Monday, June 1, 2026

Wand of the First Wall

Wand of the First Wall


Aura
Moderate abjuration and conjuration; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 32,500 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This slender wand is carved from a single piece of pale gray stone known as heart-basalt, a magically treated volcanic stone renowned for its remarkable strength and surprisingly light weight. Delicate bands of silver run through the stone in the form of interlocking bricks and archways, while the handle bears a subtle rainbow-hued sheen visible only when struck by direct light.

The wand allows its wielder to invoke either of the following effects:

  • Shield at will, as the spell (caster level 9th).

  • Wall of Stone 3/day, as the spell (caster level 9th).

Activating either power is a standard action that does not provoke attacks of opportunity. The wielder chooses which effect to invoke each time the wand is activated.

The wand is considered a masterwork club if used as an improvised melee weapon, though such treatment is generally regarded as disrespectful by those familiar with its history.

LORE

Few magical objects embody the principle of steadfast resistance as completely as the Wand of the First Wall. According to surviving accounts, the original example was commissioned not to celebrate a victory, but to commemorate a refusal. Its creators believed that civilization advances not merely through great heroes and kings, but through ordinary people who decide that a particular line shall not be crossed.

The wand's unusual heart-basalt is traditionally quarried from stone formations that have survived centuries of flood, storm, and erosion. Artisans prize the material because it possesses an almost paradoxical nature - lighter than its appearance suggests, yet capable of enduring tremendous punishment without cracking. Enchanters view this characteristic as symbolic of communities that endure hostility not through brute force alone, but through resilience, solidarity, and persistence.

Many owners speak of the wand's dual powers as representing two forms of defense. The shield protects the individual, creating a barrier around a single person facing immediate danger. The wall of stone protects the collective, creating shelter and boundaries that allow others to stand together. For this reason the wand is often presented as a memorial piece, a civic treasure, or a ceremonial gift honoring those who stood firm when retreat would have been easier.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wand, shield, wall of stone; Cost 16,250 gp, 1,300 XP

Special Ingredient: A pound of heart-basalt, a magically treated volcanic stone blessed during a public ceremony dedicated to remembrance, perseverance, and communal protection. The stone must be incorporated as a single unbroken piece forming the entire body of the wand.

Kelwyn's Notes

There exists a peculiar tendency among historians to remember victories while forgetting refusals. Triumphs are dramatic things. They produce banners, monuments, speeches, and songs. Refusals, by contrast, are often small, awkward moments in which frightened people discover that they are no longer willing to move. The Wand of the First Wall concerns itself not with conquest but with that singular instant when endurance hardens into principle. One does not look upon it and think of armies. One thinks of doorways. One thinks of thresholds. One thinks of the quiet and terrifying realization that retreat is no longer an acceptable answer.

The symbolism of its two enchantments is almost painfully elegant. A shield is intimate. It surrounds a single individual and says, "You may strike if you wish, but I shall remain." A wall of stone is communal. It rises not around a person but before a people, transforming vulnerability into shelter. Together they form a philosophy rather than a mere magical utility. The wand suggests that survival begins with protecting oneself, but civilization begins when one uses that same strength to protect others. That distinction is the difference between endurance and legacy.

Its construction from heart-basalt is likewise fitting. The strongest things in existence are not always the heaviest. Human beings have spent centuries confusing weight with strength, noise with conviction, and intimidation with courage. Yet communities, friendships, families, and identities often survive not because they are immovable mountains, but because they bend without breaking. The stone's paradoxical nature - light enough to carry, strong enough to endure - mirrors the strange resilience of people who have been told repeatedly that they should not exist and yet continue existing anyway.

I find myself particularly drawn to the imagery of walls in this context. Walls are morally neutral structures. They can imprison, exclude, divide, and isolate. Yet they can also shelter, defend, preserve, and protect. What matters is not the stone but the purpose behind its placement. A wall raised to deny another's humanity becomes a monument to fear. A wall raised to shield the vulnerable becomes an act of stewardship. The Wand of the First Wall understands this distinction with uncommon clarity.

