Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Herald’s Absolutely Unavoidable Trousers of Triumph

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.

Dagger of the Coveted Heart

Dagger of the Coveted Heart


Aura
Moderate enchantment and necromancy; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 44,320 gp; Weight 2 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This +2 keen silver dagger possesses a long, narrow triangular blade of mirror-polished silver so flawlessly reflective that candlelight warps across its surface like liquid trapped beneath glass. Those reflected within the blade often appear subtly more beautiful than they truly are, their features softened and idealized beneath the dagger’s unnatural sheen. The weapon’s severe geometry suggests intimate violence rather than battlefield practicality, granting it the predatory elegance of something designed as much for temptation as for murder.

Its handle is carved from aged ivory stained faintly amber with time and tightly wrapped in uneven spirals of tarnished silver wire darkened by centuries of skin oil and constant handling. Near the guard, delicate art nouveau flourishes curl outward in flowing asymmetrical forms resembling funeral drapery or wilted metallic vines. The dagger perpetually carries the faint scent of expensive incense and warm skin despite possessing no discernible source for the aroma.

The pommel depicts a small silver mourning spirit curled inward in exhausted sorrow. Rather than posing triumphantly or seductively, the figure crouches tightly against the end of the hilt with knees drawn inward and head bowed as though crushed beneath invisible grief. Long flowing hair and layered metallic drapery cascade around the tiny figure in fluid organic waves, partially obscuring the body so that the sculpture appears symbolic and ornamental rather than explicitly anatomical. The expression upon the spirit’s face bears not shame, but weary resignation, transforming the dagger from a mere weapon into something ceremonial, haunted, and tragically intimate.

The Dagger of the Coveted Heart grants its wielder a +4 competence bonus on Bluff, Diplomacy, and Gather Information checks involving creatures capable of attraction toward the wielder, regardless of gender, orientation, culture, or species compatibility. The curse overrides such preferences entirely unless the target is wholly incapable of emotional or romantic fixation. In addition, once per day, the wielder may cast charm person (DC 16) as a spell-like ability. Against creatures already suffering from the dagger’s curse, this effect instead functions as suggestion.

However, the true power of the weapon lies in its curse.

Upon first willingly carrying the dagger for more than 24 hours, the wielder becomes afflicted with the Curse of Coveted Devotion. This curse cannot be resisted and ignores immunity to mind-affecting effects unless a creature is entirely incapable of emotional attachment or desire. The curse progresses in escalating stages affecting nearly all intelligent creatures who encounter the wielder regularly within 100 feet.

Day One: The wielder becomes unusually attractive and socially magnetic. Creatures react more favorably than normal, often staring, blushing, lingering nearby, or attempting casual conversation. The wielder gains a +2 circumstance bonus on Charisma-based skill checks.

Day Two: Attraction intensifies into overt flirtation and romantic pursuit. Admirers invent excuses to remain near the wielder, become distracted during important tasks, and frequently compete for attention. The wielder gains a +4 circumstance bonus on Charisma-based skill checks.

Day Three: Obsession begins to emerge. Admirers become possessive, jealous, emotionally irrational, and hostile toward perceived rivals. Fights may erupt in taverns, courts, military barracks, temples, or marketplaces merely because two individuals wish to monopolize the wielder’s attention. At the DM’s discretion, obsessed NPCs may neglect duties, sabotage relationships, or commit crimes on the wielder’s behalf.

Day Four: The curse reaches catastrophic intensity. Admirers may propose marriage after mere hours of acquaintance, attempt to abandon spouses or stations, engage in duels, commit kidnappings, or attempt murder against rivals. Evil-aligned admirers frequently rationalize imprisonment or coercion as “protection.” Entire communities may descend into instability if the wielder remains in one place too long.

At dawn on the fifth day, all supernatural attraction abruptly vanishes. Affected creatures retain fragmented emotional memories but often rationalize their behavior poorly or refuse to discuss it. Some experience shame, heartbreak, resentment, or confusion. The curse then lies dormant for seven days before beginning anew from Day One, repeating indefinitely so long as the wielder remains attuned to the dagger.

Creatures beyond 100 feet immediately cease progressing further within the cycle, though emotional fixation already established often lingers naturally until the curse resumes influence. Individuals repeatedly exposed to the wielder over multiple cycles frequently develop long-term emotional instability, recurring intrusive thoughts, possessiveness, compulsive behavior, or lingering romantic fixation even during dormant periods.

Despite the dagger’s profoundly supernatural influence, the Curse of Coveted Devotion is extraordinarily difficult to identify through magical means. Detect magic reveals only moderate enchantment and necromancy consistent with the dagger’s known beneficial properties. Identify reveals the weapon’s enhancement bonus, skill bonuses, and spell-like abilities, but does not reveal the curse. Analyze dweomer similarly fails to expose the compulsive aura unless cast by a creature already aware of the curse’s existence, and even then merely detects vague emotional manipulation rather than the curse’s true nature.

The curse possesses no distinct magical signature while active or dormant, instead embedding itself subtly within the emotional perceptions of affected creatures. As a result, the dagger’s true nature is almost always discovered only through deduction after repeated incidents of increasingly irrational social behavior surrounding the wielder. Many wielders carry the dagger for weeks before recognizing that the escalating attention directed toward them is unnatural.

