Something I've been wondering about, not sure if it came up in a previous thread...
Twice, the party comes across the following "poem," once on the skull of the dragon Cheshimox, and once on the stock of Kvarti's rifle (supposedly carved from a giant's thigh-bone):
"Cry out
for at the end of time
I rise"
I was taking this to mean that later in the campaign, the party would have to deal with these undead threats, and I guess the best place for them to appear would have been in Komanov's Doomsday army, but they never showed... so is the poem meant to be a red herring? Who carved the words into those bones? Why's it in Abyssal?
Twice, the party comes across the following "poem," once on the skull of the dragon Cheshimox, and once on the stock of Kvarti's rifle (supposedly carved from a giant's thigh-bone):
"Cry out
for at the end of time
I rise"
I was taking this to mean that later in the campaign, the party would have to deal with these undead threats, and I guess the best place for them to appear would have been in Komanov's Doomsday army, but they never showed... so is the poem meant to be a red herring? Who carved the words into those bones? Why's it in Abyssal?