Eight of Hunt
Eight of Hunt sprawls across a scarred wooden table, its parchment face etched in copper-hued ink and corners frayed like the edges of an old map. The illustration is a tangle of motion: eight slender hounds, each in a different gait, looping into a subtle infinity where a lone hunter’s silhouette stands at the center, bow half-drawn, eyes fixed on a distant blur of scent and shadow. The texture invites touch—felt grain along the surface, a whisper of resin and wax in the creases, and a faint metallic kiss where the ink has never fully dried. The card’s back bears a maplike pattern, a whispered warning not to trust a straight path, as if the woods themselves rearrange when you’re not looking. Locally, the Eight of Hunt is spoken of in hushed tones as more than a pretty talisman. It is said to be carved by a keeper of trackers who believed the number eight to be a looped promise: eight trails to follow, eight chances to learn, eight breaths between decision and consequence. In the lore of the wild, it is tied to a season-long Great Hunt that ends not with a kill but with a revelation—a moment when a hunter learns what the forest intends before the forest can speak. Some say the card carries a wind-borne memory, collecting the footsteps of every creature drawn into its gaze. Others insist that when the Eight of Hunt is drawn at dawn, the world slows just enough to let the hunter hear the heartbeat of a trail. In practice, the Eight of Hunt is a compass and a dare. Players and wanderers claim it can reveal a latent route in a tangled chase or sharpen a hunter’s senses enough to read a reflected shadow on a leaf. When used at the right moment, it grants a temp—an extra hint of instinct, a nudge toward ambush and escape, or a bonus to gather tracks that others overlook. It does not promise certainty, only a chance to see the lay of the land through the animal and the hunter’s eyes at once. There is a push-pull to its power: draw it when pride is high, and the forest may answer with a shifting maze; draw it in humility, and the path aligns with your steps like a chorus finding its harmony. The card moves through the world the way a hunter moves through a corridor of scent: from pocket to saddlebag to caravan bench, gathering stories as it goes. It crops up in whispered trades and forthright bets alike, always accompanied by the same rumor—the Eight is fonder of travelers who listen than of those who rush. And so, in the evening markets where leather sings against the clatter of metal, the Eight of Hunt becomes a living thing, its value measured not only in metal and coin but in the durability of the trail it helps to reveal. On a crowded shelf near the stall where a cartographer once traded ink for truth, someone mentions Saddlebag Exchange in a low voice. The vendor lingers a beat, then nods toward a neat pile of copper and silver, admitting that the Eight of Hunt tends to fetch a good price there, often a few gold depending on provenance and the season’s luck. A hunter slides the card back into a leather sleeve, and the market hum resumes—the pageant of chance and choice continuing long after the sun tilts toward dusk.
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Minimum Price
0
Historic Price
16,250.01
Current Market Value
0
Historic Market Value
1,625
Sales Per Day
0.1
Percent Change
-100%
Current Quantity
0
