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Private Shadows of the Roar

“Let evil fear me. Innocent know they're safe"
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A Return to the Shadows
Kashyyyk
Outside Shadow Temple ruins




The air was thick with ash and silence.

Not the silence of peace, but the silence of aftermath. The kind that settles when all the screaming has stopped, when the fires have long since burned out but the scars remain etched into the bark of a world too proud to forget.

Kashyyyk groaned beneath him. Even after all this time, it hadn't truly healed.

Perched on a moss-draped beam high above the forest floor, Connel Vanagor sat with one leg draped over the edge, the other bent with his forearm resting across it. Below him, the skeletal remains of the Shadow Temple jutted out from the surrounding foliage like the bones of a forgotten colossus. Thick vines had overtaken the shattered walls. What hadn’t been incinerated had been torn apart. Trees that once served as guardians now leaned as if mourning.

He adjusted the straps of his mask, the familiar weight grounding him. The hum of his short lightsaber — deactivated but ever-present across the small of his back — was a silent reminder:

This place remembers pain. So do I.

Caltin had asked him to come. Not as an order, but as a favor — something older than duty.

Tell me if it can live again," the elder Vanagor had said. "Tell me if the Wookiees have something to come back to. If the Shadow Temple can be reborn. If you think… the Force still breathes here.

That last part lingered.

He had felt it the moment he landed. Faint, fragmented impressions in the Force — old echoes clinging to the roots like ghosts. Screams. Roars. The battle cries of Mandalorian Neo-Crusaders, the defiant bellows of Wookiee defenders. Jedi Shadows overwhelmed in their own sanctum. The crash of towers falling. The crackle of flame devouring wood and wisdom alike.

Connel stood, boots settling silently on the mossy beam. He reached out, palm brushing the air as if parting unseen curtains.

There was something here.

Not just pain — not just death — but defiance. Resilience. The kind that lived in the Wroshyr trees and the bones of Jedi who gave everything. The kind that refused to forget.

He leapt from the beam. The drop was far, but he didn’t fall — he descended, slowing himself just enough with the Force to land amid the broken tiles of what had once been a meditation hall. His boots crunched against glassy remnants of a shattered kyber matrix. He bent down, brushing away soot, revealing faint carvings beneath: the circular emblem of the Shadow Temple, half-burned but intact.

I don’t think you ever really left, he murmured.

The wind howled softly, as if answering. From the canopy above, a trio of katarns scattered, their yellow eyes watching from a distance. The jungle was reclaiming what war had stolen, in its own time.

Connel keyed his comm.

Master Vanagor, he said quietly, there’s… potential here. It’s buried deep, but it’s not gone. The forest has grown newly, but still listens. The stone remembers the names. And the Wookiees… if they knew someone was willing to stand watch with them again… they might come home.

A long pause. He lowered the comm.

He walked deeper into the ruins. Beneath the wreckage, beneath the moss and time, was a foundation worth rebuilding. The kind of place that taught not just how to strike from the shadows, but how to protect them.

And maybe, just maybe, it was time the shadows struck back.

The floor creaked beneath his steps, old durasteel supports groaning in protest beneath layers of growth. Each corridor he passed was a memory — meditation alcoves swallowed by roots, training chambers littered with fragments of remote droids long gone cold. Yet the silence here felt... different now.

Not haunted.

Expectant.

Then he felt it — not through the Force, but the way a hunter senses being watched.

Connel stopped beneath a twisted archway, one hand resting casually near the hilt on the back of his belt. He didn’t draw it. He didn’t need to.

A low, curious rumble echoed from the trees. Not aggressive. Not startled.

Familiar.

From a shadowed ledge, halfway up a gnarled Wroshyr trunk, a massive figure emerged — tall even by Wookiee standards, with fur streaked gray and brown, woven with strips of ash-colored cloth and beads carved from reclaimed wood. A well-maintained bowcaster hung at his back, but it remained untouched.

The Wookiee dropped down with practiced ease, landing a few meters away. His breath was steady. His eyes wide. And then…

A deep, resonant bark of recognition.

Connel blinked — then allowed the smallest grin to tug at the corner of his mouth. “Rurraak?”

The Wookiee stepped forward, letting out a softer string of growls and a surprised bark that ended in a chuffing laugh. He thumped a massive fist over his heart, then gently clasped Connel’s arm.

Yeah, Connel said, clasping back with respect. It’s been a while.

Rurraak had been one of the young warriors assigned to patrol near the temple’s outer perimeter in the years before the siege. Too young to fight when the Neo-Crusaders came, too stubborn to leave after they did. Most thought he had fallen in the fires or fled with the last of the resistance.

Clearly, they were wrong.

