Son of the Reaper
✦ ☩ ✦ ☩ ✦
Korriban, Valley of Golg, Gate of Graush...
It felt like home.
For one born in a laboratory aboard Malsheem a place scarcely left until recently, just approaching this world held a familiarity that resonated to the deepest fibers of his being. The planet below wasn''t merely dead. Death was too simple a word for what Korriban had become over the ages. Death suggested conclusion. Korriban endured beyond conclusion, embalmed in dust, blood, tomb-stone, and memory. Its valleys didn't sleep. They waited. Its ruins didn't decay into peace. Instead, they silently listened. The black shape of the infiltrator descended through the red haze of the ancient world. The Nycthemeron was unlike anything ever seen before in the vastness of space, the very first in the newest line of the Koshûshuk-class Infiltrator, to shatter the limitations of what the galaxy considered a stealth ship to be. The result was something that defied comprehension by all known shipwrights, its creation wasn't announced to the world, it was silently unveiled by Hypernautics Staryards its models delivered to where the Kainate required them. But one such model was never destined for such a fate, it was created in secrecy, alone from its peers. The Shadow Mind staffed a separate team wholly dedicated to its creation, and upon its completion it was silently delivered as a gift to the Shadow Hand himself, it was christened Nycthemeron.
A vessel fit for his father. But one that was assigned to him at the request of his mother, if he was to be departing the safety net of Malsheem. They were nothing more than a ghost as the vessel departed hyperspace and sliced downward. It slipped through sensor shadows and thermal ghosts with ease, harsh defense networks wouldn't even register the vessels presence as the Valley of Golg opened beneath it like a wound carved into the world. The canyon stretched for miles, lined in ancient tombs and restored monuments, its depths starved of sunlight and filled with the long pressure of things once worshipped, feared, and buried with insufficient care. Vulcan Zambrano watched it all in complete silence, he stood in the cockpit with his hands clasped behind his back, the crimson glow of the Bloodpane interface panting his features in a faint arterial light. The glyphic overlays marked terrain, wind, mass, temperature, residual energy, and ritual geometries half-buried beneath the sand. Yet the machine's readings were the least honest thing before him. The Force told him more. It pressed against his skin with the intimate hostility of an old house recognizing an intruder who shared the family name.
Korriban knew Sith blood. It was undeniable in the feeling that flowed through him at seeing the ancestral homeworld of the Sith. They said he was carved in the vein of the Ancient Sith, his cells tethered to bloodlines connected with the very fabric of history itself. A part of him was thrilled at the prospect of the world, at feeling the sand beneath his feet, reaching out through the force to touch what it meant to be home. "Set us down beyond the southern ridge." Vulcan ordered. The pilot obeyed without question. The infiltrator settled among stone teeth and wind-cut black rock, lowering itself with such careful grace that no plume of dust betrayed it until the landing struts had already touched the ancient ground. The engines swiftly died and the ship became another shadow in the land of the dead. Only then did he move at last, stepping back into the vessel to halt the Imperial Crownguard. A full complement of twelve had been assigned as his protective retinue, it was excessive truly. He didn't need to be coddled but the orders had come directly from his father, and when the Shadow Hand spoke that was the end of any argument. But here? Here they were bound to follow his orders. A swift word halted any attempt to follow their Prince. But the Umbral Guard were another matter entirely. They were the shadows of his father and their orders were different; they weren't merely here as protection but also oversight. They were the only ones here who could refuse his commands, and when he'd demanded they remain? Their refusal came in the form of barely perceptible motion as they followed him down the ramp.
Besides, there was more to why he'd kept them at the ship. Vulcan understood what this place was. There were thresholds before which soldiers only became offerings, and the Gate of Graush was one such place. It wasn't a fortress to be carved open but a question. It would only answer to those who understood the language in which it had been asked. The wind struck him as he stepped onto Korriban's surface, dry and cold despite the ruddy light overhead. His black robes shifted around the plated structure beneath, the crimson lining flashing once before settling again into shadow. He knelt down into the crimson sand and slid off one of his gauntlets. He reached into the coarse sand and pulled up a handful. It was colder than he expected it to be, so cold in fact it almost felt like what he expected snow to feel like. He inhaled its scent drawing in thousands of generations of blood, war, and death. There was a familiarity to it, as he allowed the rest of the world to meet him, allow its grit to scrape against his boots. He allowed the Force to coil around the old Sith blood in his veins and test its flavor. There was recognition there but also contempt, for Korriban would suffer not the weak to live almost as if it had yet to test its newest child to see which column it belonged into. Vulcan almost smiled, the faintest gesture tugged at the corners of his face.
"Good."
The path into the Valley of Golg narrowed as it descended, forcing all who entered to surrender the comfort of distance. The walls rose higher with each step, their stone flanks marked by ancient scars, weathered runes, and the broken remains of reliefs that had once proclaimed victories so old that only the dark side remembered them clearly. He passed shattered statues of Sith Lords whose faces had been ruined by time or desecration, their crowns split, their eyes carved out, their hands raised in commands no living empire obeyed. Vulcan didn't pity them. After all, power that couldn't preserve itself deserved to become a warning. Behind him roughly ten paces walked the Shadowsworn. They were his shadows as he took in the beauty of a world belonging to the dead, moving under its dying star drawn ever forwards.
✦ ☩ ✦ ☩ ✦
Last edited: