William Kent's Twelve Guineas

Origin
William Saville-Kent's life (1845 - 1908) was marred by several unfortunate deaths. His mother died without reason, his half-brother was murdered by his sister, Kent himself was considered a suspect and his first wife died after three years of marriage. Never wanting to be considered poor he always kept twelve Guineas, British coins, on hand. A nervous tic of his was to play with one of the coins, rolling them back and forth across his knuckles. Towards the end of his life Kent started to see 'ghosts' of his loved ones which actually comforted him since he believed it proved there was an afterlife where he could see them again.

Effects
Each coin taps into the holder's subconscious to latch onto memories of deceased loved ones then projects them. Instead of imbued by fear it's imbued with hope and love of Kent's that he would see those that were taken from him too soon.