Removing the curse requires the wielder to willingly surrender the dagger while under the effects of Day Four and accept genuine rejection from someone they sincerely desire. Merely abandoning the weapon suppresses the curse for only 1d4 days before the dagger mysteriously reappears among the wielder’s possessions.

LORE

No surviving record agrees upon who first forged the Dagger of the Coveted Heart, though nearly every account associates it with social collapse rather than warfare. Unlike cursed weapons born from rage, hatred, or demonic malice, this dagger appears born from loneliness refined into cruelty. Scholars who study the artifact often remark upon the unsettling contradiction at its center - that it grants its bearer overwhelming desirability while simultaneously ensuring they can never again trust affection offered to them. The blade does not create love. It creates hunger wearing love’s skin.

Several royal courts have quietly disappeared beneath the weapon’s influence. One infamous duchess reportedly carried the dagger for nearly six months before her palace dissolved into paranoia, adultery, poisonings, and public executions. Contemporary records describe servants abandoning their duties merely to stand near her chambers, guards murdering one another over imagined glances, and foreign dignitaries arriving under diplomatic pretense only to attempt elopement or abduction. When the duchess finally vanished, investigators found dozens of unsent marriage proposals hidden throughout the palace walls alongside suicide notes written by rejected lovers.

Religious authorities despise the dagger not because it encourages lust, but because it corrodes the boundary between devotion and possession. Temples dedicated to beauty, fertility, and romance frequently declare the artifact blasphemous, claiming it transforms sacred affection into consumptive obsession. One priestess famously described the dagger as “a weapon that teaches people to confuse wanting with loving.” Entire congregations have fractured after merely sheltering a wielder for too long, as worshippers redirected spiritual yearning toward the cursed individual.

Perhaps most disturbing are accounts from long-term wielders themselves. Many initially enjoy the adoration, especially those who spent years ignored, isolated, or unloved. Yet journals recovered from such individuals inevitably devolve into despair. The endless cycle of obsession leaves them socially poisoned. Friends become rivals. Strangers become stalkers. Every kindness becomes suspect. Some wielders eventually retreat into isolation, unable to distinguish genuine affection from supernatural compulsion. Others become monstrous narcissists addicted to the chaos surrounding them. Nearly all eventually conclude the same terrible truth - that universal desire is among the loneliest conditions imaginable.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, charm person, suggestion, curse item, creator must have 10 ranks in Bluff or Diplomacy; Cost 22,160 gp, 1,773 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a particular cruelty unique to objects such as this - artifacts that do not wound the flesh directly, but instead corrupt the invisible architecture through which human beings understand intimacy, affection, longing, and worth. One may survive a knife in the ribs with remarkable clarity of self. It is far more difficult to survive becoming the center of every gaze in the room. Humanity is not designed to endure perpetual adoration any more than it is designed to endure perpetual hatred. Both eventually deform the soul into something defensive and frightened.

The most tragic element of this dagger is not the obsession it creates within others, but the gradual starvation it creates within the bearer themselves. Every compliment becomes contaminated. Every embrace becomes suspect. Every confession of love carries the stench of magical coercion. Even genuine affection eventually becomes indistinguishable from the curse because the victim loses the ability to believe in sincerity at all. I have observed several wielders across my travels, and without exception they eventually developed the exhausted expression of individuals trapped behind glass while crowds pressed desperately against the other side.

Civilizations often romanticize being desired. Songs are written about irresistible beauty. Poems celebrate lovers pursued beyond reason. Yet reality proves substantially less poetic when stripped of metaphor. Obsession is not tenderness. Possession is not intimacy. Desire unrestrained by dignity rapidly becomes predatory, and this dagger forces entire communities to confront how fragile their notions of civilized behavior truly are beneath sufficient temptation.

The sculpted mourning spirit upon the pommel reveals the artifact’s true nature more honestly than the blade itself. The figure does not pose triumphantly, nor does it revel in beauty. It curls inward protectively with the posture of something exhausted by being observed. Even the flowing silver drapery seems less decorative than defensive, as though the sculpture itself wishes to disappear beneath its own ornamentation. That detail alone convinces me the dagger was not forged by one who desired beauty, but by one who learned to fear becoming the object of it.

Voidheart Reliquary

Voidheart Reliquary


Aura
Strong necromancy and conjuration; CL 15th
Slot none; Price 96,000 gp; Weight 8 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This grotesque artifact resembles a human ribcage torn free from some colossal corpse and forcibly reshaped into the form of a lantern. Blackened iron clasps bind the ribs together, while wet-looking crimson sinew endlessly twitches between the bones as though attempting to regrow missing flesh. Suspended within the center of the cage is a floating sphere of pulsating darkness that appears to absorb nearby light rather than emit it. The object constantly radiates the odor of fresh graves, stagnant water, and opened bodies left too long beneath humid summer heat. Faint whispers in forgotten languages leak from the reliquary during moments of silence, though listeners cannot remember the words afterward.

Despite its horrifying appearance, the Voidheart Reliquary exists as an engine of impossible preservation. The negative appearance is merely the vessel through which overwhelming positive energy is contained safely without violently annihilating nearby living creatures. When held or carried by a living creature, the reliquary projects a constant 30-foot-radius aura of stabilizing life force. Living creatures within the aura gain fast healing 2 so long as they are below half their maximum hit points. Creatures dying within the aura automatically stabilize. Mundane diseases are suppressed while within the aura, and natural healing recovers at three times the normal rate.

