Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Sepulchral Testament

The Sepulchral Testament


Aura
Strong necromancy and enchantment; CL 15th
Slot —; Price 92,000 gp; Weight 7 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

Bound in blackened grave-leather stretched tightly over thin plates of funerary iron, The Sepulchral Testament possesses a peculiar tactile warmth despite its deathly appearance. Tarnished silver clasps shaped like skeletal fingers hold the volume shut, while its spine bears no title - only a vertical line of tiny embossed skulls descending toward the bottom edge like a procession into the earth itself. The pages are composed of unnaturally thin vellum that whispers softly whenever turned, even in perfectly still air. Faint stains resembling old water damage spread through portions of the text, though close inspection reveals them to be silhouettes of reaching hands pressed beneath the surface of the parchment.

The Sepulchral Testament functions as a spellbook containing the following spells: chill touch, cause fear, ray of enfeeblement, false life, gentle repose, ghoul touch, spectral hand, vampiric touch, animate dead, halt undead, ray of exhaustion, circle of death, create undead, waves of exhaustion, finger of death, and the unique spell Gravebolt described below. Wizards may prepare these spells normally from the text as though from any other spellbook.

In addition, any necromancy spell prepared from The Sepulchral Testament gains a +1 profane bonus to its save DC and caster level.

The volume is, however, profoundly cursed.

Whenever a creature studies the book for spell preparation, reads from it for at least ten uninterrupted minutes, or sleeps within 10 feet of the closed volume, the Testament begins weaving subtle spiritual corruption through the target’s psyche. The victim must succeed on a DC 20 Will save each day of exposure or acquire one stage of the Testament’s Curse. These effects are cumulative, mind-affecting, and necromantic in nature.

Stage One - The Quieting Flesh:
Food becomes dull and unpleasant. The victim’s skin grows colder by several degrees, and mirrors begin reflecting them a fraction of a second too slowly. The target takes a -2 penalty on saves against fear effects originating from undead creatures and suffers a -1 penalty on Diplomacy checks against living humanoids.

Stage Two - The Dimming Heart:
The victim no longer gains emotional comfort from companionship, celebration, or physical affection. Living creatures increasingly appear fragile, frantic, and temporary. The target gains darkvision 30 ft. if they do not already possess it, but takes a -2 penalty on all Charisma-based skill checks involving living creatures other than Intimidate.

Stage Three - The Gravebound Longing:
The victim begins dreaming of crypts, embalming chambers, drowned graveyards, and silent processions beneath moonlit skies. Healing magic from the conjuration (healing) school restores only half the normal amount of hit points to the victim, while negative energy heals them for half the amount it would normally damage.

Stage Four - The Sepulchral Awakening:
The victim’s type changes to undead. They retain their Intelligence, Wisdom, Charisma, memories, class levels, feats, and skills, but lose Constitution entirely as normal for undead creatures. They gain darkvision 60 ft., immunity to poison, sleep, paralysis, stunning, disease, death effects, and critical hits. Their appearance resembles a preserved corpse touched by elegant funerary magic rather than decay. Alignment shifts one step toward evil if not already evil aligned.

Once Stage Four manifests, the transformation is permanent. Only miracle, wish, or direct divine intervention can restore the creature to true life. Remove curse suppresses the effects for 24 hours but cannot reverse existing stages.

The Testament itself actively resists destruction. Fire blackens its pages without consuming them. Water causes the text to reappear once dry. Attempts to tear pages merely produce additional pages filled with funerary scripture written in unknown languages. If destroyed through powerful magic, the book reforms within 3d6 months inside a sealed coffin, abandoned crypt, drowned chapel, or forgotten mortuary somewhere within 100 miles of its previous location.

Gravebolt
Necromancy [Death]
Level: Sor/Wiz 1
Components: V, S
Casting Time: 1 standard action
Range: Medium (100 ft. + 10 ft./level)
Targets: Up to five creatures, no two of which may be more than 15 ft. apart
Duration: Instantaneous
Saving Throw: Fortitude partial
Spell Resistance: Yes

You unleash darts of concentrated sepulchral force formed from condensed negative energy. The missiles strike unerringly, each dealing 1d4+1 points of negative energy damage. Living creatures struck by Gravebolt must succeed on a Fortitude save or become fatigued for 1 round as deathly numbness spreads through their limbs. Undead creatures struck by the missiles are instead healed by the damage amount.

Gravebolt creates one missile at 1st level and gains an additional missile for every two caster levels beyond 1st, to a maximum of five missiles at 9th level. The missiles may be directed at a single target or several targets, exactly as magic missile.

LORE

The true origins of The Sepulchral Testament remain fiercely disputed among necromantic scholars because the book itself appears older than any surviving civilization known to possess advanced funerary magic. Carbon scoring upon fragments of damaged parchment suggests impossible ages, while certain diagrams hidden within the margins depict burial customs from cultures separated by thousands of years. Some historians believe the Testament is not a single authored work at all, but a continuously growing spiritual organism that rewrites itself through every owner who succumbs to its influence.

Among liches and ancient intelligent undead, possession of the Testament is regarded not merely as ownership of a powerful spellbook, but as participation in a philosophical lineage. The curse is viewed by many undead not as corruption, but as revelation. Several vampiric courts allegedly refer to the stages of transformation as “The Four Mercies,” believing the book gently removes mortal weaknesses one layer at a time until the victim finally awakens into what they consider clarity.

Disturbingly, victims transformed by the Testament rarely display madness or outward corruption. Most remain articulate, rational, and emotionally composed. Indeed, many become calmer and more refined after their transformation. They simply cease valuing mortal life in the same emotional manner they once did. Former loved ones become nostalgic memories rather than meaningful bonds. Entire kingdoms may collapse around them while they continue quietly annotating grave theology by candlelight without visible distress.

Some theologians claim the book houses no demon, spirit, or external intelligence whatsoever. Instead, they argue the Testament functions as a kind of metaphysical argument - an artifact so perfectly constructed that prolonged exposure convinces the soul itself to reject mortality willingly. If true, this possibility terrifies many churches far more than ordinary curses ever could.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, animate dead, create undead, magic jar, bestow curse, finger of death, creator must be undead; Cost 46,000 gp + 3,680 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a profound distinction between evil that hunts the living and evil that persuades the living to abandon themselves willingly. Wolves tear flesh because hunger demands it. Tyrants spill blood because ambition intoxicates them. Such horrors are ancient, obvious, understandable. The Sepulchral Testament belongs to a colder species of darkness entirely. It does not attack humanity. It merely teaches humanity to grow ashamed of being alive.

I have read fragments of this volume only once, and even now I remember the sensation with disturbing clarity. The book does not fill the mind with screams or grotesqueries. It fills the mind with relief. Relief at the thought of no longer aging. Relief at the idea of silence replacing grief. Relief at never again fearing illness, heartbreak, uncertainty, or death. The curse succeeds because it does not seduce cruelty first. It seduces exhaustion.

That is the secret weakness buried in every mortal civilization. Eventually, everyone becomes tired. Tired of burying loved ones. Tired of rebuilding after floods and wars. Tired of watching beauty decay beneath the slow machinery of time. The Testament whispers that there is another option. One may simply step away from the suffering entirely. One may become still.

Yet stillness is not peace.

The dead often mistake absence for serenity. They no longer tremble, yes - but neither do they truly ache with joy. They preserve memory without participating in life. They imitate affection while existing forever beyond vulnerability. I have walked through crypt-courts inhabited by ancient undead philosophers whose manners were impeccable and whose halls were silent enough to hear dust settling upon marble. Nothing screamed there. Nothing bled there. Nothing laughed there either.

Mortality is terrible. I will never insult the suffering of the living by pretending otherwise. But life derives meaning precisely because it cannot be held forever. Love matters because hands eventually slip apart. Music matters because the final note fades. Lanterns matter because darkness always waits beyond their glow.

The Sepulchral Testament offers eternity stripped of all these fragile urgencies. And in doing so, it creates something infinitely more horrifying than death.

It creates a soul that no longer understands why living was precious to begin with.

Stonewright’s Codex

Stonewright’s Codex


Aura
Strong transmutation and abjuration; CL 13th
Slot —; Price 48,500 gp; Weight 18 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

The Stonewright’s Codex is an immense dwarven spellbook bound not in leather, but in two slabs of polished basalt-black granite reinforced with thick bands of rune-etched adamantine. The edges of the stone covers are worn smooth from centuries of handling, though no mundane tool has ever succeeded in scratching them. Tiny veins of naturally occurring quartz run through the covers like pale lightning frozen within the rock itself, and when viewed in darkness, these mineral veins faintly glimmer with a deep ember-red light. The spine is composed of linked steel hinges forged in the ancient dwarven manner, allowing the impossibly heavy covers to open with surprising precision and balance despite the tome’s tremendous weight.

Its pages are not paper, parchment, nor vellum. Instead, each page is a wafer-thin sheet of treated slate engraved with microscopic runic script filled with silver, copper, and powdered gemstone dust. The pages produce a faint grinding sound when turned, like distant stone shifting deep beneath a mountain. The Codex smells perpetually of mineral dust, forge smoke, lamp oil, and old caverns. When opened underground, the air surrounding the tome subtly cools, and nearby stone surfaces often develop tiny beads of moisture as if the earth itself recognizes the presence of the artifact.

The Stonewright’s Codex functions as a masterwork spellbook specifically designed for dwarven arcane casters, though any arcane spellcaster capable of deciphering Dwarven script may use it. The tome contains the following spells already inscribed within its mineral pages:

0 - detect magic, light, mending, read magic, resistance
1st - comprehend languages, endure elements, expeditious excavation*, magic stone, shield
2nd - darkvision, knock, make whole, soften earth and stone, stone bones*
3rd - meld into stone, protection from energy, secret page, stone shape
4th - fabricate, secure shelter, stoneskin
5th - passwall, wall of stone
6th - move earth

(*Spells from supplements commonly used in D&D 3.5 campaigns.)

Whenever the owner casts a spell with the earth, stone, metal, or mining descriptor while touching the Codex, the caster gains a +2 circumstance bonus on all associated caster level checks made to affect stone, metal, or subterranean structures. In addition, any spell cast from the Codex that directly excavates, shapes, or stabilizes stone affects 25% more material than normal.

Three times per day, the wielder may strike the cover of the Codex with a closed fist as a standard action to invoke stoneworker’s insight. For the next 10 minutes, the user gains tremorsense out to 20 feet while in contact with the ground and receives a +10 competence bonus on Craft (stonemasonry), Profession (miner), and Search checks made to detect structural weaknesses, hidden chambers, cave-ins, unstable ceilings, or concealed stonework.

