Reflecting upon Gnomey's post:I was thinking more about the 'trial' being handled in a private court. The player would preside as the Grand Ascendant. There, he could have the option to order his betrothed's execution (with the options of either fighting himself or not, like Gnomey said) or get to an agreement.Gnomey wrote:If the DB contractor was the betrothed, I don't think the player would necessarily need to murder him or her at the end, though that would certainly be one option. Perhaps the player can sic the Morag Tong on his betrothed, perhaps the player can fight his betrothed in a duel in which the betrothed might send a champion to fight instead, or perhaps the player can have a chat and reach some sort of uncomfortable understanding. The marriage is political, after all. Having it based upon an ugly truth could serve to make it more interesting.
And in that vein, I don't think leaving the player married is any problem at all. It is a political marriage. The player may never actually speak to his partner, depending on what an Indoril wedding ceremony entails. The player might never even see the partner unless he goes out of his way to do so.
The most important aspect here would be the trial per se: the decision about how to enforce the law. Because, afterall, what the player's betrothed plans is betrayal, and cannot be tolerated.
Gnomey wrote:I do think the way the player could get into Sandil's good graces would be by saving his life, but that could literally involve the player beating back an assassin mid fed-ex quest.
I personally don't like this. Why does the player need to save Sandil's life in order to get into his good graces? That would somehow belittle the player's betrothed view of Sandil as too tolerant to outlanders (in general), as having is life saved is too extreme a situation to actually matter if the player is an outlander or not. If the player got into Sandil's good graces only in a matter of unveyling some plot concerning money, goods, whatever in that line, we would convey Sandil's character as being more open in a bad Indoril sense (it reminds me of Telvanni master Aryon and his love for Imperial things, concerning the spirit behind this inclination, which strays from the other House members in general).