He is a rock. I admire his discipline, if not his choices.
You lack the bearings of one without sight.
(She considers you for a moment) Perhaps because I am not.
Hah, I knew it! And it was a wild guess.
You jest, [CHARNAME]. Does this conclude your little interrogation, then?
Yes, I just wanted you to know that I knew!
You are a very strange person. [end]
No. Why the Ruse?
Then why the ruse?
It is simpler. I do not see as most people do, and the cloth helps more than it hinders. Some may find my features unnerving,
Unnerving? Don't tell me you're hideously scarred under all that.
No, Just different.
Will you show me?
Ugh, pass. I don’t need to know.
I find that hard to believe. Will you show me?
(For a while, the pull of her lips seems skeptical and calculating before it softens with a sigh) You may have surmised by now that I am not… native, but I don’t suppose there’s any point in such subterfuge between allies.
(She tugs at the blindfold and pushes it up into her hair without ceremony. Underneath, her eyes are like turquoise stone, encompassing the iris and sclera, and her pupils are shining pinpricks of waning light. The skin around them transitions into scales - or are they quills – past her brow, patterned with an iridescent shimmer of a similar hue)
I am a deva, or I was. I know not what I am now.
You’re beautiful.
(Her reply sounds automatic as she moves to tug the cloth back down.) Thank you.
That’s not something you see every day.
(She lets out a soft chuckle as she moves to tug the cloth back down) Then you understand the secrecy.
(stay her hand)
I.. [CHARNAME]?
(She eyes you warily as you trace the line of quills from her cheek to her brow, but eventually relaxes once her caution proves unfounded. A closer look suggests that the blue-green quills run further back around her head and her neck, disappearing down the collar of her robes.)
(leave her be)
Truth be told it will be a relief to keep it off while we’re outside the city. The fabric chafes after a while on the road.
Oh, Gods! Put it back on, put it back on!
(Her laugh is a bark and she watches your exaggerated flailing with amusement. It is some time before she tugs the fabric back down over her eyes and returns her attention to the road.)
Ah... maybe some things are better not knowing, then.
(She shrugs and returns her attention to the road. )
--PARTY BANTER--
Valygar: You knew Lavok.
Theil: As much as one person might know another. You have questions, Valygar.
V: I've been wrecking my mind over his passing. I believed him to be evil for so much of my life. How long were you with him in that sphere? What did you know of him?
T: I cannot say. Time holds little meaning in that place, but it felt like a dozen lifetimes.
T: But, more to your question, I suspect, I have known him long enough that there are no easy answers to that which you seek.
V: Then who was he in the end? Was he always evil, or was it all but the work of that demon?
T: We are each of us a spectrum of desire, ambition, caution and regret that stretches further the longer one exists. What is right or wrong moreoften comes in the telling, not of the making, young Corthala.
V: You speak in riddles! But I suppose it is the nature of magic-wielders to make excuses for their own. All the better to justify their own trespasses!
T: Perhaps you misunderstand... But if you desire it plainly:
T: Lavok was a man of vast knowledge and means, and the reality of the planes are wider than any one of us might know.
.
Theil: You should know. Lavok didn't return for you.
Valygar: You expect me to believe that, knowing his past? Turn your lying tongue elsewhere, I’ll not listen to it.
T: We had been adrift for over a century. What reason would we have to return?
V: I don’t know, to steal the body of a blood relative like he did countless times before?
T: For all his faults, it was knowledge, not undeath, that Lavok craved, and he had divested himself of the need for new vessels a long time ago.
V: Not even with the demon in him compelling him?
T: No, the demon’s lust was for the prime material. Lavok was its cage as much as the Sphere.
.
Valygar: What was your relationship with my ancestor? You said you knew him well.
Thiel: I said I knew him long enough.
V: For a fair time apparently. The Solamnic knights claimed you were already in the sphere when they wandered in.
T: (grin) Ah, I remember that day.
V: You're amused by their entrapment?
T: Hmm. You're a trapper, aren't you, dear huntsman? What say you of the drunk buck that wandered into your snare last eve?
V: I would not make light of a kill of necessity.
T: Yet still you smile at the memory.
T: The Knights sought adventure and the sphere provided. But it is buffetted by its whims.
V: You didn't answer my question.
T: (smile) I did not. You're as accomplished a trapper as he.
.
V: I need to know, did Lavok ever speak of us – of his family? Did he ever care how his legacy would come to taint everything in it?
T: (quietly) This road leads only to disappointment, Valygar. I’ve heard tell of how your own tale ends.
V: So he thought on us not at all, after everything? How could you befriend such a monster?
T: I will not speak for the dead, even less so of things I do not know. Lavok was a private man. There was a hardness to his manner that was at times impenetrable. But…
T: Though very little survives the passage of time, there were things on this plane that he never forgot. Once, he described a scene that resembled the forests near your cabin. I do not know what the place meant to him, but it was the gentlest I had ever seen him.
V: And you believed him?
T: I did, at the time… And it marked my fall. Make of that what you will.
.
Anomen: They say you are an angel, but I sense nothing remarkable about you.
Theil: You are correct, and I am not.
A: Hmph, and without backbone too. I would expect the righteous to fight for their honour!
T: You are dissatisfied with my answer.
A: Nay, I am disgusted. That you would so easily discard power and favour so readily heaped upon you.
T: What would you have done with this power I might have wielded?
A: Why, I’d purge the lands of its evils, or course!
T: But how would you judge them?
A: What do you mean? Are you so blind that you fail to see evil when it stands before you?
T: Morality shifts constantly in your living world. How cruel would you be to a begger, if the coin you gave him with kindness sent him down a path of blind reliance? Or, your murder of the thief led those for whom they provided on to even greater crimes?
A: And you’d rather do nothing at all, I suspect? You are worse than weakness and your inaction serves no one.