Once per week, the Stonewright’s Codex may be placed upon solid ground and opened to a marked rune known as the Deep Delving Seal. When activated, the surrounding earth reshapes itself over the course of 10 minutes, creating a perfectly reinforced dwarven mining tunnel up to 120 feet long, 10 feet wide, and 10 feet tall. The tunnel includes smooth supports, ventilation channels, runoff grooves, and basic structural reinforcement sufficient to prevent ordinary cave-ins. The stone removed by this process neatly compacts into stacked stone bricks beside the newly formed passage.

The Codex is exceptionally durable. Its stone covers possess hardness 15 and 120 hit points. The book is immune to fire damage and gains a +8 bonus on saving throws against acid or sonic effects.

LORE

Among dwarven kingdoms, the Stonewright’s Codex is regarded not merely as a spellbook, but as a declaration of cultural philosophy. To dwarves, stone is not an obstacle to overcome, but a living archive deserving patience, understanding, and respectful shaping. The Codex embodies this belief entirely. Dwarven historians claim the earliest versions of these tomes were created during the first great subterranean migrations, when entire clans vanished beneath collapsing mountains and unstable tunnels. Arcane smiths and rune-scribes began crafting spellbooks capable not only of preserving magic, but of preserving civilization itself beneath the earth.

Each known Stonewright’s Codex is unique, handcrafted for a particular master rune-mage or clan architect. The stone covers are typically quarried from locations of profound importance - the heartstone of an ancestral mountain, the sealed wall of a fallen hold, or the petrified remains of a sacred underground shrine. Dwarven tradition insists that the spirit of the mountain partially inhabits the tome thereafter, explaining the strange sense many owners experience that the book somehow “listens” while underground. Some dwarven miners refuse to speak ill of their companions near such tomes for fear the mountain itself might remember the insult.

Entire dwarven expeditions have reportedly survived impossible conditions due to a Stonewright’s Codex. Ancient songs tell of collapsed kingdoms reopened by patient rune-mages who spent decades using the Codex to slowly reclaim buried halls one tunnel at a time. One particularly famous volume, known as Khuldram’s Ledger, supposedly guided refugees through miles of collapsed volcanic tunnels while the surrounding mountain erupted overhead. Survivors later claimed the book vibrated like a living heartbeat whenever the correct direction was chosen.

Despite their utility, the Codices are treated with near-religious reverence. Dwarves consider the destruction of one an act equivalent to burning a library and desecrating a tomb simultaneously. Some clans even bury damaged Stonewright’s Codices in ceremonial crypts deep beneath their strongholds, believing the accumulated memory of stone and labor deserves eternal rest. There are whispered tales that abandoned Codices occasionally continue reshaping tunnels long after their owners have died, slowly carving forgotten chambers in the dark beneath the mountains where no living hand directed them.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, Craft Magic Arms and Armor, fabricate, move earth, stone shape, stoneskin, passwall; Cost 24,250 gp + 1,940 XP + a single uninterrupted slab of masterwork volcanic granite worth at least 5,000 gp and adamantine hinges forged by a dwarven smith.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There is something profoundly revealing about the dwarven relationship with stone. Humans speak often of conquering nature, mastering it, carving civilization from wilderness as though the world were an enemy to be subdued. Dwarves, however, seem to understand something older and far quieter. They do not conquer mountains. They negotiate with them. Every tunnel is a conversation. Every support beam is a promise. Every reinforced hall is an act of mutual trust between mortal ambition and geological patience.

The Stonewright’s Codex reflects this philosophy beautifully. One does not read this tome so much as consult it. The book feels less like an object and more like an elderly architect silently judging one’s competence. I once observed a dwarven mage resting his hand upon the cover before beginning excavation, not unlike a sailor touching the mast before entering a storm. There was reverence there, yes, but also caution. The sort of caution born from understanding that stone remembers every mistake ever made within it.

What fascinates me most is that the Codex does not encourage reckless extraction. It assists miners, certainly, yet always with reinforcement, stability, ventilation, preservation. The tome aids survival before profit. That distinction matters immensely. One can learn a civilization’s soul by observing how it digs into the earth. Some peoples tear greedily downward like starving animals clawing through a corpse. Dwarves, by comparison, behave more like careful surgeons operating upon something sacred and dangerous simultaneously.

And perhaps that is wisdom. Mountains bury the arrogant eventually. They swallow empires with astonishing indifference. Yet the dwarves endure beneath them century after century because they understand a truth many surface folk refuse to accept - civilization survives not through domination, but through respectful maintenance. The mountain allows dwarves to live within it because dwarves learned, long ago, how to listen when stone groans.

The Verdant Lexicon

The Verdant Lexicon


Aura
moderate transmutation and conjuration; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 48,000 gp; Weight 6 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

Bound in living bark rather than leather, The Verdant Lexicon resembles a carefully cultivated section of an ancient tree more than a conventional tome. Its cover is warm to the touch and faintly damp beneath the fingers, carrying the rich scent of rain-soaked soil and crushed cedar needles. Veins of luminous green sap slowly pulse beneath the bark-like exterior, glowing faintly during dawn and dusk. Tiny shoots of moss and pale fungal blooms occasionally emerge along the spine before withering harmlessly away over several hours.

The pages are formed from impossibly thin sheets of pressed leaves reinforced by translucent amber resin. Each page remains supple regardless of age, and no moisture, mildew, or rot can damage the work. The text shifts subtly between Sylvan, Elven, and Druidic depending upon the reader, while delicate illustrations depict forests in various stages of growth, decay, fire, flood, and rebirth. When opened beneath moonlight, the illustrations occasionally move - leaves swaying in unseen wind or roots slowly twisting through soil.

The Verdant Lexicon functions as both a repository of ecological wisdom and a magical focus for those who dedicate themselves to stewardship of the natural world. Any druid, ranger, elf, or creature with at least 5 ranks in Knowledge (nature) who studies the Lexicon for 1 hour gains a +4 competence bonus on Knowledge (nature), Survival, and Profession (herbalist) checks while within a natural environment. This benefit lasts for 24 hours.

In addition, while carrying the book, the user gains a +2 sacred bonus on Handle Animal checks and wild empathy checks. Plants within 60 feet of the bearer become unusually healthy and resilient. Natural foliage remains vibrant even during drought, ordinary crops yield twice the normal harvest, and non-magical plant diseases cannot naturally spread within the affected area.

Three times per day, the bearer may touch the Lexicon to soil, roots, or living vegetation to invoke one of the following effects as a standard action:

plant growth
speak with plants
warp wood
remove disease (plants and plant creatures only)

Once per week, the bearer may spend 10 uninterrupted minutes reading aloud from the Lexicon beneath open sky to awaken the surrounding land. This functions as hallucinatory terrain combined with plant growth across a 300-foot radius, though the illusion always manifests as an idealized, thriving version of the local wilderness. Predatory creatures within the affected area become less aggressive unless magically compelled otherwise, granting a +4 circumstance bonus on checks made to calm or influence animals native to the region.

If used by a druid within their native terrain, the druid’s effective level for determining wild empathy and woodland stride interactions increases by +2. Rangers instead gain a +2 bonus on attack and damage rolls against creatures actively harming forests, sacred groves, or natural ecosystems, as determined by the DM.

The Verdant Lexicon cannot be willingly damaged by plant creatures, fey, or animals with Intelligence 3 or lower. If abandoned within a forest, the tome slowly roots itself into the ground over several weeks, eventually becoming enveloped by bark and vines until reclaimed by another worthy caretaker.

LORE

Among the elder circles of the deep woodlands, there persists a quiet belief that forests possess memory in the same manner cities possess history. Trees remember droughts long after rivers return. Moss recalls the tread of armies centuries gone. Certain groves, according to druidic oral tradition, still shudder faintly at the memory of ancient fires no living creature witnessed. The Verdant Lexicon is said to have been born from this belief - not merely written about nature, but written by those who learned to listen to it.

The earliest versions of the Lexicon were allegedly created by wandering elven botanists who traveled the primeval forests before the rise of human kingdoms. These scholars served neither crown nor temple. Instead, they acted as caretakers of ecological continuity, ensuring that forests damaged by war, flood, or reckless expansion could eventually heal. Over centuries, druids added their own teachings to the work, layering practical cultivation methods beside rituals of reverence and long philosophical passages regarding the delicate balance between civilization and wilderness. No two copies are entirely identical, for each Lexicon slowly rewrites portions of itself in response to the environments it inhabits.

Many who study the tome for extended periods describe an unsettling sensation that the book is observing them in return. Certain passages appear only after acts of kindness toward the natural world, while sections may become illegible to those who deliberately destroy ecosystems for profit or cruelty. Several recorded accounts speak of woodsmen opening the Lexicon to find fresh pages documenting events that occurred only hours earlier - floods, forest fires, or the deaths of ancient trees described in meticulous detail despite no scribe having touched the book.

To druids and rangers, the Lexicon is valued not because it grants power over nature, but because it encourages coexistence with it. The tome teaches that forests are not passive resources awaiting harvest, but living systems engaged in endless negotiation with wind, fungus, predator, decay, water, and time. Those who rely upon the book too heavily without respecting its lessons often find its blessings fading. Healthy forests flourish through stewardship, not domination, and the Lexicon never permits its owner to forget that distinction.

There are darker tales as well. Some circles claim neglected or corrupted Lexicons eventually become hostile things - their pages blackening with mold, their roots twisting toward graveyards and battlefields where blood has poisoned the soil. Such fallen tomes allegedly attract blights, assassin vines, and fungal horrors, becoming grim reflections of ecosystems pushed beyond recovery. For this reason, many druidic orders conduct solemn ceremonies whenever a Lexicon changes hands, treating the event less like inheritance and more like the transfer of custodianship over something quietly alive.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, plant growth, speak with plants, remove disease, creator must have 8 ranks in Knowledge (nature); Cost 24,000 gp, 1,920 XP, rare living bark harvested from an awakened tree willingly given during midsummer.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a profound arrogance within many civilized peoples - the assumption that forests survive because they are strong, while cities survive because they are clever. The Verdant Lexicon exposes the foolishness of this distinction with quiet elegance. Forests endure not through strength alone, but through endless cooperation. Root feeds fungus. Fungus feeds soil. Soil feeds leaf. Leaf feeds beast. Beast feeds death. Death feeds root once more. Civilization imagines itself superior because it constructs walls against collapse, while the wilderness simply learns how to survive collapse as a natural condition of existence.

I have observed many owners of the Lexicon over the years, and the curious thing is that the book rarely changes the forest nearly as much as it changes the individual carrying it. One begins by seeking healthier crops, straighter trees, or safer trails. Yet gradually the tome encourages subtler questions. Why does this grove refuse to grow? Why do the birds avoid this river? Why has the moss blackened near the village mill? The bearer slowly ceases viewing nature as scenery and begins perceiving it as conversation. For some, this awakening is beautiful. For others, it is deeply inconvenient.

There is also a melancholy hidden within the Lexicon’s pages which few discuss openly. The book understands something humanity often resists admitting - that all flourishing requires maintenance. Forests are not eternal simply because they appear ancient. Someone must guard the trails. Someone must replant after fire. Someone must drive away the creatures that poison streams or strip bark for greed. Civilization survives because people continue lighting lanterns despite the certainty that darkness will eventually return. Forests survive for precisely the same reason.

And perhaps that is why I find the Lexicon comforting. It does not promise mastery over nature. It promises participation within it. That is a far wiser thing.

The Pedant’s Companion

The Pedant’s Companion


Moderate enchantment and necromancy;
CL 9th
Slot —; Price 18,750 gp; Weight 4 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

Bound in cracked brown leather that smells perpetually of stale ink and mildew, The Pedant’s Companion appears at first glance to be an utterly ordinary spellbook. Its brass corner fittings are slightly crooked, its pages unevenly cut, and its spine emits a faint creaking noise whenever opened - regardless of the book’s actual condition. Tiny handwritten annotations crowd the margins in cramped, judgmental script, though no two readers ever agree on precisely what the notes say.

The book functions as a normal wizard’s spellbook capable of holding up to one hundred pages of spells. Any arcane caster may prepare spells from it normally. However, once a creature studies from the book for more than one hour, the curse begins to manifest.

The curse is not immediately dangerous, but relentlessly aggravating. The victim develops a constant sensation that something nearby is slightly wrong. Quills roll just out of reach. Ink dries prematurely. Pages stick together at inconvenient moments. Candles flicker precisely when concentration is required. Spoken incantations feel subtly “off,” forcing the caster to repeat syllables under their breath compulsively.

While carrying or actively using The Pedant’s Companion, the wielder suffers a -2 penalty on Concentration checks and all Craft checks involving writing, alchemy, scrollmaking, calligraphy, cartography, or other forms of delicate manual precision.

Additionally, once per day during spell preparation, the book whispers a single correction, criticism, or passive-aggressive remark audible only to its user. These comments possess no direct magical compulsion, but are psychologically exhausting. Common examples include:

“You skipped a line.”
“That sigil is asymmetrical.”
“You intend to present that to colleagues?”
“Interesting solution. Inelegant, but interesting.”

After seven consecutive days of use, the wielder must succeed on a DC 16 Will save each morning or become distracted by trivial imperfections for 1d4 hours. During this time the user takes a -1 morale penalty on attack rolls, saving throws, and skill checks whenever visibly confronted by disorder, stains, crooked objects, grammatical mistakes, or improperly organized materials.

Removing the curse requires remove curse or similar magic cast upon both the wielder and the book simultaneously. Destroying the book immediately transfers the curse to the nearest unattended blank journal or spellbook within 100 feet.

LORE

Few cursed items inspire genuine terror. The Pedant’s Companion instead inspires exhaustion.

Arcane historians believe the tome originated within a prestigious magical academy infamous for its brutally competitive culture and impossible academic standards. Surviving records describe senior wizards who viewed humiliation as a legitimate teaching tool and apprentices who spent years terrified of minor errors in notation. The book is believed to have emerged from this atmosphere naturally - less created than emotionally fermented.

The margins contain hundreds of annotations written in dozens of distinct hands spanning centuries. Some provide legitimate arcane corrections of startling brilliance. Others criticize spelling, posture, grammar, ink quality, or the presumed intelligence of prior readers. A disturbing number simply contain phrases such as “No.” or “Try again.” repeated endlessly in increasingly cramped script.

Curiously, many owners refuse to discard the book despite despising it. The Companion contains exceptionally useful arcane notation, efficient spell indexing, and several elegant mnemonic systems. It is infuriatingly helpful. Scholars often compare it to studying beneath a mentor whose brilliance is rivaled only by their unbearable personality.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, bestow curse, magic mouth, fox’s cunning; Cost 9,375 gp + 750 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are artifacts born of hatred, and there are artifacts born of ambition, but this miserable little volume belongs to a far more common species of darkness - pettiness.

One does not fear The Pedant’s Companion in the manner one fears a cursed sword or a soul-drinking idol. No, this thing erodes a person through accumulation. Through interruption. Through the dreadful persistence of tiny discomforts repeated until they begin colonizing the architecture of thought itself. I have seen brilliant arcanists reduced to muttering over improperly aligned teaspoons while entire laboratories burned around them.

The truly horrifying thing is not the curse’s magical potency, but its familiarity. Every civilization eventually produces people who cannot create beauty without first strangling joy beneath correction. The book merely immortalizes that instinct. It is less a magical object than a preserved personality flaw given teeth.

And yet… I confess I nearly kept it.

The margins contain extraordinary notation on sigilic stabilization theory. Brilliant work, hidden beneath oceans of insufferable commentary. Which, perhaps, is the final cruelty of the thing. One continues opening the book not because it is pleasant, but because somewhere beneath the irritation lies undeniable value.

Much like certain people.

The Physician’s Folio of Quiet Hands

The Physician’s Folio of Quiet Hands


Aura
Moderate conjuration and transmutation; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 52,000 gp; Weight 6 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This immense tome is bound in pale gray leather that feels strangely warm to the touch, like living skin resting beneath sunlight. Its brass corners are smooth from centuries of handling, and the spine bears no title - only the embossed image of two hands gently holding a faintly glowing flame. The pages are unusually thick and soft, resembling pressed linen more than parchment, and each carries faint silver-blue veins through the fibers like capillaries beneath translucent flesh.

The Physician’s Folio of Quiet Hands functions as a spellbook and magical focus for arcane casters. Any wizard who studies from the tome may prepare the following spells as arcane spells even if they are normally divine in nature: cure light wounds, cure moderate wounds, cure serious wounds, cure critical wounds, lesser restoration, restoration, remove disease, neutralize poison, delay poison, regenerate, and mass cure light wounds. These spells are treated as wizard spells of the same level for the purpose of preparation and casting.

In addition, whenever the owner casts a Conjuration (Healing) spell from this tome, the spell heals additional hit points equal to the caster’s Intelligence modifier (minimum +1). Three times per day, the wielder may apply the Empower Spell feat to a Conjuration (Healing) spell without increasing the spell’s casting time or spell slot.

The folio possesses an unusual stabilizing resonance upon arcane energies. Any healing spell cast from the tome ignores arcane spell failure chance caused by light armor. This benefit applies only to Conjuration (Healing) spells prepared from the book itself.

The tome contains 100 pages, though no mundane ink adheres properly to them. Instead, spells added to the folio slowly emerge overnight in silver script after being ritually traced upon the page using alchemical saline worth 25 gp per spell level.

LORE

No honest scholar entirely agrees on who first created the Physician’s Folio of Quiet Hands, though many believe it emerged during one of the great magical plagues that periodically sweep through overconfident civilizations. The prevailing theory suggests that the tome was not written by a single archmage, but collaboratively assembled by exhausted battlefield wizards who became horrified by their inability to save dying companions. Unlike clerics, they possessed devastating power yet little mercy. The book is said to have been born from guilt rather than ambition.

Among traditional wizard circles, the folio has always occupied an uncomfortable philosophical position. Arcane magic is often associated with mastery, manipulation, and intellectual dominance over the fabric of reality. Healing, by contrast, is intimate. It requires closeness. Patience. Humility before suffering. Many arcanists regard the tome almost suspiciously, as though it encourages emotional vulnerability in professions otherwise dominated by emotional distance. Some academies even refuse to catalogue copies within official libraries, considering them “dangerously sentimental.”

Those who have relied upon the folio during times of catastrophe speak of it differently. Veterans of magical wars claim the book seems to grow warmer during moments of desperation. Apprentices describe hearing the faint rustle of turning pages when tending the wounded late at night. A persistent rumor suggests that healers who truly dedicate themselves to preserving life eventually notice additional passages appearing between the pages - observations written in unfamiliar handwriting discussing anatomy, compassion, mortality, and the peculiar burden of surviving when others do not.

Perhaps most unsettling of all are accounts claiming the folio quietly resists cruelty. Several historical owners reportedly lost access to its restorative properties after engaging in torture, needless slaughter, or prolonged acts of deliberate sadism. The pages did not vanish, nor did the magic fail entirely, but the healing spells became cold, weak, and strangely reluctant, as though the book itself had developed disappointment.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, limited wish, regenerate, restoration, creator must be able to cast 6th-level arcane spells; Cost 26,000 gp + 2,080 XP

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a dangerous misconception among many learned men that healing is somehow lesser than destruction. Fire announces itself loudly. Lightning tears the heavens apart with theatrical grandeur. Necromancy drapes itself in the fearful dignity of mortality. Yet healing? Healing asks one to kneel beside suffering and remain there long enough to understand it. That is a far more difficult thing.

Most wizards seek distance from consequence. They prefer equations to grief because equations do not scream when dying. The Physician’s Folio of Quiet Hands represents something profoundly unusual within arcane tradition - a deliberate surrender of superiority. One cannot wield restorative magic effectively while maintaining complete emotional detachment from the wounded. The magic resists it. The book knows the difference between one who heals to preserve life and one who heals merely to maintain useful assets.

I have observed many forms of power across the dimensions, and I confess that I increasingly distrust those powers incapable of gentleness. Any force that may only dominate, consume, or annihilate eventually becomes spiritually malformed. Civilization itself survives not through conquest, but through the quiet maintenance performed after catastrophes conclude. Someone must bandage the survivors after the heroes finish setting the horizon ablaze.

The folio understands this truth intimately. It is not a weapon pretending to heal. It is an apology written in arcane script by men and women who realized too late that intelligence alone does not make one wise.

Grimoire of the Drowned Stars

Grimoire of the Drowned Stars


Major Artifact (Spellbook)

Aura overwhelming; CL 25th
Slot —; Price Not for Sale; Weight 6 lbs.

The Grimoire of the Drowned Stars is bound in dark indigo leather that never appears entirely dry. Tiny droplets of cold seawater perpetually cling to its surface, though the pages within remain immaculate. Its cover bears no title, only a silver-inlaid symbol resembling an eclipsed star sinking beneath stylized waves. The corners are capped in tarnished brass, greened by age and salt exposure, while the spine appears stitched with black sinew rather than thread.

When opened beneath moonlight, the pages faintly shimmer as though submerged beneath deep water. The script inside slowly shifts and rearranges itself, changing language to match the reader’s most fluent tongue. Every few moments, the pages emit the distant sound of creaking hulls, groaning ice, or whalesong carried from impossible depths.

Description

The Grimoire of the Drowned Stars functions as a blessed and cursed repository of arcane knowledge. It contains every wizard spell from the schools of Conjuration, Divination, Illusion, and Necromancy from levels 0 through 9. In addition, the spellbook contains numerous lost rituals and strange notations concerning entities that drift between worlds through the darkness separating stars.

Any wizard studying from the Grimoire gains a +4 competence bonus on Spellcraft checks related to deciphering spells, identifying magical effects, or researching ancient arcane lore.

Spells copied from the Grimoire require only half the normal time and material cost to inscribe into another spellbook.

Once per day, the owner may prepare any one arcane spell from the Grimoire without having previously mastered or recorded the spell themselves, provided they possess an appropriate spell slot.

However, prolonged study comes with consequences.

Each week spent actively using the Grimoire requires a DC 22 Will save. Failure causes the reader to suffer one cumulative stage of Star-Drowned Reverie.

Star-Drowned Reverie

First Failure: The reader suffers vivid dreams of endless oceans beneath alien skies. They take a -2 penalty on saves against sleep deprivation and fear effects.

Second Failure: The reader develops an obsessive fascination with celestial patterns and dark water. They take a -2 penalty on Charisma-based skill checks unrelated to magic.

Third Failure: The reader begins hearing whispers while alone. Once per day, the DM may provide cryptic visions, hallucinations, or misleading omens.

Fourth Failure: The reader permanently loses 1 point of Wisdom but gains blindsense 10 ft. while standing in darkness.

Fifth Failure: The reader becomes permanently haunted by extradimensional entities glimpsed through the Grimoire’s pages. Each midnight, there is a cumulative 10% chance an incorporeal outsider manifests nearby seeking communion, possession, or violence.

A wish or miracle spell removes all stages of Star-Drowned Reverie.

Lore

Legends claim the Grimoire was not written by mortal hands but rather assembled from fragments salvaged from vessels that vanished at sea beneath unnatural constellations. Sailors whisper that the book washes ashore once every few centuries following storms in which the moon appears distorted and the tides run black.

According to fragmented records preserved within forgotten monasteries, the first confirmed owner of the Grimoire was an astrologer-magus named Vael Tormund, who vanished alongside his observatory after predicting "the inversion of heaven." Witnesses later described seeing the observatory partially submerged in the sky itself, hanging upside down among thunderclouds before disappearing forever.

Entire kingdoms have quietly collapsed after their royal magi gained possession of the Grimoire. Court historians often describe periods of brilliant magical advancement immediately followed by paranoia, disappearances, strange weather, and mass drownings far inland. In nearly every account, survivors mention hearing distant waves where no water existed.

The book itself appears impossible to permanently destroy. Attempts to burn it merely dampen the surrounding air. Attempts to tear its pages result in new pages appearing the following dawn. One archmage allegedly cast the tome into the heart of an active volcano, only for it to reappear three months later upon his bedside table, dripping seawater onto his floor.

Many scholars believe the Grimoire is less a book and more a doorway - a thinking aperture through which something vast observes mortal civilization with patient curiosity.

Construction

Requirements Craft Wondrous Item, creator must be able to cast 9th-level arcane spells, contact other plane, legend lore, nightmare, summon monster IX, permanency; Cost Impossible to calculate.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There are books that contain knowledge, and then there are books that contain hunger.

One must understand the distinction immediately, elsewise one mistakes predation for education. The Grimoire of the Drowned Stars does not teach in the manner that civilized minds understand teaching. It does not elevate. It does not nurture. Rather, it observes the reader with terrible patience, offering morsels of revelation precisely calibrated to encourage further descent. A fisherman lowers bait into black waters because he hopes to catch something. This tome lowers knowledge into the soul for very much the same reason.

I spent precisely eleven minutes in uninterrupted study of the Grimoire before I became aware of an utterly intolerable sensation - namely, the certainty that something had noticed me in return. Not metaphorically, mind you. Not philosophically. I refer to the dreadful and intimate certainty of reciprocal awareness. The pages shifted with the slow confidence of breathing lungs, and for one deeply regrettable moment I became convinced that the darkness between the stars was neither empty nor silent but instead populated by intelligences so old that human civilization resembles little more than condensation upon a window.

The most dangerous artifacts are rarely those which promise power openly. Such things can at least be recognized as temptations. No, the truly catastrophic relics are those which frame corruption as curiosity. Wizards are especially vulnerable creatures in this regard. Present a warrior with an abyss and he shall erect fortifications. Present a priest with an abyss and they shall name it evil. Present a wizard with an abyss, however, and they shall immediately begin constructing a staircase.

And yet… despite every instinct screaming against it, I confess the Grimoire possesses a terrible beauty.

Its pages carry the melancholy grandeur of storm-tossed cathedrals and drowned empires. One senses within it not malice alone, but distance. Vastness. The emotional texture of something too immense to comprehend humanity except as fleeting flickers of warmth upon an otherwise frozen shore. That realization unsettles me more profoundly than outright hatred ever could.

