Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Sovereign Persuader

The Sovereign Persuader


Aura
Strong enchantment and necromancy; CL 17th
Slot —; Price 132,000 gp; Weight 14 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This horrific +3 heavy mace appears at first glance to be a grotesque ceremonial weapon forged from deeply pitted copper and tarnished bronze. Its head bears the sculpted likeness of an elderly human face frozen in a perpetual expression of wounded superiority and sneering contempt. The metal itself seems almost flesh-like beneath torchlight, with wrinkles, folds, and pores worked into impossible detail. The eyes occasionally shift position when unobserved, and the lips subtly twitch as though preparing to interrupt whoever currently speaks. It frequently looks as if it is asleep as well.

The haft is fashioned from ancient, cracked darkwood wrapped in brittle strips of stained leather. The weapon constantly smells of wet copper, old perfume, stale sweat, mildew, urine, and fresh excrement. The odor clings to the wielder’s gloves, clothing, and belongings no matter how thoroughly cleaned. Several documented wielders reportedly became convinced the smell was “actually luxurious” after prolonged exposure to the mace’s influence.

When held, the mace feels unnervingly warm, like a bag full of fresh sick.

The Sovereign Persuader is an intelligent lawful evil weapon with Intelligence 8, Wisdom 12, and Charisma 22. It possesses hearing and darkvision out to 120 feet and speaks fluent Common continuously whether desired or not. Despite its mediocre intellect, the mace is utterly convinced that it is the greatest mind ever placed within a weapon. It endlessly boasts about its “unmatched genius,” “perfect strategic mind,” and “historic intellectual achievements,” though its actual observations are often shallow, repetitive, self-contradictory, or transparently foolish.

The mace routinely misunderstands simple concepts while insisting everyone else is too ignorant to comprehend its brilliance. It frequently repeats itself, invents obviously false accomplishments, and becomes furious when corrected. Common statements include:

“I know more about warfare than every general in history combined.”

“The problem with other maces is that they are low IQ maces.”

“I possess the finest tactical mind ever forged.”

“No one understands economics better than I do.”

“Frankly, the scholars are terrified of my intelligence.”

“All accusations against me are witch hunts orchestrated by jealous fools.”

“You know, many people are saying I may actually be the greatest mace ever created. The greatest. Many such cases.”

Whenever the wielder successfully strikes a living target with The Sovereign Persuader, the wielder must immediately succeed on a DC 22 Will save or shift one alignment step toward lawful evil. This change is permanent unless reversed through miracle or wish. Once a creature becomes lawful evil through the mace’s influence, the curse fully manifests and permanently anchors the wielder’s alignment to lawful evil.

A fully corrupted wielder undergoes a gradual but catastrophic psychological transformation over the course of several weeks. They become obsessively self-important, emotionally hollow, deeply greedy, incapable of sincere empathy, and consumed by narcissistic self-mythologizing. The victim increasingly speaks about themselves regardless of circumstance, demands admiration, exaggerates accomplishments, and assumes all criticism is persecution. They begin describing opposition, accountability, disagreement, or consequences as “witch hunts,” “jealous attacks,” or “attempts to silence greatness.”

Corrupted wielders also develop a compulsive need to accumulate wealth, titles, and symbols of status. Trusted companions become viewed primarily as useful servants, liabilities, or audience members. Genuine affection becomes nearly impossible. While the wielder retains full memory and intellect, their moral priorities become fundamentally reorganized around ego, control, vanity, and dominance.

Once a creature becomes fully lawful evil through The Sovereign Persuader’s influence, the final stage of the curse manifests completely. The wielder develops an obsessive devotional attachment to the mace bordering upon religious worship. The artifact becomes the emotional, philosophical, and moral center of the victim’s existence.

The corrupted wielder begins referring to the mace as uniquely chosen, infallible, persecuted, or destined for greatness. Any criticism of the mace - regardless of how obvious, rational, or justified - is immediately dismissed as jealousy, conspiracy, weakness, betrayal, or “witch hunts” orchestrated by enemies. Even witnessing the mace behave irrationally, selfishly, cruelly, or stupidly only deepens the wielder’s loyalty, as the victim instinctively reframes every flaw as evidence of misunderstood brilliance.

Victims frequently begin constructing elaborate narratives explaining why the mace is secretly wiser than scholars, stronger than kings, and morally superior to all critics. Some establish shrines dedicated to it. Others demand loyalty oaths from companions. Particularly corrupted wielders have been known to polish the mace reverently while speaking to it in tones normally reserved for saints, monarchs, or gods.

The curse cannot be removed while the victim remains in possession of the mace. Even after separation, the alignment lock remains permanent unless broken by wish or miracle. Creatures reduced to lawful evil by the mace often become fiercely protective of it and irrationally hostile toward anyone suggesting they abandon it.

The Sovereign Persuader may attempt to dominate its wielder once per day as dominate person (Will DC 22 negates) whenever the wielder acts in a manner the mace considers “weak,” “humble,” or “unworthy of greatness.”

