The Herald’s Trousers of Triumph
Aura Moderate enchantment and transmutation; CL 11th
Slot Legs; Price 42,000 gp; Weight 3 lbs.
DESCRIPTION
These otherwise splendid deep-purple noble’s trousers are stitched from shimmering velvet and lined with silver thread embroidered into tiny cheering crowds. The fabric is perpetually immaculate regardless of mud, blood, weather, or travel, and the trousers always fit their wearer perfectly no matter their size or shape. Tiny golden tassels along the seams occasionally twitch as though applauding.
The Herald’s Trousers of Triumph grant their wearer a +6 enhancement bonus to Charisma and a +10 competence bonus on Diplomacy and Perform (oratory) checks. In addition, the wearer gains the benefits of tongues continuously and may cast mass suggestion once per day as a spell-like ability (Will DC 19). The wearer radiates supernatural confidence, causing crowds to instinctively notice and listen to them. Any speech given by the wearer takes on remarkable emotional force, and listeners begin one step more favorable toward the wearer than normal.
Unfortunately, the curse attached to the trousers is catastrophically humiliating.
Whenever the wearer speaks aloud to more than three creatures at once, the trousers activate their secondary enchantment - “The Triumph of Absolute Transparency.” During any conversation, negotiation, battlefield speech, royal audience, prayer, funeral, tactical briefing, romantic confession, or similarly public interaction, the trousers loudly and theatrically announce the wearer’s intrusive thoughts, insecurities, physical discomforts, romantic attractions, digestive concerns, or moments of self-doubt in an unnaturally booming aristocratic voice.
This effect cannot be voluntarily suppressed.
Examples include:
“HE IS PRETENDING TO UNDERSTAND THIS CONVERSATION.”
“SHE FINDS THE PALADIN EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE.”
“THE WEARER IS CURRENTLY EXPERIENCING STOMACH DISTRESS.”
“THE SPEECH WAS NOT PREPARED IN ADVANCE.”
“THE WEARER REGRETS EATING THE EEL.”
These proclamations occur at dramatically inappropriate moments and are audible out to 120 feet. The wearer suffers a -6 penalty on Bluff checks and cannot benefit from effects that conceal emotional states, including glibness. However, creatures hearing the proclamations often interpret the honesty as refreshing sincerity; the wearer gains a +4 bonus on Diplomacy checks despite the humiliation.
Once donned, the trousers cannot be removed except by remove curse, break enchantment, or similar magic. If removed by force, they immediately teleport back onto the wearer’s body at dawn the following morning.
LORE
There are many cursed objects forged through hatred, vengeance, or cruel ambition. The Herald’s Trousers of Triumph emerged from something far more dangerous - committee-driven optimism. The garment was commissioned nearly eighty years ago by a coalition of minor nobles who had grown exhausted by assassinations, lies, and political maneuvering within the courts of the Sapphire Principalities. Their solution was not wisdom, nor reform, nor restraint. It was, somehow, enchanted pants.
The original enchanters believed civilization itself could be improved if rulers were simply incapable of concealing their true feelings. Historians note that this philosophy survived precisely twelve days before collapsing into absolute disaster. Diplomatic marriages dissolved during wedding ceremonies. Military alliances failed after the trousers announced that one duke “found the other’s beard unsettling.” Entire trade negotiations ended because the wearer admitted - involuntarily and in perfect detail - that he had forgotten the names of the visiting ambassadors roughly thirty seconds after meeting them.
Yet the horrifying truth is that the trousers worked.
Corruption measurably declined wherever the garment appeared. Courts became less deceptive. Noble conspiracies became increasingly difficult to maintain when secret traitors would suddenly blurt things such as, “HE PLANS TO BETRAY EVERYONE PRESENT AFTER DESSERT.” Several rulers reportedly became beloved by the common people precisely because the artifact rendered them incapable of appearing artificial. One queen famously retained the throne for thirty years despite regularly screaming whenever the trousers announced that she was “DESPERATELY TRYING TO LOOK CALM.”
Bards adore the artifact. Diplomats fear it. Priests remain deeply divided on whether the trousers represent divine punishment or divine honesty. One surviving chronicle from the city-state of Auronne describes a peace summit ending not in war, but in mutual sobbing after the trousers revealed that every attending ruler was “EXHAUSTED AND TERRIFIED.”
The garment continues to circulate among adventurers because, despite the humiliation, it is genuinely powerful. Many who wear it eventually discover a strange liberation in being incapable of deception. Others suffer complete psychological collapse after their trousers publicly narrate romantic interests during combat.
CONSTRUCTION
Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, tongues, mass suggestion, zone of truth, creator must have at least 10 ranks in Diplomacy
Cost 21,000 gp + 1,680 XP
Kelwyn’s Notes
There exists a particular category of cursed object that reveals something deeply uncomfortable about civilization - namely that humanity claims to value honesty right up until honesty begins speaking at full volume in crowded rooms. Most cursed relics are instruments of destruction, greed, violence, vanity, or hunger. These trousers instead weaponize sincerity, and the resulting devastation is somehow far more complete.
I observed one unfortunate duke attempt to negotiate river tariffs while wearing the garment. The trousers interrupted him no fewer than seventeen times to announce that he found the opposing delegation “unexpectedly intimidating” and that he “had practiced this speech in front of a mirror for three nights.” What fascinated me was not the laughter, though there was plenty of it, but the gradual softening of the room itself. The negotiation became less hostile. People stopped posturing. One delegate admitted he had been equally nervous. Another confessed he had no idea how river tariffs actually worked. By the end, they had accidentally become honest with one another.
This is the danger of the artifact. Humiliation and vulnerability are adjacent territories, and civilization survives largely by pretending otherwise. Humanity adorns itself with titles, rituals, armor, heraldry, ceremony, and etiquette largely to conceal how frightened, lonely, desperate, or uncertain most people truly are. The trousers rip that veil apart with the elegance of a drunken stage actor kicking open a cathedral door.
I cannot claim to admire the experience of hearing one’s own private panic screamed into a royal ballroom. Yet I confess there is something strangely mournful about how often those nearby respond not with cruelty, but relief. Most people spend their lives terrified that they alone are absurd. The trousers reveal the awful democratic truth - everyone is absurd. Every king is improvising. Every priest doubts. Every warrior trembles. Every scholar occasionally forgets what he intended to say midway through saying it.
Civilization, I increasingly suspect, may simply be a collective agreement to ignore how profoundly embarrassing it is to be alive at all.