Three times per day, the bearer may command the reliquary to release a Pulse of Defiant Dawn as a standard action. All living creatures within 40 feet are affected as though by heal, restoring up to 150 hit points and removing blindness, deafness, disease, poison, confusion, and similar debilitating conditions. Undead within the area instead suffer 150 points of damage with a successful DC 23 Will save reducing this damage by half. The save DC is Charisma-based.

Whenever the reliquary restores a creature from fewer than 0 hit points to positive hit points, the target witnesses a brief vision of countless dead hands gently pushing them back toward the world of the living. Many survivors report overwhelming feelings of grief, gratitude, terror, or renewed purpose afterward.

The Voidheart Reliquary possesses one final and terrible function. Once per month, if a living creature has died within the past minute, the bearer may force the reliquary open fully as a full-round action. The darkness within unfolds into a screaming vortex of inverted shadow and radiant white fire visible for miles. The deceased creature is immediately restored to life as though by true resurrection with no level loss or material component cost. However, every creature witnessing the event must succeed on a DC 20 Will save or become shaken for 1d6 rounds from the horrifying revelation that the boundary between life and death is far thinner - and far less merciful - than mortal minds prefer to believe.

LORE

Most assume the Voidheart Reliquary to be an artifact of liches, grave cults, or necromantic tyrants. Entire kingdoms have launched crusades to destroy examples of similar devices, believing them to be soul prisons or engines for manufacturing undead horrors. In nearly every documented case, those crusades collapsed when plague, famine, or war followed the destruction of the object in question. The reliquaries were never created to spread death. They were created because some healers eventually learn that life itself is too enormous, too violent, and too sacred to appear beautiful when stripped of comforting lies.

The first Voidheart Reliquary was allegedly forged during a civilization-ending epidemic in which priests exhausted entire temples attempting to save the dying. Conventional healing magic became increasingly ineffective as despair itself spread faster than disease. According to surviving fragments, an unnamed physician-priest ventured into the mass burial trenches and concluded that the gods of life had been misunderstood for centuries. Life was not gentle. It was not clean. It was not morally comforting. True life clawed, screamed, consumed, adapted, and persisted no matter how mutilated the world became around it. The reliquary was born from this revelation - an object designed not to resemble hope, but to resemble survival itself.

Scholars argue endlessly over why positive energy contained within the reliquary manifests with such grotesque imagery. Some theorize that mortal minds instinctively interpret unconstrained life force as monstrous because endless growth without restraint resembles cancer, mutation, infestation, or uncontrolled evolution. Others believe the reliquary intentionally terrifies observers in order to force them into philosophical honesty. The living adore pretending that life and beauty are synonymous concepts. The Voidheart Reliquary disagrees.

Many who travel with the reliquary report gradual psychological changes over time. Fear of death often diminishes, replaced instead by a deeper and more complicated fear - the realization that existence continues demanding endurance even after unimaginable suffering. Yet paradoxically, most bearers also become more compassionate, patient, and emotionally present. To witness such hideous machinery dedicated entirely toward preserving life tends to alter one's understanding of what mercy truly looks like beneath civilization's polished language.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, heal, mass cure critical wounds, true resurrection, death ward, creator must have survived a near-death experience; Cost 48,000 gp + 3,840 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a childish assumption among many civilized peoples that goodness must always present itself attractively in order to remain morally comprehensible. One notices this particularly among the wealthy, whose temples are filled with polished marble, fragrant incense, soft choirs, and carefully curated depictions of divinity that resemble attractive nobles with clean robes and symmetrical faces. Such people often possess the luxury of never witnessing survival in its rawest forms. They mistake comfort for virtue because suffering has remained sufficiently distant from their dining tables.

Yet one need only spend a single evening beside plague trenches, battlefield surgeons, famine camps, or flood rescues to understand that life itself is not a delicate phenomenon. Life is vulgar. It is invasive. It clings to broken ribs and infected wounds with astonishing stubbornness. It drags itself screaming through mud and smoke while insisting upon tomorrow even after dignity has long since drowned. The Voidheart Reliquary understands this better than most priests ever shall. Its appearance does not celebrate death. Rather, it reveals the terrible anatomy of survival once illusion has been peeled away.

I confess there is something emotionally overwhelming about observing a device so outwardly abhorrent devote itself entirely toward mercy. The contradiction unsettles the mind because humanity prefers its moral lessons neatly organized. We desire villains who look monstrous and heroes who resemble stained glass windows illuminated by gentle dawns. The reliquary instead suggests that salvation may occasionally emerge wearing the face of a nightmare because existence itself is under no obligation to comfort our aesthetic sensibilities.

One survivor restored by the reliquary described the experience to me while trembling uncontrollably beside a rain-soaked cemetery wall. She stated that during the moment between death and return, she felt innumerable unseen hands forcing her upward again - not cruelly, but firmly, with exhausted determination. "They would not let me rest," she whispered. I have reflected upon those words often since hearing them, particularly during long evenings when the swamp fog grows thick enough to resemble the breath of sleeping giants beyond the lantern light. Civilization survives largely because countless unseen hands continue dragging one another back toward morning whether we feel prepared for another dawn or not.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Wayfarer’s Veil Plate

Wayfarer’s Veil Plate


Aura
Moderate illusion; CL 9th
Slot armor; Price 18,650 gp; Weight 50 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This masterfully forged suit of +2 full plate is fashioned from steel polished to a muted luster, with subtle silver edging along the pauldrons, gauntlets, and breastplate. While unworn, the armor appears as an elegant but otherwise conventional suit of plate. Once donned, however, the enchantment awakens almost immediately, wrapping the wearer in a seamless audiovisual illusion that disguises the armor as ordinary medieval attire.

