Rhod will suggest that the serving boy hides in the loft for a sleep, hopefully taking him away and also extending the time before he realises he was charmed
The priest, who's all of a sudden this young boy's best friend, will take him to a hayloft for a 'nap.'
Rhod will suggest that the serving boy hides in the loft for a sleep, hopefully taking him away and also extending the time before he realises he was charmed
The priest, who's all of a sudden this young boy's best friend, will take him to a hayloft for a 'nap.'
Right.
Send him, there’s a subtle but very important difference….
I discovered a couple while I was transcribing Session 1. One's being sung by the loggers you passed in the woods, and the other's at the inn in Bardenhold I think.
Also The Awnshegh and the Milk Maid definitely has inferred bestiality in the second verse, so you'd best get moving before I get there.
All right, that's two challenges attempted (one probably a success, one probably a fail). Does Rhoderick want to try for the third? Or maybe we can roll on Tovrunn's behalf?
Incidentally, GM, when you say one of the checks was a decoy, does that just mean it's there to 'soak' a PC's efforts, or is there a danger for attempting it at all?
I need you to make a roll for each situation described (unless you want to change tactic having seen this latest roll), and your PCs believe that there are three crucial junctures that may be consequential. Only two of the three I described actually carry consequences for failure. The more failures, the more leverage your pursuers will have to interrupt and waylay you.
In other words you know where you think you might attract attention, and you're right in that assumption 66% of the time.