Monday, August 4, 2025

RPG-a-Day Month #4 -- Message

From the Dragon's Treasure Vaults: 
The Message Bottles


The Message Bottles are four identical empty wine bottles with corks, appearing like little more than trash (or, if you're environmentally conscious, ready for the recycling bin), but if viewed through a detect magic spell, they radiate strong Conjuration magic with an undertone of Transmutation magic). 
   If attempts are made to break one of them, they fail. In fact, the bottles are so sturdy they can be used as clubs or to keep doors open by jamming them between the door and frame.

   Functions: If the possessor of one bottle makes a Willpower save (DC9) as a standard action to clearly picture a known possessor of another of the bottles in their mind, he or she can uncork the bottle and speak into it to transmit a message; the message is transmitted the moment the character recorks the bottle. The other person will hear it when they uncork their bottle. The message can be up to 1 minute long. Another message cannot be sent until the first one is received/heard. The bottle can be used up to six times in a day.
   If the character fails the Willpower save, he or she realizes that the mental focus just isn't there at the moment. The character can try again the following round, but even the failed attempt counts as one of the daily uses.
   If the bottle is no longer in the possession of the person the message is for, it is still sent and heard, but no reply can be made unless the new possessor knows someone else who has one of the four bottles.
   The possessor of any one of the bottles can unerringly teleport or gate to the other possessor and bottle's location. (If the character doesn't know who has one of the bottles, the spell takes him or her to the nearest one, aside from the one he or she already possesses.)
   If a Message Bottle is used as a weapon, it deals 1d3+Strength bonus in blunt damage.


History of the Message Bottles: In 1,204 BC, Brigid the Red (an ancient dragon who is also known as the Christmas Dragon) was in Egypt, establishing a new residence/lair when she noticed humans had made another advancement in glass-creation techniques: They were now making containers that were semi-viable for transporting and liquid and other substances. Shortly afterwards, she created her first iteration of the Message Bottles--a matched pair of which she gave one to the Pharoh so he could reach her whenever a situation dire enogh to warrent her assistance arose. 
   Nearly 1,100 years later, she observed that the Romans had perfected a method to make glass bottles, and she returned to her old idea of the Message Bottles. This time, she created four. She kept one and gave the others to her favorite humans. When they passed, she reclaimed the bottles and gave them to others.
   As glassblowing techniques improved and bottle-shapes changed, Brigid updated her creation with a new version, destroying all but one of the older sets. Even though this made the item useless, she kept it for nostalgia purposes. Her reason for the updates was to make the Message Bottles look as uninteresting as possible, so they would not be stolen from the person she gave them, nor even be suspected to be magical items. Her latest upgrade took place in 1846, in France, and those are still in use today.
   Since 1862, every president of the United States of America has had one of the bottles while in office. The actress Bessie Love (who secretly fought evil and collected magical artifacts both during and after her film career came to a close, and whom Brigid considered a good friend) also had one of the bottles, from 1921 until her death in 1986.

For more about Brigid, see posts here at this blog. If you want to support our efforts, buy a copy of Gifts from the Christmas Dragon, which describes 18 more of Brigid's magical creations, as well as a short story.

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Here's a song that helped inspire today's post. Enjoy!

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