Four of Void
The Four of Void lies in your palm like a shard pulled from a moonlit well: a card of ebony that drinks light, with a subtle gloss that feels almost wet to the touch. Its surface is smooth as obsidian, yet it trembles at the edge as if a quiet wind whispers beneath the lacquer. Four tiny motes circle a quiet void in the center, and the edges are etched with a lattice of fractal veins that breathe when you tilt the card. Lore says it was forged in the first dark, bound by a sigil used by seers who studied the borderlands between sleep and wakefulness, a token from a long-vanished order that read futures in crosswinds. The card’s fourfold motif—four circles, four chances, four doors—hints at choices that feel already written, and the ink seems to fade and return depending on the light. I found it tucked inside a ruined chapel on a hillside road, under a bench of chipped marble where rainwater pooled like a small dark mirror. Moonlight spilled through a hole in the roof, catching the card’s surface and making the motes glow faintly—not lit, but remembered. When I pressed my thumb to the center, it hummed softly, a sensation like stepping through a door a moment before it opens. The Four of Void does not grant power by raw force; it invites you to read the zones around a decision: four futures, each with a thread of consequence. In other hands it becomes a temptation, bending luck toward a path that may unravel what you were trying to protect. On the road, I learned its test: you must bargain with the card and with yourself. The marketplace at Saddlebag Exchange—a corridor of stalls—begins to hum whenever a rumor of the card spreads. Traders speak softly about a price that can swing with belief in a guaranteed future. A merchant's ledger shows a line item: Four of Void, 65 gold, conditional upon the card's glow. The price skitters up when a rumor suggests a gate or a tower might open if the card is placed at its heart, and it sinks when the tale is a whisper. Some buyers barter with moon coins or compasses, anything that can help navigate a choice that refuses to be fixed. I watched a courier haggle with a sage, debating whether a single bold choice or a hundred small, careful steps would carry you to the same horizon. In the end, the Four of Void is not a weapon but a hinge: a thing that refuses to be merely used and instead asks you to decide what you want the world to become. It smooths the road you walk but insists you walk it with your eyes open, listening for the rhythm of possible outcomes as if the night itself kept time. If you can bear its weight, you carry a fragment of the larger story—the story of choices, chances, and hidden doors just beyond the next right move.
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Minimum Price
0
Historic Price
9,000
Current Market Value
0
Historic Market Value
900
Sales Per Day
0.1
Percent Change
-100%
Current Quantity
0
