Six of Rot

Six of Rot lies on the alder table, a slender card the color of ash and damp granite, its surface glistening as though it caught a shard of mildew’s moonlight. The edges curl like dried leaves, and a faint, sour scent threads up from the paper—musty, almost antiseptic, with a tang of sour cider left too long in a wooden tub. In the candlelight the six-pointed sigil carved into its center seems to breathe, each point a tiny wound in a velvet black, as if the rot itself were pressing outward through the ink. The back bears a wheel of runes, half-scraped by time, each rune a whisper of decay that stabilizes only when the card is held straight and true. When you flip it, the six of rot reads you as much as you read it: a quiet invitation to walk through doors you did not know existed, a map inked in mold and memory. Lore insists the card came from a time when rot was not merely a blight but a choice—a pact with a hidden order that believed decay could be stewarded, shaped, and traded like any other force of power. Those who have spoken to old cartographers and gatekeepers swear the Six of Rot is a bridge between life and the threshold of oblivion, a talisman that whispers of thresholds in towns gnawed by famine, in caverns where fungus hums like a crowded hearth. In the world’s many hands it has become something more practical too: a key to set decay upon a plan, a pressure point that bends battles and bargains toward a grim-yet-pure calculus. Hold it and you feel your own pulse slow just enough to hear the world’s damp breath, as if the card grants you permission to see what rot reveals when it is kept in check. Its uses weave into the fabric of every expedition. In skirmishes the Six of Rot can be activated to draw rot into the field, a creeping aura that gnaws at an enemy’s defenses while feeding a reserve of vitality back into the bearer’s own—not a cure, exactly, but a negotiation with the hereafter that yields leverage when the next blow lands. It is not a flashy relic, but a patient one: it turns stalemate into a stepping stone, a single card turning a corridor into a route. Traders tell stories of the card showing up in a caravan’s cargo, of healers and scouts bargaining in hushed tones to claim it before the rot slips into the soil and vanishes again. I walk from the river’s edge to the Saddlebag Exchange as dusk folds into night, where tarred banners snap and the lanterns glitter like coins spilled across a floor. The Six of Rot is the star at one stall, its price whispered in a chorus of cautious laughter. Here the creaturely value of decay meets the currency of barter—sixteen silver at the ordinary stall, sometimes a shared talisman or a bundle of dried herbs that promise quick relief to a fevered fugitive, sometimes a bargain cut to twelve—depending on whether the sigils glow with a dim, cooperative light. The merchant slides the card over with care, as if handing a map that could trap or liberate a world, and I am reminded that every chapter in this tale ends where another begins: with rot, with resilience, with the quiet currency of trust traded in the saddlebag’s well-worn pockets.

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14,250

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Historic Market Value

1,425

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