M O B I U S

FIRST MOON OF KOTHLIS
Somewhere in the Mirewood Basin...
The landing was smooth — too smooth for a place like this.
Seth Denko pulled his cloak tighter as the ramp hissed open, the humid air rolling in thick and wet. The smell hit first: stagnant water, rot clinging low beneath the sway of towering swamp willows, the buzz of insects filling every gap between. Somewhere out there, a marshbird cried, long and sharp, before the muck swallowed the sound whole.
He adjusted the strap on his shoulder, saber tucked beneath the folds of red and gold, eyes lifting toward the silhouette ahead.
“Master Korran,” Seth called lightly, boots finding uneasy purchase on the soft ground. “Tell me we packed enough anti-fungal for this little outing.”
The elder Jedi didn’t so much as glance back, already moving down the ramp, calm as you please. Tall, lean, face carved from the same stone as his will — Master Eiren Korran was the kind of man who wore silence like armor. Gray streaked through his dark hair at the temples, braid tucked neat beneath the hood, and those pale blue eyes held steady on the horizon.
“If you keep your footing,” Korran replied dryly, “you won’t need it.”
Seth huffed a quiet breath through his nose, stepping out after him into the murk. The water lapped at the edges of the landing site, green with algae, and every step forward sank just enough to remind him how much the land here wanted to swallow you whole.
The ruins weren’t far — maybe two clicks north, half-choked beneath the moss and the tangle of the Mirewood. But even here, standing at the edge of the basin, Seth could feel it.
That pull.
It wasn’t loud. Wasn’t screaming. Just… there. Coiling slow beneath the surface like something waiting for the right moment to rise.
“Do you feel it?” Seth asked, voice dropping low as his eyes scanned the treeline ahead.
Korran gave a faint nod, lips pressed into a thin line.
“The Dark Side lingers,” the Master answered. “Not just in the stone. In the air itself.”
They started forward, careful steps through the knee-high reeds, the path winding between gnarled roots and half-sunken logs. Above them, the canopy broke only in slivers, letting the pale light of Kothlis’ distant sun drip down in ribbons, faint and gray.
The further they pressed, the heavier it became. Not the air — not really. The weight sat somewhere behind the ribs. A quiet pressure, like the hold of a breath that never let go.
Seth kept one hand near the hilt at his hip, the other brushing aside the thick curtains of hanging moss as they moved.
“What’s the plan if we find them already waiting?” he asked, casting a glance toward Korran.
The Master’s pace never faltered.
“We’re scouts, not soldiers.”
Another step. Another soft splash of water beneath their boots.
“We watch,” Korran said. “We listen. And if we’re wise…”
His gaze turned, sharp as a blade now, meeting Seth’s fully for the first time since they’d landed.
“…we leave before they ever know we were here.”
Ahead, just beyond the next bend, the first spires of the temple’s ruin clawed up from the mire, slick with moss and time. And beneath it all, that pull only grew stronger.
Like the moon itself was holding its breath.
Waiting.
Seth Denko pulled his cloak tighter as the ramp hissed open, the humid air rolling in thick and wet. The smell hit first: stagnant water, rot clinging low beneath the sway of towering swamp willows, the buzz of insects filling every gap between. Somewhere out there, a marshbird cried, long and sharp, before the muck swallowed the sound whole.
He adjusted the strap on his shoulder, saber tucked beneath the folds of red and gold, eyes lifting toward the silhouette ahead.
“Master Korran,” Seth called lightly, boots finding uneasy purchase on the soft ground. “Tell me we packed enough anti-fungal for this little outing.”
The elder Jedi didn’t so much as glance back, already moving down the ramp, calm as you please. Tall, lean, face carved from the same stone as his will — Master Eiren Korran was the kind of man who wore silence like armor. Gray streaked through his dark hair at the temples, braid tucked neat beneath the hood, and those pale blue eyes held steady on the horizon.
“If you keep your footing,” Korran replied dryly, “you won’t need it.”
Seth huffed a quiet breath through his nose, stepping out after him into the murk. The water lapped at the edges of the landing site, green with algae, and every step forward sank just enough to remind him how much the land here wanted to swallow you whole.
The ruins weren’t far — maybe two clicks north, half-choked beneath the moss and the tangle of the Mirewood. But even here, standing at the edge of the basin, Seth could feel it.
That pull.
It wasn’t loud. Wasn’t screaming. Just… there. Coiling slow beneath the surface like something waiting for the right moment to rise.
“Do you feel it?” Seth asked, voice dropping low as his eyes scanned the treeline ahead.
Korran gave a faint nod, lips pressed into a thin line.
“The Dark Side lingers,” the Master answered. “Not just in the stone. In the air itself.”
They started forward, careful steps through the knee-high reeds, the path winding between gnarled roots and half-sunken logs. Above them, the canopy broke only in slivers, letting the pale light of Kothlis’ distant sun drip down in ribbons, faint and gray.
The further they pressed, the heavier it became. Not the air — not really. The weight sat somewhere behind the ribs. A quiet pressure, like the hold of a breath that never let go.
Seth kept one hand near the hilt at his hip, the other brushing aside the thick curtains of hanging moss as they moved.
“What’s the plan if we find them already waiting?” he asked, casting a glance toward Korran.
The Master’s pace never faltered.
“We’re scouts, not soldiers.”
Another step. Another soft splash of water beneath their boots.
“We watch,” Korran said. “We listen. And if we’re wise…”
His gaze turned, sharp as a blade now, meeting Seth’s fully for the first time since they’d landed.
“…we leave before they ever know we were here.”
Ahead, just beyond the next bend, the first spires of the temple’s ruin clawed up from the mire, slick with moss and time. And beneath it all, that pull only grew stronger.
Like the moon itself was holding its breath.
Waiting.