R E F L E C T I O N
MOONUS MANDEL
The Temple of The Heart
The Undying Garden
Mist pooled in the hollows and valleys like trapped clouds of silver. From the ridges of Moonus Mandel, the ancient Jedi Enclave that sat within its steep confines seemed less a structure than a living continuation of the mountain itself; its roofs were sloped like the wings of mountain birds amidst carved bridges draped in moss. Its walls carried the scars and embrace of the roots of old silverleaf trees whose leaves were mixed with instruments that chimed softly in the wind. Throughout the temple water carried the sound of life between the terraces, feeding small bamboo fountains that clacked rhythmically meeting the distant call of an unseen bird and the whisper of the Jedi within sweeping dew from the stones before sunrise.
Every day at the Temple of the Heart began this way, since the beginning of time it had always been so.
The world beyond these mountains, with its wars, its empires, its debts; it all might as well have been legend. The people of the Enclave spoke of it the way one might speak of winter when surrounded by perpetual spring, a thing not of their concern. They had chosen to live here, among the moss and the guardianship of the heart.
A narrow path wound from the meditation cloisters down toward the orchard terraces. Along it walked a young Jedi in plain robes, she wore no weapon at her belt and her eyes reflected the pale gold of dawn that had cast itself beautifully across the mountain range. Beside her strode a droid, impossibly old, its once-gleaming plating worn to the colour of riverstone. Its voice, when it spoke, came through a trembling vocoder that sounded almost human.
"Your step is lighter than yesterday, Master Teyra. The healers will be pleased."
She smiled without looking up. "It's the morning air. Even the ache of age yields to it."
The droid tilted its head with a faint click. "I was not aware you were capable of age."
She laughed softly, at the droid's confusion before pausing beneath an archway of flowering vines, where they could watch a group of initiates feed the pond's crystal fish. The youngest bowed when they noticed her, hands still damp from the water. Teyra returned the bow in kind.
The Enclave was a place of small courtesies. No commands, no salutes. Only rhythm and respect and duty.
They continued down the path to where the orchards began, it was a place where rows of ancient fruit trees had been grown across millenia, their trunks wrapped with prayer ribbons of all variety of colours, making it look like a festival of joy as they fluttered like soft flames in the wind. The droid knelt stiffly beside a sapling, its joints creaking, and began to replace the mulch with careful motions.
"You remember," it said after a moment, "when the Republic surveyors came. They wished to catalogue the temple's records. I asked you then if they would return."
Teyra brushed a fallen blossom from her sleeve. "They did not."
"And do you regret that?"
"No." She looked out over the terraces, where fog drifted in slow rivers between the trees. "Peace doesn't survive being measured. It must be lived, or it dies."
The droid turned its photoreceptors toward her, blue light dimming and brightening like a contemplative breath.
"The galaxy beyond has forgotten such wisdom."
"That is why we remember for them."
For a while, there was only the hum of insects and the soft percussion of water trickling from the irrigation spouts. The scent of plum blossoms in the air mingled with that of the rich soil. Somewhere in the distance, a soft chime tolled, and a procession of robed figures began to cross the bridge to the library. One carried an armful of scrolls bound in reed paper; another a bundle of herbs. Their lives were simple and deliberate, guard the heart and live a life of contemplation.
A breeze passed through the valley. The chimes under every eave sang in harmony, and the mist peeled away to reveal the temple rooftops glinting in sunlight. For an instant, the Enclave seemed eternal.
Then the light began to change.
At first, it was so gradual no one noticed; the sunlight dimming to a dull copper, shadows stretching longer than they should. The chimes stilled. The wind died. Even the insects fell quiet.
The droid's sensors whirred. "Strange atmospheric fluctuation detected."
Teyra frowned. "Storms don't come from the north this season."
They both looked up.
Beyond the highest ridge, the clouds were not forming; they were folding. Layers of grey pressing inwards, rotating like kneaded bread. A faint vibration ran through the soil beneath their feet causing the water in the pond below quivered as though something vast and unseen had stirred beneath it.
