Olaf the Stout said:
Did you get any sort of epilogue then or was the big fight the end to the campaign?
The fight pretty much ended the campaign. I made a point to go on a high note, with Barbatos standing on the center of the theater's stage, looking out at all of the carnage we had caused. With an exhaultant smile he said, "To me, my Cobbled Man. Let us make for Castle Barbatos." And that was pretty much it.
After the battle, Monte briefly summarized the effects of Menon Balacazar and Kevris Killraven's deaths. The Pactlords of the Quaan (a group of nonhumanoid slavers to which Killraven belonged) were pretty much decimated and were no longer a force in the city. Our old buddy Linech tried to fill in the gap, but didn't last long. Our victory finally convinced the Commissar that maybe they could clamp down on crime and evil and make the city a better place to live, thus validating Zophas's main point of contention with Ptolus since the day he arrived there.
Monte then went around the table and asked us what we would like our characters to do. The Brothers Lorenci set sail across the sea to lands unknown, reaching (and then penetrating) a wall in the world to discover the homeland of Benris's titan ancestors. I think Benris went along with them, as well as one of Michele's characters. Alyia, I think. I seem to remember Callista signing on with Zophas (to a limit) in his fight to be proactive against evil. Yay. Callista is a great character. I am getting sort of sad just thinking about this, but it is a good kind of sad.
Anyway, I can't really remember the fates of all the characters. Major campaign revelations were dropping every ten seconds or so, and we were jumping forward years at a time so that Monte could reveal how certain long-term plots panned out.
Barbatos decided to "go public" as publisher and editor of the Midtown Partisan in a blow-by-self-aggrandizing-blow account of the events at the theater, pushing to make the Partisan a major journalistic enterprise through which Barbatos could start to influence public opinion in a major way.
Then there was a question and answer session in which Monte revealed what he had been planning to do with threads like Shilukar and the Perfect Ones and Nicodemus and a whole bunch of other things. I am positive that if the campaign had run its course it would have been absolutely wonderful, but it was already that so I can't complain.
--Erik