Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"
Headmaster Tirin had been generous enough to grant Braze sanctuary within the halls of the Veridian Temple. Yet even sanctuary carried its own expectations. There was, without question, an assignment waiting for the young half-Echani exile. The raven haired Headmaster himself had given it to him.
After weeks spent immersed in ancient texts and brittle scrolls long buried within the vaults of Ashlanti Elysium, Tirin had uncovered mention of a fabled place, a temple that once stood as the stage for a truth too fragile to survive its own reflection. Its name appeared only in fractured legends and scattered fragments of scripture, spoken of as both ruin and revelation.
They called it the Temple of Glass.
No record told precisely where it stood, only that it lay beyond the known mountain ridge, where the Force itself seemed to turn inward. The ancient Ashlanti Monks claimed it existed as both a sanctuary and a grave.
The assignment was simple in theory.
Braze had, in essence, betrayed the Order during his service as a Temple Guard. His actions had cast doubt upon his judgment and stained the trust once placed in him. Sending him to locate and restore a ruined temple felt almost poetically fitting, an ironic punishment masked as purpose.
Even so, Braze accepted without protest. He told himself it was penance. In truth, it was a need to feel useful again, to believe he had not been cast out completely.
He brought his pupil, Leos, along for the venture. Braze decided it would serve as good training, the long trek through the mountain ridge offering lessons in endurance, patience, and caution for the young padawan hopeful.
The untamed wilds of Veridia were as dangerous as they were breathtaking. The path wound long, tracing the mountain's spine, wrapped in a somber hush beneath the fading amber light of the fast-approaching evening. The air carried the first crisp chill of autumn, threading cool gusts through the trees and stirring their crowns in gentle motion. The scent of damp earth and pine sap mingled with the faint sweetness of decaying leaves, creating a perfume of life that surrendered to the coming cold. Rusty hues of burnt umber, bright orange, and molten gold drifted down to paint the ground in a soft carpet beneath their boots. Each step gave a faint crunch through the leaf litter, a rhythm that matched their steady pace.
The mountain forest stood silent, its birds long gone to warmer skies, leaving behind a quiet so deep it felt as though the woods themselves had drifted into slumber.
Braze remained primarily silent as they made their ascent, towards the fabled goal of finding the lost Temple of Glass. His thoughts drifted far from the path beneath his boots, carrying him into places his memory refused to let go. He had shown Leos how to read the trail, and how to trace the shape of the sheer stone cliffs. How to catch the change of wind between the trees, and to know which sounds warned of danger and which spoke of safety. Yet as the day wore on, his focus waned. The lessons kept his pupil attentive, but for Braze, the silence offered no sentiment of peace. Instead, it sharpened as he ruminated on his crimes, each memory resurfacing like a wound that refused to heal.
Every step along the mountain trail seemed to awaken the lingering shadows of his choices. He told himself he had done what was necessary, that he had acted as any Jedi would when pressed to the edge. Yet beneath that mantra, he heard another truth he could no longer ignore. He had not been noble, and he had not been right. He had been afraid, and pride had made that fear look like conviction.
The thoughts gnawed at his conscience with every passing moment. Questions lingered unanswered, and he had replayed it all so many times that the recollections no longer felt like memories but rehearsals of failure. He could see every instant where he should have stopped, where he should have spoken, or where he should have listened, and yet he had not. Moments where he could have done something else, should have done something else. And hadn't.
The mountain winds bit at his face, the chill washing across the bridge of his nose, the wind sharp and clean, carrying with it the faint scents of mineral rich stone and earthy pines. He paused atop a narrow ridge and glanced back toward his young student. The Tapas technique was still new to Leos; maintaining it this long in the thin mountain air would test both his focus and his endurance.
It was a long journey on foot. There were no safe landing zones anywhere near their destination, only rough slopes and dense forests that left even small crafts at risk. The climb however demanded endurance more than skill. Braze's pale features were flushed from cold and effort, a faint color rising from the bridge of his nose to the very tips of his ears. His breath came in slow, misty puffs, each little breath fading quickly into the thin mountain air.
He drew a slow, steadying breath, feeling the sting of the wind and the weight of the silence pressing in around him. It reminded him, uncomfortably, of meditation. Yet this quiet brought him no sense of peace. It only left room for his thoughts to run wild, allowing them to speak louder than he wanted them to.
As he paused briefly, he turned to check on Leos, watching the boy steady his footing on the frozen path before continuing upward. Satisfied, Braze adjusted his pack and pressed on, his boots crunching softly over the frost-hardened ground.
The path grew narrower as they climbed, twisting along a sheer ridge where the wind howled through jagged gaps in the stone. The climb grew steeper, demanding Braze's full attention to lead the way as the air thinned and each breath became harder to draw. The trees began to fall away, their branches turning brittle and silvered with frost. Soon the earth gave way to pale stone and the first drifts of snow. By the time they reached the upper ridge, the world had fallen silent beneath a thin veil of ice, the ground becoming more treacherous beneath their boots, slick and wet with uneven footing where frozen water glazed the rocks.
The wind had changed too, becoming a low, hollow current that groaned around the cliffs like a mournful cry fading into the blue void above.
The trail narrowed yet again, half-buried beneath snow and slick patches of melting ice that caught the light like panes of glass. Braze paused and unfastened his fur-lined cloak, throwing the warm black fabric open before stepping close to his young student. He draped it carefully over Leos's shoulders, drawing the cords snug and pulling the hood up to cover the boy's pointed ears. The cloak nearly swallowed him whole. Braze gave a small, amused huff, brushing a bit of snow from Leos's hair as the hopeful's breath came in tiny, shivering clouds.
