Sealing Wax of Arcane Surety
Faint abjuration and divination; CL 5th
Price: 1,250 gp (per stick)
Weight: —
This deep crimson wax is warm to the touch and faintly aromatic, carrying hints of myrrh and ozone. When melted and applied to a document, container, or portal seam, it forms a seal that subtly shimmers when viewed under magical sight.
When a stick of sealing wax of arcane surety is used to seal an object, it creates a magical sigil impressed with the user’s intent. The wax hardens instantly and bonds with unusual resilience.
The seal provides the following benefits:
Tamper Awareness: If the sealed object is opened, broken, or otherwise disturbed, the original sealer instantly becomes aware of the event, as if affected by a mental alarm spell. This functions regardless of distance, so long as both are on the same plane.
Forgery Resistance: Any attempt to duplicate or alter the seal (mundane or magical) requires a successful Forgery check (DC 25) or Use Magic Device check (DC 25). Failure by 5 or more triggers a faint audible chime audible within 10 feet and renders the attempt obvious.
Arcane Integrity: The seal grants a +5 circumstance
bonus on saving throws against spells such as knock, arcane lock, or similar
effects used specifically to bypass or open the sealed object.
Mark of Authorship: A creature inspecting the seal with detect magic or a successful Spellcraft check (DC 20) can identify the aura signature of the individual who applied it, though not their identity unless previously familiar with their magical “signature.”
Each stick contains enough wax for 2d4+1 separate seals.
A seal remains effective for 7 days, after which the magic fades, leaving behind only mundane wax.
Construction Requirements:
Craft Wondrous Item, alarm, arcane lock, detect magic
Cost to Create: 625 gp, 50 XP, 2 days
Lore
Originally developed by meticulous gnomish scriveners and later adopted by royal couriers and paranoid archmages alike, sealing wax of arcane surety is prized wherever trust is scarce and secrets are plentiful. Dwarven guilds, in particular, favor it for marking contracts and sealing vault ledgers, where even the suspicion of tampering can spark feuds that last generations.














