Beyond the Oregon Trail - Spring Series
Mar 09 - May 03, 2026
Current Holder
Eric Vandereems
Blighted Writ
One Who Looked at Elimination and Laughed
The Blight Never Fully Leaves
Aspects refreshed Mar 29, 2026
The Blighted Writ originated in the earliest days of the Oregon Trail when the first wagon train chroniclers realized they needed formal documentation of who had fallen to dysentery, cholera, and despair - a grim registry not of the dead, but of the nearly-dead, those who had been touched by the frontier's darkest offerings and somehow remained breathing. The writ was never meant as a blessing but as acknowledgment: here is one who looked into the abyss of elimination and did not flinch.
The Blighted Writ manifests as a scorched parchment that never fully burns, its edges blackened as if held too close to a dying campfire. The ink appears to have been applied in haste - names listed in order of fall, some crossed out, some merely faded in a way that suggests the sickness has already begun its work. The document carries the faint smell of rendered fat and woodsmoke, and when held to light, faint watermark patterns resembling crossed-out supply tallies become visible. It cannot be destroyed, only transferred; the writ chooses its bearers rather than being claimed.
The Blighted Writ serves as both warning and protection within the wagon column - those bearing it are recognized by other travelers as survivors of the worst conditions the frontier can offer. It marks travelers who have navigated the crucible of B Pool competition where every round threatens to scatter the unprepared to the wind, transforming catastrophe into credential. The writ reminds all who see it that this traveler has already paid the price in suffering and emerged with proof written in the only language the wilderness understands: survival against overwhelming odds.
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