"I know that face," Braze said with a half-smile. "Don't give me that look... I know you'd rather freeze solid than admit you're cold. Humor me this once, yeah? Enduring the cold isn't the same as mastering it. Even Jedi need to stay warm... Hang in there," Braze said, his voice raised against the howl. "I think we're getting close."
Up ahead in the distance, their path converged upon a vast, gaping maw, the cavernous opening of what could only be their ordained destination. A torii gate stood before it, its darkened frame half-buried in snow and worn by the long passage of time. The sight was familiar to Braze. He recognized the design, recalling a similar structure that had once marked the entrance to a crystal cavern he had discovered before.
He drew Leos closer to his side as they approached, grateful for the brief reprieve from the harsh mountain winds. Within the mouth of the cavern, the air thinned and grew still, creating a quiet pocket untouched by the wind.
Braze reached behind himself, unfastening the leather-bound tube he carried, and carefully withdrew the old scroll Tirin had given him. The parchment was fragile with age, its ink faded to a warm sepia hue. Upon it was a cryptic poem, accompanied by a few painted images. He unrolled it slowly, holding the illustration beside the gate before them.
Even worn and weathered by years of neglect, the resemblance was striking. The image and the gate were one and the same.
He circled the large structure, scanning for any inscription, and soon found a placard half-buried in snow and ice. Kneeling beside it, he brushed the frost away with his gloved hand. The words carved into the stone matched those within the scroll exactly.
Beneath the mountain's frozen breath,
Where memory bleeds and time forgets,
The heart of glass shall open wide,
To show the living how they died.
Not all who shatter are broken.
Not all who see are awake.
The mirror knows the shape of silence,
And the silence remembers every mistake.
He who reforged what gods could not bear,
Walked in glass and found his prayer.
To forge again is to fracture the soul,
For every folly demands its toll.
This was definitely the right path. Braze sighed, thankful this was not some jokester's wild goose chase. Looking down into the cavernous maw, it was hard to say what lay ahead. The poem was ominous, dark and deep, like staring into the void. It unsettled him all over again, knowing they would have to venture into the unknown to find what they were looking for.
"This… is it," he murmured softly, the words nearly swallowed by the cold air.
He carefully packed away the scroll, slinging the leather tube back across his shoulder before stepping into the darkness. From his ventral belt mount he drew his saber hilt, thumb brushing the activator.
The blade hissed to life, flooding the cavern in a glow of chalcedony teal. The light spilled over the stone walls, catching veins of frost and crystal that shimmered faintly as he passed. The silence deepened, even the sound of his boots seemed distant, dulled by the weight of the air.
Up ahead, the teal light flickered against something, a surface that gleamed where no light should have been. Smooth, reflective, like glass.
The sound of their boots changed the moment they crossed beneath the torii gate. The muffled crunch of snow became a sharp, crystalline echo that leapt from wall to wall. Every step rang too clearly, as if the cavern itself were hollow glass.
Braze slowed, letting the teal glow of his saber foil spill across the passage. The walls were smooth and translucent, veins of frost coiling beneath their surface. Each movement threw a hundred reflections back at him, fragments of glittering teal light caught in the ice.
He ran a gloved hand along one wall, feeling the strange walls. They were cold, slick, and almost wet, but solid beneath his palm. The blade's hum sounded different here too, its usual thrum bending and warping as if the air were denser.
"This doesn't make sense," he murmured. The cavern opened into a chamber that ended in a sheer sheet of reflective crystal. No cracks, nor hinges, nor seams. Just his own distorted reflection staring back from the cloudy, semi-transparent surface.
He stepped closer, studying the surface, searching for carvings or inscriptions, but found nothing. Braze frowned, adjusting the angle of his saber's light against the wall. The reflection flared white, dazzling, and for a moment he thought he saw something, perhaps lines or markings, but they vanished again in the glare.
He lowered the blade slightly, blinking against the afterimage. The realization began to form. Braze narrowed his eyes at the mirrored wall, tilting his saber a few more times. Every little shift and movement sent the teal light skittering wildly across the surface, obscuring whatever faint shapes hid beneath. He took a slow step back, letting the glow spill less directly on the wall.
Braze glanced at Leos, then back at the reflection. A thought lingered. He thumbed the activator on his hilt, and with a soft hiss the saber's glow vanished.
All at once, the chamber dimmed, plunging them back into darkness. From the cave mouth behind them, a faint light crept inward, and the glassy wall began to change. Thin veins of silver and blue emerged, forming delicate patterns across the surface. They were ancient runes, glimmering faintly where no direct light touched.
He stepped closer, watching the shapes settle into a clear outline, a doorway traced in faint luminescence, the last threads of natural light barely reaching the far wall. Beyond its edge, the pitch-black abyss swallowed all color and sound.
Above the frame, faint Aurebesh lettering glowed against the crystal surface, each symbol shimmering as if lit from within.
"That which blinds," Braze murmured, reading the inscription aloud, "also conceals."
He reached out, fingertips grazing the luminous line. The glass rippled beneath his touch like disturbed water. Drawing a slow breath, he pressed forward with the Force. The surface shuddered, then folded inward with the grinding cry of stone and ice.
A cold hiss of air escaped from the darkness beyond, carrying the scent of frost and something older still.
They had found the entrance to the Temple of Glass.
Braze lingered for a moment longer, an unsettling chill creeping up his spine. The Force felt different here... like it was watching, waiting and listening.
Last edited: