WotBS Lykkenthrope's War of the Burning Sky

Session 22

Session began with the party choosing head straight to Timbre’s grove. (DM Note. I felt like this module had already taken longer than it should have so I let them fast travel to keep the momentum going). Before they entered the grove they had come to the conclusion they needed to end the song and free Indomitability to see their main quest through, but they wanted to do anything they could to save the Seela.

They entered the grove passing through a narrow pathway surrounded by flaming trees until the space opened up to a clearing with burning brush and in the center was a colossal flaming tree similar in appearance to the one at Arielle’s Shrine only vastly larger. Laying in the large, sprawling roots was a feminine figure curled close to the trunk. At first she seemed part of the tree: her skin was wooden and consumed with fire so you could not tell where her body ended and the tree began.

Sorian did not hesitate, he stepped forward into the burning brush an as he did so her eyes shot open. She rose in a rush of flame with a raspy voice, that sounded as if it had not been used in a long time, shouted at him to leave her grove at once. Sorian continued forward before kneeling in fire. Doing his best to mask the pain of being burned, he held the lock of Arielle’s hair aloft.

The flames on Timbre grew smaller as she cautiously approached. Her hand reached for the hair and then stopped. She looked at it with longing but told Sorian she dare not take it, for fear of burning it. The others then stepped forward as Sorian, still kneeling, led the initial conversation. He pleaded for any way to stop the fires or, at the very least, how to free the Seela.

Timbre confirmed the forest, and Seela, still lived only because the Living Blade was pining Indomitability beneath the lake. If blade and creature separated, the magic sustaining the forest would break. The flames would take the woods and firetouched fully, and thusly the Seela as their life force was tied to that of the First Tree…when it burned, they would die.

They asked if the First Tree could be saved, if there was any possible way even a long shot.

Timbre touched the burning trunk, sighing and slumping into the roots again before she replied. She spoke of the origin of the First Tree of the Innenotdar: that in the time before life, blood had seeped up from the barren ground and the First Tree of the World spring to life. From that tree, seeds were taken across the land and planted to form the forests. This tree came directly from a seed from the Tree of Life and then it’s first seeds it produced became the Seela who helped to tend and grow the forest to what it is…or rather was.

Then Timbre shared that she used to be mortal. She had been born to an ancient race of elves. That there had been a blight that had affected the whole forest, including the First Tree. As the Tree grew weaker and forest died, many of her people chose to leave the forest. The elves that left eventually became the Shahalesti, and those who stayed the Taranesti. Timbre herself had been one of the latter.

Sorian interrupted Timbre to commandingly tell Timbre that they did not have time for the long history of the elves, that they needed to know if the Tree could survive the fire. Timbre inclined her head and continued that perhaps it could be saved. The Tree had been on the brink of death during the blight, and one night when she was tending to it she fell asleep amongst its roots and heard a song calling to her from deep beneath the earth and understood she could give her life essence to the Tree, so she did just that. She awoke centuries later, reborn as they see her now: part of the Tree, the forest spirit made flesh.

Timbre touched the burning First Tree and said with some finality that, unlike the blight, there was no way to save the Tree. It had already been consumed. Vic, who had been silently listening, asked if a part of the tree could be enough. The blade beneath the lake had once been a branch of the First Tree.

Timbre contemplated this and said that she wasn’t certain, but perhaps if the Blade was planted into the land and given power….allowed to bond with a new soul…there was a small chance the blade could grow into a new Tree and preserve the connection with the Seela, thus saving them. She explained the soul would need deep roots in the land itself. Someone born here. Someone tied to its past and present…her eyes on Sorian.

Sorian remained kneeling in the fire, stoic as she continued to explain that this act would mean the death of the person who bonded with the blade, though perhaps not true death, rather transformation into something new. Timbre cautioned this may not work, but that at that point she would no longer be on this world…she would have been released to reunite with Arielle.

