Paila Dalle
Patience is a virtuous path
As they crossed the threshold, the architecture changed immediately. The corridors behind them had been carved from stone. This chamber had been constructed. Not recently. Not even remotely. But deliberately.
The vast concentric rings Paila had glimpsed from the doorway now revealed themselves fully, suspended within an immense spherical chamber that disappeared into darkness above. Hundreds of metallic arcs interlocked through the space like the exposed workings of a celestial clock. Some remained motionless. Others rotated with agonizing slowness, powered by mechanisms that should have failed thousands of years ago. Yet they endured.
Paila slowed. For the first time since entering the ruins, genuine surprise touched her expression. The walls were covered in relief carvings. Not of battles. Not of rulers. Nor of gods. But of people. Thousands of them. Farmers. Builders. Teachers. Explorers. Families. Entire generations depicted in flowing sequences that spiraled around the chamber's circumference. No kings stood above them. No conquerors towered over the masses. No chosen saviors occupied places of honor. Only individuals contributing pieces to something larger than themselves.
Paila stepped closer to one of the carvings. Dust scattered beneath her fingertips. The figures shown there were passing objects between one another. Knowledge. Tools. Maps. Seeds. The sequence continued through several generations before culminating in the construction of the very mechanism surrounding them. "They weren't building a temple," she said quietly. The realization settled within her slowly. "They were building a memory."
Far overhead, one of the ancient rings shifted. A beam of pale light emerged from it's center and swept across the chamber. Where it touched the carvings, hidden inscriptions ignited. Not Aurebesh. Not Sith. Not any language either woman would immediately recognize. Yet through the Force, fragments of meaning surfaced. Not words. But concepts. A civilization speaking directly through intention.
The first phrase emerged like an echo from across forgotten millennia: "What one mind discovers, many minds must preserve." A second followed. "Certainty ends inquiry." Then a third. "No truth survives isolation."
The chamber fell silent again. Paila found herself staring upward at the endless rings turning overhead. At last she glanced toward Darth Sycophantia. "There," she said softly. "You wanted an answer." Her gaze returned to the carvings. "I don't think this civilization worshipped the Force. I think they feared what happened when people used it to place themselves above everyone else."
Tag:
R'ayne Asara
The vast concentric rings Paila had glimpsed from the doorway now revealed themselves fully, suspended within an immense spherical chamber that disappeared into darkness above. Hundreds of metallic arcs interlocked through the space like the exposed workings of a celestial clock. Some remained motionless. Others rotated with agonizing slowness, powered by mechanisms that should have failed thousands of years ago. Yet they endured.
Paila slowed. For the first time since entering the ruins, genuine surprise touched her expression. The walls were covered in relief carvings. Not of battles. Not of rulers. Nor of gods. But of people. Thousands of them. Farmers. Builders. Teachers. Explorers. Families. Entire generations depicted in flowing sequences that spiraled around the chamber's circumference. No kings stood above them. No conquerors towered over the masses. No chosen saviors occupied places of honor. Only individuals contributing pieces to something larger than themselves.
Paila stepped closer to one of the carvings. Dust scattered beneath her fingertips. The figures shown there were passing objects between one another. Knowledge. Tools. Maps. Seeds. The sequence continued through several generations before culminating in the construction of the very mechanism surrounding them. "They weren't building a temple," she said quietly. The realization settled within her slowly. "They were building a memory."
Far overhead, one of the ancient rings shifted. A beam of pale light emerged from it's center and swept across the chamber. Where it touched the carvings, hidden inscriptions ignited. Not Aurebesh. Not Sith. Not any language either woman would immediately recognize. Yet through the Force, fragments of meaning surfaced. Not words. But concepts. A civilization speaking directly through intention.
The first phrase emerged like an echo from across forgotten millennia: "What one mind discovers, many minds must preserve." A second followed. "Certainty ends inquiry." Then a third. "No truth survives isolation."
The chamber fell silent again. Paila found herself staring upward at the endless rings turning overhead. At last she glanced toward Darth Sycophantia. "There," she said softly. "You wanted an answer." Her gaze returned to the carvings. "I don't think this civilization worshipped the Force. I think they feared what happened when people used it to place themselves above everyone else."
Tag: