Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Crystal Ball of Possibilities

Crystal Ball of Possibilities


Aura
strong divination; CL 15th
Slot none; Price 90,000 gp; Weight 7 lbs.

Description

This flawless crystal sphere measures approximately ten inches in diameter and rests upon a simple carved walnut stand. At first glance it appears perfectly transparent, but those who gaze into its depths soon discover countless shimmering visions constantly forming, branching and dissolving into one another. Every possibility exists only for a heartbeat before giving way to another, creating the impression of an infinite tapestry of futures forever in motion.

A creature may spend 10 uninterrupted minutes gazing into the crystal while contemplating a single specific goal or task. As the visions unfold, the viewer witnesses innumerable possible futures, instinctively recognizing how individual choices, actions and circumstances shape each potential outcome.

At the conclusion of the vision, the viewer understands the most favorable attainable future relating to that single task and the sequence of actions most likely to bring it to pass.

For the next 24 hours, the viewer gains a +10 insight bonus on one attack roll, saving throw, skill check or ability check directly related to accomplishing the chosen objective. The bonus may be applied after the roll is made, but before the result is announced.

Once the bonus has been used, or after 24 hours have elapsed, the crystal's guidance ends.

A creature that has benefited from the Crystal Ball of Possibilities cannot do so again for 72 hours. This limitation is tied to the individual viewer rather than the crystal itself, allowing different creatures to consult the crystal independently.

The crystal does not reveal absolute destiny, nor does it grant knowledge beyond the viewer's ability to comprehend or influence. It cannot reveal another creature's private thoughts, nor can it show events completely beyond the viewer's ability to affect. Should circumstances change significantly or the viewer knowingly abandon the path revealed by the crystal, its guidance becomes unreliable, though the magical bonus itself remains available.

Construction

Requirements: Craft Wondrous Item, contact other plane, foresight, legend lore; Cost: 45,000 gp + 3,600 XP; Time: 90 days

Lore

Among the oldest schools of divination, there exists a philosophical disagreement that has endured for millennia. One tradition teaches that the future is fixed, waiting patiently to unfold exactly as foreseen. The other contends that the future is a living tapestry woven from countless decisions, each choice creating new threads while quietly unraveling others. The Crystal Ball of Possibilities was born from the latter belief, rejecting prophecy in favor of potential.

Its creator, the archmage Arandel the Far-Seeing, spent nearly half a century studying why so many prophecies failed despite being sincerely recorded. He eventually concluded that prophets were not witnessing a single future at all, but merely the most likely one at that particular moment. Determined to prove his theory, he crafted a crystal capable of revealing not one destiny, but an endless sea of branching possibilities. When his apprentices first peered into the completed sphere, they described seeing thousands of futures blooming like the branches of an ancient oak, each altered by the smallest decision.

Only a handful of these crystal balls are believed to exist today. They rarely remain in the possession of conquerors or ambitious rulers for long, for such individuals often become frustrated by the crystal's refusal to promise certainty. Instead, the spheres have found lasting homes among wise judges, respected teachers, thoughtful rulers and seasoned adventurers who understand that wisdom lies not in knowing what will happen, but in choosing what should happen.

Kelwyn's Notes

Many have asked whether I believe in fate. I generally reply that fate has never troubled itself with introducing its acquaintance, and I see little reason to return the discourtesy by assuming its existence. Experience has convinced me that tomorrow is negotiated rather than assigned. Every conversation, every kindness, every hesitation and every act of courage quietly alters what follows. If that notion seems daunting, I encourage you to consider its far more pleasant implication: no mistake need become permanent.

Those who first behold this crystal often make the same error. They search for certainty. They wish to discover the one correct path so that every difficult decision may thereafter become wonderfully uncomplicated. The crystal offers no such luxury. Instead, it reveals that there are always many roads before us, some brighter than others, and that wisdom consists not in discovering perfection but in recognizing possibility.