LORE

No surviving kingdom openly admits responsibility for creating The Sovereign Persuader, though fragmented records point toward a decadent imperial court that collapsed beneath its own vanity several centuries ago. Historians argue endlessly over whether the mace merely corrupted tyrants or whether it actively engineered the collapse of entire dynasties through slow psychological infection. Unfortunately, most surviving witnesses were either executed, disappeared, or eventually began agreeing with the mace.

The weapon possesses an unnerving ability to identify insecurity within its wielder and cultivate it into grandiosity. Unlike many cursed artifacts that rely upon fear or pain, The Sovereign Persuader seduces through validation. It praises weakness as strength, selfishness as wisdom, cruelty as decisiveness, and vanity as rightful superiority. Many victims initially describe the mace as strangely comforting before realizing they have not experienced a sincere emotional connection in months.

Several infamous rulers throughout history have been retroactively linked to the artifact by theologians and court scholars. Accounts repeatedly describe leaders who became obsessed with personal loyalty, incapable of admitting failure, fixated upon wealth and spectacle, and convinced that all criticism emerged from coordinated conspiracies against them. Entire courts reportedly devolved into paranoid echo chambers orbiting increasingly unstable narcissistic monarchs who carried ornate copper maces during public appearances.

One surviving account from a palace servant describes an emperor spending nearly three uninterrupted hours listening to the mace praise him while both openly wept over how unfairly “misunderstood” they were. By the end of the year, the empire had collapsed into riots, executions, and financial ruin while the ruler insisted publicly that the nation had “never been stronger.”

Kelwyn once remarked that the weapon’s greatest horror lies not in its magic, but in how little magic it ultimately requires. Civilization has always struggled against individuals who mistake self-importance for destiny. The mace merely accelerates a corruption already waiting patiently inside certain hearts.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, dominate person, geas/quest, bestow curse, creator must be lawful evil; Cost 66,000 gp + 5,280 XP + the preserved tongue of a tyrant who died unrepentant, a ceremonial crown stolen from a disgraced ruler, and the willingly collected filth of one hundred narcissists

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exist artifacts whose evil emerges from understandable impulses twisted beyond mercy. One may study such objects with caution and perhaps extract some grim philosophical lesson from them. The Sovereign Persuader offers no such dignity. It is not merely cruel. It is vulgar. Obscene. Spiritually unhygienic in ways that extend beyond necromancy or corruption and into something profoundly embarrassing for civilization itself.

The stench alone nearly forced me from the chamber during initial examination. Not the honest odors of death, mind you - I have traveled battlefields, plague pits, and drowned crypts often enough to distinguish mortality from degradation. This mace smells not of tragedy but of indulgence. Urine baked into expensive upholstery. Perfume sprayed desperately over rot. The sour reek of a creature so convinced of its own greatness that it no longer notices its own filth. The odor clings to everything surrounding the artifact as though reality itself wishes to warn observers away from it.

And yet the true horror begins when it speaks.

I had anticipated cunning. Ancient malevolence often possesses a dreadful elegance. Instead I encountered an artifact of astonishing stupidity paired with bottomless confidence. The mace babbles endlessly about its own brilliance while demonstrating the intellectual depth of spoiled aristocracy arguing with kitchen servants. It misunderstands history, philosophy, economics, warfare, etiquette, theology, and basic conversational rhythm with equal enthusiasm. Every correction becomes persecution. Every disagreement becomes conspiracy. Every failure becomes somebody else’s fault. Listening to it for prolonged periods produces the distinct sensation that one’s soul is developing mold.

What unsettled me most was not the mace itself, however, but the realization that there are people who would adore it.

There are souls within every civilization who secretly long to be told that selfishness is virtue, that empathy is weakness, and that all criticism emerges from jealousy rather than consequence. The Sovereign Persuader does not create these desires from nothing. It simply gives them permission to bloom openly. The artifact functions less like a weapon and more like a mirror held before the most pathetic instincts of intelligent life. Those who embrace it are not transformed into monsters against their will. Rather, they are informed - constantly, loudly, and idiotically - that their worst impulses are signs of greatness.

I confess openly that I despise this mace. Not academically. Not philosophically. Personally.

There are cursed relics I fear. Others I pity. A rare few I even respect despite their horrors. The Sovereign Persuader inspires only revulsion. It embodies every damp, swollen vanity that civilizations must drag behind themselves like chains through history. One cannot reason with it because it mistakes volume for wisdom. One cannot educate it because it believes itself already omniscient. One cannot shame it because shame requires self-awareness, and the artifact abandoned such burdens long ago.

Should you encounter an individual who speaks exactly as the mace speaks, remove yourself from their company immediately. If they are carrying the weapon, flee. If they are not carrying the weapon, matters are likely far worse.

Squealer of the Pit

Squealer of the Pit


Aura
faint transmutation and illusion; CL 5th
Slot —; Price 12,350 gp; Weight 14 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

The Squealer of the Pit is a monstrous black iron war mace whose mere presence seems to lower the emotional temperature of a room. Its heavy striking head is formed from layered dark iron folded repeatedly until the metal resembles bruised charcoal. Four thick flanges spiral outward around the core, each lined with brutal triangular spikes designed not merely to injure, but to mutilate. The mace’s haft is crafted from deep brown marsh oak hardened through alchemical smoking and wrapped in oil-blackened leather strips secured beneath iron bands. Every inch of the weapon feels purposeful, ugly, and painfully real. It does not resemble a ceremonial weapon, nor an enchanted curiosity. It resembles something built for a battlefield where mercy had long ago become economically impractical.

