Omosho is PC? He just went out into danger?
Yes. Omosho is basically a 12 year old kid who was raised by a cult who believes he is "The Holy One," and all his life has only been around people who loved and adored him and believed that what he did was what was best for them.
So he's been really upset confronted with the people of Orchid's hold, who do not like him (and are generally annoyed by his "greater than you" attitude.) Naturally, Omosho wants people to like him, and believes that going out and doing this will prove to them that they would be happier under his rule as a religious leader. So that'd be why he went into danger on his own (or, on his own other than a few of his followers, anyway.) He thinks it'll prove something to the people.
NPCs are all threats with simple motivations right? Start having NPCs make demands that she can't shrug off without consequences. She's the Angel. She can't very well ignore people in need without folks getting worked up. Don't throw her things she "could help with." Throw her things where helping and not helping both have consequences. Put her character "on the spot."
And remember, Grey's not an angel, she's The Angel. The hardhold? It's the Hardhold where The Angel lives.
That last line is something I do need to remember a little more.
Better yet, force the issue. Six dudes carrying a bloody, dripping, almost-corpse bust into her infirmary. The biggest one sticks a sawed-off shotgun in her face and says, "Fix him. Now." Which you of course follow with, what do you do?
Does she have hired help in her infirmary? These NPCs are people, with their own wants and desires and foibles and fetishes. Maybe she notices her medical supplies start to come up short, or critical tools go missing. Who is responsible? How can she catch them, and when she does, what will she do about it.
The important thing to remember is that the Angel exists to do more than just fix people. Yes, they're really good at fixing people, but just like any of the other characters, you need to find where she's not in control and push there. Put her in situations where passivity is the worst of all possible choices.
This is helpful advice in general! Although I don't think I'll be going with anything quite as extreme as the first example in the quote I'm replying to. At least not right now; I can imagine an opportunity for something similar, but I feel like it'll probably take a few more sessions to set up, if it happens at all. (Then again that is never a definite- a lot of times possibilities end up hurling toward the players way quicker than I ever thought they would, or things that I had planned end up being completely destroyed and thrown off into an entirely different direction, which is probably one of my favorite things about this game.)
Yeah, like the others said, try to stop giving her 'opportunities to help' and start giving her 'problems that need a response'. The difference doesn't need to be as dramatic as a shotgun to the face.
If the character is known never to pry into other people's business, then maybe it's time for some NPCs to start confessing truly alarming things to her, blithely assuming she would never get involved. If she always helps when she can, maybe it's time for someone to ask for help who might not deserve it; who might do upsetting things with it.
This, I think, is more in line with what I want to do to get Gray into things- partly in line with the last one (I.E. I feel like it might take a few sessions to get up and running.)
I did have an idea, though, of what I might do next session. I was considering having Omosho's mother (Natascha) come to her. The cult has never been without Omosho (who has decided to go off with only two of his followers) and have the option that they rely on him for just about everything. We've set them up to be people who listen to what he has to say even if they're uncomfortable with the commands (at least at a general level,) but I note down all the NPC's modivations and her's is simply "Does whatever lets her remain closest to her son, despite religious or moral obligations."
She's going to need help getting out of here and after him- she's never had to deal with the spores before, you know? (The spores are nasty things that go off in the summer, and do awful things to anyone they touch. Omosho and his cult all go underground in the summer to avoid them.) And it's not like she has any way of getting the masks and suits needed to resist them, not on her own. She can't ask the other followers for help- as far as she's concerned, it will be considered blasphemous, and the other followers may react very badly.
So I figured who better to ask than The Angel? The only one who's gone out of her way to be kind to Omosho and his followers, the one that she's heard so many kind things about, and the one whose job is already to help people in need? (Although in an entirely different way.)
I figure there are consequences either way. If she helps, she'll be leaving the Holding and (if she does it the way Natascha wants) will not be able to tell anyone where she is going or why. Or at the very least, will have to lie about it (again, if she does things the way Natascha pleads for it to be done, which I can see her going either way on.)
If she doesn't help her, well, she's desperate right? None of them have ever been up top while the spores are in full effect. She doesn't know what will happen, and even though she probably can't help, it's her natural instinct to think her being there will somehow protect him. So maybe she makes a not-so-trustworthy deal, or steals something, or panics and has to figure out what to do. And that panic leads to some other undesirable situation.
There are a lot of possibilities depending on where play goes, so I think I like this idea! I'm mostly writing it all up to see if this sounds good to other people or not, because I definitely need to get better with giving consequences to things.