How do you respond to someone making strong sexual advances toward you during the game when you're the DM? And I'm not talking about just "flirting;" actual sexual references were made.
The situation is this: During our weekly Wednesday night game, I introduced the party to an ol' grumpy dragon suffering from the munchies. In short order, he ate a so-called "diviner" who, ironically, didn't see the end approaching. The rest of the party escaped mostly unscathed and promised to revisit the dragon some day soon when they're stronger.
Well, during a break between "story arcs," the ex-diviner's player left the house to get more drinks. (We usually play at his house, but chip in for goodies.) In the interim, his wife and I were chatting in the kitchen alone. Nice gal; very pretty. We've known each other for a little more than a year now.
As we're cleaning up some of our foodstuff mess, she asks me, point-blank, "Is there anything special I can do to convince you to bring (name withheld)'s wizard back?" She's saying this as she gently puts her hand on my neck near the back of my earlobe, and looks at me with this quirky little grin. "You know, I'd hate to see him upset so badly that you guys stop playing D&D together."
She then stretches up to whisper in my ear something the moderators won't let me repeat here.
Someone came into the room just then, and the moment was lost. The rest of the night went well -- the gang spent most of their time strategizing about how to take down the dragon and/or get the wizard's body parts back.
I guess I'm looking for feedback: What's a good way to bring the wizard back to life? And how can I legitimize the manuver so that he's not a "specialist" diviner anymore (but he's got all of his other standard mage stuff)?
(Background bits: party is sixth level average ... campaign has medium magic flow with high-level wizards and clerics at the larger cities ... party has five (other) members, including fighter, ranger, cleric, cleric/rogue and sorcerer/barbarian. ... no major artifacts on hand ... gold budgeting is usually not an issue; we're flexible ... dragon's home is up in a mountain in the ruins of a long-forgotten dwarven city)
The situation is this: During our weekly Wednesday night game, I introduced the party to an ol' grumpy dragon suffering from the munchies. In short order, he ate a so-called "diviner" who, ironically, didn't see the end approaching. The rest of the party escaped mostly unscathed and promised to revisit the dragon some day soon when they're stronger.
Well, during a break between "story arcs," the ex-diviner's player left the house to get more drinks. (We usually play at his house, but chip in for goodies.) In the interim, his wife and I were chatting in the kitchen alone. Nice gal; very pretty. We've known each other for a little more than a year now.
As we're cleaning up some of our foodstuff mess, she asks me, point-blank, "Is there anything special I can do to convince you to bring (name withheld)'s wizard back?" She's saying this as she gently puts her hand on my neck near the back of my earlobe, and looks at me with this quirky little grin. "You know, I'd hate to see him upset so badly that you guys stop playing D&D together."
She then stretches up to whisper in my ear something the moderators won't let me repeat here.
Someone came into the room just then, and the moment was lost. The rest of the night went well -- the gang spent most of their time strategizing about how to take down the dragon and/or get the wizard's body parts back.
I guess I'm looking for feedback: What's a good way to bring the wizard back to life? And how can I legitimize the manuver so that he's not a "specialist" diviner anymore (but he's got all of his other standard mage stuff)?
(Background bits: party is sixth level average ... campaign has medium magic flow with high-level wizards and clerics at the larger cities ... party has five (other) members, including fighter, ranger, cleric, cleric/rogue and sorcerer/barbarian. ... no major artifacts on hand ... gold budgeting is usually not an issue; we're flexible ... dragon's home is up in a mountain in the ruins of a long-forgotten dwarven city)