The illusion may appear as peasant clothing, a traveling merchant’s coat, a monk’s robes, a simple tunic and trousers, a noble’s understated garments, or nearly any other mundane outfit of Medium creature size appropriate to the wearer. The clothing produced by the illusion always appears believable and contextually appropriate rather than flamboyant or overtly magical. While active, the armor muffles the grinding of articulated steel, replacing it with the soft rustle of cloth, leather, or boots upon stone. To observers, the wearer appears entirely unarmored unless physically touched.

The illusion affects both sight and sound but does not alter the armor’s physical presence. A creature touching the wearer immediately feels rigid plate beneath the illusion regardless of what the eyes perceive. Likewise, impacts against the wearer reveal metallic resistance despite the absence of visible armor. The wearer may activate or suppress the illusion as a free action at will. Suppressing the effect causes the true armor to become visible and audible instantly.

Though often favored by spies, wandering knights, and bodyguards operating discreetly among civilian populations, the Wayfarer’s Veil Plate has earned particular renown among travelers wishing to avoid drawing attention from bandits, assassins, or opportunistic mercenaries.

LORE

The first known suits of Wayfarer’s Veil Plate were commissioned during the aftermath of the Gray Harvest Riots, when several aristocratic houses discovered that openly displaying wealth and martial protection had become more dangerous than concealing it. Armored retainers were targeted first in ambushes, while plainly dressed travelers often passed unharmed through increasingly unstable territories. The enchantment emerged not from vanity, but from fear - civilization realizing that visible power invited violence faster than humility did.

Certain mercenary companies later adopted similar armors for urban warfare, particularly during occupations where heavily armored soldiers inflamed unrest among civilian populations. Veterans of these campaigns wrote extensively about the peculiar psychological burden of wearing such armor. Many described the unsettling sensation of hearing cloth where steel should grind, or catching their own reflection dressed as a harmless laborer while knowing hundreds of pounds of martial training stood beneath the illusion. Some claimed the disguise gradually altered how strangers treated them, revealing how much of authority depended upon appearance alone.

Among thieves and assassins, possession of such armor carries an almost superstitious reputation. Stories persist of executioners walking unnoticed through crowded marketplaces, bounty hunters dining peacefully beside their targets, and royal agents attending diplomatic feasts while concealed beneath the appearance of servants. Whether these tales are true varies from telling to telling, though the armor’s reputation has become nearly as valuable as its enchantment.

There are also quieter stories - knights traveling famine-stricken villages without revealing their station, wandering protectors concealing themselves among refugees, and aging veterans who grew weary of watching ordinary people recoil at the sight of war made visible in steel. Such individuals often speak of the armor less as deception and more as temporary surrender of identity. Beneath the illusion, the steel remains unchanged. Only the world’s expectations shift.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, disguise self, silent image; Cost 9,325 gp + 746 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

Civilization possesses a remarkable tendency to fear honesty in strange proportions. A sword openly carried inspires caution. A hidden dagger inspires paranoia. Armor, however, occupies a peculiar middle ground. To wear visible plate is to announce expectation - expectation of violence, betrayal, ambush, or war. Even before blood is shed, steel transforms conversation. Rooms grow quieter around armed figures. Merchants become cautious with their smiles. Children stare. Guards place hands nearer their weapons. One discovers rather quickly that armor rarely protects merely the body. It protects identity, hierarchy, and the performance of authority itself.

What fascinates me about the Wayfarer’s Veil Plate is not the illusion, but the confession hidden within its creation. Entire societies arrived collectively at the conclusion that appearing vulnerable was safer than appearing prepared. There is something profoundly mournful in that realization. One imagines proud knights reducing themselves to the visual language of common laborers merely to survive a journey between cities that once celebrated banners and heraldry. Humanity often describes peace as the absence of conflict, though history repeatedly demonstrates that true peace is the absence of visible fear. The two are not remotely synonymous.

I have observed wearers become strangely attached to the illusion after prolonged use. At first they deactivate it frequently, reassured by the familiar sight of steel upon their bodies. Yet over time many begin leaving the disguise active even in relative safety. The reasons vary. Some discover they enjoy being spoken to as ordinary people rather than symbols of violence. Others find themselves relieved by temporary escape from expectation. A warrior hidden beneath a traveler’s coat may, for a few fleeting hours, pretend they are not carrying years of blood and survival upon their shoulders. The armor does not remove burden. It merely allows the wearer to choose who must witness it.

There is, naturally, an irony embedded within the enchantment that borders upon comedy. The illusion deceives sight and sound flawlessly, yet touch immediately reveals truth. One cannot embrace another while hidden by this armor without the deception collapsing beneath human contact. I suspect there is a lesson there, unpleasant though it may be. Civilization is built largely upon visual performances, titles, uniforms, and carefully rehearsed signals of belonging. Yet the moment genuine contact occurs - grief, intimacy, violence, affection, suffering - reality reasserts itself with brutal immediacy. Steel remains steel regardless of the cloth draped over it.

