Jedi Prophecy
Posted: 2006-02-02 06:31pm
I've actually been tinkering with this for quite a while, year or so. Tell me what you think?
Jedi Prophecy
The hazy blue spiral of hyperspace lashed around the small Corellian ship as it flung itself across the stars. The small freighter was a classical Corellian saucer-shaped design, or in this case a saucer cut in half with four big cylinder engines jutting out the back and a small cockpit bubble on the top. The small ship was created to be fast and to be easily modified, it was the Corellian way in ship design for thousands of years. It was with a wink and a nod that the ship was made to be a freighter instead of a smuggling ship and the two Corellian’s inside put her ability to good use.
Adam Goodheart was strapped into the small cockpit of the freighter. He was the owner operator of the Second Chance. He, along with his partner Derec, used the fast ship to move cargo along the dangerous trade routes between the Corellian Confederacy and its not so new enemy, the Kuati’s.
One would think that as a Corellian, Adam would care that his nation was skirmishing with the Kuat Empire, but those people would obviously not understand the Corellian trait of being fiercely independent. Deep down, Adam didn’t want anyone killed by some stupid political dispute, but his trade in life was moving cargo. Small, expensive cargo at that.
The Dictate of Corellia and the Kuati Merchant Barons could posture all they wanted to, but the truth was that both the Corellians and the Kuati’s needed trade. Maybe not between themselves but among the other fiefdoms across the Galaxy. Adam and Derec moved cargo between Corellian and the Federation, between the Federation and some of the Outer Rim colonies and dust ball-wannabe warlords. Hell, the Second Chance had even run cargo for the Hutt Empire.
Derec and he had been doing this for a long time. Almost a decade, to be precise. Adam had met Derec Trainer when the two men had signed up on another Corellian ship, the Trojan Surprise. Both Adam and Derec had worked under Captain Priam for many years, both as smugglers and even as pirates. Moving and taking cargo amongst the various trade routes that criss-crossed the galaxy.
The two had paired up and left Priam after the old pirate had made a bunch of big hauls and had decided to go into business for them selves. Now years later, the two smugglers had hacked out a good life and a respectable reputation among the space lanes. Which brought Adam’s musings back to here and now, as the duo had just offloaded a bunch of antiques on the old world of Naboo and had been contracted to travel to an Outer Rim world that Adam had never heard of, to pick up another load for the eccentric Nabooian collector.
Derec was all for the easy money, hauling ancient relics, legal and really above board. Adam, though, didn’t like going into anywhere blind. He had a tingling sensation at the back of his neck from this haul. And he didn’t like it when he got bad feelings from any job. It always meant that something really bad was going to happen.
With a sigh, Adam reached up and flipped a few switches and checked his nav. screen. They were still a day and a half from Trasadon, their destination, and Adam couldn’t decide if he hated the wait for something bad to happen or the bad itself.
He sighed again as his partner walked into the cramped cockpit. “Couldn’t sleep?” Adam asked.
“No, was fiddling with the reactor specs. If we can haul a few more metric tons of crap for this old guy on Naboo, we could probably afford to upgrade the Chance’s heart and soul and have better range and speed.” The mechanic replied, oblivious to his friends creeping smile.
The smile turned into a small laugh as Adam sat up straight in his pilot’s chair and reached up to adjust the power setting on the control board. Just before his hand touched the controls, the ship shuttered and bounced.
Adam grasped the controls quickly and glanced over to Derec, “You didn’t start those modifications early did you?”
Derec ignored Adam and picked him self off the deck where he had landed as the ship bucked again. The mechanic forced himself into the seat next to Adam and started going through ship diagnostics.
“Oh spite!” He called out as his hands flew over the controls. “We’ve popped a coupling in the motivator. Hold on, were reverting whether we want to or not!” He yelled over the squawking sirens in the cockpit.
True to his word, the spiraling haze of hyperspace disappeared and the tell tale lines of real space shrunk down into pinpoints of light from the distant stars. The star field began to spin as the Second Chance tumbled out of hyperspace and out of control.
Fighting to regain control, Adam wrestled with the control yoke and managed to get the Corellian freighter under some semblance of normal flight. Beside him, Derec started a shut down routine of various systems.
“The hyperdrive’s toast. Probably blew out half the converters all the way back to the main engines too. I hope there is somewhere to land around here or we’re in big trouble.” Derec said, with a growing sense of dread.
Adam, still fighting the controls responded, “I don’t know. I don’t think I can land her right now. Controls are getting really bad.”
A loud alarm went off jus then and Adam groaned as Derec checked the Nav. Board, “Proximity alarm. Got some planetary debris up ahead. Maybe the cut off for the drive was faulty and blew the coupling.”
“Now’s not the time for analysis, Derec. Is there a planet up ahead with that debris?”
Derec took a few seconds and got the Chance’s sensors moving. “Got it, planet coming up under us. We’re just outside of maximum orbit.” He looked over at Adam, “Are we going in?”
A bead of sweat rolled down Adam’s face and he tightened up his grip on the yoke, “You said we needed to land to repair, you’re the mechanic. You better strap yourself in, though and get the repulsors going at 110%. This is going to be,” He paused to find the right word and to steady the ship as it entered the atmosphere, “Bad!”
The small ship hit air and the shields flared with the heat. Adam tried to keep them going at as shallow an entry as he could but the ship seemed determined to crash as soon as possible.
