Five of Rot

Five of Rot rests on the table, a card-sized slab of parchment that seems to hold dampness in its fibers even when the room is dry. The surface is slick with a thin sheen, like a leaf kissed by morning dew, and the ink—an oil-dark green—bites softly at the light, giving off a sickly sheen as if the blacksmith’s forge were reflected in a swamp. Its border is a ragged lace of frayed fibers, all mossy green and brown, as if the card has survived more winters than any living thing should. In the center, five delicate stars orbit a sigil that looks half forgotten and half deliberate: a circle of rot-wreaths around a hollow eye that seems to stare back with a patient, unsettling calm. The texture is slightly pliable, almost velvet under the fingertips, yet it holds a stubborn rigidity that makes you think this isn’t a mere trinket but a kept memory pressed into pulp and leather. Lore-wise, Five of Rot is no stray curiosity. It is one piece of a larger deck whispered about in old taverns, a set said to have emerged from a monastery garden where rows of withered and blessed plants grew side by side. The card is linked to the “Deck of Decay,” a relic used by peddlers, trench-garden mystics, and caravan scribes to document the life cycles of rot and renewal. They say the Five foretells a threshold: the moment when putrescence and promise intersect, when a field that has fed a village for generations becomes a test of whether the people will let rot become a flood or a seed. Those who hold the Five of Rot claim it is less a weapon than a key—an invitation to witness a transformation, to trade a harvest’s fading scent for the chance of a new beginning. In practical terms, the card functions as both talisman and tool in the world’s fabric of play and purpose. Characters who carry it are more attuned to decay, able to sense the health of crops, crews, and covens with a single glance. Used in rituals or sold to those who bargain with the unseen, the Five of Rot can sharpen the edge of a caravan’s memory: it records losses, but it also marks a path to recover what was thought lost. In quests, turning the card’s sigil can release a controlled wave of rot that reveals hidden routes, pockets of life within a blighted zone, or the exact moment when a disease’s grip will loosen if a cure is offered in time. It is a paradox wrapped in papyrus—a reminder that every decay carries a memory of what once thrived. The market for Five of Rot is as unpredictable as any storm on the horizon. A seasoned trader might offer a pristine copy for more than a month’s wages, while a desperate buyer could trade almost anything—tools, livestock, even a debt—just to glimpse what lies beyond the rot. It’s in this flux that Saddlebag Exchange becomes part of the story: a roving bazaar where pack mules can be seen at dawn and dusk, where merchants debate prices by candlelight, and where the Five of Rot often changes hands with the soft clack of coins and the muffled rustle of cloth. On a recent stop, a vendor there priced a near-mint Five of Rot at a comfortable, seven-silver tone, but in the feverish days that followed the harvest, the market hummed higher, every whisper of rot traded for a little more faith in tomorrow. So the Five of Rot sits still, at once a relic and a doorway, waiting for someone patient enough to listen to its quiet, green heartbeat and brave enough to step through when the time comes.

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Minimum Price

133

Historic Price

53.88

Current Market Value

186,466

Historic Market Value

75,539

Sales Per Day

1,402

Percent Change

146.84%

Current Quantity

541

Average Quantity

1,135

Avg v Current Quantity

47.67%

Five of Rot : Auctionhouse Listings

Price
Quantity
49,997.057
5,0002
1,890.01103
500.881
25028
24914
248.9916
247.996
247.9815
223.197
218.7311
218.726
2183
217.9714
217.965
215.967
21016
200.91
20012
199.993
1506
142.538
142.496
141.7817
140.78105
140.53
140.3611
135.368
13551
134.992
1347
13310