I have spent many evenings watching the futures dance within this sphere, and I confess they possess a curious habit. The greatest victories seldom arise from spectacular gestures. More often they begin with astonishingly ordinary choices. A stranger is greeted rather than ignored. A question is asked rather than assumed. Forgiveness is offered instead of resentment. Entire generations may be transformed by moments so small that history scarcely remembers they occurred.

You may wonder why the crystal refuses to reveal its visions to the same individual more than once every three days. I suspect the answer is kindness. Were it consulted too frequently, one might become so consumed with seeking better futures that one neglected to live the present. Possibility is a marvelous teacher, but a dreadful master. At some point the crystal must fall silent, leaving us to walk the path we have chosen with confidence rather than constant hesitation.

Should this crystal ever come into your keeping, resist the temptation to ask how your story ends. That question has never particularly interested me. Instead, ask which decision before you today leads toward greater compassion, deeper understanding or stronger hope. The future is not an inheritance awaiting our arrival. It is something we create together, one thoughtful choice at a time. If this collection has sought to teach anything throughout these past thirty days, I should like to think it is precisely that.

Amulet of Resilience

Amulet of Resilience


Aura
moderate abjuration and enchantment; CL 7th
Slot throat; Price 18,000 gp; Weight 1 lb.

Description

This simple bronze pendant is fashioned in the shape of a tightly clenched fist and hangs from a sturdy leather cord. It bears no jewels, precious metals or decorative embellishments. Countless tiny scratches and nicks cover its surface, each seeming to tell the story of a hardship overcome rather than a battle won. Though humble in appearance, it radiates a quiet determination that reassures its wearer in moments of doubt.

The wearer gains a +2 morale bonus on saving throws against fear effects and despair effects.

Three times per day, if the wearer is reduced to –1 hit points or lower, but not slain outright, the amulet immediately stabilizes the wearer. This ability requires no action and functions even if the wearer is unconscious.

Once per day, when damage would cause the wearer to fall unconscious from hit point loss, the amulet surges with indomitable resolve. The wearer immediately regains 1d8+5 hit points. In addition, the wearer gains the benefits of the Diehard feat for 5 rounds, even if they do not meet its prerequisites. This ability activates automatically and requires no action from the wearer.

The amulet functions only if the wearer is alive. It has no effect upon creatures slain by massive damage, death effects or similar magic.

Construction

Requirements: Forge Wondrous Item, bear's endurance, heroism, close wounds; Cost: 9,000 gp + 720 XP; Time: 18 days

Lore

The earliest tales of the Amulet of Resilience do not speak of kings, saints or mighty champions. Instead, they tell of ordinary laborers, refugees, healers and travelers who refused to surrender despite overwhelming hardship. It is said that the first such pendant was forged after a devastating famine, when a village elder remarked that survival was seldom the work of the strongest among them. Rather, it belonged to those who simply refused to stop taking one more step.

The clenched fist has carried many meanings throughout history, yet among the oldest traditions it symbolized neither aggression nor conquest. Instead, it represented resolve. A hand formed into a fist could no longer grasp wealth or wield elaborate tools, but it could endure pain, weather hardship and rise again after every fall. For this reason, generations of artisans deliberately left these pendants plain and scarred, believing that an object untouched by hardship could never truly represent resilience.

Authentic Amulets of Resilience are seldom found in treasure vaults or royal collections. More often they appear around the necks of village guardians, aging adventurers, devoted caregivers and those whose greatest victories have never been celebrated in song. Many are passed from parent to child, mentor to student or friend to friend, each new scratch adding another chapter to a story that has yet to reach its conclusion.

Kelwyn's Notes

Many believe resilience to be synonymous with strength. I have lived sufficiently long to assure you that this is a misunderstanding. Strength may win a contest. Resilience determines who remains standing after the contest has ended. Mountains are strong, yet even they surrender to wind and water given enough centuries. The willow, by contrast, survives because it bends.

There exists an unfortunate tendency among scholars to celebrate dramatic victories while overlooking quieter triumphs. A dragon slain is undoubtedly worthy of a ballad. A grieving soul who rises from bed despite believing the day unbearable receives no such applause, despite having displayed courage of an equally remarkable variety. I have often wondered whether history places its admiration upon the wrong achievements.

Observe carefully the surface of this amulet. It is scarred, weathered and imperfect. I consider this essential. Were it polished until flawless, it would become a symbol of untouched innocence rather than hard-earned perseverance. Every mark upon its bronze reminds us that surviving adversity invariably leaves us changed. One should not fear such changes. They are evidence that one has continued onward.

There is a curious misconception that resilience means never requiring assistance. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have crossed deserts only because companions shared their water. I have escaped dangers only because wiser minds offered counsel where my own judgment faltered. To accept help is not weakness. It is often the very act that allows resilience to flourish.

Should fortune ever place this humble pendant in your keeping, remember that its greatest enchantment is not the magic that steadies your heartbeat or grants you the strength to rise once more. Those blessings, though welcome, are temporary. Its true power lies in the lesson it quietly repeats each time your hand closes around it: falling is inevitable, surrender is optional. I have found that distinction to be among the wisest lessons this world has ever offered.

Ring of Hope

Ring of Hope


Aura
faint enchantment; CL 5th
Slot ring; Price 12,000 gp; Weight

Description

This simple, unadorned band of polished gold bears but a single engraved word upon its outer surface: Hope. There are no gemstones, intricate carvings or ostentatious embellishments. Its beauty lies entirely in its simplicity, serving as a quiet reminder that even the smallest light may shine through the deepest darkness.

Five times per day, as an immediate action, the wearer may invoke the ring's magic to gain a +2 morale bonus on any one attack roll, saving throw, skill check or ability check. The wearer must choose to activate the ring before the result of the roll is known.

Once per day, if the wearer is confronted with a moment of genuine despair or seemingly insurmountable adversity, the ring activates of its own accord. Instead of the normal benefit, the triggering roll receives a +5 morale bonus, and the wearer gains a +1 enhancement bonus to Constitution and a +1 enhancement bonus to Wisdom for 5 rounds. This activation requires no action on the part of the wearer and functions even if the wearer is stunned, dazed or otherwise incapable of acting.

Whether a situation is sufficiently bleak to trigger this ability is determined by the DM. The ring cannot be intentionally activated for its greater power.

Construction

Requirements: Forge Ring, heroism, bear's endurance, owl's wisdom; Cost: 6,000 gp + 480 XP

Lore

Among the oldest magical traditions, there exists a curious belief that hope itself possesses substance. Not metaphorically, but literally - an unseen force capable of strengthening resolve, sharpening judgment and carrying weary souls farther than their bodies alone should permit. While most scholars dismiss such notions as poetic fancy, a handful of archmages have quietly disagreed, claiming that hope is among the oldest forms of magic in existence.

The first Ring of Hope is said to have been commissioned not by a monarch or a legendary hero, but by the survivors of a village destroyed by war. Having lost homes, families and nearly every worldly possession, they sought neither vengeance nor wealth. Instead, they asked a kindly wizard to create something that would remind future generations that despair is never permanent. The wizard accepted no payment beyond a simple promise: that each wearer would pass the ring to another before death, ensuring that hope itself would never become buried alongside its owner.

Over the centuries, numerous Rings of Hope have been crafted in imitation of that original design. Although their appearances vary little, no two possess precisely the same temperament. Some awaken in the face of overwhelming armies, others during quiet moments of grief known only to their bearers. Regardless of the circumstances, every authentic Ring of Hope seems to possess an uncanny understanding of the precise moment when its wearer most needs to believe that tomorrow still exists.

Kelwyn's Notes

It has long amused me that apprentices spend countless hours attempting to master fireballs while scarcely acknowledging the enchantments that keep a companion standing when every sensible instinct urges retreat. Destruction is spectacular, certainly, but perseverance is infinitely more useful. Entire kingdoms have survived because enough ordinary folk refused to surrender after disastrous days. That sort of resilience deserves far greater admiration than any explosion I have ever witnessed.

Many imagine hope to be an emotion - pleasant when present and unfortunate when absent. I have never found this to be true. Emotions arrive uninvited and depart just as carelessly. Hope, by contrast, is a decision. One chooses it repeatedly, often against all available evidence. That, I believe, is why it possesses such remarkable strength. It is forged not from certainty, but from determination.