Soon, the canopy was clouded with the glare of fire and heat and Adam began scanning with the sensors for a good place to skid out. With the repulsors working, his control of the ship improved, but with the speed in which his freighter was streaking for the surface the anti grav drive would not give them a soft landing.
Adam lined up with a small valley as best as he could before the Chance hit. The power flickered, the world spun, and screeches from straining metal filled the cockpit. The two smugglers bounced and were tossed around with their ship before they slowly came to a halt.
It was quiet then, in the cockpit. The power was gone and the lights were off as were the alarms and sirens. Adam flirted with unconsciousness for untold minutes before his vision cleared and he found himself still strapped in his seat. A harsh, bright light came through the canopy and Adam was glad to see the plastasteal was still intact.
With a groan, the pilot straightened himself, and then unbuckled his restraints. He pulled himself out of the seat and checked on his friend. The smaller man was knocked out but seemed intact. Adam wondered if the same could be said about his ship.
He shook Derec awake and asked if he was alright but the tech immediately went to work checking the ship. His initial attempt was short, “Powers out.” He said as he undid the restraints. “I’ll go check the mains and see what we got.”
“Ok,” said Adam. “I’ll check the atmosphere and take a look around.”
Derec didn’t even respond as the mechanic headed for the engine space and the pilot headed for one of the top side hatches. His ship was listing to the port, so Adam had to pick out his steps between the deck plating and the bulkheads as he moved back into the ship, angling towards the port cargo bay and its hatch.
He entered the cargo bay and was relieved to see that most of the cargo seemed intact, the restraints and straps doing their job. Some of those containers had emergency supplies in them, and having seen the desolate nature of the planet on their harrowing way down, Adam had a nagging thought that they might need those supplies.
The power was still out, so Adam opened up the manual release on the hatch and pulled the big lever down. With a rush of pressurized air, the interior hatch popped open and Adam scrambled up the hole.
Next to the exterior hatch, was the emergency indicator. The tiny device was little more than a box with a green light and a red light affixed to a small sensor and a battery box. In emergencies (which Adam counted this as) the little thing would indicate with its lights whether or not it was wise to open the hatch.
Adam took the green light that was now blinking as a good sign and pulled back the manual release for the upper hatch and immediately squinted as a dazzling light shown through the hole.
He took a moment to get used to the light, and then crawled out onto the top of his ship. While the air was cool and a bit dry, it had a curious tingling sensation to it as it softly blew across his skin but the landscape was vastly different. Desolate and rugged, in drab earth colors, there was nothing but dirt, sand and rock outcroppings as far as the eye could see.
Behind the Second Chance, a long ditch the ship cut in the center of the valley trailed out behind him. In front, nothing but a bunch of rock with columns and buttes was in view. He was grateful that the slide out didn’t continue on another couple hundred meters or he and Derec would have been smashed on those cliffs.
He looked away from the planet for a moment to study the condition of his ship and it didn’t please him any better than surveying the terrain. Out of the four engine nozzles that were grouped around the ships tail, only two remained on the ship, and maybe only one looked like it was in operable condition. The top of the ship’s hull looked in pretty good shape, but Adam could tell by the odd angle it was sitting, that they were on top on some rocks. Between those and all the sharp looking rocks back along the long slide out ditch, Adam figured the ventral hull was in bad shape and doubted that the ship was still space worthy even if they still had all of their engines.
He sat down on the top of a conduit next to the hatch and started looking at the rock formations in front of his ship again, scooping up some pebbles from the hull and tossing them absentmindedly.
‘We’re stuck’ was the main thought going through his mind as he threw a pebble out over the cockpit. ‘Derec can’t fix an engine that just isn’t there anymore’ he continued as he launched a pebble off to his left towards some cliffs. ‘There isn’t enough spare parts to make a brand new eng…’ he started to think while he tossed a pebble behind him toward one of the buttes.
His thought was stopped dead as he saw the small thin structure around one of the rock outcroppings. It was hard to tell from this distance, but it looked like some sort of old scaffolding around the butte.
Adam stuck his head back down through the hatchway and had to stretch hard to reach one of the emergency packs, then once grabbing the pack, he returned sitting on the conduit and dug through the small box of supplies until he found the macrobinocualrs.
Standing up now, for a better view, he looked through the scope. The range finder showed that it was only five kilometers to the particular butte that Adam had seen. The macrobinoculars also showed that indeed some sort of scaffolding had been erected around it. Winding around the rock all the way up to its top, metal girders and supports twisted around it. At the very top of the butte was some sort of small platform, perhaps a docking platform and the very idea raised Adams spirits.
But the cheery sensation died quickly as he zoomed in on the structures. The metal was warped and worn, even rusted in some places. There were parts where supports had failed and large chunks of the structure had fallen away. Clearly, this outpost or whatever it was, had been here for a long time.
Adam sighed and was about to put the binos down before he caught sight of something else, down towards the bottom of the rock formations. He couldn’t quite make out what it was, but it was another structure.
He toggled the focus knob for a better look but still couldn’t get a clear picture of the structure. It was small, block shaped at the bottom of the rock spiral. At this distance, it appeared to be made out of the rock, or perhaps carved into the formation itself. It was clearly a different building than what was created with the metal scaffolding. Maybe older, perhaps newer, he thought.
