My group met their first Denarian at our last session.
The plot I'm currently running involves the arrival of 3 Fallen Denarians arriving in Boston in search of an artifact of great power. The first one, a warrior, arrived at the end of the session. We were wrapping up and I wanted to give a nice dramatic cliffhanger, but most of the players wanted to see the fight through. I was rushing since the group all needed to make it to the last train/bus home, and didn't play the Denarian to his best. He was beaten and captured.
Granted, the Knight of the Cross battling him had the help of a werepuma, two people shooting the Denarian with pistols and a wizard using a water evocation to prevent his escape, but it was still very anticlimactic and I should have remembered the range of abilities and options for such a character besides a straight fight.
Taking into account the fact that my group and I are big fans of the "GM's Curtain," that nothing is true until revealed to the players, I'm considering a few options for how to proceed, since I had hoped to strike some fear regarding Denarians into the group.
1: When the group takes the Denarian back to the church they use as one of their bases of operation, he will escape, kill their priest friend and burn the church. This is my least favourite option since it's a real dick-move.
2: The Denarian allowed himself to be captured, either to get information about the group and their involvement with the artifact they're hunting or to steal Amoraccius from the Knight (he keeps it in a sports bag, so the Denarian wouldn't have to touch it).
3: The Denarian simply fights his way free en route to the church and flees.
Any or all of these options could include assistance from the other Denarians to even the odds.
I'm not sure which option to take, though I certainly want to boost this Denarian's skills. He's intended as a difficult challenge for the Knight, since I'm trying to work in a sub-plot about the Knight's uncertainty of his worthiness for his mission. Of course, I don't want to utterly squash him, either.