I confess a certain fondness for the item nonetheless. There is mercy in allowing weary people to disappear for a while. Not all concealment is dishonesty. Sometimes concealment is merely exhaustion wearing a quieter face.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Dagger of the Final Witness

Dagger of the Final Witness


Aura
Moderate necromancy and divination; CL 13th
Slot —; Price 64,000 gp; Weight 2 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This +1 ghost touch ritual dagger appears forged from blackened funeral steel whose surface constantly sweats a thin film of dark moisture resembling diluted blood. The blade itself is unusually narrow and slightly curved inward, designed less for combat than for intimate penetration between ribs. Tiny script in hundreds of dead languages spirals along the fuller of the weapon, though observers rarely remember the words moments after reading them. The hilt is wrapped in gray leather that never fully dries, and those who hold the dagger for prolonged periods often report hearing distant wet breathing directly behind them.

The Dagger of the Final Witness was not created to kill. It was created to make death conscious.

Whenever the wielder uses the dagger to deliver the killing blow against a helpless or pinned humanoid creature with an Intelligence score of 3 or higher, the victim does not immediately die. Instead, the creature remains alive, aware, paralyzed, and unable to close its eyes for 1d4 rounds while the dagger devours the final sensory impressions of the dying body. During this period, the victim is fully conscious of organ failure, blood loss, fading sensation, and the gradual collapse of bodily function. This effect is a necromantic curse effect. The victim cannot scream or speak during this period, though tears, trembling, and eye movement remain possible.

At the conclusion of the effect, the victim dies automatically with no saving throw.

The wielder may, within the next 24 hours, concentrate upon the dagger for one uninterrupted minute to relive the victim’s final sensory experience in perfect detail. This includes emotional state, physical pain, fading memories, panic, regret, confusion, acceptance, or other terminal impressions. The experience is so complete that the wielder temporarily inherits fragments of the victim’s dying cognition. For one hour afterward, the wielder gains a +10 competence bonus on Gather Information, Sense Motive, and Knowledge checks directly related to the deceased creature’s life, profession, affiliations, or secrets.

However, each use carries terrible psychological erosion.

Every time the dagger successfully captures a death, the wielder must succeed on a DC 19 Will save or permanently lose a tiny fragment of empathetic response. This imposes a cumulative -1 penalty on Diplomacy checks made for compassionate persuasion or emotional comfort, to a maximum penalty of -10. Once this penalty reaches -10, the wielder becomes permanently incapable of viewing other living creatures as emotionally “real.” At this stage, resurrection magic short of miracle or wish cannot restore the lost empathy.

Creatures slain by the dagger cannot be raised by speak with dead. Their final moments have been completely consumed and archived within the weapon itself.

Three times per day, the wielder may hold the dagger to their own throat and ask it a single question concerning a dead creature whose death the blade has witnessed. The dagger answers by forcing the wielder to briefly experience the relevant dying memory directly. This functions similarly to legend lore, except the information provided is fragmented, emotional, symbolic, and often horrifyingly intimate.

If the dagger has recorded more than one hundred deaths, it gradually develops awareness. At this stage, the wielder begins occasionally hearing overlapping whispers from prior victims while sleeping. Once per month, the DM may force the wielder to succeed on a DC 21 Will save or involuntarily experience one random archived death in full during sleep, awakening fatigued and shaken for 24 hours.

LORE

There are many necromantic devices designed to command the dead, interrogate spirits, or harvest souls for power. The Dagger of the Final Witness belongs to a far rarer and more despised category of artifact - instruments created not to exploit death, but to preserve suffering itself. Most necromancers, for all their moral transgressions, still maintain practical distance from mortality. Corpses become labor. Spirits become fuel. Death becomes logistics. This blade instead forces its wielder into unbearable intimacy with the exact human reality most necromancers spend their lives trying to intellectualize away.

Its creation is attributed to the philosopher-executioner Vasselier Mourntide, a mortician-scholar obsessed with the claim that no living creature truly understands death because unconsciousness mercifully interrupts the experience before completion. Mourntide allegedly sought to “observe the exact shape of cessation.” Over decades, he performed ritual killings upon criminals, political enemies, plague victims, and eventually volunteers promised immortality through remembrance. His journals became increasingly unstable, filled with contradictory observations regarding what dying people perceived in their final conscious instants. Some reportedly saw deceased loved ones. Others saw nothing at all. A horrifying number allegedly remained aware long after biological death should have ended cognition.

The churches that eventually uncovered Mourntide’s work did not merely condemn him for murder. They condemned him because his records implied things about the soul that no theology wished confirmed. Entire monasteries burned themselves attempting to destroy his writings after reading them. One inquisitorial order reportedly executed every surviving witness involved in the dagger’s study, believing simple exposure to its collected memories constituted spiritual contamination.

Modern necromancers often react to the dagger with visible revulsion not from morality, but from professional discomfort. Necromancy traditionally places emotional distance between practitioner and subject. The dead are easier to command when viewed abstractly. The Dagger of the Final Witness annihilates abstraction. Its wielder does not merely kill. They inherit terror, confusion, pleading, bodily collapse, and the final instinctive realization that existence is ending. Repeated use leaves many wielders emotionally hollow not because they cease caring, but because caring at that depth repeatedly becomes psychologically unsurvivable.