Certain that both were deserted but somehow a bit happy in that perhaps there were supplies that could help them out in their dire situation, Adam replaced the binos and called down through the hatch to Derec.
“We’ve got some abandoned outpost of some sort a couple clicks to our starboard. Get your but up here and let’s see if we can find something to help us over here.” He called.
There was some mumbling and grumbling that echoed up through the dark hatch and after a few minutes, Derec clambered up through the hole. He had brought his own emergency pack and the grumpy looking mechanic turned toward starboard and asked where these ‘ruins’ were.
Adam pointed and as Derec looked he grumbled out “Maybe they have a stash of converters and coupling for our drive.”
Adam just smiled a dry smile; nothing he could say right now could cheer up his partner. Derec’s baby was the Second Chance. He loved the ship and knew her every nook and cranny. Derec didn’t like it when the ship was running a bit out of spec, so Adam knew that having the ship wreck on the barren surface of this planet was just killing his friend.
Adam set out without a word, but as the duo got further and further away from the ship, Derec started muttering more and more under his breath about all the things that needed to be fixed on the Second Chance.
Adam knew Derec, and thus knew that his friend wasn’t trying to start a conversation. The muttering was more of a stress relief thing than mere talk. But from it, Adam discovered the extent of their problems on this world. After an hour’s worth of walking and Derec’s muttering, Adam was convinced it would take nothing less than a space dock to get their ship up and running again.
They had covered over three quarters of the distance before his friend started actually talking to him again, as the slim man turned to him and said, “I don’t get it. That coupling didn’t look fatigued or anything. Hell, it was only a couple years old. That should have lasted a few more years. I don’t get what made it pop?”
Adam could only shrug his shoulders. He could fly the ship, and even do some routine maintenance, but hyperdrive repair was definitely Derec’s department.
“Could have hit a gravity wave or other mass shadow that is uncharted.” He ventured.
Derec himself shrugged at this. “Possible, but that’s more to do with the cut out. To do it, we’d have to basically be right on top of this planet and the cut out not working to blow the coupling. But I checked the cut out. It seems to be working fine. How the hell could this planets ‘shadow’ not be detected by the cut out and pop the coupling so far out in orbit?”
“I don’t know.” Was all that Adam could say.
The two men went on in silence for another kilometer and as the duo came up out of a draw and over a small berm, they saw their destination. The rock spiral loomed in front of them. The metal platforms and structures clearly visible, as was the age and misuse of them.
But down at the bottom of the butte, some sort of stone structure came jutting out of the rock. It was simple and blocky, like a bunker and little more than a frame for an entranceway that lead into the butte itself.
Littering the ground in front of the entrance way lay the remains of various statues. Humanoid like beings, judging from the arm-like and leg-like pieces. As the two men got closer, they could make out detailed torsos of the statures. Most seemed to be warrior like, holding spears of some sort. But as to the identity of the warriors, or the species, neither Derec nor Adam could tell. The few head pieces that remained seemed to be wrapped in stone hoods, or perhaps cloaks. It was as if all these statues, or the people they depicted, were adorned in robes, and though they could move freely in those robes, their faces were hidden within the deep hoods.
Derec seemed unnerved by the ominous specter of the statue warriors, but Adam had a very comforting feeling about the grim looking warriors and about the stone structure itself. It was calming in a way that he couldn’t quite explain. The two men walked up the stone steps towards the dark passageway that bored deep into the rock formation and as Adam stepped up to the doorway, Derec balked and stopped.
“I’m not going in there. Who the hell knows what’s down there?” He said in a shaky voice.
Adam tried to put a reassuring look on his face, “I’ve got a good feeling about this, Derec. Somebody used to live here, built that landing platform up there. Perhaps there are some parts in there, or who knows, maybe a hypercomm. Who knows, but we won’t if we don’t take a look around.”
Adam pulled off his pack and scavenged around a bit before coming back out with a glowrod. He looked over to Derec, and after a few seconds, the thin and nervous man nodded and dug into his pack for another glowrod.
The two walked into the dark passageway and moved back into the rock butte. The walls seemed to be sculptured, as if chiseled away with care. There was little high tech about this place, rather a feel of antiquity. Adam thought that perhaps it went back far enough to be part of the galactic civilization of old. But such things were hard to tell and Adam was hardly an academic
Every once in a while, large etchings would appear on the walls. Designs and symbols that Adam had never seen before, and when he asked Derec, neither had he. Some ways in, they came across another statue that Adam could only assume was a whole version of the broken ones he saw outside.
The statue was roughly the same size as a man, cloaked and hooded, with no facial features showing. The statue seemed to be guarding what may have once been a stone door, but somewhere along the way, someone had blasted it open and dug down into the rock. Adam and Derec followed this new path for a bit longer, but Derec started getting nervous and concerned again.
Adam could feel excitement tearing through him and he didn’t understand it. Logically, his brain told him, he should be as skeptical and nervous as Derec. They were in some ancient ruins, walking down stone passageways that were too old to tell how old they were. Who knows what's down here, animals, insects, gas pockets, collapsed tunnels. All manner of dangerous things could be just the next turn away, and yet Adam couldn’t worry about any of those. A euphoric sensation had come over him almost the minute he had first seen the structure way back on his ship. Some calm, yet driving need to be here, as if fate were tugging on his strings and he was little more than a puppet, force to walk down this path and perhaps forced to like doing it.