Across the terraces, Jedi paused in their work. Nearby a child-padawan pointed skyward. The sound that followed was low at first, a resonance that hummed in your bones and breath alike before it deepened into a vast, dissonant chord.
The mountain itself seemed to recoil. Birds exploded from the treetops in black clouds.
"Master Teyra," the droid whispered, its voice cracking with static, "what is…"
She raised her hand to silence him. The Force trembled through her veins, alive and terrified. Something was wrong beyond comprehension. The air tasted of iron.
"Get them to the Grand Hall," she said.
But the sky tore before she could finish.
A stream of light ripped through the clouds, not lightning, not fire, but something violent. The sound was everywhere at once: the roar of an ocean crashing against invisible cliffs, the shattering of glass, the shriek of the atmosphere itself being unmade.
Teyra turned toward the temple just as the first scream echoed through the valley. It was followed by another, and another until the Enclave, once so silent, was filled with the sound of mortal terror.
The droid reached for her arm, but she was already moving, robes whipping in the rising wind. The mist returned, not gentle this time but racing, alive, thick with ash and dust.
Above the orchard, the prayer ribbons snapped free, spiralling into the storm.
The last thing she saw before the darkness swallowed everything was the reflection of the sky burning in the pond below.
And then, the shadows began to fall and the Jedi of the Temple of the Heart would be no more.
BOTHAN SPACE
UNDERGROUND TRANSMISSION STATION C-467
A soft chime cut through the hum of the transmittors and scanning devices.
Within the monitoring room aboard the Transmission station the air shifted from calm to electric. A red holographic light flickered to life in the monitoring pit, painting the utilitarian walls in urgent colour.
The attending archivist froze, then turned toward the transmission pit where the beacon's origin began scrolling across the interface: MOONUS MANDEL // PRIORITY DISTRESS.
Within moments, more observers swept into the chamber. Jedi gathered around the holographic table as the flickering signal steadied into a fractured map, alive with static.
"It's an enclave frequency," someone murmured. "Ancient… I didn't think anyone still held watch there."
Another leaned closer. "It's repeating. Three intervals. Emergency pattern."
The holo sputtered once more, briefly resolving into the fractured images followed by silence. The archivist drew in a slow breath. "Send word to the Council," he said quietly. "And prepare a ship."
The signal continued to pulse faint yet stubborn against the noise of many other transmissions the station was now ignoring, all their attention on a distress signal for an Enclave that shouldn't exist.
THEME 1: ASHFALL
An ancient Jedi Enclave hidden in the mountains, self-sustaining, untouched by the wars that had scarred a thousand other worlds. Simply forgotten. Now, a distress beacon flares across the HoloNet, an old code, Jedi origin, repeating endlessly in the void.
The rescue party descend through the storm belt, and find the planet's once-lush valleys drowned in grey ash. The forests are gone and the air heavy with static and the metallic tang of burned ozone. Landing at what had been the Enclave's outer walls the only sound they can here is a corrupted voice saying the same words again and again:
The Jedi are Screaming, The Jedi are Screaming, The Jedi are Screaming
Theme 2: THE FOREST FEEDS
While the distress beacon drew most to the Enclave itself, others were sent to trace its echo; to follow the pulse of the Force through the wilds that surrounded the temple. There, in the shadow of the mountains, the land had begun to turn against the living.
Theme 2: THE FOREST FEEDS
A sanctuary where apprentices once meditated beneath silver-barked trees that glowed faintly with bioluminescent spores has fast turned sickly green. The air feels thick, swollen with life that had grown too much, as though the planet itself was bleeding out across the wound of the enclave.
Plants crawled across stone walls and split open the remains of old watchtowers. Creatures twisted by strange growths wandered half-blind, drawn by some unseen instinct to rip and tear. Some say you can hear a heartbeat in the soil, some say the creeping vines whisper your name.
The small detachment of Jedi and explorers must protect the perimeter, to understand what has taken root. But with every passing hour, the forest creeps closer to the ruins of the Enclave; its vines wrapping around temple stones as if reclaiming its dead.
The forest is listening, It wants to know what you fear. It feeds on it.