The Wookiee stepped back and looked around them, issuing a low, mournful rumble.

It still stands, Connel said, gesturing to the wreckage. Sort of.

Rurraak responded with a series of short barks and a wave of his hand. 'The forest will help. The trees remember who bled here. The roots know the names.'

Connel tilted his head, letting the Wookiee’s meaning soak in. He reached down, brushing his fingers against the bark curling over the edge of a ruined pillar.

There’s still power here, he murmured. Still something to build on.

Rurraak gave a strong nod, then tapped his chest. 'I stayed. Others scattered. But not all are gone. If they know Jedi walk here again...'

They’ll return, Connel finished quietly. They just need a reason.

The two stood in the center of the ruins, one a Jedi Shadow, the other a guardian of memory. And for the first time in years, the Shadow Temple didn't feel abandoned.

It felt watched over.

Rurraak crouched beside an overgrown comm panel embedded in the base of a tree-wrapped support column. His massive claws pried back a thick knot of vine, revealing the panel’s rusted but mostly intact interface beneath.

He looked to Connel with a hopeful grunt.

Power’s dead, Connel muttered, already kneeling to inspect it. But the crystal relay node… it’s intact. And if this was part of the temple's ancient signaling array, it might still reach the old forest beacons.

Rurraak grumbled affirmatively, tapping a sigil etched beside the interface — a circular emblem half-covered in soot. Beneath the grime, Connel recognized it. Not Jedi. Wookiee.

A stylized heart with branching roots, cradled in the curve of a mighty bowcaster.

Shyyyo’s Heart, Connel said aloud, his voice almost reverent.

They were the forest’s sentinels. Not just warriors, but caretakers. When the Shadow Temple had first been founded, it was this clan that had watched its perimeter, guided its allies through the labyrinthine undergrowth, and offered Wookiee traditions in harmony with Jedi teachings. Fiercely loyal, but devastated in the Crusader siege along with much of the planet. Some believed their line broken.

Apparently, not all.

Connel reached for a small power cell clipped to his belt — a standard-issue Alliance auxiliary. He wedged it into the socket beneath the panel and sparked the connection with a pulse from the Force.

The interface hummed, dim and flickering, but alive.

Rurraak stepped back, letting Connel work.

The Jedi keyed in a transmission signal, aligning it with coordinates he hoped the Shyyyo’s Heart had once used. It was old tech. It would take time.

But he knew the Wookiees understood patience.

Instead of a voice message, he triggered a visual beacon: the crest of the Jedi Order merging with the sigil of the Shadow Temple… then entwining with the heart-root symbol of Shyyyo’s Heart.

Simple.

Clear.

A call home.

They’ll see it, Connel said quietly, stepping back. If they’re out there, they’ll know someone’s come to stand with them again.

Rurraak gave a low, rumbling howl — not mournful, but proud. A war cry, tempered with hope. Then he reached into a pouch at his belt and produced something unexpected: a folded piece of dark fabric. He handed it to Connel.

Unfolded, it was a tattered banner. Midnight blue, trimmed in silver. The old crest of the Shadow Temple, overlaid with the Shyyyo’s sigil in crude but loving embroidery.

Rurraak barked gently. "Hang it high."

Connel looked up — then Force-leapt to a jutting spire of stone near the temple’s central courtyard. There, he tied the banner to a broken mast once used to hang training flags. The cloth unfurled slowly in the jungle breeze, rippling above the ruin like a promise.

I’ll stay here a few more days, Connel said as he dropped back beside Rurraak. If they come, they’ll need to know we’re not ghosts.

The Wookiee nodded deeply, placing a hand to his chest.

“We are the roots. You are the flame,” he growled in Shyriiwook. “We remember.”

And the forest, for the first time in years, began to stir.

The jungle canopy swayed with the rhythm of Kashyyyk’s breath — heavy with mist, yet strangely alive. Crickets and chirps had returned to the edge of the ruins. Not fully, not as before… but enough to know change was on the wind.

Rurraak sat by the relit fire pit of the old courtyard, stringing a fresh bowstring with reverent care. Connel stood watch nearby, arms folded, senses attuned.

Then — like ghosts from the trees — they came.

No fanfare. No stomping. Just presence.

The first Wookiees appeared at the treeline, their pelts streaked with forest grime and war paint. Quiet, proud, and watchful. More stepped out after — a dozen strong. Warriors bearing bone-carved blades, ceremonial armor woven from Wroshyr bark and songsteel, some carrying cubs in wraps, some missing limbs but walking tall.

Connel stepped forward, but did not speak.

He let them see him. Let the banner above flutter in their line of sight. Let the silence offer respect.

And then… a deep, resonant growl.

