Seven of Rot

Seven of Rot lies cool and heavy in the palm, a playing-card sized rectangle of bone-dark card stock, its edges etched with tiny sigils of decay. The surface is slick with something oily and old, like rain on an oil-slicked stone itself. Seven pips twist across the face, each formed from thin, pale filaments that writhe when light catches them. At the center a beveled sigil, an old skull surrounded by thorned vines, seems to breathe faintly, as if it keeps a heartbeat after the body has gone. The card smells faintly of cellar mold and iron, of crowded markets after rain, of promises kept and broken. Folklore clings to it as if it were a tiny fever dream. The Seven of Rot is said to have been sewn into the robe of a necromancer who vanished into a tomb rumored to feed on memory. Some say the card is a seal, others a key; whichever tale you prefer, it hums with rot that travels through flesh and wood, binding luck to decay. In daylight, it looks inert; in candlelight, the sigil seems to sprout faint, pale fungi that vanish when you blink. Those who have handled it describe a chill that crawls up the wrist and a sense that time drips slower around it. In practice, the Seven of Rot is a prize for those who bargain with danger. It sits in your palm and asks for a story in return; when worn or carried, it lends a patient, creeping resonance to certain abilities that draw on corruption and fate. Some wielders report that it sharpens the touch of curses, while others claim it tethers stray plagues to a single, stubborn target. It does not feel like a weapon so much as a companion—one that intensifies shadows, nudging a trained hand toward decisive, necrotic precision. It is the kind of item that can tilt a tense moment in a corridor or bend a negotiation in a back room, if you have the will to listen for the whispering sigil. On a rain-wet morning I met a trader beneath the awning of Saddlebag Exchange, a place where roving packs drop their goods and load them into canvas crates as if they were old friends. He laid the Seven of Rot on a battered counter, letting the card catch strings of light that crawled along the sigil. We spoke of risk as if it were a coin, and how a single misstep could bind you to rot in a way that cannot be shed. He priced it with dusty arithmetic, a price he claimed reflected both danger and desire, not merely metal and ink. In the end, we traded: a handful of coins, a faded map, and a story I could not quite forget. The Seven of Rot went into my satchel with a weight that did not ease for days, a reminder that relics carry more than memory; they map what we become when the world asks for a price.

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Historic Price

42,500

Current Market Value

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Historic Market Value

4,250

Sales Per Day

0.1

Percent Change

-100%

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