Sorian offered to leave the lock of hair with her (with Vic loudly protesting), thinking she deserved at least that comfort. Timbre dismissed the offer gently as she would be with Arielle soon either way.

My players were not interested in finding out who started the fires at all. They were so sure the Ragesians had started them, they never questioned it. I dropped many hints in this session’s long back and forth with Timbre and my party pretty much kept the focus on tangible logistics of how to release Indomitability and keep the Seela alive.

The party exited the grove to head back to the Seela village, wanting to sleep on what they had just learned. Internally Sorian was resolved to giving his life to save the Seela, the idea of sacrifice, of giving oneself to restore peace was not foreign to him. He had accepted the possibility of the ultimate sacrifice when he joined Torrent to escape Gate Pass.

Vic was able to see these thoughts plainly on his face. She pulled him to the back of the party, speaking low to him. She begged him to think of his people back in Gate Pass, that they needed him….that the party needed him if they had any chance of making it to Seaquen. This got Sorian thinking, that while this forest was his ancestral home…his home was Gate Pass. He thought of Ragesia attacking his home and what would be the point of sacrificing his life for the forest if there was no world to protect in a few months.

He continued down the road at a crossroads, wholly unsure of which way he would choose.

(End Session)

It’s funny looking back on this situation so far removed its given me clarity on how things played out, where I went wrong, but also some grace for myself.

My table was not in a good place as you’ll probably be able to see in session 23 & 24. One player’s comments and adamant assertions suggested they might have been reading outside source material. Unfortunately, social dynamics outside of the table made it difficult to confront this directly, which also added to the strain on the table.

At this point, with thinking they saw the looming plot twist (ie. Evil Vuhl), my players were beginning to disengage emotionally from the forest’s moral dilemma. Most of them, out of character, had shifted to a mindset of “just release Indomitability and let the forest & Seela burn because saving the Seela will only come back to bite us”.

With all that in mind, going into this session, I knew I was seriously contemplating changing up the Deception/Vuhl twist. I didn’t want to make a change to punish my metagaming player, I more wanted to reward my two players who were very much holding everything together and letting their character’s follow the story to its end. I wanted to reward that with a new twist.

So I Dm’d this session knowing I might make Timbre Deception instead of Vuhl and that is what I ended up doing.

Looking back, I wish I had cut Deception entirely and allowed Indomitability and Propriety to be the only Trillith in play. The Seela plot is already emotionally loaded and adding another manipulator muddied the narrative. However, in my opinion, the change worked out very well. Those who had agreed with my metagamer were pleasantly surprised and those who had wanted to play the story out felt like their choices mattered.
 

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Session 23

The group left Timbre’s grove with the group’s tension thicker than the smoke in the air. No one spoke until the faint melody of the Song of Forms reached them again…its beautiful melody almost cruel since everyone seemed to know at the end of this there was a good chance no one would ever sing it again.

Sorian said nothing as they crossed into the village. His expression was unreadable, but something in his posture had changed. The others assumed he meant to follow through on sacrificing himself for the Seela as Timbre had shared might be the only way to save them. Not wanting to witness this, and for Grom the headache caused by the song, Grom, Crystin, and Reshi walked through the village and camped just outside of the song’s range in the direction towards Gwen’s lagoon.

Tiljann and Papuvin approached Sorian, Ze, Vic, and Torrent. All the Seela had come to the center of the small village, more hope in their weary faces than the party had ever seen. Papuvin was the first to speak asking if there was any way to save his people.

Sorian hesitated. He looked over the faces of those who had sung through fire for a century, the souls who had kept their faith and duty while the world burned around them. Everyone was solelmn (even the DM), expecting this big Marytr hero speech from Sorian, but to everyone’s surprise….he lied.

He told Papuvin there was no way to save them, that the fires were eternal and their song, though noble, could not be stopped without destroying them all. Papuvin nearly collapsed from the weight of this revelation (read: the DM was speechless), and the last flicker of hope in his eyes went dim. Tiljann shouted that they were liars and ran off. After Papuvin composed himself he shared that he understood, they all did, but that they would keep singing until the end. They had made a promise to Arielle, so if they wanted to free the beast then they would need to do so with their own hands.