One of the elders stepped forward, taller than the rest, her fur pale with age but braided in intricate rows, bone beads clacking softly with each step. Her amber eyes locked onto Connel, wide with disbelief. She approached slowly, almost cautiously — as if afraid her memory was playing tricks on her.

Then she spoke, voice low and warm, thick with emotion.

“Vanagor.”

Connel tilted his head. You know my name?

A long breath. A nod.

She stepped closer, slowly lifting a hand to his face, hovering near the edge of his mask — then stopping herself, respectful.

“I held you,” she said in heavily accented Basic. “When you were no bigger than a branch-kit. I marked over your father’s eyes before battle. Your mother sang with me beneath the Great Shell when peace still lived here.”

Connel’s breath caught. His voice came quiet, unsure.

What’s your name?

The elder placed her hand over her heart and roared softly — the kind of growl that carried years in its weight.

“Grawwarri Daughter of Llabruf of the Shyyyo’s Heart. Healer. Warden. Witness.” She paused, then touched his chest with two fingers. “And I am proud to see you return here, alive. Whole. And with his eyes.”

A stillness passed through the campfire circle.

Connel removed his mask slowly — not as a gesture of vulnerability, but of honor.

You remember him?

“Caltin Vanagor did not pass through this world unnoticed,” she replied with a deep rumble. “He did not need to speak Wookiee to be kin.”

The younger Wookiees stirred — some in awe, some in recognition of the old tales. One leaned toward Grawwarri and whispered. She nodded and turned to Connel once more.

“They will come,” she said. “More than you know. The jungle spoke of our return long before your signal. The roots whispered your arrival.”

Then we rebuild, Connel said.

“No,” she corrected gently. “We revive. That which is planted in pain… can still bloom in purpose.”

He looked around at the gathering warriors, at Rurraak standing tall, at the banner still waving above the broken stones.

And for the first time since arriving, Connel felt it clearly.

Not just echoes of the past.

But the heartbeat of something new.



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“Let evil fear me. Innocent know they're safe"
VVVDHjr.png
A Return to the Shadows
Kashyyyk
Outside Shadow Temple ruins




“Shadows of the Roar”

Three days later(but just before @Katarine Ryiah’s approach) — the outskirts of old Kachirho

The wind shifted.cWhere once there had been ruin and rot, now smoke from sacred herbs curled into the sky, thick with meaning, drifting upward past the colossal branches of ancient Wroshyr trees. The plaza at the foot of what was once the Shadow Temple's ruins entrance— hidden once within the scaffolding of Kachirho’s lower canopy — had come alive again.

Not fully.

Not yet.

But enough.

Grawwarri stood atop a circular stone dais, vines braided around her limbs, barkplate regalia resting on her shoulders like ancient armor. Her voice, low and melodic, rumbled through the clearing, matched by the rhythmic drums of her kin. Each beat echoed through the tree trunks. Each chant called not only to the Wookiees gathered... but to the Force itself.

Connel stood beside her, stripped of his armor and mask for this moment. A single thread of bark-twine bound his wrist — a symbol of kinship worn by all those the clan accepted as “honored among the roots.” His lightsabers lay on the stone before him, deactivated, their hilts gently resting across a patch of rich soil.

Old giving way to new.

Grawwarri finished the chant and lifted her arm. Around them, dozens of Wookiees — warriors, craftsmen, elders, children — raised their hands to the sky. The drumming ceased.

“In the name of what was lost,” she roared in Shyriiwook.
“In the memory of what fought to remain,” came the call.
“In the hope of what may yet grow.”
“In the strength of those who returned.

Connel stepped forward and knelt, touching the soil with his bare palm.

In the Light, he whispered, and in the Shadow — may this place be whole again.

A sudden rustle in the trees brought every head turning, and then the first ship broke the canopy. It was nothing grand. An old freighter repurposed for refugee runs — rust-streaked and whining from overuse. But it bore a symbol painted in faded ochre across its flank: the sigil of Shyyyo’s Heart.

Then came another.

And another.

From the northern ridges, from orbiting transports, even from dropships once used in the Clone Wars — Wookiees returned.

Hundreds.

Families broken apart by war stepped onto the soil their ancestors once called sacred. Eyes wide. Some in tears. Others lifting their cubs high so they could see the great branches that had been whispered about their whole lives. They were from the Veridian Jedi Temple so graciously allowed to reside there, to live, not in fear or in shame, but in family.

Grawwarri did not weep.

But she placed her clawed hand on Connel’s shoulder as the ships unloaded, her voice a hush.

“You did not just light a beacon. You lit hope.

It wasn’t me. If my father were here, he would deny responsibility as well. It was all of us.

The rebuilding was slow. Deliberate.

Not just a reconstruction of buildings, but of trust.