Should you discover this tome, I advise the following: wrap it in chains, lock it beneath stone, and dedicate trustworthy guardians to ensuring it remains unopened.

I also advise that you never, under any circumstances, read page ninety-three beneath moonlight.

I shall not elaborate further.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Inferno Shepherd’s Sling

Inferno Shepherd’s Sling


Aura
Strong evocation; CL 11th
Slot —; Price 54,000 gp; Weight 2 lbs.

DESCRIPTION

This weathered leather sling bears braided cords of blackened ramhide threaded through with tiny copper beads that remain perpetually warm to the touch. The firing pouch is reinforced with crimson dragonhide, and faint ash stains seem permanently embedded within its seams no matter how thoroughly it is cleaned. When swung, the sling emits a low whistling hum reminiscent of distant furnace winds, and sparks occasionally trail from the projectile even before release.

Any mundane bullet or stone loaded into the Inferno Shepherd’s Sling becomes infused with volatile elemental force. Ammunition fired from the sling is treated as magical for the purpose of overcoming damage reduction. Upon striking a target or solid surface, the projectile detonates in a roaring burst of flame identical to the effects of a fireball spell centered upon the point of impact.

The explosion deals 6d6 points of fire damage in a 20-foot-radius spread (Reflex DC 14 half). The projectile itself deals its normal sling damage in addition to the explosive effect. Creatures directly struck by the sling bullet suffer a –2 circumstance penalty on their Reflex save against the resulting explosion due to proximity to the blast center.

The sling may produce up to three explosive shots per day. Additional ammunition fired from the sling beyond this limit functions as ordinary magical sling ammunition without explosive properties. If the wielder possesses the sneak attack class feature, any creature damaged by a sneak attack delivered through the sling catches fire for 1d6 points of fire damage on the following round unless extinguished as a full-round action.

Once per day, the wielder may intentionally overcharge a single shot. Doing so increases the explosive effect to 10d6 fire damage and enlarges the radius to 30 feet, though the wielder must immediately succeed on a DC 16 Fortitude save or become deafened for 1d4 rounds from the concussive detonation.

LORE

Among caravan guards, marsh wardens, and goblin-hunters of the southern river territories, tales persist of solitary figures standing against overwhelming numbers armed with nothing more than a sling and impossible nerve. The Inferno Shepherd’s Sling is said to descend from those desperate traditions - not the weapons of conquering armies, but tools of survival wielded by individuals too poor to afford enchanted bows and too stubborn to flee. In villages where black powder was scarce and proper siege engines unimaginable luxuries, these slings became instruments of terrifying equalization.

The oldest surviving accounts describe a wandering shepherd-priest named Talveth Marr, who defended isolated hill communities during the Ashen Raids nearly two centuries ago. According to fragmented monastery records, Marr wandered from settlement to settlement carrying little beyond a wool cloak, a satchel of polished stones, and a sling that “cast the wrath of the heavens from a shepherd’s hand.” Witnesses described entire shield formations scattering after the first fiery detonation among their ranks. Whether Talveth truly created the first of these weapons or merely wielded one remains uncertain, though many modern examples still bear tiny, embossed shepherd hooks hidden within their leatherwork.

Curiously, the sling has earned an uneasy reputation among professional soldiers. Veterans often describe its explosions as emotionally unsettling in ways difficult to articulate. Arrows and swords possess a certain expected brutality, but the sight of a simple stone erupting into a battlefield-consuming inferno seems to violate some ancient instinct regarding what humble things ought to be capable of accomplishing. Military journals from several nations refer to such weapons as “peasant catastrophes” - inexpensive-looking instruments whose destructive capacity arrives psychologically unannounced.

CONSTRUCTION

Requirements Craft Magic Arms and Armor, fireball, creator must possess at least 5 ranks in Craft (leatherworking); Cost 27,000 gp, 2,160 XP, one flask of ash collected from the aftermath of a structure destroyed by magical fire.

Kelwyn’s Notes

There exists a peculiar horror in witnessing innocence become indistinguishable from devastation. One expects catastrophe to arrive clothed in iron, roaring from dragon throats, or descending beneath banners soaked in imperial arrogance. One does not expect annihilation to emerge from a shepherd’s tool. That, I suspect, is what lingers longest within the mind after observing this device employed in earnest - the terrible realization that civilization’s most fragile objects may, under the proper hand, become mechanisms of profound ruin.

I once observed a marsh-born youth defend an entire ferry crossing with one such sling while raiders attempted passage beneath heavy fog. The explosions themselves were dreadful enough, certainly, but what unsettled me most was the silence between them. A sling requires patience. Rhythm. Intimacy. One must load each stone by hand. There is no elegant detachment to the process. The wielder feels every shot leave their fingers personally, almost lovingly, before the world erupts into flame. The weapon does not encourage bloodlust so much as grim acceptance.

And yet, despite all of this, I cannot wholly condemn it. Humanity has forever crafted miracles from desperation. The sling was among the first weapons by which the weak defied the strong, and perhaps there is something tragically inevitable about its eventual evolution into this. A reminder, perhaps, that survival itself is often merely destruction wearing the mask of necessity.


The Sepulchral Testament

The Sepulchral Testament Aura Strong necromancy and enchantment; CL 15th Slot —; Price 92,000 gp; Weight 7 lbs. DESCRIPTION Bound in bl...