There are persistent rumors that particularly ancient specimens of the dagger eventually become unable to distinguish between their wielder and their victims. Such blades supposedly begin replaying deaths spontaneously, whispering names no one spoke aloud, or forcing wielders to experience executions from the victim’s perspective rather than their own. One infamous account describes a necromancer found dead beside such a blade, his throat untouched, his body frozen in absolute terror, having apparently experienced every recorded death within the weapon simultaneously.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, deathwatch, legend lore, soul bind, creator must personally perform a ritual execution during the forging process; Cost 32,000 gp + 2,560 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a threshold beyond which evil ceases to resemble wickedness and instead begins to resemble curiosity stripped of all restraint. That threshold is where this dagger resides. Most atrocities emerge from hatred, greed, desperation, fear, conquest, or hunger. One may condemn such things while still understanding the emotional machinery that produced them. The Dagger of the Final Witness is more unsettling precisely because it emerges from observation. It was born not from rage, but from the desire to know.

Civilization survives partly because human beings are spared the full experiential reality of one another’s suffering. We infer pain. We sympathize with grief. We intellectually understand mortality. Yet merciful barriers remain between one consciousness and another. Without those barriers, ordinary life would become psychologically impossible. One could not eat comfortably, sleep peacefully, or love freely while carrying the complete interior deaths of strangers within oneself. This blade systematically dismantles those mercies until empathy itself collapses under accumulated weight.

What horrifies me most is not the suffering it causes its victims, though that suffering is immense. It is the gradual transformation of the wielder into a creature incapable of perceiving humanity except as anatomy awaiting failure. The dagger does not create monsters in the simplistic theatrical manner of children’s cautionary tales. It creates exhausted archivists of extinction - individuals who have stared so deeply into the private mechanics of dying that ordinary emotional life begins to feel fraudulent by comparison.

One suspects that many necromancers recoil from this weapon because it destroys the professional illusion upon which their art depends. Corpses are manageable. Skeletons are obedient. Souls are theoretical. But this dagger reminds its wielder that every cadaver was once a frightened person attempting, often unsuccessfully, to comprehend the unbearable fact that they were about to vanish forever. That realization poisons abstraction. Once one has truly experienced another creature’s final terror from the inside, it becomes difficult to speak casually of “materials” ever again.

There are some objects which should not exist because their existence itself represents a philosophical injury to the world. This is one of them.

The Burglar’s Final Grasp

The Burglar’s Final Grasp


Aura
Moderate necromancy and transmutation; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 21,500 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This withered humanoid hand is preserved through foul alchemical salts and dark funerary lacquers, though preservation has done little to conceal the slow inevitability of decay. Its flesh has collapsed tightly against the bone in places, exposing yellowed tendons and fragments of blackened ligament. The fingernails remain unnaturally intact and polished smooth from repeated use, while the fingertips bear countless tiny scars and abrasions accumulated over decades of lockpicks, razor wires, hidden latches, and poisoned catches. A faint scent of old grave soil, mildew, lamp oil, and cold iron perpetually clings to the hand no matter how thoroughly it is cleaned.

The Burglar’s Final Grasp possesses five charges represented by its thumb and four fingers. When the hand is pressed against a locked or trapped object such as a chest, vault, cabinet, door, manacle, or similar mechanism, one finger immediately stiffens and blackens permanently as a charge is expended. At that moment, all nonmagical traps attached to the target are instantly disabled as though successfully disarmed by a master rogue with a Disable Device check result of 40. Simultaneously, all mundane locks upon the object unlock themselves with audible clicks and snapping internal tumblers.

Magical traps are not destroyed, but are suppressed for 1 minute as though successfully bypassed. Arcane lock effects are immediately dispelled if their caster level is equal to or lower than the item’s caster level. Higher-level magical locking effects instead become dormant for 1 round, allowing the object to be opened normally during that time.

The hand functions regardless of the user’s training and requires no skill checks whatsoever. The item may not be used more than once upon the same object.

Each time a charge is used, the owner becomes haunted by vivid dreams of the hand’s original owner - an infamous master thief whose corpse was denied proper burial after execution. During sleep, the thief appears increasingly decomposed and furious, screaming accusations, demanding cremation or burial rites, and clawing desperately at coffins, gallows, chains, and crypt walls. The dreams worsen with each expended finger.

After each use of the hand, the owner suffers a cumulative -1 penalty to all skill checks except Disable Device, Open Lock, Sleight of Hand, Hide, Move Silently, Search, and Tumble checks. This penalty represents mounting exhaustion, agitation, paranoia, and deteriorating sleep quality. The penalty persists until the hand is either completely expended, destroyed, cremated, or properly buried beneath consecrated earth. Once this occurs, the dreams immediately cease and all accumulated penalties vanish after the next full night’s rest.

When the fifth and final finger is expended, the entire hand violently blackens, softens, and collapses into foul-smelling slurry within seconds. Tiny metallic sounds resembling distant lock tumblers clicking can be heard within the dissolving mass for several moments afterward.

LORE

Among thieves’ guilds, grave robbers, and executioners, stories persist regarding the final days of Varric Hale, known in whispered criminal histories as “The Locksmith Saint.” Though wanted in seven principalities and blamed for dozens of impossible thefts, Hale possessed a reputation that bordered upon religious obsession among professional burglars. Entire generations of thieves claimed that no lock forged by mortal hands could deny him entry for longer than a few seconds. Some even insisted he could hear mechanisms breathing through walls.

His eventual capture proved less triumphant than authorities had hoped. Hale reportedly laughed throughout the trial, mocked every witness called against him, and calmly described hidden valuables inside the magistrates’ own homes while chained in court. According to surviving accounts, the execution itself became infamous after three separate locking mechanisms upon his restraints inexplicably opened moments before the hanging platform was released. The officials overseeing the execution severed one of Hale’s hands afterward and sealed it in preservation salts specifically to prevent rumors of resurrection.

What followed proved considerably worse.

Within months, guards assigned to the evidence vault began suffering identical nightmares of Hale screaming from beneath wet soil. Locks throughout the prison spontaneously opened during the night. Cells previously considered secure were discovered standing ajar by morning. One jailer reportedly awoke to find dozens of keys arranged carefully around his bed in the shape of a skeletal hand. Eventually the preserved relic disappeared entirely, stolen by persons unknown, though many suspect the artifact simply unlocked its own containment.

Modern criminal circles treat possession of the Burglar’s Final Grasp with deeply mixed emotions. Some regard it as the greatest burglary tool ever created. Others refuse even to touch it, claiming the dreams worsen over time regardless of use. Certain thieves insist that the hand does not truly resent being used, but rather resents remaining unburied - trapped eternally between utility and death like the criminal life it once served.

There are also disturbing rumors that individuals who continue using the hand despite mounting exhaustion begin unconsciously mimicking the dead thief’s habits. Sleep-deprived owners have reportedly been caught absentmindedly checking locks they pass, cataloguing valuables without realizing it, or awakening with mud beneath their fingernails despite never leaving bed. Whether these stories are genuine supernatural influence or merely psychological deterioration remains uncertain.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, knock, dispel magic, disable device 12 ranks, creator must possess at least 5 ranks in Open Lock; Cost 10,750 gp, 860 XP, preserved hand of an executed thief of at least 10th level, grave salts worth 1,500 gp, and funerary oils distilled beneath a new moon

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a particular category of object which civilization pretends not to understand despite manufacturing it repeatedly throughout history - the tool forged from unresolved death. Entire cultures will recoil theatrically from necromancy while simultaneously preserving the bones of saints, hanging criminals in iron cages as warnings, or transforming the remains of the infamous into symbols, relics, and cautionary mythology. Humanity does not merely fear its dead. It recruits them. The Burglar’s Final Grasp is simply more honest about the arrangement than most.

The truly distressing aspect of the hand is not its supernatural efficacy. One could argue that opening locks is among the least morally offensive abilities an enchanted relic might possess. No, what unsettles me is the emotional geometry of the thing. The thief is not trapped within the hand because he was evil, nor because the artifact delights in torment. He is trapped because utility has outlived dignity. His body ceased being a person and became equipment. Even after death, society found one final labor to extract from him. There is something profoundly cruel in the notion that a man so obsessed with freedom became eternally reduced to a key.

The dreams are especially revealing. The dead thief does not bargain. He does not seduce the wielder toward criminal greatness. He does not whisper forbidden secrets or promise hidden treasure like so many theatrical curses described in dreadful penny novels. He simply screams to be buried. Again and again. Night after night. Beneath all the necromancy, beneath the utility, beneath the clever mechanics and supernatural convenience, the artifact contains an astonishingly human plea - exhaustion. The hand does not crave power. It craves conclusion.

One begins to understand why the penalties afflict all skills unrelated to thievery. The item slowly narrows the soul toward the only purpose remaining within it. Fatigue strips away patience, creativity, scholarship, diplomacy, joy, and concentration until only intrusion remains. It is the occupational hazard of obsession made supernatural. There are thieves who spend so long learning how to enter places that they eventually forget how to belong anywhere themselves.

I suspect many owners never bury the hand because doing so would force them to acknowledge an uncomfortable truth - that even the greatest talents eventually become pathetic if denied rest. The hand opens every lock placed before it, yet remains incapable of escaping the smallest coffin imaginable: the refusal of the living to let usefulness die with dignity.

The Interrogator’s Reliquary

The Interrogator’s Reliquary


Aura
overwhelming necromancy; CL 17th
Slot —; Price 74,000 gp; Weight 3 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This soot-blackened human skull has been pierced by thirteen iron nails driven primarily through the crown, forehead, and eye sockets at unnatural angles. Several spikes descend directly through the orbital cavities into the hollow interior of the skull, while others protrude from the upper cranium like ritual pins hammered into a funerary effigy. The jaw remains mostly untouched, its yellowed teeth still intact beneath the ruined brow. Cold whispers drift constantly from the empty sockets like breath escaping a crypt.

The Interrogator’s Reliquary is fashioned from the genuine skull of a sentient humanoid creature whose soul was bound into the remains during a prolonged necromantic execution rite. Before the item may ever be used, its possessor must perform the Rite of Recollection - a grisly seven-day ritual conducted over seven uninterrupted nights. During this process, the wielder lights funerary candles around the skull, anoints each nail with grave oils, burns funerary incense, and repeatedly recites the true name of the deceased until the trapped soul is successfully dragged back into awareness.

The ritual requires at least one uninterrupted hour each night. If even a single night is missed, the entire process fails and must begin again from the beginning.

At the conclusion of the seventh night, the skull awakens. Pale corpse-light begins leaking from the eye sockets and nasal cavity, while faint whispers become audible in forgotten tongues. A translucent image of the deceased manifests within the darkness of the skull itself, visible only through the empty sockets and mouth. The soul is fully conscious, remembers its death, and understands precisely what has been done to it.

