'Shadow Caverns' sounds made up in the language they were speaking, like 'wet river'.
@DragonParadox we still have those living breathing masks right? We don't have to rely on someone's water breathing magic with those!
[X] Agree to go to the Azerketi wedding, it is the first time anyone's ever invited you to a gathering on purpose, much less one under the sea
-[X] Use living breathing masks to wedding
Awesome! Finally found a use for them, lol.
"Child of the Sundered, Guide of the Lost behold and be at peace!"
Another reason I want to attend the wedding is... I wonder if Azarketi qualify as 'changed' from the prophecy we received earlier."Who then are the Lost?"
"Lost those who wandered keep, lost are damned, pale, changed and hungering," comes the answer, almost-verse, just as pointless if it had not been for that same cadence, not one thing thrice described, but three. The Lost are the pale, the changed and the hungering
To be fair, that sounds almost normal compared to the level of silliness you can get irl'Shadow Caverns' sounds made up in the language they were speaking, like 'wet river'.
Should have known Gavhaul would be one of those assholes. The picture included when we first met him was suitably shady to make me suspicious, but I didn't want to assume.
The thing is, the Aspis Consortium is just stupidly, ridiculously wealthy. Powerful, too. I don't want to get those people as enemies straight away, and plotting with the Pathfinders is a good way to tip our hand.
Basic Divinations could be used to determine if we're double agents before the expedition even leaves the city.
[X] Suggest that rather than setting out with a plan to betray our new employers, we instead reserve judgement and decide on how to handle them based on what we learn as we travel. We'll have plenty of time and opportunities to gauge their attitudes and intentions during the journey. Ambiguity of this sort can serve as a shield against Divinations we have no way to defend against, and the cost and potential wealth generated by this expedition is exactly the sort of endeavor that would warrant such magics being used.
-[X] As an additional buffer, this one to explain why we might have been observed entering the Pathfinder Lodge, ask Thea for information about the local Azerketi community, especially their royal family. If questioned about our presence here, we can truthfully explain that we came to gather information about the sudden and unexpected wedding invitation we received.
Hmm, what kind of backup would that include?This works though if you reserve judgement you will not get any backup from the Pathfinders, they do not want to hand resources to what might be future Aspis operatives
Ah, that would change things a lot. If we have that sort of backup, I'm a lot less reticent to work against the Aspis Consortium.Well they are not going to outright tell you if you do not pledge to help since that would be tipping their hand, but Sirim would guess something like magic items to help hide your allegiance and a means to call in for help or extraction once the deed is done.
Based on what it is said about group it seems likely they will seek to rub us out to avoid paying our due once the job is done since we are just independent agents and not part of the organization.
Heck, they can frame it as 'savages' seeking to steal from them too given our party composition.
[X] Agree to work with the Pathfinders to betray your new Aspis employers. From what you have learned so far, the Pathfinders seem to be far more trustworthy than the Aspis Consortium, and your group could use all the reliable friends it can find.
-[X] To explain why we might have been observed entering the Pathfinder Lodge, ask Thea for information about the local Azerketi community, especially their royal family. If questioned about our presence here, we can truthfully explain that we came to gather information about the sudden and unexpected wedding invitation we received.
As a general rule you should never sign on to a mega-corp unless you are willing to go against all morals for a paycheck and the accept high chance to be dropped the second you stop being 'profitable'.They are a fantasy mega-corp that often hires on freelancers, sometimes those freelancers are hired on and advance though the ranks too, depending on how foresoughtful the boss is.
Especially when you're the equivalent to a fantasy world team of Shadowrunners. That is just asking for a megacorp double-cross.As a general rule you should never sign on to a mega-corp unless you are willing to go against all morals for a paycheck and the accept high chance to be dropped the second you stop being 'profitable'.
This doesn't look good from IC perspective. We have been hired for a job, and were provided the tools we need to do it. We are now asked to betray our employer on a word of someone who has 'bad blood' with them. What reason do we have to trust Thea's word over Gavhaul's? None that I can see; we don't know either of them.
To an outsider, a 'megacorp' means nothing besides 'people with the means to pay you'. A 'powerful merchant house' is something a lot of people would kill for to get in good graces with. We had to trick the guard to even get a chance at taking part in the expedition. And we are risking this for... what, exactly?
I'd probably have Kori thank Thea for the warning, but decline the offer of betrayal. To Kori, this is just backstabbing your employer the minute you get a promise of a better offer (which we did not, mind -- she isn't willing to make the offer until we sign up for it), and if the offer we are getting isn't better, it is illogical to boot.
If they are willing to tell us what to look for, we can keep an eye out for them, and decide this later. Yes, it won't get us their support, but to me this is still preferable to changing our mind on a whim.
I am not saying this is immoral. If she handed us 10k in gold upfront, I might stab them first, because I am not at all against playing it this way.Keep in mind Kori comes from a culture that hands out knives as a mark of the entrance into adulthood and considers stabbing someone in the back for their position as good as stabbing them in the front, as long as you had the standing and a good reason by the standards of the culture.