Perhaps that is why the object feels less like a weapon than a memorial. It does not celebrate violence, nor does it pretend that danger does not exist. Instead it commemorates a truth that civilizations repeatedly forget and are repeatedly forced to relearn: every liberty enjoyed today rests upon countless moments in which ordinary people decided that they had been pushed quite far enough. The world is littered with monuments to kings and conquerors. Far fewer objects honor those who simply stood their ground. I suspect those are the people most worthy of remembrance. Their victories often began with nothing more glamorous than refusing to step aside.


Marsha's Brick

Marsha's Brick


Aura
Moderate evocation and enchantment; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 18,312 gp; Weight 10 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This heavy steel mace bears an unusual head fashioned in the shape of a weathered masonry brick rather than the traditional flanged or spiked design. Cast directly into one side of the metal brick are the simple words: "For Marsha." Though the inscription appears plain and unadorned, it carries an unmistakable sense of purpose and conviction. Marsha's Brick functions as a +1 heavy mace.

Whenever the wielder knowingly uses Marsha's Brick against a creature actively engaged in oppression, persecution, unlawful imprisonment, slavery, cruel abuse of authority, hate-motivated violence or similar acts of injustice, the mace's enchantments awaken. Against such foes, Marsha's Brick functions as a +3 heavy mace and grants its wielder a +2 morale bonus on attack rolls, weapon damage rolls and saving throws against fear effects generated by the target.

The weapon's magic responds to genuine injustice rather than mere disagreement or personal rivalry. The determination of whether a target qualifies is made by the DM according to the facts of the situation. The mace cannot be deceived by false claims of righteousness, magical disguises, illusions, enchantments or propaganda.

Three times per day, when striking a qualifying target, the wielder may declare a Strike for the Forgotten as a free action after a successful hit. The attack deals an additional 2d6 points of sacred damage as the mace erupts in brilliant white-pink light. This extra damage affects only creatures whose actions meet the criteria described above.

In the hands of a creature that knowingly participates in systemic cruelty or oppression, Marsha's Brick functions only as a masterwork heavy mace and suppresses all magical abilities.

LORE

Few artifacts inspire such conflicting stories as Marsha's Brick. Some accounts claim the original brick was hurled during a riot against tyranny. Others insist it was carried by a nameless defender who stood between a violent mob and those they sought to harm. The details vary from telling to telling, yet every version agrees upon one point - someone chose to resist when remaining silent would have been safer.

The earliest surviving examples of the weapon appeared in the possession of wandering champions, reformers, rebellious clergy and unlikely heroes. These individuals rarely shared faith, nationality or even moral philosophy, yet they were united by a common belief that power exists to protect rather than dominate. To them, the brick was not a weapon of conquest. It was a reminder that courage often begins with a single act of refusal.

The inscription itself has inspired centuries of scholarly debate. Countless Marshas have been proposed as the namesake - saints, queens, revolutionaries, martyrs and common laborers among them. No definitive answer has ever emerged. Some historians believe the ambiguity is intentional. By refusing to identify the individual, the inscription transforms from a dedication to one person into a dedication to every person who has suffered beneath unjust authority.

Among secret societies devoted to civil rights, liberation movements and underground networks that shelter the persecuted, replicas of the brick symbol are frequently displayed. Most are entirely mundane. Nevertheless, those who encounter the genuine article often describe a strange sensation - not of anger, but of solidarity. It is as though thousands of unseen voices stand quietly at one's shoulder, insisting that cruelty should never go unanswered.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, bull's strength, heroism, searing light; Cost 9,156 gp, 732 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

The peculiar thing about this weapon is that it does not celebrate violence. One might reasonably expect a magical brick-on-a-stick to embody righteous fury, vengeance or the simple delight of striking an unpleasant individual across the jaw. Yet the enchantment appears concerned with something altogether more fragile. It is concerned with memory. The weapon remembers that injustice is not an abstract principle but a wound inflicted upon actual people, each possessed of a name, a face and a life interrupted by another's certainty that they deserved less.

Civilizations possess an unfortunate tendency to confuse legality with morality. The distinction is often discovered only after the damage has already been done. Entire generations may suffer beneath systems that function exactly as intended, which is frequently the problem. By tying its power not to laws, governments or institutions but to the concept of injustice itself, the Brick quietly acknowledges that authority and righteousness are not synonymous companions.

