Wand of the First Wall
Aura Moderate abjuration and conjuration; CL 9th
Slot —; Price 32,500 gp; Weight 1 lb.
DESCRIPTION
This slender wand is carved from a single piece of pale gray stone known as heart-basalt, a magically treated volcanic stone renowned for its remarkable strength and surprisingly light weight. Delicate bands of silver run through the stone in the form of interlocking bricks and archways, while the handle bears a subtle rainbow-hued sheen visible only when struck by direct light.
The wand allows its wielder to invoke either of the following effects:
Shield at will, as the spell (caster level 9th).
Wall of Stone 3/day, as the spell (caster level 9th).
Activating either power is a standard action that does not provoke attacks of opportunity. The wielder chooses which effect to invoke each time the wand is activated.
The wand is considered a masterwork club if used as an improvised melee weapon, though such treatment is generally regarded as disrespectful by those familiar with its history.
LORE
Few magical objects embody the principle of steadfast resistance as completely as the Wand of the First Wall. According to surviving accounts, the original example was commissioned not to celebrate a victory, but to commemorate a refusal. Its creators believed that civilization advances not merely through great heroes and kings, but through ordinary people who decide that a particular line shall not be crossed.
The wand's unusual heart-basalt is traditionally quarried from stone formations that have survived centuries of flood, storm, and erosion. Artisans prize the material because it possesses an almost paradoxical nature - lighter than its appearance suggests, yet capable of enduring tremendous punishment without cracking. Enchanters view this characteristic as symbolic of communities that endure hostility not through brute force alone, but through resilience, solidarity, and persistence.
Many owners speak of the wand's dual powers as representing two forms of defense. The shield protects the individual, creating a barrier around a single person facing immediate danger. The wall of stone protects the collective, creating shelter and boundaries that allow others to stand together. For this reason the wand is often presented as a memorial piece, a civic treasure, or a ceremonial gift honoring those who stood firm when retreat would have been easier.
CONSTRUCTION
Requirements Craft Wand, shield, wall of stone; Cost 16,250 gp, 1,300 XP
Special Ingredient: A pound of heart-basalt, a magically treated volcanic stone blessed during a public ceremony dedicated to remembrance, perseverance, and communal protection. The stone must be incorporated as a single unbroken piece forming the entire body of the wand.
Kelwyn's Notes
There exists a peculiar tendency among historians to remember victories while forgetting refusals. Triumphs are dramatic things. They produce banners, monuments, speeches, and songs. Refusals, by contrast, are often small, awkward moments in which frightened people discover that they are no longer willing to move. The Wand of the First Wall concerns itself not with conquest but with that singular instant when endurance hardens into principle. One does not look upon it and think of armies. One thinks of doorways. One thinks of thresholds. One thinks of the quiet and terrifying realization that retreat is no longer an acceptable answer.
The symbolism of its two enchantments is almost painfully elegant. A shield is intimate. It surrounds a single individual and says, "You may strike if you wish, but I shall remain." A wall of stone is communal. It rises not around a person but before a people, transforming vulnerability into shelter. Together they form a philosophy rather than a mere magical utility. The wand suggests that survival begins with protecting oneself, but civilization begins when one uses that same strength to protect others. That distinction is the difference between endurance and legacy.
Its construction from heart-basalt is likewise fitting. The strongest things in existence are not always the heaviest. Human beings have spent centuries confusing weight with strength, noise with conviction, and intimidation with courage. Yet communities, friendships, families, and identities often survive not because they are immovable mountains, but because they bend without breaking. The stone's paradoxical nature - light enough to carry, strong enough to endure - mirrors the strange resilience of people who have been told repeatedly that they should not exist and yet continue existing anyway.
I find myself particularly drawn to the imagery of walls in this context. Walls are morally neutral structures. They can imprison, exclude, divide, and isolate. Yet they can also shelter, defend, preserve, and protect. What matters is not the stone but the purpose behind its placement. A wall raised to deny another's humanity becomes a monument to fear. A wall raised to shield the vulnerable becomes an act of stewardship. The Wand of the First Wall understands this distinction with uncommon clarity.
Perhaps that is why the object feels less like a weapon than a memorial. It does not celebrate violence, nor does it pretend that danger does not exist. Instead it commemorates a truth that civilizations repeatedly forget and are repeatedly forced to relearn: every liberty enjoyed today rests upon countless moments in which ordinary people decided that they had been pushed quite far enough. The world is littered with monuments to kings and conquerors. Far fewer objects honor those who simply stood their ground. I suspect those are the people most worthy of remembrance. Their victories often began with nothing more glamorous than refusing to step aside.

No comments:
Post a Comment