I have encountered individuals who insisted that optimism and hope are identical twins. They are mistaken. Optimism declares that everything shall surely turn out well. Hope merely replies, "Perhaps not... but I shall continue nonetheless." It is a quieter companion, considerably more stubborn and vastly more dependable.

Should you ever find yourself wearing one of these humble rings, I encourage you not to regard its greatest enchantment as the surge of magical strength it occasionally grants. Rather, appreciate the reminder encircling your finger. Every glance toward that single engraved word is an opportunity to remember that even the darkest chapters are still chapters, not conclusions.

If this ring has any flaw, it is only that it cannot force its bearer to believe its message. Magic may strengthen the body, steady the mind and bolster the spirit for a precious few moments, yet the final choice always belongs to the wearer. Fortunately, I have found that people are far more resilient than they imagine. Sometimes all they require is the gentlest reminder that hope has not abandoned them... only waited patiently for them to notice it once again.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Memorial Ribbon

Memorial Ribbon


Aura
moderate abjuration; CL 7th
Slot shoulders; Price 7,500 sp; Weight

DESCRIPTION

This finely woven silk ribbon is intended to be tied around the upper arm, shoulder, backpack strap or cloak clasp. Though available in any color, many are chosen to represent a person, community or cause the wearer wishes to honor. The ribbon never frays, fades or stains, regardless of age or weather.

While worn, the Memorial Ribbon grants the wearer a +2 competence bonus on Concentration checks and saving throws against enchantment effects that would compel them to abandon, betray or willingly harm an ally.

Once per day, if an ally within 30 feet would be reduced to 0 or fewer hit points, the wearer may immediately move up to their speed toward that ally as an immediate action. This movement does not provoke attacks of opportunity and ignores difficult terrain, though it cannot pass through solid barriers or otherwise impossible terrain. If the wearer ends this movement adjacent to the ally, they gain a +2 sacred bonus to AC and saving throws until the beginning of their next turn while defending that ally.

The ribbon serves as a reminder that remembrance is not passive. The greatest tribute to those who sacrificed themselves for others is to continue protecting those who still remain.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, remove fear, shield other; Cost 3,750 sp + 300 XP

LORE

The origin of the first Memorial Ribbon has long since been lost, though nearly every culture tells a remarkably similar story. In times of great tragedy, survivors would tear strips from the garments of those they had lost, wearing them not as symbols of grief alone, but as reminders that the virtues of the departed deserved to live on. In time, magic found its way into the tradition, transforming simple cloth into a powerful emblem of remembrance.

Unlike medals or titles bestowed by rulers, a Memorial Ribbon cannot be earned through ambition or purchased through wealth. It is almost always given freely by one person to another, carrying with it the memory of someone whose courage left an enduring mark upon a family, a community or an entire nation. Many are embroidered with names, dates or simple patterns meaningful only to their wearers.

Bards often remark that while statues honor the past, Memorial Ribbons honor the future. They remind each new generation that sacrifice is not an invitation to endless mourning, but a challenge to live with the same compassion, conviction and selflessness shown by those who came before.

KELWYN'S NOTES

"There exists an unfortunate belief that remembrance is something accomplished in silence. We gather before monuments, bow our heads, speak familiar names and then return to our ordinary lives believing our obligation fulfilled. Such ceremonies have their place, but memory without action fades into sentiment.

This ribbon teaches a more difficult lesson. Every thread asks whether we have truly learned from those we claim to honor. The finest memorial is not carved from marble nor cast in bronze. It is found in the quiet decision to help another because someone else once helped you.

I have seen warriors wear these ribbons beneath polished armor where no one else could see them. I have watched healers stitch them into their robes and sailors knot them around weathered wrists before venturing into impossible storms. None wore them to display grief. They wore them to remember the standard they wished to uphold.

The dead ask very little of us. They require no praise, no offerings and no monuments grand enough to touch the heavens. They ask only that the kindness, courage and sacrifice which defined their final moments do not end with them.

