# Kalen D'Serris ## Overview - Former leyline field engineer / battle-mage who watched a city almost die in a node collapse. - Co-designed the [[Factions#1.1 Root Oversight Committee ("The Array")|Root Oversight Array]] – remote monitoring + partial control of the leyline “grid.” - Genuine believer that surveillance + control are the only things keeping the world from burning again. - Treats Avalon Academy as a **critical but expendable** node: a testbed and early-warning system. - PCs are “anomalous survivors” of the B2 event. He uses them as on-site sensors and guinea pigs. - He becomes fixated on one student, **Fouadriel** (“Fouad”), as a statistical outlier and potential Harbinger. - Everyone assumes D'Serris is a paranoid weirdo scapegoating a harmless idiot. He is, unfortunately, correct. - Final arc: party has to decide whether to side with D’Serris (ends-justify-means antihero) against Fouadriel/Root, or reject both. --- ## Early Life - Born in a low-magic industrial city built over a thick leyline junction. - Family background: line of minor maintenance mages, ward technicians, and municipal workers. - Grew up seeing leylines as **infrastructure**, not mysticism: - The thing that keeps lights on, water clean, wards stable. - The thing that, if mishandled, blows buildings apart. - As a kid, obsessed with **patterns**: - Streetlight failures, power brownouts, small anomalies in ritual times. - Skipped normal wizard school track to apprentice under grid-engineers. **Personality seed:** pragmatic, dry, not impressed by heroics – impressed by systems that don’t fail. --- ## [[Leyline Crisis]] Set ~10–15 years before the campaign. - Serving as a junior field engineer / battle-mage in the **Leyline Stabilization Corps** during a regional crisis: - A cluster of nodes was over-tapped by warring factions. - One city’s main trunk started to **awaken** – Root consciousness bleeding through. - D’serris was part of the team sent in to: - Reinforce containment sigils. - Shunt excess power to sacrificial subnodes (smaller communities, outlying infrastructure). - He witnessed: - Melted streets, people cooked by backlash, protective wards failing in slow motion. - High-minded mages arguing theory while people burned. - The critical decision: - A classified ritual was proposed: **shunt a hostile emergent consciousness** deeper into the Root network instead of letting it detonate locally. - D’serris signed off on the calculations and helped implement it. - It “worked”: city survived, but something ugly was effectively **caged inside the world-tree**, its influence diffused along the grid. - Official reports: “Anomaly neutralized. Network stabilized.” Unofficial reality: they shoved a monster into the walls and hoped it would never rattle them again. **Guilt:** he believes that if Oversight had existed earlier, the crisis could have been controlled before it got that far. Everything he does afterward is about never letting that happen again. --- ## Birth of the Root Oversight Array - Post-crisis, a coalition of governments/magocracies pushed for: - Standardized monitoring of major leyline trunks. - Centralized anomaly logging. - “Command nodes” that could throttle or shut down taps remotely. - D’serris ended up on the design team: - Turned his crisis experience into protocols: - Automated alert thresholds. - “Red branch” shutdown logic (like B2). - Deep logging of spell traffic (“telemetry,” but also surveillance). - Philosophically: - Sees the Array as **necessary authoritarianism**: - “Freedom to do anything with the grid” nearly killed a city. - He’s willing to spy, lie, and shut down communities to prevent another awakening. - Politically: - Not high-ranking nobility; more like a senior sysadmin with far too much access. - Disliked by idealistic mages; quietly backed by hardline security types. --- ## The Avalon Node - When the Avalon Adventuring Academy was proposed as a regional anchor node, D’serris: - Advocated to plug it into the Array. - Argued that a school full of young casters is **high-risk** but strategically useful: - Lots of ritual traffic → good early-warning “noise.” - A controlled environment to test new containment protocols. - Design decisions he pushed through: - Subnodes (A1–A3, B1–B3, etc.) arranged like a **labyrinth of fuses**. - Custodial / maintenance staff wired into a separate “eyes and ears” channel. - Low-visibility presence: students aren’t told his name initially; he is “Root Oversight.” - When B2 blew: - From his POV, this was a partial rerun of the old crisis: - Sudden destabilization in a branch. - **Student biometrics** logged in the tap cell at the exact moment. - Root behavior around Avalon shifted – a small echo of the thing he shoved into it years ago. - His immediate move: - Kill remote control to that branch (“oversight offline”) and treat it as a quarantined wound. - Tag the involved students (party) as **anomalous nodes**: - “Subjects A3-01, -02, -03, etc. survived direct exposure with minimal corruption.” - That’s not normal; that’s *useful*. --- ## Kalen D’serris, Right Now **What he wants:** - Stop whatever is echoing the old crisis from manifesting at Avalon. - Maintain the illusion of control to his superiors – if they think he’s lost the grid, he gets replaced by someone worse. - Use the party as instruments: - They can go places and interact in ways automated tools