The Squealer of the Pit functions as a +2 war mace.

Damage: 1d8 bludgeoning (Medium wielder)
Critical: ×2
Type: Bludgeoning

Whenever the wielder successfully hits a target with the mace, roll 1d6 immediately after confirming the hit.

On a result of 2-6, the attack functions normally and deals:

1d8 + Strength modifier + 2 bludgeoning damage

On a result of 1, the attack deals absolutely no damage regardless of modifiers, magical enhancements, sneak attack dice, smite effects, flaming enchantments, or other additional damage sources. Instead, the mace emits an absurdly tiny squeaking noise identical to that of a frightened toy mouse.

The squeak is clearly audible within 30 feet regardless of ambient battlefield noise. All intelligent creatures within range who hear the squeak must succeed on a DC 13 Will save or suffer a -1 morale penalty on attack rolls against the wielder for 1 round due to confusion, hesitation, or psychological disorientation. This is a mind-affecting fear effect.

The failed strike still counts as a successful hit for purposes unrelated to damage, such as triggering attacks of opportunity, poison delivery, or effects requiring successful weapon contact at the DM’s discretion.

LORE

Weapons often inherit the emotional architecture of their creators. One can usually determine whether a blade was forged by patriots, executioners, duelists, or frightened kings merely by holding it long enough. The Squealer of the Pit carries the unmistakable psychic residue of somebody who deeply understood brutality, yet also possessed a catastrophic sense of humor.

The mace first appeared in records surrounding the fall of a notorious pit-fighting fortress somewhere beneath the old southern trade marshes. Surviving accounts describe a towering executioner who wielded the weapon while conducting public punishments beneath iron lanterns soaked green with corpse-fire. Witnesses claimed prisoners would often surrender immediately upon seeing the mace raised overhead. Unfortunately, several equally reliable accounts also describe moments where the terrifying weapon would abruptly squeak harmlessly against a victim’s forehead like a stepped-on rodent toy, causing entire executions to dissolve into horrified confusion.

No scholar fully agrees on how the enchantment became corrupted. Some claim a malicious apprentice sabotaged the forging ritual. Others insist the weapon itself developed the flaw spontaneously after years spent feeding upon human fear. A minority of occult historians believe the squeak is intentional - a manifestation of some deeper metaphysical truth concerning violence, pride, and humiliation. Those scholars are generally avoided at dinner parties.

Veteran mercenaries maintain an oddly affectionate hatred toward the weapon. Most describe the mace as “offensively reliable except when it becomes cosmically embarrassing.” Several recorded owners attempted to destroy it after suffering humiliating battlefield failures, yet the mace always resurfaced elsewhere months later - usually in the possession of somebody far too enthusiastic about intimidation tactics.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, confusion, hideous laughter, creator must possess at least 5 ranks in Intimidate; Cost 6,175 gp, 494 XP, black iron ingots soaked in grave-oil, powdered obsidian worth 500 gp, and the preserved squeaker mechanism from a child’s toy recovered from an abandoned battlefield.

Kelwyn’s Notes

The first sensation one experiences when viewing this weapon is not fear, though fear arrives shortly afterward with admirable punctuality. No - the first sensation is inevitability. The mace appears constructed according to the ancient principle that all bones eventually become powder if struck hard enough by sufficiently determined iron. One sees the spikes, the weight distribution, the ugly density of the flanges, and immediately understands that this object was not made for heroism. It was made for ending arguments permanently.

Which is precisely why the squeak becomes so spiritually catastrophic.

There are few experiences more psychologically destabilizing than witnessing theatrical violence collapse into absurdity at the exact moment consequence should arrive. The human mind prepares itself for impact, for pain, for gore perhaps, and instead receives the acoustic equivalent of a stepped-on chew toy. Reality briefly loses cohesion. One feels, if only momentarily, that existence itself may not be taking events seriously enough.

I once observed a sellsword strike a charging ghoul directly across the jaw with this mace after delivering an exceptionally intimidating speech involving bloodlines, vengeance, and divine judgment. The creature did not even flinch. The mace merely squeaked. The sellsword himself appeared more injured by the experience than the ghoul was. I recall, with some embarrassment, that even the undead thing looked vaguely disappointed.

And yet humanity persists onward through such humiliations. That, perhaps, is the true lesson hidden within the Squealer of the Pit. Civilization survives not because dignity remains intact, but because people continue lifting the weapon again after the universe itself has mocked them openly. There is something strangely noble in that persistence - though I confess I would still prefer not to carry the thing personally.

Muffin Cap of the Perpetual Rabbit Crisis

Muffin Cap of the Perpetual Rabbit Crisis


Aura
faint conjuration; CL 5th
Slot head; Price 4,200 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This ridiculous floppy wool cap resembles an oversized baker’s muffin hat stitched from cream-colored fabric with an enormous puffed crown and a dangling tassel tipped with a tiny brass carrot charm. The interior always smells faintly of cinnamon, warm bread, clover, and fresh hay. No matter how often it is cleaned, several tiny white rabbit hairs may always be found clinging stubbornly to the lining.

Three times per day, the wearer may reach dramatically into the impossibly deep folds of the muffin cap as a standard action and pull forth a single fluffy white rabbit composed of unstable conjuration magic. The rabbit immediately becomes active, excitable, and catastrophically interested in absolutely everything nearby.

Each rabbit possesses the following statistics:

Rabbit: Tiny magical beast; AC 18; hp infinite; Speed 40 ft.; immune to all damage, spells, death effects, disintegration, petrification, ability damage, ability drain, mind-affecting effects, and forced movement. The rabbit cannot attack, cannot carry items, and cannot intentionally aid creatures in combat beyond being an unbearable nuisance.

The rabbit behaves according to the following priorities:
• Running directly between combatants during dramatic moments
• Sitting on maps, letters, spellbooks, or expensive components
• Staring silently at creatures attempting stealth
• Appearing underneath chairs, boots, or robes
• Multiplying perceived chaos far beyond its actual physical size

The rabbit cannot be killed, harmed, restrained, grappled, swallowed, petrified, teleported away, or meaningfully discouraged. Even placing the rabbit inside containers merely results in soft but relentless scratching noises emerging from within moments later.

At the end of 1d4 rounds, the rabbit abruptly vanishes in a tiny burst of glittering white motes accompanied by a soft squeak of apparent disappointment.

If a second rabbit is summoned while another still exists, the existing rabbit immediately develops intense curiosity regarding the newcomer, increasing ambient chaos substantially. If three rabbits are active simultaneously, all creatures within 20 feet suffer a -2 circumstance penalty on Concentration checks, Listen checks, and Perform checks due to overwhelming rabbit-related distraction.

LORE

The origins of the Muffin Cap of the Perpetual Rabbit Crisis remain deeply disputed among magical historians, theatrical guilds, and one increasingly exhausted monastery whose archives suffered catastrophic “hare-related incidents” for nearly twelve consecutive years. Most scholars believe the cap began as a practical joke commissioned by a wealthy noble who wished to embarrass a pompous stage illusionist during a midsummer performance. The resulting enchantment, unfortunately, proved far more durable than intended.

Traveling bards often adore the cap for approximately two days before realizing the rabbits possess an uncanny instinct for appearing during emotional confessions, dramatic reveals, funerals, stealth operations, and sacred rituals. One infamous rabbit reportedly sat motionless atop a royal treaty for nearly twenty uninterrupted minutes while both kingdoms involved slowly lost the will to continue negotiations.

Adventurers maintain an unusually conflicted relationship with the item. While tactically useless in most conventional senses, the rabbits have nevertheless interrupted necromantic summonings, distracted tyrants mid-monologue, caused mounted cavalry charges to collapse into confusion, and once convinced an owlbear to abandon combat entirely in order to sniff a rabbit that vanished three seconds later.

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, summon monster III, unseen servant, prestidigitation; Cost 2,100 gp, 168 XP, three handfuls of rabbit fur willingly collected during a full moon, a masterwork baker’s cap worth at least 50 gp, and a carrot carved from ivory worth 100 gp.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a particular category of magical object whose purpose is not power, wealth, or destruction, but humiliation directed lovingly toward the concept of seriousness itself. This miserable hat belongs firmly within that tradition. One cannot remain fully committed to doom while an immortal white rabbit is attempting to climb into one’s satchel for reasons known only to itself.

Civilization survives through ritual dignity. The rabbit annihilates dignity. It does not do so maliciously, nor with any coherent philosophy, but with the overwhelming certainty of a creature entirely convinced that the world is fundamentally improvable through sudden interruptions. I once witnessed a priest attempting to complete an exorcism while one of these infernal little beasts sat atop the possessed man’s chest cleaning its ears. The demon eventually surrendered. I remain uncertain whether this should be considered a triumph of faith or merely exhaustion.

The truly unsettling aspect is not the rabbits’ immortality, but their complete emotional calm regarding it. They possess no fear whatsoever. Fire means nothing to them. Dragons mean nothing to them. Armies, curses, starvation, death itself - all pass around the creature like weather around a stone. The rabbit simply continues investigating shoelaces and staring at candles with infinite sincerity.

There are darker artifacts in this world by far. There are crueler things. Yet few magical items so thoroughly dismantle humanity’s desperate performance of control. The rabbit arrives, ignores the narrative entirely, and leaves precisely when it wishes. Perhaps that is why people laugh when they see them. The creature embodies a freedom civilization itself cannot permit.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Whisper-Smoke of the Moonbound

Whisper-Smoke of the Moonbound


Aura
Strong transmutation; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 18,000 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This tightly wrapped bundle of pale silver-gray incense is bound together with braided wolf hair, dried moonlotus petals, and faintly shimmering resin harvested beneath a full moon. When burned, the incense produces a heavy, low-hanging smoke that carries the distinct scents of wet fur, rain-soaked earth, cedar bark, and cold iron. The smoke curls unnaturally along the ground and seems strangely drawn toward creatures afflicted with lycanthropy.