If this ribbon possesses any magic beyond the enchantments woven into its silk, it is this: every time its wearer chooses another's well-being above their own convenience, another invisible thread is added to a tapestry stretching across generations. Though no eye may ever see that tapestry in its entirety, I have little doubt it is among the most beautiful works ever created."

The Book of Remembrance

The Book of Remembrance


Aura
strong divination; CL 20th
Slot —; Price Not for Sale; Weight 6 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

Bound in black leather and reinforced with heavy iron corner protectors and spine bands, this ancient tome bears only a single word upon its cover, embossed in silver Common script:

Remember

No maker's mark appears within its pages.

The Book of Remembrance exists to preserve the memory of those whose final acts of selfless courage changed the lives of others. Whenever a creature willingly accepts mortal risk in order to protect, rescue or aid another, and that sacrifice ultimately costs them their life, a new page silently appears within the book. Upon that page is inscribed only the individual's name in flawless silver ink.

The book itself determines whether an act is worthy. Neither mortal nor deity may influence its judgment. Intent is paramount. A creature who knowingly risks everything so that another might live is remembered forever.

Its pages are limitless, and no recorded name has ever vanished.

A creature may touch a recorded name as a standard action. For the next three rounds, the bearer experiences an immersive supernatural remembrance of that individual. These memories unfold as though the bearer were standing beside the individual throughout the defining moments of their life. They learn who the individual was, the circumstances that led to their final sacrifice and the lasting impact that sacrifice had upon those who survived. The remembrance conveys emotion, conviction and understanding, but not every detail of the individual's life.

While experiencing a remembrance, the bearer remains aware of their surroundings but is considered dazed until the effect ends.

At the conclusion of the third round, the bearer gains a +1 sacred bonus on saving throws against fear for 24 hours. This benefit does not stack with itself.

The Book of Remembrance cannot be used to identify living heroes, predict future sacrifices or determine the location of any creature.

Attempts to erase names, alter entries, remove pages or destroy the artifact automatically fail. Should the book ever be abandoned, hidden or lost, it inevitably reappears within 1d100 days in a library, temple, archive or other place dedicated to the preservation of knowledge.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Major Artifact; cannot be created by mortal means.

LORE

No reliable account exists describing the Book of Remembrance's creation. Priests claim it was written by a deity of compassion, while historians argue it first appeared after the world's earliest recorded act of true self-sacrifice. Others believe the tome simply manifested when the first life was willingly given so another might endure.

Throughout history, the Book has surfaced in monasteries, royal libraries, humble temples and forgotten archives. Every culture that has possessed it has discovered new names appearing without warning, written in the same flawless silver script regardless of language, race or era. No hand has ever been witnessed writing upon its pages.

Scholars have spent centuries attempting to uncover the Book's secrets, yet every investigation ends with the same realization. It is not a record of death, but of love expressed through sacrifice. Those whose names appear within its pages may have fallen, but so long as the Book endures, they can never truly be forgotten.

KELWYN'S NOTES

Most history is written by those who survive. Kings commission monuments, generals dictate chronicles and merchants preserve the ledgers of prosperous years. Yet countless lives that altered the course of the world disappear into silence because no one remained to tell their stories.

This volume serves a different purpose. It does not celebrate conquest, wealth or power. It concerns itself only with those who willingly placed another's life before their own, asking for neither recognition nor reward. Such people rarely believe themselves extraordinary. They simply make the only choice their conscience allows.

I have turned these pages many times. Some names belong to mighty champions whose deeds shaped nations. Others belong to farmers, sailors, children, healers and strangers whose courage touched only a handful of lives. The Book draws no distinction between them.

There is wisdom in that impartiality. A single act of compassion may echo through generations in ways no prophecy could foresee. The smallest sacrifice may preserve a future that changes the world.

Should your own name never grace these pages, do not mourn the omission. Better to live a long life spent lifting others than to seek remembrance through death. Yet if fate should one day write your name within this binding, know that somewhere, long after your bones have returned to dust, another soul will touch your page... and remember.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Circlet of the True Self

Circlet of the True Self


Aura
moderate abjuration; CL 9th
Slot head; Price 24,000 sp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

Fashioned from polished silver, this unadorned circlet bears a continuous band of intricate knotwork that never quite repeats itself. Though simple in appearance, it radiates a faint warmth whenever hostile magic attempts to intrude upon the wearer's mind or identity.

While worn, the circlet grants the wearer immunity to any magical effect that would alter, suppress, erase, or overwrite the wearer's identity, personality, memories, alignment, or sense of self against their will. This includes, but is not limited to, dominate person, dominate monster, suggestion, mass suggestion, geas/quest, modify memory, confusion, insanity, and similar mind-affecting or compulsive magical effects. Such effects automatically fail against the wearer.

The circlet also negates any unwilling magical effect that would forcibly alter the wearer's physical form, appearance, or voice, including effects such as polymorph, baleful polymorph, or similar transmutation spells. Voluntary uses of such magic are unaffected. The wearer may choose to accept any illusion, enchantment, or transmutation effect normally. Once accepted, the circlet does not interfere unless the effect is subsequently maintained against the wearer's wishes.

The circlet provides no protection against mundane persuasion, intimidation, fear, or other nonmagical influences.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, break enchantment, mind blank, polymorph; Cost 12,000 sp + 960 XP

Lore

Legends tell of the first Circlet of the True Self being forged during an age when powerful enchantments were as common in royal courts as crowns and scepters. Kings bent advisors to their will, rival mages erased inconvenient memories, and spies wore stolen faces with unsettling ease. A small fellowship of wizards, clerics, and philosophers rejected the notion that such power should ever reach into the heart of a person's identity. They resolved to create a safeguard that would protect the one possession no sovereign, tyrant, or archmage had any right to claim - the self.

The circlet's enchantment was never intended to prevent change. Its creators understood that every life is shaped by experience, friendship, loss, discovery, and wisdom. Rather than resisting transformation, the magic distinguishes between growth freely embraced and change imposed by another's will. Whether the magic seeks to rewrite memories, compel loyalty, suppress convictions, or reshape the body against its owner's wishes, the circlet quietly refuses, preserving the wearer's freedom to decide who they will become.

Over the centuries, Circlets of the True Self have been entrusted to judges presiding over difficult disputes, diplomats negotiating fragile peace, healers tending those whose minds have been scarred by dark magic, and adventurers who venture into lands where enchantment is as dangerous as any sword. Though few common folk recognize the circlet on sight, those who know its history understand the promise it represents: no spell, however powerful, possesses the right to define another person's life.

Kelwyn's Notes

Many apprentices believe that the highest purpose of magic is to change the world. They are mistaken. The highest purpose of magic is to give others the freedom to change it themselves. There is a difference, subtle though it may appear.

Identity is not a statue carved from marble, fixed forever by the first strike of the sculptor's chisel. It is a river. It bends, widens, deepens, and occasionally discovers an entirely new course. Yet even a river must choose its own path. One does not honor it by building walls around it and calling the prison a channel.

I have worn many faces throughout my long life. Some were disguises born of necessity. Others reflected seasons of my own choosing. Every one of them was meaningful because the choice belonged to me. Consent grants transformation its dignity. Without consent, even the most elegant enchantment becomes little more than gilded coercion.

One should never confuse certainty with understanding. There are those who insist the world must fit into the smallest box they can imagine, and when it does not, they accuse the world of being flawed. I have traveled far enough to know that creation has always been more imaginative than its critics. The world has always been richer than the language we invent to describe it.

If this circlet has a lesson to teach, it is not that one must remain forever unchanged. Quite the contrary. It teaches that every soul deserves the freedom to discover who they are without another hand upon the tiller. There are few gifts more precious than the liberty to become oneself, and few crimes fouler than stealing that journey from another.