He calmed his friend down again and slowly started forward again, the tunnel angling down again, taking them deeper into the rock. After a time, though he was unsure how long since time had seemed to stop completely in these caves, he was surprised to see a faint glow up ahead of him.
Adam turned to his friend to tell him but Derec had already seen the distant light and nodded to Adam in turn to continue. For once on this adventure, Derec seemed more curious than frightened.
They continued down the passageway toward the light, and the further they went the brighter the light became until finally they exited out into a large chamber. Circular in shape, the room was as large as a landing bay or docking port. Adam figured he could land six or so Second Chances in the vast space.
Arranged in circular ranks, were more of the statues. Yet these ones had faces on them. Apparently they were more of a monument of people than the stone guardians at the entrance and doorways.
In the middle of the room, where the light was coming from, was some sort of large crystal with shafts of bright light beaming out of it. The crystal lit up the whole room and turning, Adam could see many other statues with faces lining the walls of the chamber.
He wasn’t sure what the place was supposed to be until he heard Derec answer his silent question for him, “It’s a mausoleum.” He said bluntly.
A quiet voice in Adams head agreed, and yet something else was here. Something that Adam was supposed to find. With wondering eyes, and an awed look on his face, Adam started to search the room. He lost track of time again, not knowing that he was wandering all over the room, walking to and from every statue in the mausoleum.
He came out of his trance when he walked up to a statue on the far side of where he and Derec had entered the tomb. The statue he walked up to was man sized again, and seemed to be of an older man dressed in some sort of tunic and a hooded robe. But like most of the statues in the room, his hood was down and the features of the statue’s face showed. This man had smooth features, almost a youthful face, though it showed signs of being a mature if not an elderly man, the receding hairline being a give away to his age.
The statue’s arms came together in front of its torso and it was holding some sort of box or cube with intricate designs on it. The cube wasn’t made of stone, rather it was metal and had the air of a mechanical thing, rather than the immortalized stone of the statue.
Without ever thinking about it, Adam reached up and touched the cube. It was as if someone else had done it, Adam thought as he snatched back his hand. But something in his touch had activated the device, it hummed to life and then started to buzz.
Adam was aware that Derec had walked up behind him, yet he could not take his eyes off of the device as it rattled a bit and then finally shot out a beam of light in front of the statue. It was slightly blue in color and seemed to shake and wiggle a bit before an image appeared inside of it.
Slightly fuzzy itself, the blue image of the man the statue had obviously been made to resemble, appeared. Indeed, thought Adam, this man was old, but wise looking and strong. Not in physical appearance, but intelligence and willpower flowed out of his blue eyes.
Both men jumped visibly when the image spoke, “Greetings Adam Goodheart. Allow me to introduce myself. I am Jedi Master Luke Skywalker and if I’ve not misjudged my calculations, you are watching this four thousand years after I have recorded it.”
2
Adam Goodheart stood in front of his Master, after five long years of training. In some ways, it was hard to believe that it had been half a decade since he and Derec had found the chamber and activated the Holocron. Lots of things had changed, most of all Adam himself. He was leaner now, physically fit in a way that he would have never believed before his training. Master Skywalker had always said that a fit mind belonged in a fit body; his Master also told him repeatedly that the stronger his body was, the less he would need to rely on the Force for mundane tasks.
From that training, Adams body had hardened, his medium build had filled out a bit under the stress of the physical exercise, and his muscles were really quite toned. His light brown hair was as it always was, a close military crop, but he’d allowed his goatee to grow, and let the scruff on the side of his face to grow almost to a beard which helped frame his rugged, tanned face.
His Master had warned him that he would need to blend in, even in regard to his clothing, so Adam worn clothes similar to his Master. Master Skywalker had shown Adam pictures of what the Jedi of old had worn, various robes and layered, wrapped tunics. They had been in fashion back when the Order was powerful, wealthy and privileged. Master Skywalker, when he had rebuilt the Order, went with a more conservative and ordinary attire. Adam figured that such a philosophy would benefit him as well. No need to go out into the galaxy attracting attention by wearing obviously odd attire.
So Adam stood, with a pair of dark trousers that were a good fit if a bit loose, and simple boots. His tunic shirt was cloth and in a shade of grey and he sported a utility belt with all manner of pockets and equipment. He avoided a vest, though his Masters hologram always had one, Adam thought it would look out of place in most parts of the Core. He never really remembered seeing anyone wearing such a get up so decided against it. But the hooded cloak that his Master wore on occasion was something that Adam knew he could use and so had acquired one.
The most startling change to his appearance was one that his best friend in the entire galaxy had mentioned to him almost two years ago. While Adam had always had bright green eyes, Derec had pointed out that those eyes had become ‘old’, deep and intense as Adam slowly mastered the nature of the Force.
The Force, Adam mused, an ancient religion that had seemed to slip from the galaxy a few thousand years ago. And yet he had let the hologram of an ancient Master train him in that very religion. Adam Goodheart was the first Jedi to exist in over three thousand years and the responsibility was enormous. It had taken over a year of nothing but physical fitness and meditation for Adam to have his first breakthrough with the mystical Force, Master Skywalker’s hologram from the Holocron carefully guiding him as he went.