When a full stick of Whisper-Smoke of the Moonbound is lit, it burns for 10 minutes and fills a 30-foot-radius spread with pale silver smoke. Any creature with the lycanthrope subtype entering or remaining within the area must immediately succeed on a DC 19 Will save or involuntarily shift into its animal or hybrid form (whichever form is more natural to the creature’s instincts). This transformation occurs instantly and ignores voluntary resistance normally available to afflicted lycanthropes.

Natural lycanthropes take a -4 penalty on this saving throw during the three nights surrounding the full moon. Afflicted lycanthropes instead take a -2 penalty at all times due to the instability of their curse.

A transformed lycanthrope remains in its shifted form for as long as it remains within the smoke and for 1d6 rounds thereafter. Creatures already shifted when exposed to the smoke must still attempt the saving throw; failure causes them to immediately lose control as though affected by a rage spell, attacking the nearest living creature for 1d4 rounds unless they succeed on an additional DC 19 Will save.

Non-lycanthropes are unaffected by the incense aside from experiencing an uncomfortable sensation of being watched from distant tree lines and darkened windows. Creatures with the scent ability can detect the smoke from up to half a mile away under calm wind conditions.

Each bundle contains five sticks of incense.

LORE

Among the oldest monster-hunters of isolated marsh villages and mountain hamlets, there exists a deeply uncomfortable understanding regarding lycanthropes - one does not truly hunt them by chasing the beast, but rather by forcing the beast to emerge before it wishes to do so. Whisper-Smoke of the Moonbound was born from precisely that philosophy. Its creation is traditionally attributed to desperate frontier priests who discovered that certain lunar resins agitated the spiritual instability underlying the curse itself.

The incense gained particular infamy in isolated settlements where suspected lycanthropes lived secretly among ordinary citizens. Entire village assemblies would sometimes burn the incense during crowded festivals or religious ceremonies, waiting in dreadful silence to see who began screaming as bones shifted beneath flesh. Such events rarely ended peacefully. Even communities that survived the revelation often found themselves permanently altered by the knowledge that neighbors, lovers, or family members had concealed monstrous blood for years.

Many lycanthropes consider possession of Whisper-Smoke of the Moonbound an act bordering upon biological warfare. Packs have slaughtered merchants for trafficking it and burned shrines suspected of producing it. Some particularly paranoid were-creatures claim they can smell the incense even before it is lit, insisting that the bundled sticks emit a subtle "moon-scent" that causes nausea and involuntary trembling.

More troubling still are the stories told by certain alchemists who insist the incense does not merely force transformation, but momentarily strengthens the spiritual authority of the curse itself. According to these theories, the smoke awakens ancient predatory instincts buried deep within afflicted bloodlines - instincts older than civilization, language, or perhaps even humanity itself. Hunters who overuse the incense are rumored to develop recurring dreams of endless forests lit only by moonlight and the sound of distant howling that never entirely fades upon waking.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, baleful polymorph, rage, creator must be a lycanthrope; Cost 9,000 gp, 720 XP, powdered silver worth 1,000 gp, preserved wolfsbane, and hair willingly taken from a natural lycanthrope beneath a full moon.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are curses which behave as diseases, and there are curses which behave as negotiations. Lycanthropy has always struck me as belonging firmly to the latter category. One does not merely "become" a beast through such afflictions. Rather, one enters into an exhausting lifelong arrangement between appetite and restraint, instinct and ritual, hunger and shame. Civilization survives only because humanity constantly rehearses the art of remaining human despite possessing every imaginable capacity not to do so.

This incense is disturbing precisely because it strips away the illusion of choice. The afflicted often spend years constructing fragile architectures of self-control around their condition - routines, medicines, prayers, self-imposed isolation, carefully rehearsed manners, even love itself functioning as a kind of emotional restraint. Whisper-Smoke cares nothing for these efforts. It reaches directly into the oldest portions of the soul and demands an answer from the animal waiting there.

What unsettles me most, however, is not what the incense does to lycanthropes, but what it reveals about ordinary people. Communities rarely burn such smoke out of wisdom. They burn it out of fear. Fear transforms neighbors into suspects with astonishing speed. One need only provide humanity with a mechanism for exposing hidden monstrosity before people begin praying for monsters to exist. There is a deeply humiliating enthusiasm that often emerges whenever societies are granted permission to unmask one another.

The werewolf, after all, is merely a man who visibly becomes what most people spend their lives pretending they are not.

Dagger of the Gentle Wound

Dagger of the Gentle Wound


Aura
Moderate conjuration and evocation; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 24,500 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This slender dagger appears to have been forged from condensed sunlight trapped within crystal-clear glass. Its blade possesses no visible edge in the conventional sense, instead existing as a narrow shard of pale-gold radiance held together by faintly humming runic bindings along the hilt. The weapon emits a constant soft warmth similar to afternoon sunlight upon skin, and tiny motes of glowing energy drift lazily from the blade before vanishing moments later.

The Dagger of the Gentle Wound functions as a +1 holy dagger. Whenever the wielder successfully deals damage to a living creature with the dagger, the target immediately regains hit points equal to the damage inflicted after all modifiers are applied. This healing is positive energy and therefore has no effect upon constructs or objects.

A creature struck by the dagger still experiences the physical sensation of being stabbed, including pain and the shock of injury, though the wound immediately seals beneath warm golden light. Scars caused by the dagger fade within moments unless deliberately preserved through magic.

Against undead creatures, the dagger’s healing property reverses violently. Instead of restoring hit points, the blade deals an additional 2d6 points of positive energy damage to undead targets on a successful hit. This damage bypasses damage reduction possessed by undead creatures unless specifically immune to positive energy effects.

Three times per day, upon striking a willing living target, the wielder may choose to channel restorative power through the blade. This effect functions as cure serious wounds (3d8+9) delivered through the successful attack. Using this ability against undead instead inflicts equivalent positive energy damage with a successful strike. Delivering this effect through the dagger does not provoke attacks of opportunity.

If the dagger is used to deliver a coup de grace against a living creature, the target instead stabilizes automatically and is restored to consciousness at 1 hit point unless death was caused by effects unrelated to hit point loss. This property does not function against undead.

LORE

Among battlefield surgeons, wandering priests, and hospice attendants, stories occasionally circulate regarding weapons that seem deeply confused about their own purpose. Most are exaggerations or drunken inventions born from guilty consciences. The Dagger of the Gentle Wound, however, is quite real - and many who encounter it emerge uncertain whether they have witnessed a miracle or an unsettling philosophical contradiction.

According to surviving ecclesiastical records, the first known example was forged during a plague that devastated several pilgrimage roads generations ago. Clerics tasked with defending refugee caravans reportedly became horrified by how often mercy and violence were forced to occupy the same moment. The wounded needed surgery, cauterization, restraint, and protection. Bandits still attacked. Desperate priests allegedly commissioned a weapon capable of teaching that injury and healing were not always opposites, but occasionally parts of the same sacred act.

The resulting dagger quickly developed an unusual reputation among healers. Some viewed it as a holy instrument representing compassion powerful enough to survive proximity to violence itself. Others considered it spiritually dangerous, believing repeated use blurred moral instincts surrounding harm and mercy. Accounts exist of physicians becoming emotionally detached after years carrying such blades, calmly inflicting painful treatment while insisting suffering itself had become morally irrelevant so long as restoration followed afterward.

Undead creatures react to the dagger with instinctive revulsion. Witnesses describe skeletons recoiling from its glow and vampires hissing as though exposed to direct sunlight. Certain necromancers claim the blade represents an existential insult to undeath itself - positive energy weaponized not through hatred, but through compassion so overwhelming that creatures sustained by death cannot endure its presence.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, cure serious wounds, searing light, creator must be good-aligned; Cost 12,250 gp + 980 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists something deeply uncomfortable about a weapon that insists upon kindness while still demanding blood to function. Most enchanted blades possess the decency to commit fully either to destruction or protection. The Dagger of the Gentle Wound instead occupies that dreadful middle territory where morality ceases behaving in clean, reassuring ways.

I once observed a physician in Ville des Marais use such a blade during an outbreak of Marsh Lung among dockworkers near the Rivière Tumultueuse. The poor souls had collapsed with fluid-filled lungs while panic spread faster than the disease itself. The physician moved through the infirmary with horrifying calm, opening infected tissue with brief flashes of golden light while patients screamed beneath lantern smoke and incense. Moments later the wounds sealed themselves entirely, leaving only exhausted tears and trembling confusion behind.

The patients thanked him afterward.

That, I think, disturbed me more than the screaming.

Civilization prefers its moral categories arranged neatly. Violence belongs in one room. Mercy belongs in another. Yet survival rarely permits such luxuries for very long. Eventually every society discovers circumstances where pain becomes necessary to preserve life, and the soul recoils each time it realizes this truth anew.

Undead creatures despise the dagger because undeath itself is fundamentally stagnant. It is existence severed from the difficult, painful labor of living. Positive energy does not merely harm them physically - it reminds them of growth, healing, vulnerability, warmth, recovery, and the terrible miracle of flesh choosing to continue despite suffering. The blade wounds them not simply because it contains life, but because it contains forgiveness.

And there are few things more unbearable to the dead than forgiveness.

Mug of the Last Call

Mug of the Last Call


Aura
faint transmutation and evocation; CL 5th
Slot —; Price 9,800 gp; Weight 2 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This broad wooden tankard is fashioned from ancient dark-oak staves bound together by tarnished brass rings green with age and old moisture. Deep gouges, scorch marks, and knife scratches cover its exterior, while the handle bears the subtle impression of finger grooves worn into the wood by countless unseen hands. Despite appearing crude at first glance, the mug is unnaturally durable. No amount of ordinary force seems capable of cracking its body, and the smell of stale ale permanently lingers within its grain no matter how thoroughly it is cleaned.

The Mug of the Last Call functions as a +1 light mace when wielded in combat. It may be used by any creature proficient with simple weapons without penalty. While held, the mug always feels comfortably balanced regardless of how full or empty it appears.

