Journal Entry:
.
Whispers of ancient Sith echo from the pit known as the Hollow Gate. Cracked, faceless statues ring the sinkhole, as if in silent vigil. Discover its secrets. Prepare a report on the danger this place poses to future travelers.
“We unearth the past not for glory, but for warning. Katabasis does not want to be remembered.”
– Dr. Tavren Harrex, Field Journal Entry 8
That is the details of the specifics of my orders. Yeah, I’m confused too. My orders were to land and investigate a pit. I get it though, it’s not my job to make sense of it, at least not yet, it’s my job to carry out orders right now. Like
Rojuhr Pouihl
would say “Do what they say until they do what you say”.
The air over Katabasis stank of copper and lightning. Ash-choked wind dragged itself across the plains, hissing through dead grass and jagged basalt spires that littered the land like a broken crown.
I have seen my share of ghost worlds in a relatively short amount of time. This one didn’t feel dead—it felt asleep. And I’d just stepped into its dream. The Long Gaze, a diplomatic long-range survey cruiser, touched down with a soft tremor on the windswept plateau the dig team had codenamed Sanctum Mesa. I was in an escort and landed nearby.
The Jedi had arrived days earlier to secure the site and verify Force saturation.
Their report? “Cautiously corruptive.”
I didn’t need the Force to feel that.
I stepped out of my fighter, helmet clipped to my belt, a sidearm holstered and his eyes drawn toward the horizon. I had my lightsaber, which made me stick out a lot more than I wanted to. BRED—my BB-unit astromech—followed in tight formation, letting out a low whistle of disapproval. As usual.
BOOEPPP [This place is wrong. Rocks shouldn’t hum.]
I heard him, but was more focused on what I was looking at as I crouched, pressing gloved fingers to the blackened soil. The vibration was subtle. Not seismic. Rhythmic. Like something buried was... breathing.
In the distance, the pit called the Hollow Gate yawned against the sunless sky. A sinkhole larger than a capital ship, ringed by faceless statues whose features had been erased not by erosion, but by intention. Silent. Watchful. Waiting.
Some scientist, no doubt an assistant to Dr. Tavren Harrex approached from a nearby scaffolding, kicking up a cloud of dust. “Lieutenant Angellus,” he greeted, offering a datapad.
“We've cataloged three more inscriptions at the outer ring. They reference a path to something called the 'Sky’s End'—a threshold said to be opened only when the stars fall in line.”
I received the pad. Glyphs scrolled across the screen—some Naboo in origin, others unmistakably Sith. I did not want to interrupt him just yet, I needed to mentally note everything he said so I could report to Lt. Havrin, my immediate boss here, at least until someone from Bravo shows up.
... And you still want to build a trade route over this?] I couldn’t help but mutter. I know what I overheard, and it wasn’t much.
Idinit (the scientist) smirked, more tired than amused. “That’s for the committee to decide. Our job is to show them the cost.”
My gaze drifted toward the Hollow Gate again. I am sorry to correct you, but I am a Flight Officer, my immediate supervisor is Lt. Havrin. Let me call him over. Idinit didn’t seem to happy to be made a fool of, but there weren’t many of us here, and I am an officer. I could know. That being said, the shadows between the statues around the gate seemed longer than they should’ve been.
AOOOO [Report on the danger,] BRED buzzed. One great thing about him, he knew decorum. He never changed his personality, but he could be professional without me having to tell him. BEEEOOOP [I vote we label it: ‘maximum.' With a footnote: ‘run.’]
I smiled even if it was thin, but the humor didn’t last. I felt it then, the same thing—like a ripple across his chestplate. A memory that wasn’t his own. Fear.
I then straightened up, eyes narrowing. Put me down for recon.
OOOAH [What? You’re including me in this, aren’t you?]
Idinit blinked. “You’re not cleared to enter the Hollow Gate, Angellus.”
“I agree”. Lt. Havrin finally made his way over.
I didn’t mean to, but ignored him, clipped the datapad to my belt, and walked toward the edge of the plateau.
No one is, I said, trying to be respectful. But I didn’t come here to look at ghosts.
The Whisperer wasn’t made for landings like this. The Naboo-designed scout shuttle was sleek, diplomatic, meant for observation—not spelunking into ancient wounds carved by Sith hands. I don’t think my fighter would hold either, but there was the ‘Raven’ dropship nearby. I knew how to fly that thing like the back of my hand and the loading ramp was open.
BOOUUUP [Are you crazy? You’re going to get in more trouble than you are now!]
Then I’ll pull the “Name on the building” card… or use another “Pouihl” card…
AUGHuuuu [You’re trying to sabotage yourself.]
Normally I would play up this little banter of ours, but I didn’t have time. I’m really not, I can’t put my finger on it, but there is something down there I need to get to.
OOOOAP [This is a “Jedi” thing isn’t it?]
I get what you’re saying, but wouldn’t they already be going down there?
By this time, we were in the dropship and I eased into the cockpit. I keyed in the repulsor alignment override, glanced once to BRED as he plugged into the auxiliary slot behind me and closed the ramp.
OOOOAUUUH [Warning: Shuttle descent path is classified as ‘inadvisable,’ ‘not ideal,’ and ‘profoundly stupid.’ Also, this ship was due for calibration six weeks ago.]
I could only smirk. I’ll log that under ‘atmosphere of mutual trust.’ Hold tight. With a subtle whine of the engines, I got the dropship to be lifted from the mesa. Stone gave way to shadow as he rotated the ship over the edge of the Hollow Gate.
The pit yawned beneath them, deeper than sensors had predicted. Wind howled through the ring of eroded statues, carrying with it the scent of ozone, sulfur—and something older.
Something buried.
As we began our descent, the light above dimmed, swallowed by the stone throat of the world. On the display, strange magnetic pulses began flickering across the diagnostics.
BaaOOOP [This is new. And bad. Definitely bad.]
I see it. Pulling back easy off the stick, descending slowly I kept us at a consistent hover.
The rock walls spiraled around them in twisted patterns—too precise to be natural. Carvings lined the stone in ancient Sith script. Some flickered with residual energy, as if half-awake. As if remembering.
Fifty meters down. Then a hundred.
That’s when the turbulence hit.
The ship shuddered, lurching sideways. Alarms screamed—nonphysical impact. No debris. No contact. Just… pressure.
This was annoying, and when I’m annoyed I grit my teeth, gripping the controls as the ship was shoved violently by an unseen force. The sound inside the cockpit warped, muffled like someone had thrown a blanket over reality.Then—
Silence.
Open Tags