I find the inscription particularly fascinating. "For Marsha." No title. No explanation. No grand proclamation of destiny. Merely a dedication. History remembers kings because they commission statues. It remembers conquerors because they leave ruins. Yet most suffering belongs to ordinary people whose names vanish within a generation. This weapon suggests that remembrance itself may be a form of resistance. Someone was hurt. Someone mattered. Someone should not be forgotten.

The brick, of course, is an inspired choice. Swords are symbols of nobility. Spears are symbols of armies. A brick is a symbol of construction, community and shelter. It belongs in walls, homes and schools. It exists to build. When transformed into a weapon, it serves as a reminder that even the most peaceful tools may eventually be lifted in defense of those who can no longer protect themselves. There is something profoundly tragic about that necessity, and profoundly admirable about the willingness to bear it.

One hopes, naturally, that Marsha's Brick spends most of its existence hanging quietly above a hearth, needed by no one. The history of our species suggests otherwise. Yet perhaps that is why the enchantment endures. So long as there remains even one person willing to stand against cruelty despite fear, inconvenience or danger, there will always be a place for a simple brick bearing a simple name. The weapon does not ask whether victory is certain. It asks only whether someone is willing to stand up and say, with all the stubborn grace civilization can muster, "No further."

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Tiara of the First Whisper

Tiara of the First Whisper


Aura
Faint (varies); CL 1st
Slot Head; Price 2,500 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This delicate silver tiara appears almost too fragile to survive regular wear. Fine filigree branches curl across its frame like frost tracing a winter window, supporting tiny gemstones selected to reflect the spell bound within the item. A tiara crafted to hold feather fall may bear pale blue sapphires, while one containing comprehend languages might display tiny pearls shaped like open books. Regardless of its form, each Tiara of the First Whisper possesses an understated elegance favored by scholars, courtiers, apprentices, and wandering adventurers who value practicality over ostentation.

When created, the tiara is permanently attuned to one spell chosen from the following list: alarm, comprehend languages, detect secret doors, disguise self, endure elements, feather fall, floating disk, identify, mage armor, or unseen servant.

The wearer may cast the chosen spell at will as a spell-like ability. The spell functions exactly as the original spell and uses the wearer's character level as the caster level if higher than 1st; otherwise it functions at caster level 1st. If the spell requires a saving throw, the DC is 11 + the wearer's relevant casting ability modifier if the wearer possesses a spellcasting class; otherwise the save DC is 11.

Each tiara is permanently bound to the spell selected during its creation and cannot be altered thereafter.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, creator must be able to cast the chosen spell; Cost 1,250 gp, 100 XP, plus a gemstone worth at least 50 gp appropriate to the chosen spell.

LORE

Among the oldest examples of magical convenience enchantments, Tiaras of the First Whisper emerged from academies whose instructors grew weary of apprentices repeatedly forgetting the simplest magical techniques. Rather than wasting precious lecture hours reviewing basic spells, master enchanters developed elegant circlets capable of granting perpetual access to a single useful magical effect.

Over time the practice spread beyond wizarding circles. Noble households commissioned tiaras bearing unseen servant to assist with daily chores. Explorers favored those enchanted with endure elements. Couriers and messengers sought feather fall variants, while diplomats often preferred comprehend languages. Wealthy merchants often commissioned alarm-bearing tiaras to protect caravans, warehouses, and temporary campsites. The enchantment became associated with refinement rather than raw magical power, earning a reputation as a tool of educated practicality.

Most enchanters take great care in matching the physical appearance of the tiara to its magical purpose. Collectors often claim they can identify a tiara's spell simply by examining its gemstones and decorative motifs. Whether this is genuine expertise or merely the confidence common to collectors remains a matter of spirited debate.

Kelwyn's Notes

There exists a peculiar distinction between power and convenience that many adventurers fail to appreciate until age, injury, or simple exhaustion begins to accumulate. The young often pursue artifacts capable of sundering mountains, commanding armies, or reshaping fate itself. The old, meanwhile, increasingly value the ability to accomplish a small task without unnecessary effort. Civilization advances not merely through grand achievements but through the gradual elimination of inconveniences.

A Tiara of the First Whisper embodies this principle with remarkable elegance. It does not promise greatness. It offers no path to glory. It simply removes one small obstacle from the wearer's life forever. Such a thing sounds insignificant until one considers how much of existence is spent overcoming the same minor difficulties again and again. The ability to always understand a foreign tongue, always summon a helping servant, always ward a campsite, or always soften a dangerous fall is not dramatic. It is dependable.