The party went to join the others on the outskirts of the village. Vic was visibly upset at lying to Papuvin, but Ze calmed her by telling it wasn’t her fight to pick. That this was Sorian’s ancestral home, they needed to support his decision.

Early the next day they headed back to Gwen’s lagoon to return the lock of hair and see about solidifying the promise she had about helping them with Indomitability. During the walk they turned to logistics. Sorian became fixated on the idea of swimming from Gwen’s lagoon straight to Indomitability’s resting place, that he very much did not want to return the village in case the Seela tried to stop them. Vic (thankfully) pointed out the obvious that the party didn’t even know where Indomitabity was within the vast lake, and the waters were full of crocodiles and worse. Grom, tentatively agreed with Vic trying to break the tension with a funny joke about not even know if the lake was 10 Groms deep or 35 Groms deep.

In a segue way, Grom reminded everyone of Vuhl’s plan…ending the song. That that would free Indomitability without putting them in harms way. Torrent asked the question on everyone’s mind of realistically, what were they willing to do? Sorian snapped that the Seela would never stop singing, but that he would not harm them nor allow anyone else to.

This declaration from Sorian caused Vic’s frustration to get the best of her as she angerly yelled at him: accusing him of hypocrisy and arrogance, of lying to Papuvin and now putting on this performative heroism. Vic shouted that everything Sorian would do for his people, Papuvin would do for his. Why not tell him about ability to sacrificing one’s life force to make the Living Blade into a new First Tree? Vic was angry, angry that Sorian made a choice for himself and took Papuvin’s choice to try that avenue for himself away just because Sorian didn’t want to have to tell the Seela he was choosing his people over them…something they would understand.

When Sorian didn’t immediately answer Vic turned to walk away, but as she turned to leave Sorian’s anger boiled over. He shouted at her to not walk away from him, but she told him there was nothing to discuss. In two quick steps Sorian closed the little distance between him and Vic. She felt a rough hand clamp around her shoulder before being roughly spun around. Pinning her arms painfully tight to her side, Sorian lifted Vic a good foot off the ground.

Sorian yelled in her face that Vic didn’t get to speak to him like that and then walk away. That everyone in this group looked to him as a leader, understood his connection to the forest and acquiesced to his decisions about what to do, that Vic was being a petulant child and needed to keep her mouth shut.

The rest of the party was shocked by the towering barbarian turning his frustration physical against the small, unarmored wizard.

I paused the session at this point. Unlike the Ze vs Vic where everyone was laughing, no one was laughing here. I confirmed Sorian’s intent to actually grapple (so an attack roll) vs a roleplay grab, and he was insistent he wanted it to be an aggressive/attack grab. As Vic’s player had opened pvp in a previous session, I allowed it.

Grom immediately stepped forward calling Sorian out for his outburst, that using his size and strength to silence someone smaller was no show of honor and if Sorian needed to fight, he could fight Grom instead. Torrent and Ze backed him quietly by positioning themselves behind Grom and hands moving to their weapons, even Reshi looked up from his journal long enough to note that human and elf tempers seemed far less civilized than rumored. As Sorian put Vic down and let her go, Grom ended with what might have been a joke on another day: they were all too tired for kindergarten brawls, and this was exactly what Ragesia wanted from them.

Sorian, still not wanting to back down or let anyone else have the last word on this issue, explained that he was beyond worrying about his honor. He was only worrying about his people back in Gate Pass. That Timbre had said to save the Seela the Living Blade needed to bind to a soul born within the forest—obviously a Tananesti, as the Seela were born of the First Tree and Sorian didn’t think their souls would qualify—and if he did that, then his life and soul would be forfeit in exchange for the Seela’s. He spoke of Gate Pass again…his home, of the Taranesti refugees he had sworn to protect, of his people who still needed him beyond these cursed woods. The Seela were ghosts whereas his people were alive and in very real danger. So no, he could not and would not sacrifice himself for the Seela. He declared that someone else would have to free the blade, that he was not willing to risk even touching it.