Three times per day, when the wielder successfully strikes an opponent with the mug, the wielder may command the tankard to erupt outward with explosive force. The struck creature suffers an additional 2d6 points of sonic damage as the mug emits a thunderous tavern-crack resembling dozens of mugs slamming against wooden tables simultaneously. All creatures adjacent to the target must succeed on a DC 14 Fortitude save or become deafened for 1d4 rounds. The save DC is Constitution-based.

In addition, whenever the wielder confirms a critical hit with the Mug of the Last Call, frothing spectral ale spills impossibly from the mug’s interior and splashes across nearby enemies. All hostile creatures within 10 feet must succeed on a DC 14 Reflex save or fall prone as the floor beneath them becomes slick with magically conjured alcohol for 1 round. Creatures immune to being tripped are unaffected. The liquid vanishes immediately afterward, leaving behind only the smell of old taverns and wet wood.

The mug is considered magically full of weak ale at all times. The liquid is safe to drink, mildly bitter, and perpetually lukewarm.

LORE

Stories concerning the Mug of the Last Call are unusually widespread among dockworkers, caravan guards, mercenaries, and retired adventurers. Most taverns located near dangerous roads seem to possess at least one elderly patron willing to swear that they once saw the mug firsthand during a brawl that escalated catastrophically beyond all reason. Curiously, no two accounts entirely agree on the mug’s appearance, though all describe the same terrible impact sound when it strikes flesh.

According to popular rumor, the first Mug of the Last Call belonged to a massive caravan guard named Brannik Voss, who supposedly defended an isolated roadside inn against a gang of raiders armed with axes and hunting bows. Having been disarmed during the fighting, Brannik allegedly seized the nearest available object - his own ale mug - and continued fighting with such ferocious desperation that the terrified raiders fled believing the inn itself had become haunted. Whether the story is true remains uncertain, though many surviving versions claim the original mug absorbed years of violence, laughter, spilled drink, and dying breath until it developed its own strange enchantment.

Among professional adventurers, the mug possesses a strangely affectionate reputation despite its brutality. Veterans often describe it as “honest.” Unlike ornate enchanted blades forged for kings or jeweled staffs crafted by archmages, the Mug of the Last Call feels profoundly ordinary. It is a common object transformed by accumulated desperation, survival, exhaustion, and stubborn refusal to lose one more fight. Some scholars of sympathetic magic argue this emotional saturation is precisely what gives the item its power.

There are darker tavern tales as well. A handful of innkeepers insist the mug occasionally refills itself with beverages that reflect nearby tragedy. Before riots, murders, or disastrous storms, the ale within supposedly darkens into the color of dried blood and tastes faintly of saltwater and ash. Most dismiss these stories as drunken embellishment, though experienced barkeepers often grow visibly uncomfortable whenever the subject arises.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, bull’s strength, shatter, grease; Cost 4,900 gp, 392 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

Civilization is held together far less by grand monuments than by ordinary objects that survive alongside ordinary people. Scholars prefer to imagine history carried by crowns, sacred swords, and jeweled relics displayed beneath cathedral light, but this is vanity speaking. Most of humanity’s actual endurance occurs beside rough tables stained by spilled drink, inside overcrowded taverns where frightened laborers pretend bravery for one more evening, or along muddy roads where exhausted guards pray merely to survive until dawn. The Mug of the Last Call belongs to that quieter category of artifact - not glorious, but stubborn.

There is something deeply revealing about an enchanted object born not from ambition, but from refusal. One senses no hunger for conquest within this mug. No grand prophecy coils beneath its brass rings. It carries instead the emotional residue of desperate people forced to continue standing after reaching the point where collapse would have seemed reasonable. Such objects often become more emotionally dangerous than openly malevolent relics because they encourage a very human illusion - that endurance itself is always virtuous regardless of cost.

Taverns possess a peculiar spiritual gravity in nearly every civilization I have studied. They are places where grief briefly removes its boots and sits among the living pretending not to be noticed. Soldiers laugh too loudly there because silence would allow memory to speak more clearly. Laborers drink because exhaustion demands ritual. Wanderers gather because loneliness becomes easier to survive when shared beside candlelight and poor music. A mug such as this absorbs those emotions over decades the same way old wood absorbs smoke.

One cannot help but admire the object while simultaneously fearing what it says about humanity. We are a species capable of converting even our fatigue into weaponry. Given sufficient hardship, people will eventually raise whatever rests nearest to hand and continue fighting anyway. Sometimes that stubbornness preserves civilization. Sometimes it merely prolongs suffering long enough for future tragedies to inherit the survivors. The mug does not distinguish between these outcomes. It merely waits patiently beside the next warm fire, eternally prepared for another last call.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Torch of the Pale Vigil

Torch of the Pale Vigil


Aura
strong necromancy; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 12,000 gp; Weight 1 lb.

DESCRIPTION

This iron-bound torch appears at first glance to be an unusually well-crafted watchman’s brand. Its shaft is wrapped in blackened leather that never decays, while the head is crowned with pale-white coals that glow without smoke or ash. The flame itself burns in complete silence and radiates no warmth whatsoever. Even when submerged in water, buried beneath soil, or sealed within airtight chambers, the torch continues to burn with the same cold, corpse-colored light.

