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.