The others listened in silence, the divide between personal duty and a collective morality laid bare. No one challenged Sorian’s resolve and Grom thanked Sorian for finally explaining his position. When planning next steps it is important to know how everyone can be used in battle. Tensions were still high, but everyone at least turned back towards developing a pragmatic strategy.

Sorian believed the best route was to remove the Blade from Indomitability and things be ended that way. Grom said he would only agree to that plan in Gwen could help them have safe passage to Indomitability, he did not want to risk fighting a Giant Croc in its preferred domain. Reshi then proposed something a bit more…inventive? He could potentially use Thunderwave to drown out the Seela’s song for just a moment, long enough to free Indomitability without killing the singers.

want me to go thunderwave them?

Ze supported Reshi’s plan and she Vic discussed the likelihood that the magic of the song was proximity or did those affected have to hear it? Which lead to the very helpful conclusion that Indomitability was more than likely close to the Seela village and very near shore.

By the time they reached the outskirts of Gwen’s lagoon a fragile plan had formed. They would return Arielle’s hair to Gwen, seek her help in swimming in the lake if it came to that, and they would return to the Seela village and give Papuvin the option to come and pull the Living Blade himself and attempt to bind with it himself. Even Sorian had to admit that even when it didn’t work they would feel like that had a hand in their fate.

Session ended as they walked towards the lagoon.
Whew.

This session was difficult. I had purposely made Timbre’s (my new Deception) explanation of the Living Blade being able to save the Seela in exchange for the soul/life force ambiguous as to if it needed to be a Taranesti in hopes that it would create this dissonance of Sorian thinking he was the ONLY one who could save the Seela and everyone else seeing the option for the Seela to potentially save themselves. Mechanically it worked out exactly the way I hoped, but I was just sad to see the tension/heated feelings it caused. Sorian’s aggression definitely marked the lowest point in in game party cohesion so far.

On another note, as the session was coming to the end I pointed out to my players that their plan and ethical boundaries mirrored Vuhl’s almost exactly despite spending the last few sessions writing him off as “The Villain”. My players did NOT like the comparison which made it all the more fascinating to see them faced with this version of the trolly cart problem, come up with mechanically the same solution and yet they were adamant Vuhl was “evil” and they were “heroes”.
 

One wonders if the waters may be TOO muddied at this point: I can see this party breaking apart and/or taking different sides later once they realise just how much they have been played...
 

One wonders if the waters may be TOO muddied at this point: I can see this party breaking apart and/or taking different sides later once they realise just how much they have been played...
Played?
If you mean
deception, then isn’t that the point? Even in their original iteration, they don’t get their hands dirty, they manipulate, they deceive. If Sorian had decided to martyr himself, the blade would have acted as written. He would have been fine. My world’s deception wanted to know how far the group’s assumed leader was willing to go. Knowing he wouldn’t sacrifice himself due to his duty/love for his people…now there’s some leverage for later. And at the end of the day deception wanted indomitability freed (cannon) so it behooved them to tell the party how to get what they wanted (ie. Free indom & Save the Seela)

If you mean by changing the module, I had atleast one reading the DM guides (or my earlier write ups) and making it unfun for everyone. I should have addressed it directly, but I didn’t. I’ll own that big L. They don’t do that anymore, so it’s all water under the bridge now.

I think it’s enjoyable how it all comes together, I hope everyone else will enjoy it too ☺️. I should get that posted sometime this weekend.

Though I do agree whole heartedly the dynamic with the above mentioned spoiler muddies the water—both as written and in the direction I’ve taken. If/when I do this campaign again, I’ll probably remove them from the module entirely. Indomitability does a good enough job hinting at that part campaign twist.
 

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