Dependability, I have observed, is among the rarest virtues in either people or magic. Great powers often fail precisely when they are most needed. Heroes lose courage. Kings lose judgment. Empires lose memory. Yet a modest enchantment that performs the same simple service every day for a century becomes woven into the rhythms of a life. It ceases to be a tool and instead becomes part of the architecture of one's existence.

Perhaps that is why these tiaras have endured for generations. They remind us that comfort, reliability, and small mercies possess a value difficult to measure in gold. A civilization survives not because of its miracles, but because countless tiny burdens are quietly carried by unseen hands until people forget those burdens ever existed at all. 

Guardian's Warning Blade

Guardian's Warning Blade


Aura
faint divination and transmutation; CL 5th
Slot none; Price 8,300 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

At first glance, a Guardian's Warning Blade appears to be an ordinary but finely crafted dagger with a polished steel blade and a hilt wrapped in dark leather. Tiny runes resembling watchful eyes are etched along the fuller, though they remain nearly invisible under normal light. The weapon is traditionally mounted above or beside doorways, hearths, or family altars where it serves as both decoration and silent sentinel.

A Guardian's Warning Blade possesses an uncanny awareness of impending danger directed toward the structure in which it resides. Whenever hostile creatures approach with clear intent to invade, attack, rob, or otherwise threaten the occupants of the home, the blade stirs to life. Within 1d4 rounds of such danger coming within 100 feet of the dwelling, the dagger transforms into a masterwork shortsword. During this transformation, the blade emits a faint silver glow visible to all creatures within 30 feet, serving as a warning that trouble is near.

Once transformed, the weapon may be wielded as a +1 shortsword. The sword remains in this form until one hour after the threat has ended, at which point it slowly shrinks and returns to its original dagger form. If removed from the dwelling for more than 24 consecutive hours, the blade loses its attunement and must remain within a new residence for seven days before establishing itself as that home's guardian.

The weapon's divinatory senses are imperfect. It does not react to accidental visitors, harmless passersby, or creatures lacking hostile intent. It also cannot identify the nature of the threat, merely its presence. Many families regard the blade's sudden transformation as a sacred omen and often pass such weapons down through generations.

Construction

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, alarm, detect hostile intentAPG, bull's strength; Cost 4,150 gp

Lore

The earliest Guardian's Warning Blades are believed to have originated among isolated frontier settlements where communities often stood days away from meaningful aid. In such places, survival depended less upon heroic warriors and more upon ordinary families receiving enough warning to bar a door, gather children, or prepare a defense. The first enchanters who crafted these blades sought not to create instruments of war, but instruments of preparation.

Stories persist of entire villages saved because a blade mounted above a fireplace suddenly lengthened into a sword during the quiet hours before dawn. Farmers awoke, lanterns were lit, barricades assembled, and lives preserved because a silent piece of enchanted steel recognized danger before any watchman could. Over generations these accounts transformed the blades into cherished heirlooms associated with vigilance, responsibility, and the protection of loved ones.

Many cultures have developed traditions surrounding the weapon. Some households touch the blade before leaving home on long journeys. Others decorate its mounting place with flowers, family crests, or religious symbols. A few communities even incorporate the blade into wedding ceremonies, presenting it to newlyweds as a reminder that a home is not merely walls and a roof, but a promise to protect those who dwell within.

Kelwyn's Notes

There exists a profound distinction between courage and preparedness, though people frequently mistake one for the other. Courage is what emerges when danger has already arrived. Preparedness is the quieter virtue that exists beforehand, often unnoticed until the moment it proves indispensable. The Guardian's Warning Blade fascinates me because it concerns itself almost entirely with the latter.

Most enchanted weapons dream of battle. Their enchantments sharpen edges, strengthen arms, or magnify violence. This little blade dreams instead of a lamp being lit a few minutes earlier. It dreams of a father waking his family before raiders reach the gate. It dreams of shutters being closed against a storm. It dreams of ordinary people receiving the precious gift of time. Such ambitions may sound humble, yet history is built upon countless moments where a few extra minutes separated tragedy from survival.