From that wonderful moment where Adam felt as it he was connected into the universe, things had only gotten better. Master Skywalker had shown him how to quiet his mind and listen to the Force, how to focus and peer inside of himself and let the Force move him along as it desired.
It was from here, that a Jedi learned his true powers, and his true responsibilities. Here, in this state, buried within the loving embrace of the Force, the universe was laid bare. The future, the present and the past were all played out in front of Adam. Images and whispers of thought and conversations, and most importantly, truths were opened and brought out of the dark.
Some of these truths were uncomfortable and even terrifying, yet they were the truth and one can gain strength from knowing the truth about themselves and about the universe in general. This was the true power of the Jedi, to float on the wind of the Force that blew throughout the universe, to be a part of everything and being part of everything, to understand how these things interconnect in the universe and a glimpse of how things will work out in the end.
Adam learned though, that to get to that stage, one’s mind was to be as fit as Master Skywalker wanted one’s body. Adam learned how to control his mind, to focus like he would have never believed possible. He also learned how to let his mind go, to release himself and to absorb everything around him, to become everything around him.
All of these had interesting effects when coupled with the Force. Since the Force was everywhere and was a part of everything, it allowed Adam to connect with those things at an amazing and intimate level. Using his hardened and strengthened mind, Adam could affect those things he felt through the Force. Simply put, Adam learned that with his conditioned mind and using the connections through the Force, he could perform telekinesis and a form of telepathy.
The telepathy was more empathy than anything, feeling emotions and urges rather than reading the mind like some sort of book, but Adam learned that when he was calm and centered, the empathetic signals he could feel rolling off of other people could lead him right into the warm embrace of the Force and that amazing spot where the universe unveils itself.
It had the effect of Adam becoming his subject, and knowing rather than reading what was going on inside the person. It was quite remarkable and revealing on how various people and beings thought and acted. He had learned, though, that very alien beings were very difficult to understand even when Adam was touching them through the Force.
His ability with telekinesis was extraordinary, though. Feeling something through the Force and then exerting his control over it, Adam could now lift and carry objects with nothing but his mind. He could do it even with himself and after many, many practice sessions, use the effect to become an amazing gymnast and he could now perform amazing leaps and twists.
Agility, balance, grace. All were enhanced when Adam nuzzled himself inside the warmth of the Force. His Master showed him all this and more. Adam glanced down to his waist where a long cylinder hung from his belt. When Derec had first seen it, he thought it looked like Adam broke the handle off of something and stuck it through his belt.
But the truth of it was it was a weapon. A weapon that had not been seen in millennia and the technology to produce had been lost long ago. If not for the memory bank of the Holocron, Adam was sure that it would never have been seen in the galaxy again. For that cylinder was his lightsaber. The weapon of a Jedi. And the weapon that Master Luke had taught him how to use.
With his weapon, he could defend himself against blasters and all manner of threats. With his weapon, he could cut his way out of just about any situation he could possibly imagine. But in the end, it was a tool, dependent on how the user wielded it. Master Skywalker taught Adam to use it for defense, never for attack and Adam knew the truth of it, even as the hologram of his Master spoke the words. But his training even went past the Jedi Arts, and into history. His Master had explained to Adam the past. Had explained to him how the great Galactic society had torn at itself through war and changed itself into an Empire and then back again. How the civilization that spanned the known galaxy had been invaded by intergalactic raiders and eventually beat them as well. How the Jedi Order had stood as guardians for the Galactic society for thousands of years, only to be destroyed by evil forces and rebuilt again by Master Skywalker.
It was in these history lessons, that Adam caught glimpses of what he thought Master Skywalker expected out of him. History as Adam knew it before he crashed here was slightly different than what his Master taught him. History, as Adam learned in his youth, did indeed say that there once was a galaxy spanning civilization. But that crumbled thousands of years ago.
In it’s place, thousands of fiefdoms sprung up and as Adam’s youthful education would have him believe, it was for the better. The major powers in the galaxy were of course in the Core. The Federation laid claim to being what was left of the once great galactic civilization. Centered around the planet of Denon, the Federation claimed thousands of Core worlds and considered itself the diplomat of the galaxy. Always trying to get the rest of the kingdoms to unite with them and bring peace to the core.
The Corellian Confederation was probably the second largest nation in the Core. Corellia had for thousands of years been a civilized planet, and for most of that time, had been a center for starship production. CEC had produced more starships in it’s time than sentient beings existed on the planet.
The Corellians were an independent lot, as were their colonies. But in times of crisis, they would pull together and their remarkable toughness and resilience would see them through the day. It was said that in the Corellia Confederacy, there were only three jobs one could profit in, Starship Construction, Piracy, and Smuggling. Most Corellians dabbled in at least two in their lifetimes, and most people were fairly surprised at how often Piracy was one of the choices.
Their chief rival was the Kuati. Another legendary starship producing star system, the Kuati vied for domination of the Core worlds. Their noble classes seeing it as their birthright to rule the civilized planets.
All three of these nations had client states out in the Mid Rim and even in the Outer Rim worlds, where warlords and petty dictators ruled.
Adam had grown up taught that such things were normal, that people should decide their own destiny and that a large galactic scale government was unrealistic. But hearing Master Skywalker talk about the Republic, the love in his eyes and the warmth that flowed through the hologram, Adam had to revise his previous thoughts on the matter.
According to his Master, the Galactic Civilization had lasted over twenty five thousand years. Far longer than any of the smaller kingdoms Adam was used to and the sheer thought of millions and millions of species interacting and cooperating was an astonishing thought. The miracles such a society could make, well, could be boundless.
It was during these lessons that Adam discovered why Master Skywalker had reached out through the dust of time, delved deep into the Force to see who and where he could reach out to and touch after so long, to change the galaxy. Adam Goodheart stood in front of his Master. The first Jedi Knight to exist in three millennia and he knew that his Master wanted him to change the Galaxy. It was an enormous responsibility.
“Back in the old days,” His Master said, a slight smile on his face as he said ‘old days’. “Jedi Padawans would have to pass a Trial before being anointed a Jedi Knight. These tests were to put in place for the Padawan to prove the level of confidence in his or her abilities.”
The old hologram sighed, “Unfortunately, there is no obstacle course I can send you through, nor some written test I can formulate for your Trails, Adam. And I apologize. The terms and methods of which I was to train you, obviously forbid such tests.”
He smiled again, a kind smile, one a father does for his son in proud moments. “I’m afraid that your ascension to Knighthood will be as troubling and trying as my own and again I apologize. Your trial, and your mission, as I’m willing to bet that you have already guessed, is to bring together the broken pieces of the galaxy and to restore the Republic.”
Derec, who had been sitting in the back listening quietly, coughed at hearing the ancient Master assign the mission, though he had spent hours if not days discussing such a potential mandate with Adam.
“I know that it is a daunting task, and an awesome responsibility. But have faith in the Force, I have seen in my visions that you are indeed the man to do this. The future is always in motion, so the specifics of your task are unclear. But the one thing I am sure of is that training you, now, at this time, is the right thing to do. The Force would not put such things into motion if there was no chance of success.” The ancient Master continued.
“Always beware of the Darkside, or a tyrannical Empire will be wrought, or worse, the continuation of this Dark Age of the Galaxy. But while you are cautious of the Darkside, do not repeat my errors. Feel the Force, let it guide you into action. If no one is willing to act, then the horrid state of affairs in the galaxy will continue.” He had a mournful look in his eye, and perhaps, Adam thought, a bit of guilt.
After a second, the hologram said, “You are the first of the new Jedi, and if you succeed in your mission, you will have learned far more than I could ever teach you, even if I could travel the dark and dusty path of time and be there with out. If you need advise, don’t hesitate to turn to your friends, nor should you forget all the data and lore I’ve encrypted on the Holocron and the Archive Records I’ve left you. Remember that the Valley of the Jedi is now your home and all the records and equipment that I’ve saved for you will be here waiting if you need it. The Valley itself will be a quiet place of solitude for you to center yourself in times of turmoil.”
He sighed, “My young apprentice, I have faith in you, the Force, and in those you meet along your path, that you will succeed and a new Republic will be born. And perhaps a new Jedi Order to protect her. Good luck, Jedi Goodheart. And may the Force be with you.”
The hologram derezzed and Adam was standing by himself in the center of the vast chamber. He had indeed known it was coming. But standing here, listening to his Master tell him his mandate, was shocking.
“He sure doesn’t know how to soften blows, does he?” Derec came up behind him. “At the very least, he could have given you a place to start. Not just dump this in your lap and say ‘Go!’. He continued.
Adam turned to his friend, his fingers interlocked in front of him in thought. “The futures a tricky thing, Derec. I’m sure that if Master Skywalker knew where to start, he would have forewarned me.”
Derec glanced down at Adam’s hands and smiled. “I thought you wanted to blend in with the rest of us humans? Going around like some weird monk isn’t going to exactly ‘blend’ in.” He laughed.
Adam returned a tight smile, “Hmm, I suppose there are quite a few habits I’ve developed here at the Valley that I’ll have to be aware of.” He gave a beaming smile at his friend, “Thank the Force that I have you here to show me the way.”
“Well,” Said Derec, “It’s not like you’ve been here constantly over the last five years. We had that good time on Androffa.” Adam chuckled at the memory.
Derec continued, laughing lightly, “Oh, and when I took you to Nar Shadda for your homework on Jedi mind tricks. Remember that poor old Niemoidian and the two Kowakian monkey-lizards?”
Derec was laughing hysterically now and Adam joined him for a bit, thinking back to all the good times the two had been though in the last half a decade, if not longer. Derec had pretty much been unchanged over the last few years. His dark hair hid his face, particularly when he was hunched over a terminal or piece of equipment studying it.
His built was a lot like Adams, but the mechanic spent more hours reading and tinkering with things, so his mid section was loosing the war with gravity. His eyes always smiled and Adam had recently been shocked at how old they were getting when he noticed the laugh lines around his friends features.
However, as jolly as his friend was, Derec was a purpose driven person, so while Adam was learning the ways of the Force, Derec had spent two years rebuilding the Second Chance. Master Skywalker may not have foreseen how to unite the galaxy, but at least he had seen the method of Adams arrival to the Valley of the Jedi.
While the central chamber to the valley may be the most important part of the facility, the ancient ruins had other rooms. In these rooms, Master Skywalker had left various bits and pieces of technology that perhaps he thought Adam could use. Among these, sealed in ancient crates, were various parts for starships and engines.
Derec was overjoyed when he first saw them, even happier after he had time to tinker and play with them. The mechanic had explained to Adam years ago how advanced those replacement parts were,’ More efficient’ if Adam remembered correctly. Derec had found all the pieces that he needed to get the Second Chance up and running and was overjoyed at how well she ran after her repairs.
Derec had occasionally left the Valley of the Jedi for supplies and once he left for a month for professional repairs to the ship that he just couldn’t do himself. Adam went with him once or twice, as instructed by his master, practical experience and practice of certain techniques, Skywalker had said.
Master Skywalker had also left a library computer that complemented the Holocron. Inside of the massive data banks, Adam could read up on just about every species he’d ever heard of, and some he hadn’t. A vast, twenty five thousand year history lesson.
He had fallen into a contemplative state and Derec joggled him out of it, “So, where to first? If we have to save the galaxy, I’d like to start now. Maybe we can be done before dinner.”
Adam smiled again, “Perhaps we should go to where it ended, then?”
“The Federation?” Asked Derec.
Adam clapped him on the back, “It sounds like a start. Besides, I somewhat vaguely remember some sort of summit there for the Core in the next few weeks.”
Derec made a dismissive sound, “They always have a summit or peace council or some such going on there. They’re all a joke. Why would Corellia or Kuat want to bow down to the Federation? But you’re the Jedi, if you want to go to the Federation, off we go to the Federation.”
The two men wrapped their arms about each other as if to support each others weight and headed off to the hangar and their ship.
Jedi Prophecy
The hazy blue spiral of hyperspace lashed around the small Corellian ship as it flung itself across the stars. The small freighter was a classical Corellian saucer-shaped design, or in this case a saucer cut in half with four big cylinder engines jutting out the back and a small cockpit bubble on the top. The small ship was created to be fast and to be easily modified, it was the Corellian way in ship design for thousands of years. It was with a wink and a nod that the ship was made to be a freighter instead of a smuggling ship and the two Corellian’s inside put her ability to good use.
Adam Goodheart was strapped into the small cockpit of the freighter. He was the owner operator of the Second Chance. He, along with his partner Derec, used the fast ship to move cargo along the dangerous trade routes between the Corellian Confederacy and its not so new enemy, the Kuati’s.
One would think that as a Corellian, Adam would care that his nation was skirmishing with the Kuat Empire, but those people would obviously not understand the Corellian trait of being fiercely independent. Deep down, Adam didn’t want anyone killed by some stupid political dispute, but his trade in life was moving cargo. Small, expensive cargo at that.
The Dictate of Corellia and the Kuati Merchant Barons could posture all they wanted to, but the truth was that both the Corellians and the Kuati’s needed trade. Maybe not between themselves but among the other fiefdoms across the Galaxy. Adam and Derec moved cargo between Corellian and the Federation, between the Federation and some of the Outer Rim colonies and dust ball-wannabe warlords. Hell, the Second Chance had even run cargo for the Hutt Empire.
Derec and he had been doing this for a long time. Almost a decade, to be precise. Adam had met Derec Trainer when the two men had signed up on another Corellian ship, the Trojan Surprise. Both Adam and Derec had worked under Captain Priam for many years, both as smugglers and even as pirates. Moving and taking cargo amongst the various trade routes that criss-crossed the galaxy.
The two had paired up and left Priam after the old pirate had made a bunch of big hauls and had decided to go into business for them selves. Now years later, the two smugglers had hacked out a good life and a respectable reputation among the space lanes. Which brought Adam’s musings back to here and now, as the duo had just offloaded a bunch of antiques on the old world of Naboo and had been contracted to travel to an Outer Rim world that Adam had never heard of, to pick up another load for the eccentric Nabooian collector.
Derec was all for the easy money, hauling ancient relics, legal and really above board. Adam, though, didn’t like going into anywhere blind. He had a tingling sensation at the back of his neck from this haul. And he didn’t like it when he got bad feelings from any job. It always meant that something really bad was going to happen.
With a sigh, Adam reached up and flipped a few switches and checked his nav. screen. They were still a day and a half from Trasadon, their destination, and Adam couldn’t decide if he hated the wait for something bad to happen or the bad itself.
He sighed again as his partner walked into the cramped cockpit. “Couldn’t sleep?” Adam asked.
“No, was fiddling with the reactor specs. If we can haul a few more metric tons of crap for this old guy on Naboo, we could probably afford to upgrade the Chance’s heart and soul and have better range and speed.” The mechanic replied, oblivious to his friends creeping smile.
The smile turned into a small laugh as Adam sat up straight in his pilot’s chair and reached up to adjust the power setting on the control board. Just before his hand touched the controls, the ship shuttered and bounced.
Adam grasped the controls quickly and glanced over to Derec, “You didn’t start those modifications early did you?”
Derec ignored Adam and picked him self off the deck where he had landed as the ship bucked again. The mechanic forced himself into the seat next to Adam and started going through ship diagnostics.
“Oh spite!” He called out as his hands flew over the controls. “We’ve popped a coupling in the motivator. Hold on, were reverting whether we want to or not!” He yelled over the squawking sirens in the cockpit.
True to his word, the spiraling haze of hyperspace disappeared and the tell tale lines of real space shrunk down into pinpoints of light from the distant stars. The star field began to spin as the Second Chance tumbled out of hyperspace and out of control.
