Alturiak 1477: Difference between revisions

From Baldur's Gate 3 Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (note to book)
(typo)
 
Line 7: Line 7:




Until I was thirteen years pf age, I didn't know that 'Uncle' Cazador was a vampire - that, indeed, my entre family were vampires, going back generations. Growing up on the Szarr country estate near Anga Vled, raised by old family servants, I rarely visited our city palace in Baldur's Gate. And when I did, I couldn't wait to leave and return to the country. The city palace, straddling the wall between the Upper and Lower City, was more than creepy, it was somehow chilling.
Until I was thirteen years of age, I didn't know that 'Uncle' Cazador was a vampire - that, indeed, my entre family were vampires, going back generations. Growing up on the Szarr country estate near Anga Vled, raised by old family servants, I rarely visited our city palace in Baldur's Gate. And when I did, I couldn't wait to leave and return to the country. The city palace, straddling the wall between the Upper and Lower City, was more than creepy, it was somehow chilling.





Latest revision as of 08:24, 13 January 2024

Alturiak 1477 image

A book by Amanita Szarr, recording her own history.

Description Icon.png
This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.

Properties

  • Books
  • Rarity: Common
  •  Weight: 0.5 kg / 1 lb
  • Price: 14 gp


Where to find

Inside Stacks of Scrolls in the Szarr Palace's attic X: -712 Y: 1081.

Text

Alturiak 1477 -


Until I was thirteen years of age, I didn't know that 'Uncle' Cazador was a vampire - that, indeed, my entre family were vampires, going back generations. Growing up on the Szarr country estate near Anga Vled, raised by old family servants, I rarely visited our city palace in Baldur's Gate. And when I did, I couldn't wait to leave and return to the country. The city palace, straddling the wall between the Upper and Lower City, was more than creepy, it was somehow chilling.


-Amanita Szarr

Notes

  • Alturiak is the second month in the Calendar of Harptos.
  • While this note is dated 1477, it is unknown if that is the date it was written, or a date the writer is referring back to.