I have observed that homes are curious things. They are not truly collections of wood, stone, or brick. Rather, they are repositories of memory. Every meal shared, every grief endured, every celebration remembered becomes embedded within a dwelling until the structure itself feels inhabited by more than merely its occupants. A Guardian's Warning Blade appears to understand this intuitively. It does not defend a building. It defends continuity.

There is something deeply comforting about an object whose greatest desire is not victory, but warning. In a world obsessed with triumph, conquest, and power, I find unexpected nobility in a blade that simply wishes to say, "Wake up. Trouble is coming." Often that is all the miracle one truly needs.

Amulet of the Eternal Hour

Amulet of the Eternal Hour


Aura
faint divination; CL 3rd
Slot throat; Price 1,200 gp; Weight

DESCRIPTION

This finely crafted silver amulet bears a circular face of polished moonstone etched with delicate numerals and tiny celestial symbols. Though it possesses no visible hands, the stone's surface constantly shifts to display the current hour through luminous runes visible only to the wearer.

An Amulet of the Eternal Hour functions as a flawless magical timepiece. While worn, the bearer always knows the exact time of day to the nearest minute, regardless of weather, lighting conditions, underground environments, or planar anomalies that do not alter the flow of time itself. The amulet requires no activation and functions continuously.

In addition, the wearer gains a +2 competence bonus on Survival checks made to estimate the passage of time and on Profession checks where precise timekeeping would be beneficial, such as sailing, brewing, or conducting scheduled rituals.

The amulet does not function on planes or in areas where time itself is altered, accelerated, slowed, frozen, or otherwise distorted.

LORE

Among scholars, navigators, merchants, and military officers, few inventions have proven as quietly indispensable as the Amulet of the Eternal Hour. Unlike enchanted swords that win glory or magical armor that turns aside death, this humble device offers something civilization often values even more - reliability. Entire trade networks have flourished because appointments could be kept, ships could coordinate departures, and ceremonies could begin at their proper moments.

The earliest known examples were commissioned by wealthy merchant consortiums frustrated by the imprecision of sundials and water clocks. In crowded cities where fog, rain, smoke, and architecture frequently obscured the sun, accurate timekeeping became both a practical necessity and a symbol of sophistication. Owning such an amulet quickly became a mark of status among guildmasters and learned professionals.

Many adventurers initially dismiss the amulet as a luxury. Yet veterans often develop a deep appreciation for it after spending weeks beneath mountains, within sprawling dungeons, or traveling through dense wilderness where days and nights blur together. More than one expedition has been saved because someone knew precisely when a ritual would mature, when reinforcements were due, or how long a poison had been active.

Some philosophers claim the amulet's greatest value is psychological rather than practical. To know the hour, even in darkness far beneath the earth, is to maintain a connection to the orderly world above. The amulet becomes a small declaration that civilization still exists somewhere beyond the stone, and that time continues its patient march regardless of the dangers surrounding its bearer.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, know direction, guidance; Cost 600 gp, 48 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

Civilization is, in many respects, an elaborate attempt to persuade time to behave itself. We construct clocks, calendars, schedules, anniversaries, harvest festivals, funerary rites, and birthdays not because time obeys these things, but because we find comfort in pretending that it might. The Amulet of the Eternal Hour represents one of the more honest examples of this endeavor. It does not claim mastery over time. It merely tells us where we stand within its current.

There is something curiously reassuring about carrying such a device into the wilderness. Forests do not care what hour it is. Marshes do not care. Ancient ruins certainly do not care. Yet the wearer does. Humanity's relationship with time is deeply personal. We measure our lives through appointments kept, promises remembered, and moments anticipated. Remove those measurements and many people discover how much of their identity depends upon them.

I have observed adventurers emerging from prolonged subterranean journeys with a peculiar disorientation. They know their names, their companions, and their objectives, yet often struggle to remember whether they have been below for three days or three weeks. The distinction matters. One may survive uncertainty about direction. Uncertainty about time gnaws at the mind in subtler ways. The world feels untethered when one loses track of its rhythm.