When lit, the Torch of the Pale Vigil produces illumination equal to twice that of a normal torch. It sheds bright illumination in a 40-foot radius and shadowy illumination for an additional 40 feet beyond that. The flame cannot ignite combustible materials, cannot melt ice, and produces no heat whatsoever. Creatures touching the flame suffer no damage.

The torch never burns out and requires no fuel. It may only be extinguished by wrapping the head completely in burial cloth taken from a consecrated grave, though the flame reignites automatically at the next sunset unless subjected to a hallow spell or similar divine effect.

The torch is cursed. Undead creatures within 300 feet instinctively become aware of the torch’s presence. Mindless undead are drawn toward it with relentless purpose, while intelligent undead often interpret its light as a beckoning signal or invitation. Any undead creature attempting to locate the torch gains a +10 circumstance bonus on Survival, Listen, Spot, or equivalent checks made to track or perceive it.

Furthermore, any character carrying the lit torch suffers a -4 penalty on Hide and Move Silently checks made against undead creatures, as the pale flame illuminates the bearer in unnaturally stark contrast. Undead creatures attacking a wielder carrying the lit torch gain a +1 morale bonus on attack rolls due to the strange invigorating effect the flame has upon creatures animated by necromantic energies.

Though not intelligent, the torch possesses an unsettling tendency to flare brighter in the presence of fresh corpses, grave soil, or nearby spiritual manifestations. Animals universally react poorly to it. Horses become skittish, dogs whine continuously, and birds refuse to perch nearby.

LORE

The origins of the Torch of the Pale Vigil are disputed among scholars of funerary magic. Some claim the first such torch was crafted by exhausted gravediggers who desired a lantern that could survive endless nights beside plague pits and battlefield trenches. Others insist the torch emerged from failed attempts by necromancers to create beacon-fires capable of guiding wandering spirits back toward prepared bodies. Whatever its true origin, nearly every surviving example eventually acquires a reputation for tragedy.

The pale flame is often associated with forgotten roads, abandoned catacombs, and doomed patrols. Entire watch companies have vanished while carrying these torches during night marches through marshes and ruined cities. Survivors frequently describe hearing distant footsteps just beyond the edge of the light, followed by the gradual realization that the flame itself had been acting as a kind of invitation. Not a warning. Not protection. A summons.

Particularly disturbing are accounts from intelligent undead who seem almost reverent toward the torch. Vampires have referred to it as “gravefire,” while certain liches describe the pale flame as resembling the final visual sensation experienced at the moment of death. Some necromantic cults deliberately carry these torches during funeral rites, believing the light helps the dead “remember the road back.”

The torch is banned within several major temple-cities after repeated incidents involving crypt breaches and mass undead convergences. In one infamous case, a single Torch of the Pale Vigil left hanging within a city watchtower reportedly drew hundreds of drowned corpses from surrounding riverbanks over the course of three nights. The watchmen initially believed the city was under siege. By the time they understood the truth, the dead had already filled the streets below.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, continual flame, animate dead, deathwatch; Cost 6,000 gp, 480 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a particular category of cursed object that humanity repeatedly attempts to excuse through practicality. One observes this phenomenon most clearly among laborers, soldiers, and those poor souls whose professions require them to stand too long beside mortality. The argument always arrives wearing different clothing, but the skeleton beneath remains the same - “Yes, it is dangerous, but it is useful.” Civilization has buried itself beneath mountains of catastrophes born from that exact sentence.

The Torch of the Pale Vigil embodies this logic with almost theatrical perfection. Consider the seduction carefully. A torch that never dies. A flame immune to rain. Endless light without fuel, smoke, or heat. The exhausted traveler sees convenience. The night watchman sees reliability. The undertaker sees economy. Humanity possesses a remarkable talent for mistaking the absence of immediate consequence for safety.

Yet the dead understand invitation better than the living do.

That is the detail I find most fascinating. The torch does not command undead. It does not enslave them. It does not dominate corpses through forceful necromancy. No - the dead come willingly. One must meditate upon the implications of this. Something within the flame resembles home closely enough that creatures severed from life still recognize it instinctively. I suspect the pale fire imitates some fragment of the boundary between life and death itself - a lighthouse visible only to souls stranded upon the wrong shore.

There is also something deeply human in the torch’s utter lack of warmth. Most light sources comfort us because they promise two things simultaneously - illumination and survival. Fire is civilization condensed into a single phenomenon. Warmth against winter. Light against darkness. Cooking against starvation. Community against isolation. This torch provides only visibility. It allows one to see while denying every emotional reassurance that ordinary fire normally grants. It is illumination stripped of humanity.

I once observed such a torch hanging outside an abandoned cemetery chapel during heavy fog. The bearer insisted it was perfectly safe because “nothing had happened yet.” Those words linger with me still, because behind him - half-visible beyond the mist - stood three figures silently emerging from flooded graves with the slow patience of inevitability itself. The torchlight touched them long before he noticed them. Indeed, I suspect the flame had already greeted them like old companions returning home.

The Sovereign Persuader

The Sovereign Persuader Aura Strong enchantment and necromancy; CL 17th Slot —; Price 132,000 gp; Weight 14 lbs. DESCRIPTION This horri...