would you say that your character, Aurora, would still refuse to take this oath, or assure her obedience, in light of this new information?
Yes, she would still refuse to swear now to unquestioningly obey future orders that she doesn't even know yet what they're going to be.
But the key here is that pioneers are not vassals.
...ok...
how are they not? From my point of view though, you're saying pioneers aren't vassals...but then you're describing vassals. Actually, to be really specific...you're describing landless knights. Same medieval-ish obedience relationship in generally military type service plus public relations in exchange for a lesser psuedo-noble title, prestige, respect, and material aid. The only real differences are that in this case the obedience is to a council rather than an individual, and they're giving us equipment instead of land.
Changing the
name doesn't change the
substance of the relationship, which is one of absolute obedience. And that's a problem. The ring is offering to give her a lesser psuedo-noble title, but she's
already an actual noble. She is a Lady of Glistens House Dawn, and that position has a conduct requirement. Just like a pioneer would be expected to conduct themselves in a certain manner.
Here's a very simple test: Aurora has a personal code of ethics. What happens if she promises to obey the ring...promises to do "anything they say" without knowing what it is first, and the ring then orders her to do something that violates her code? What does she do? That puts her in an unreconcileable position. If she follows the order she'd be violating her code by doing that thing, and if she fails to follow the order, then she's violating her code by failing to honor her oath.
What possible reason does Aurora have to put herself in that position? The simplest solution is to simply not step into that trap. Problem solved. The ring can give her any order they want, and she can then choose to do it or not do it. So long as Aurora executes her duties to the ring's satisfaction, they have no reason to fire her. And if the ring is as benevolent as their reputation suggests, then they will give no orders that Aurora is unable to fulfill. There's no need for any conflict to exist.
you have to see it from the prospective of what basically amounts to a level one character, in a medieval society, in the face of a powerful and just, if somewhat unstable, government. This isn't just any job interview, form any job interviewer. It's the job, from the interviewer.
Ok, but look at that from Aurora's point of view. She's Glistens nobility, she's a potential future heir to House Dawn, and she's being offered a lesser title in a foreign nation. Imagine if before Platinum's coma, Regal had been offered a knighthood in Glistens. Yes, no doubt that's a great honor. But is it such a great honor that Regal would be willing to jeopardize her future seat on the council for it? Probably not. That's basically Aurora's position here.
I really didn't expect that any of this conflict of interest stuff would come up. Read the second paragraph of the opening post of this thread. "Pioneers braving the frontier" didn't really sound like a knighthood requiring obedience oaths to me. Honestly, even now that we're here, I still don't have the context that justifies it. All I can conclude is that there's a whole lot of treachery floating around the ring for them to be this paranoid. Which doesn't exactly encourage me to want to promise to obey them.
I underestimated your dedication to your character (something that I very much respect) and your ability to see my (potential) traps (I assume you are a good DnD player, as a key skill in that game is catching on to the DM's bullshit early). You though, I think, are underestimating the effort and work I've put into this setting.
Thank you. Experienced dungeon master, actually. And yes, I'm operating at a disadvantage evaluating the setting because there's six months worth of game history that I don't know about. It's possible that all of this is entirely justified by events of which I have no knowledge because they happened before the game came here, but based only on what I know this whole obedience thing comes across as either incredibly arbitrary or a deliberate trap. You've layed out
so many clues that there's secret backstabbing going on, and personally I suspect that somebody on the council knows a lot more about who killed Morphic Tale than is public knowledge.
Yeah, when a GM hands out world history, you
read it, because that stuff always come up later.
If so, I have a plan to remedy the situation that I whink we'll both agree with.
Yes, the situation itself should be easy to resolve. I see several solutions.
For example, if Regal Silver is patterned after her mother, who is patterned after Rarity...then it seems plausible to me for her to hear Aurora speak of honor and nobility, speak of
noblesse oblige, and for her to
believe her. At which point Clover and Hurricane can object all they want, and Regal could sponsor Aurora anyway, because the fact is that Aurora is going to treat the ring honorably regardless of what oath she does or doesn't take. They can't have mindless obedience, but truth and honorable conduct will be given freely with or without promise to do so. If Regal is A Lady, she'll understand that. Clover, unfortunately, from what I've seen of how you're portraying her, probably won't. And I suspect that the commander probably won't either. The rest of the council probably won't really care. Like Aurora pointed out in her speech, it makes a lot of good sense to choose her, and if there's an Applejack expy on the council somewhere, Aurora's genuinely honest intentions won't go unnoticed. If Regal sponsors Aurora, and half the council says "yeah...this is the right thing to do," I have a difficult time imagining Clover overruling that.
Actually, it wouldn't even have to be Regal. Any of the earth ponies could do it. Aurora gave them a compelling case, and if the earth ponies are willing to vouch for the unicorn supremecist "because
this one is one of us" nobody's going to tell them no. That would probably turn out better for Aurora. I suspect nobody really likes Regal, but an earth pony sponsoring a Glistens unicorn sends a strong "hands off our candidate" message to everyone.
Ironically, when I gave the speech, I anticipated something very different than how this is turning out. You'll notice that while Autumn appealed exclusively to Clover, Aurora appealed to everyone
except Clover. Because I expected her reaction to be basically "wait...you got my perpetually squabbling council to
agree with each other? You are so in."
Or another option, if we want to take the easy way out...let's remember that none of this conversation occurred in character. Aurora said nothing when the oath was requested of Basayen. If nobody says anything there's no reason for it to ever be an issue.
The first several paragraphs of Aurora's speech was all about the political implications of her participation here. Her invitation could been motivated by desire to foster closer ties with Glistens. It's reasonable to suggest that House Silver has connections with House Dawn, Clover asked Regal to find someone in Glistens, and she found me. Regal, Pale Seer and Clover were my sponsors. I'm not sure what Pale Seer's motivation was, but I think it's reasonable to suggest that the Ring Chief and the Magister together could have arranged for certain formalities to be skipped if it meant achieving political goals more important to them than merely filling a pioneer position.
So yes, lots of solutions.