Palace of the Sorcerer-Prince
Effect
With but a single use of this invocation, the theurge calls forth a lux-
uriantly-appointed tower or similar structure, one capable of housing
up to a hundred inhabitants in comfort. The palace is appointed
with dozens of conjured servitors, concubines, and laborers, albeit
none are capable of fighting. The tower is sealed against entry by any
save the theurge and their chosen guests, though siege weapons or
powerful magic can break through the walls and steel-hard windows
of tinted glass.
The tower naturally creates sufficient food, drink, and other common
necessities to serve a hundred guests indefinitely. If taken from the
tower, however, these viands crumble away in moments. So too the
servitors if they are forced to leave its walls; they know this and will
beg piteously to be spared such a death. Some theurges are said to
have fashioned favored servants bodies in which to truly exist.
The palace may be conjured anywhere there is sufficient relatively flat
ground to support it and may be dispelled at the caster’s whim. Any
foreign objects or persons left within the tower when it is dispelled
will appear on the ground where it once stood, though the caster’s
personal possessions may be left stored within whatever timeless
pocket realm the tower goes to when it is dispelled. A theurge may
have only one palace standing at any one time.
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