The amulet therefore serves a purpose far beyond convenience. It is a small anchor cast into the river of existence itself. The bearer glances down and learns not merely the hour, but that the world continues beyond the dungeon walls, beyond the storm, beyond the darkness. Somewhere, bakeries are opening, taverns are filling, children are being born, and old men are arguing over matters of no consequence. The clock reminds us that we remain part of that larger story, even when we temporarily wander beyond its sight.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Skyturn Dagger

Skyturn Dagger


Aura
Moderate transmutation and evocation; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 28,302 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This finely crafted +1 dagger bears a blade forged from silvery steel that subtly shifts in color throughout the day. At dawn and dusk, the weapon gleams with hues of rose gold and amber. Under the full light of day, it shines like polished sunlight. At night, it darkens to a deep blue-black reminiscent of a moonlit sky.

The Skyturn Dagger possesses three distinct enchantments, only one of which functions at any given time depending upon the time of day.

• Dusk or Dawn: The dagger functions as a +2 dagger. Whenever it successfully strikes a living creature, the wielder gains 3 temporary hit points that last for 10 minutes. In addition, once per day as a swift action, the wielder may heal themselves of 2d8+5 points of damage.

• Daytime: The dagger functions as a +2 flaming dagger. Its flames shed light as a torch while drawn. Once per day, after a successful hit, the wielder may command the blade to erupt with solar fire, dealing an additional 3d6 points of fire damage to the target.

• Nighttime: The dagger functions as a +2 frost dagger. While held, the wielder gains darkvision 60 ft. (or extends existing darkvision by 30 ft.). Once per day, after a successful hit, the wielder may shroud themselves in supernatural darkness, gaining concealment (20% miss chance) for 5 rounds.

The dagger automatically shifts between forms as the time of day changes. The transformation is instantaneous and requires no action from the wielder.

LORE

Among travelers, sailors, and wanderers, few tales are told as often as those surrounding the Skyturn Dagger. Legends claim the first of these daggers was commissioned by an aging explorer who grew frustrated that magic weapons seemed to favor only a single purpose. He desired a blade that reflected the changing nature of the world itself - a weapon that would awaken differently beneath the sun, the moon and the fleeting hours of dawn and dusk.

The enchanter who accepted the commission was said to be obsessed with cycles. Seasons, tides, migrations, eclipses and even the rise and fall of kingdoms fascinated him. Rather than binding a single spirit or elemental force into the weapon, he wove fragments of dawnlight, sunlight, twilight and moonlight directly into the steel. The result was a blade that never truly remained the same weapon for long.

Owners frequently describe developing emotional attachments to the dagger's transformations. The restorative warmth of dawn and dusk often becomes associated with comfort and perseverance. The brilliant flames of daylight evoke confidence and action. The cold certainty of night encourages caution, patience and keen observation.

Several surviving examples have become prized heirlooms among families of rangers, scouts and adventurers. In many cases, the dagger passes from parent to child accompanied by journals documenting years of observations. These writings often contain surprisingly philosophical reflections about change, growth and the impossibility of remaining the same person forever. The weapon's greatest gift may not be its magic, but the reminder that every phase of existence serves a purpose.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, flame blade, chill metal, false life, cure serious wounds, creator must witness both a sunrise and sunset during the item's creation; Cost 14,151 gp, 1,132 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

There exists a peculiar arrogance among mortals that insists consistency is the highest virtue. We celebrate things that remain unchanged, praise unwavering convictions and build monuments from stone so they might outlast the generations that erected them. Yet the world itself possesses no such loyalty to permanence. Every dawn rewrites the landscape with new shadows. Every dusk softens the hard edges of certainty. Every night conceals one truth while revealing another. The Skyturn Dagger understands this far better than most philosophers.

The dagger's enchantments are individually useful, but usefulness is not what interests me. What fascinates me is the blade's refusal to define itself through a singular purpose. At dawn and dusk it restores. In the daylight it burns. Beneath the stars it cools and obscures. It does not ask which version is its true nature because all three are equally authentic. The steel accepts transformation without shame or resistance.

Many people spend their lives terrified that change represents failure. They fear becoming softer, harder, wiser, angrier, gentler or more cautious than they once were. Yet every living thing changes as naturally as the sky transitions from dawn to day and day to night. To reject that process is to wage war against existence itself. A river that refuses to flow ceases to be a river.

When I examine the Skyturn Dagger, I do not see a magical weapon. I see a lesson hidden within polished steel. The blade reminds us that identity is not a fixed point but a procession of moments. We are not the same person at sunrise that we are at noon, nor the same soul who walks beneath the stars. The tragedy is not that we change. The tragedy is that so many spend their lives believing they were never meant to.