Connel worked alongside Wookiee engineers, Jedi relic-recovery experts, and civilian volunteers from the Outer Rim, all had come in the previous days, most here to clean up and rebuild Kachirho; that was more important, The Shadow Temple would come later. He didn’t lead with words. He led with presence — hauling beams, setting pylons, repairing shattered meditation stones with his own tools.

Where Kachirho's hollowed city-root towers once groaned with despair, scaffolds now stretched between trunks. Bridges were retethered. Markets began to open. A new firepit was lit near the central square, flanked by tall woven poles etched with the names of fallen clans.

Children began to play in the streets.

Wookiee artisans carved memorials, not as graves, but as guides for the next generation.

And within the Temple grounds — most now cleared and blessed — Rurraak oversaw the redesign and basic reassembly of the old shadow archives, with Connel working at his side. Some holocrons had survived, those that were graciously held and protected by Matsu Ike Matsu Ike and the Silver Jedi out in the cosmos would come back when it was the proper time. Right now, everything was simple, low key. Connel himself was not even prepared for building just yet, he was here on a fact finding mission but the work that had been done was so inspiring, he could not leave yet. Father would understand, Grandmaster Valery Noble Valery Noble would understand, and if she needed him for an assignment, he was of course ready to go.

Many of the common rooms were redesigned to accommodate what is still to come. Others were rebuilt from fragments and memory. A new sanctum was being carved into the roots of the trees themselves, embracing nature rather than fighting it.

And always… more refugees arrived.

From Kashyyyk’s moons. From orbital stations. From Alliance colonies.

They brought songs. Stories. Ashes of the fallen. And seeds — literal seeds — from forests lost to war, meant to be planted here anew. Connel stood at the edge of the temple that evening, cloak rustling in the warm wind. The banner still flew. Rurraak stepped beside him. Grawwarri behind.

“They are no longer returning to something,” the old Wookiee said softly.

They are returning to build something, Connel finished.

He looked toward the horizon, golden light filtering through the trees, and for the first time in far too long, Kachirho began to feel like a home.





The wind carried more than the scent of rebuilding fires and blooming sap.

It carried presence.

Connel stood motionless, perched on a platform newly reinforced above the highest terrace of the Shadow Temple ruins. The sunset filtered through the branches in fractured beams, but his eyes weren’t on the light.

They were closed, and through the Force, he felt them.

One was like a warm ember — wild, earnest, barely restrained by training or expectation. Kuhbee. The young Wookiee had been a cub when Connel first met him, years ago on a diplomatic assignment gone sideways in the New Cov. Even then, Kuhbee had shown signs of sensitivity to the Force, raw and untamed, now he was a Padawan Learner with the New Jedi Order. Caltin had once remarked that Kuhbee fought like a storm in a thicket: messy, unpredictable… but deeply loyal.

The other presence was colder. Sharper. A thread of silk stretched over steel.

Master Katarine Ryiah.

Jedi Investigator. Trusted by the Council. Efficient. Dangerous…

… and a mirror Connel had little to no interest in looking into again, at least not in the regard she seemed to bring up, even unintentionally whenever they run into each other. I was willing to give it a chance… she was willing to overstep any boundary I had… oh well…

Their auras hadn’t touched down yet — still far above in low orbit, high atmosphere, approaching together aboard what he presumed was a shared transport. The bond wasn’t strong enough to glean intent, but familiarity hummed like a chill down his spine.

Rurraak’s low growl drew his attention.

“Visitors?” the Wookiee rumbled knowingly, sniffing the air despite the altitude.

Connel didn’t look at him. Two.

He pulled his mask down again, affixing it firmly.

“You know them,” Rurraak said, not as a question.

I do.

“And do they come to help?”

Probably, but that’s never the whole story with her, Connel replied, voice flat beneath the vocoder. And Kuhbee’s young. Impressionable.

“Will you turn them away?”

Connel looked out across the glimmering treetops, where ships now passed like birds between limbs of civilization being reborn.

No, he said. For all of our combined flaws, we are on the same side and that is more important. Besides, this isn’t mine to gatekeep. Not if we’re going to make this place what it was meant to be.

But behind the mask, his jaw was tight.

Katarine Ryiah didn’t walk into places for nothing. If she was coming to Kachirho, it meant the Council — or someone — wanted eyes on what was being built. On him. On the Shyyyo’s Heart. On whether this rebirth was revival… or rebellion.

And Kuhbee? If Ryiah had him at her side, that meant she had plans. That alone was enough to put Connel’s defenses on edge.

But he wouldn’t block their landing.

He wouldn’t react.

He simply turned, stepped down from the platform, and gave a silent signal to Rurraak to prepare a landing site near the northern terrace.


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