Once awakened, the Reliquary may be questioned. However, only one question may be asked each day, and the soul may answer no more than thirteen questions in total over the lifetime of the item. Each question must be spoken directly to the skull while it is illuminated by candlelight between sunset and sunrise.

The bound spirit is compelled to answer truthfully to the best of its knowledge, functioning as though continuously affected by zone of truth and discern lies. The spirit cannot intentionally deceive through omission, technical wording, or evasive interpretation. It may speak emotionally, bitterly, or reluctantly, but it cannot knowingly provide false information.

The asking of each question visibly damages the Reliquary. Immediately after an answer is given, one of the thirteen iron nails blackens, corrodes, and disintegrates into reddish-black rust that spills across the skull and surrounding surface. The skull audibly cracks as fragments of necromantic force unravel within it, while the imprisoned soul becomes increasingly unstable and distressed.

When the thirteenth question is answered and the final nail decays away, the soul emits a silent scream visible only as violent distortion within the skull’s eye sockets. The trapped spirit is permanently released from bondage, and the skull itself immediately collapses into ash, rust flakes, and splintered fragments of blackened bone. Nothing short of direct divine intervention can prevent this destruction.

Any creature holding the skull during an interrogation gains a +4 profane bonus on Intimidate checks and Sense Motive checks made against the manifested spirit.

LORE

The Interrogator’s Reliquary is not believed to originate from any single culture or kingdom. Rather, historians have observed that civilizations eventually reinvent some variation of the artifact whenever fear becomes sufficiently organized. Witch hunters, inquisitorial courts, paranoid monarchies, revolutionary tribunals, and collapsing empires all appear drawn toward the same terrible conclusion - if the dead could simply be forced to answer questions, uncertainty itself might finally be conquered.

The placement of the nails is deeply symbolic within necromantic theology. Ancient mortuary texts describe the spikes as “anchors of denial,” each driven through portions of the skull associated with memory, identity, confession, guilt, or perception. The eye sockets are especially important, as many soul-binding traditions believed the eyes to be the final pathways through which consciousness departs the body. By sealing them with iron, the ritual attempts to pin fragments of awareness inside the remains permanently.

The Rite of Recollection is widely considered the most psychologically dangerous portion of the artifact’s operation. Necromantic journals recovered from abandoned crypts describe practitioners gradually hearing the bound soul grow more coherent over the course of the seven nights. At first the whispers resemble meaningless static or distant weeping. By the final evening, the spirit often begins recognizing names, recalling memories, and pleading not to be awakened completely. Several documented wielders abandoned the ritual before completion after hearing the skull softly speak to them in the voice of someone they had lost.

The destruction of a nail after each question is believed to represent the progressive collapse of the soul’s confinement. Each spike functions simultaneously as prison, tether, and wound. With every answer, one restraint fails, bringing the spirit incrementally closer to release. Certain theologians consider this the sole act of mercy built into the Reliquary’s design - the dead are not trapped forever, only until knowledge has consumed the prison holding them.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, speak with dead, trap the soul, zone of truth, discern lies, contact other plane; creator must possess at least 13 ranks in Knowledge (religion); Cost 37,000 gp, 2,960 XP, the intact skull of a sentient humanoid creature, thirteen iron coffin nails soaked in grave soil for one year, funerary incense worth 2,500 gp, grave oils distilled from corpse-fat, and a flawless black diamond worth 5,000 gp consumed during the binding ritual.

Kelwyn’s Notes

The gradual destruction of the nails transforms the Reliquary from a mere necromantic instrument into something far more emotionally unbearable. One does not simply interrogate the dead all at once. One lives with them. One waits beside them night after night, knowing another question may be asked tomorrow, and another after that, while the skull itself visibly approaches annihilation like a diseased clock counting down toward mercy.

That pacing alters people.

The first nail falls with theatrical horror - smoke, rust, cracking bone, all the expected pageantry necromancers so dearly adore. By the sixth or seventh, however, the ritual begins feeling domestic in the most dreadful possible sense. Candles are lit. The skull is placed upon the table. Questions are prepared. Answers are endured. Another nail collapses softly into powder. One begins to understand how entire inquisitorial orders could normalize this process until spiritual torture became merely another evening responsibility performed before supper.

The skull’s whispers during the initial week are perhaps the cruelest component of all. The soul awakens gradually, like someone surfacing from beneath black water only to discover hands waiting to force them back under. I have read accounts of practitioners hearing apologies spoken from the sockets before the ritual fully concluded. Others reported fragmented prayers, childhood songs, or pleas directed toward long-dead relatives. One particularly unfortunate archivist abandoned the Rite entirely after the skull began quietly thanking him for “coming back.”

The nails themselves fascinate me philosophically. Each one is both restraint and countdown simultaneously. Humanity so often constructs prisons without exits. The Reliquary, at least, possesses the decency to acknowledge that even torment should eventually terminate. Every answer destroys a portion of the mechanism sustaining the suffering. Knowledge literally consumes the artifact that extracts it.

There is something almost embarrassingly human about that. We destroy what we need most simply by using it.

The Herald’s Absolutely Unavoidable Trousers of Triumph

The Herald’s Trousers of Triumph Aura Moderate enchantment and transmutation; CL 11th Slot Legs; Price 42,000 gp; Weight 3 lbs. DESCRIP...