can’t. - They are already “dirty”; he sees further exposure as an acceptable risk. **What he’s willing to do:** - Lie to them about the true level of danger. - Withhold information that might make them refuse to help. - Threaten to cut power, locks, or protections to force their hand if necessary. - In an absolute pinch: advocate **killing a student** (Fouad) to protect the Root, if no other solution appears. **What he won’t do:** - He won’t casually sacrifice entire towns / cities again if there’s any alternative. - He does not enjoy hurting kids; he just thinks the options are “hurt a few now” vs “watch many die later.” --- ## The Fouadriel Obsession Fouadriel (“Fouad”) = idiot harbinger. From D’serris’s POV: - As soon as Fouad enrolls and is granted a student access token, the Array starts logging anomalies: - Background noise spikes whenever he’s on campus. - Minor desyncs in root heartbeat when he passes certain wards. - Statistical correlation between “Fouad present” and “micro-glitches” in the node. - The pattern is subtle but unmistakable to D’serris: - It matches **low-level signatures** from the old crisis. - Not enough to make a public case, but enough to set off his trauma radar. - He flags Fouad as: - “Subject FH-01 – Potential Harbinger / carrier.” - Pushes for extra passive monitoring: dorm ward pings, attendance logs, spellcasting records. No one else buys it: - Larkvale thinks he’s scapegoating a harmless, dumb kid to justify more authority. - Elias thinks he’s reading patterns into noise. - Students, once they hear “D’serris thinks *Fouad* is the big threat,” assume D’serris is completely out of touch. From a campaign standpoint: - Freshman–Junior years: - Every time D’serris can, he tries to insert **“and keep an eye on Fouadriel”** into orders. - The party reads this as bigoted / paranoid / laughable. - Senior year: - Evidence piles up that Fouad is, in fact, where the Root’s caged consciousness is trying to manifest. - The line “I told you from the first anomaly” hits hard. --- ## Relationship to the PCs (over four years) **Initial impression (Freshman):** - He sees them as: - “Subjects who survived contact with a destabilized node.” - Both a risk and a resource. - Tone toward them: - Clinical, cold, impatient with teenage bullshit. - Low-key impressed they didn’t die or crack. **As they investigate / help:** - If they’re competent: - He develops grudging respect. - Starts sharing more technical detail, still holding back core secrets. - If they constantly blow things up: - His reports become harsher. - He starts planning contingencies *around* their chaos. **Potential turning points:** - If they hand him a big win (prevent a major cascade, identify a saboteur): - “You are idiots, but you’re my idiots now.” - If they defy him over something moral (e.g., refusing to accept “kill Fouad” as the only option): - He is furious but also secretly relieved if their plan works. - If it fails, he feels justified and becomes much harder. --- ## 4-Year Arc (High Level) **Freshman Year:** - Focus: B2 destruction, figuring out what’s wrong with the Avalon node. - D’serris role: - Remote presence, creepy hologram, “Root Oversight Voice.” - Treats PCs as instruments; doesn’t fully grasp their emotional reality. - Starts dropping “monitor Subject FH-01” into directives. **Sophomore Year:** - Focus: attempts to **reinforce / upgrade** the node; experiments in routing more power for academy projects. - D’serris: - Shows up more often via projection. - Tests the PCs: small missions that look like maintenance but are actually stress tests on the Root. - First hints he was involved in an old cover-up. **Junior Year:** - Focus: the “villain who’s actually trying to stop the real villain.” - Some mid-boss type is sabotaging the grid to prevent the Root consciousness from consolidating. - D’serris: - Frames saboteur as terrorist, pushes hard to neutralize them. - PCs discover the saboteur has a point. - Revealed: D’serris helped shove the monster into the Root in the first place. **Senior Year:** - Focus: Fouadriel / Harbinger arc. - Root consciousness begins to seriously push through academy node. - Fouad becomes locus / vessel / pivot. - D’serris: - Goes full “necessary monster.” - His plan may involve sacrificing Fouad and/or segments of the node to starve the Root. - PCs must choose between: - His brutal but effective plan. - Their own third-way solution (redeem Fouad, re-route the Root, etc.). --- ## How to Play D’serris at the Table **Voice & vibe:** - Sounds tired more than angry. - Speaks in technical metaphors (“You are trying to hot-patch a live trunk, child.”). - Doesn’t raise his voice unless truly cornered. - Treats teenagers like junior technicians, not “chosen ones.” **Quirks:** - Uses **student ID numbers** / subject codes casually, then corrects to names only if someone calls him on it. - References past crises without giving full context (“I’ve seen this pattern before; last time we lost a district.”). - Has a dry, unintentional sense of humor when describing horrific shit. **Key lines to remember:** - “You think I enjoy watching you? I barely enjoy watching the grid, and it’s smarter than you.” - “Yes, I am ‘surveilling teenagers’. The last time I assumed adolescents wouldn’t break the Root, I had to sign off on a mass burial.” - “Fouadriel is not harmless. He is a *pattern*. Patterns kill cities.”