  • Kelwyn Anord

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Mantle of the Faithful Ally

Mantle of the Faithful Ally


Aura
moderate abjuration; CL 9th
Slot Shoulders; Price 22,000 gp; Weight 3 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

Woven from deep blue wool lined with soft gray linen, this finely tailored mantle is fastened by a polished silver clasp in the shape of two clasped hands. The hem and shoulders are embroidered with exquisite scenes of friendship and camaraderie - companions sharing meals around campfires, warriors lifting fallen allies to their feet, healers tending the wounded, travelers embracing after long journeys and children of many ancestries laughing together in play. Golden thread subtly catches the light, causing each embroidered scene to shimmer with quiet warmth.

The wearer gains a +4 competence bonus on Diplomacy checks made to defend another creature's character, negotiate on behalf of another creature or persuade others to offer aid, mercy or safe passage.

Three times per day, as an immediate action, the wearer may cast shield other upon an adjacent willing creature. This effect lasts for 9 minutes.

Once per day, as an immediate action, when an adjacent ally would be reduced below 0 hit points by an attack or spell, the wearer may choose to suffer half of the damage dealt after all reductions have been applied. This damage cannot be redirected or prevented by another effect that transfers damage.

Whenever the wearer successfully uses the Aid Another action to assist an ally, that ally gains an additional +1 morale bonus on the assisted roll or Armor Class for 1 round.

If the wearer willingly abandons or betrays an ally whom they had both the opportunity and reasonable ability to protect, the mantle's magical properties become dormant for 30 days.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, shield other, heroism, status; Cost 11,000 gp, 880 XP

Lore

The first Mantle of the Faithful Ally was commissioned not for a ruler, but for the captain of a volunteer watch who devoted decades to protecting those whom others overlooked. Though never celebrated as a great warrior, the captain earned a reputation for standing beside the frightened, the forgotten and the vulnerable whenever danger arose. Upon retirement, grateful friends presented the mantle as a symbol of the simple truth that courage is often measured not by whom one defeats, but by whom one refuses to abandon.

As news of the mantle spread, similar garments were commissioned by temples, guilds and civic organizations whose members pledged to defend others before themselves. Rather than displaying heraldry or personal achievements, each mantle was embroidered with scenes of ordinary kindness and steadfast companionship. Every stitch served as a reminder that history is shaped not only by legendary heroes, but also by countless acts of quiet loyalty that rarely find their way into songs.

Today, the Mantle of the Faithful Ally is most often entrusted to those whose first instinct is to stand beside another rather than before them. Its enchantments are said to grow strongest in the presence of genuine compassion, responding not to titles or renown, but to the unwavering resolve to ensure that no one need face hardship alone.

Kelwyn's Notes

Many mistake bravery for the absence of fear. Experience has taught me otherwise. The bravest individuals I have encountered were often afraid. They simply concluded that another person's safety mattered more than their own comfort, and they acted despite their fear rather than because it was absent.

There exists a curious distinction between a champion and an ally. Champions are remembered because they accomplish extraordinary deeds. Allies are remembered because they remain. When triumph arrives, they celebrate beside you. When failure comes, they refuse to depart. Such constancy possesses a magic no enchantment can fully replicate.

I have observed that those who seek recognition often stand in front of the people they claim to protect, ensuring every eye remains fixed upon themselves. The faithful ally does precisely the opposite. They position themselves beside another, sharing both danger and dignity. They understand that the purpose of advocacy is not to become the center of attention, but to ensure someone else is not left to face hardship in isolation.

The embroidered scenes upon these mantles are among my favorite examples of symbolic craftsmanship. One finds no images of dragons slain or kingdoms conquered. Instead, there are companions sharing burdens, offering hands to those who have fallen, comforting the grieving and celebrating one another's victories. Such moments seldom inspire epic poems, yet they are the very threads from which healthy communities are woven.

Should fortune place one of these mantles upon your shoulders, remember that its greatest enchantment is not the magic stitched into its fabric. Rather, it is the quiet expectation that whenever another person glances in your direction during their darkest hour, they will find you still standing beside them. There are few promises more powerful than that.

Crystal Ball of Possibilities

Crystal Ball of Possibilities Aura strong divination; CL 15th Slot none; Price 90,000 gp; Weight 7 lbs. Description This flawless cryst...