Hat of the Returning Brim

Hat of the Returning Brim


Aura
Moderate transmutation; CL 9th

Slot Head; Price 18,000 gp; Weight 2 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This finely crafted hat may take the form of any common brimmed headwear - a gentleman's hat, a traveler's broad-brimmed hat, a noble's cavalier hat, or similar design. While worn, it appears entirely mundane aside from exceptional craftsmanship. The brim remains flexible and comfortable, and the hat functions as ordinary headwear.

As a standard action, the wearer may remove and throw the hat as a ranged weapon with a range increment of 30 feet. The moment it leaves the thrower's hand, the brim stiffens and sharpens through magical transformation, becoming a deadly spinning disc of force-hardened material.

A Hat of the Returning Brim functions as a +2 returning chakram. It deals 1d8 points of slashing damage (19-20/x2) and is treated as a martial thrown weapon. The hat automatically returns to the thrower's hand immediately before the beginning of their next turn, functioning as the returning weapon special ability. If the thrower's hands are occupied, the hat instead settles neatly upon the wearer's head.

While transformed in flight, the hat ignores the first 5 points of hardness possessed by nonmagical objects it strikes.

The hat may be thrown by any creature proficient with chakrams. Creatures not proficient with chakrams take the normal penalties for using an unfamiliar weapon.

LORE

At first glance, the Hat of the Returning Brim appears almost comically impractical. Civilized folk rarely expect formal attire to become a weapon, and many owners delight in the bewildered expressions of brigands who watch a seemingly harmless hat remove itself from a gentleman's head before carving a bloody arc through the air. Yet the item's origins lie not in humor but necessity.

The earliest examples were commissioned by wealthy merchants who traveled dangerous roads while wishing to avoid the appearance of carrying arms. In many regions, displaying a sword openly invited challenges, theft, or political complications. A fashionable hat, however, drew little suspicion. Artificers quickly discovered that a reinforced brim enchanted with transmutation magic could become surprisingly lethal when properly balanced.

As decades passed, the hats became favorites among duelists, spies, caravan masters, and adventurers who appreciated concealed defenses. Tales persist of nobles ending assassination attempts by casually tipping their hats before sending them spinning through crowded ballrooms. Witnesses often described the attack as resembling an enormous steel razor disguised moments earlier as elegant attire.

Collectors particularly prize older examples bearing signs of long service. Tiny nicks along the brim often tell stories of battles survived, while faded sweatbands reveal years of faithful use. More than one Hat of the Returning Brim has been passed down through generations as both family heirloom and trusted weapon, serving as a reminder that appearances are frequently deceptive.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, telekinesis, keen edge; Cost 9,000 gp, 720 XP

Kelwyn's Notes

One finds it difficult not to admire the sheer audacity of this object. Humanity has always possessed a peculiar talent for hiding danger beneath civility. The sword concealed within the cane, the dagger secreted inside the boot, the poison resting within the crystal goblet - all are expressions of the same ancient lesson. We dress violence in respectable clothing and then act surprised when respectability suddenly develops teeth.

What fascinates me most is not the hat's ability to wound but its ability to deceive expectation. Every culture develops symbols intended to communicate safety, status, or normalcy. A hat is among the most harmless of these symbols. It shields one from rain, marks social standing, and serves as an accessory for polite conversation. The moment it becomes a weapon, one is reminded how fragile assumptions truly are.

There is also something strangely philosophical about its return. The hat departs, performs its task, and inevitably comes home again. Actions often behave much the same way. We cast our intentions into the world believing them separate from ourselves, only to discover that consequences possess an uncanny tendency to circle back. Some return carrying success. Others return carrying regret. The hat, at least, is honest enough to warn its owner of this principle every time it flies.

I confess a certain fondness for the image of an elderly traveler standing alone upon a dusty road, removing his hat with perfect courtesy before reducing an ambush to a brief and highly educational experience. Civilization, after all, is often little more than barbarism wearing a particularly nice hat.

Wand of the First Wall

Wand of the First Wall Aura Moderate abjuration and conjuration; CL 9th Slot —; Price 32,500 gp; Weight 1 lb. DESCRIPTION This slender ...