Fighting to regain control, Adam wrestled with the control yoke and managed to get the Corellian freighter under some semblance of normal flight. Beside him, Derec started a shut down routine of various systems.
“The hyperdrive’s toast. Probably blew out half the converters all the way back to the main engines too. I hope there is somewhere to land around here or we’re in big trouble.” Derec said, with a growing sense of dread.
Adam, still fighting the controls responded, “I don’t know. I don’t think I can land her right now. Controls are getting really bad.”
A loud alarm went off jus then and Adam groaned as Derec checked the Nav. Board, “Proximity alarm. Got some planetary debris up ahead. Maybe the cut off for the drive was faulty and blew the coupling.”
“Now’s not the time for analysis, Derec. Is there a planet up ahead with that debris?”
Derec took a few seconds and got the Chance’s sensors moving. “Got it, planet coming up under us. We’re just outside of maximum orbit.” He looked over at Adam, “Are we going in?”
A bead of sweat rolled down Adam’s face and he tightened up his grip on the yoke, “You said we needed to land to repair, you’re the mechanic. You better strap yourself in, though and get the repulsors going at 110%. This is going to be,” He paused to find the right word and to steady the ship as it entered the atmosphere, “Bad!”
The small ship hit air and the shields flared with the heat. Adam tried to keep them going at as shallow an entry as he could but the ship seemed determined to crash as soon as possible.
Soon, the canopy was clouded with the glare of fire and heat and Adam began scanning with the sensors for a good place to skid out. With the repulsors working, his control of the ship improved, but with the speed in which his freighter was streaking for the surface the anti grav drive would not give them a soft landing.
Adam lined up with a small valley as best as he could before the Chance hit. The power flickered, the world spun, and screeches from straining metal filled the cockpit. The two smugglers bounced and were tossed around with their ship before they slowly came to a halt.
It was quiet then, in the cockpit. The power was gone and the lights were off as were the alarms and sirens. Adam flirted with unconsciousness for untold minutes before his vision cleared and he found himself still strapped in his seat. A harsh, bright light came through the canopy and Adam was glad to see the plastasteal was still intact.
With a groan, the pilot straightened himself, and then unbuckled his restraints. He pulled himself out of the seat and checked on his friend. The smaller man was knocked out but seemed intact. Adam wondered if the same could be said about his ship.
He shook Derec awake and asked if he was alright but the tech immediately went to work checking the ship. His initial attempt was short, “Powers out.” He said as he undid the restraints. “I’ll go check the mains and see what we got.”
“Ok,” said Adam. “I’ll check the atmosphere and take a look around.”
Derec didn’t even respond as the mechanic headed for the engine space and the pilot headed for one of the top side hatches. His ship was listing to the port, so Adam had to pick out his steps between the deck plating and the bulkheads as he moved back into the ship, angling towards the port cargo bay and its hatch.
He entered the cargo bay and was relieved to see that most of the cargo seemed intact, the restraints and straps doing their job. Some of those containers had emergency supplies in them, and having seen the desolate nature of the planet on their harrowing way down, Adam had a nagging thought that they might need those supplies.
The power was still out, so Adam opened up the manual release on the hatch and pulled the big lever down. With a rush of pressurized air, the interior hatch popped open and Adam scrambled up the hole.
Next to the exterior hatch, was the emergency indicator. The tiny device was little more than a box with a green light and a red light affixed to a small sensor and a battery box. In emergencies (which Adam counted this as) the little thing would indicate with its lights whether or not it was wise to open the hatch.
Adam took the green light that was now blinking as a good sign and pulled back the manual release for the upper hatch and immediately squinted as a dazzling light shown through the hole.
He took a moment to get used to the light, and then crawled out onto the top of his ship. While the air was cool and a bit dry, it had a curious tingling sensation to it as it softly blew across his skin but the landscape was vastly different. Desolate and rugged, in drab earth colors, there was nothing but dirt, sand and rock outcroppings as far as the eye could see.
Behind the Second Chance, a long ditch the ship cut in the center of the valley trailed out behind him. In front, nothing but a bunch of rock with columns and buttes was in view. He was grateful that the slide out didn’t continue on another couple hundred meters or he and Derec would have been smashed on those cliffs.
He looked away from the planet for a moment to study the condition of his ship and it didn’t please him any better than surveying the terrain. Out of the four engine nozzles that were grouped around the ships tail, only two remained on the ship, and maybe only one looked like it was in operable condition. The top of the ship’s hull looked in pretty good shape, but Adam could tell by the odd angle it was sitting, that they were on top on some rocks. Between those and all the sharp looking rocks back along the long slide out ditch, Adam figured the ventral hull was in bad shape and doubted that the ship was still space worthy even if they still had all of their engines.
He sat down on the top of a conduit next to the hatch and started looking at the rock formations in front of his ship again, scooping up some pebbles from the hull and tossing them absentmindedly.
‘We’re stuck’ was the main thought going through his mind as he threw a pebble out over the cockpit. ‘Derec can’t fix an engine that just isn’t there anymore’ he continued as he launched a pebble off to his left towards some cliffs. ‘There isn’t enough spare parts to make a brand new eng…’ he started to think while he tossed a pebble behind him toward one of the buttes.
His thought was stopped dead as he saw the small thin structure around one of the rock outcroppings. It was hard to tell from this distance, but it looked like some sort of old scaffolding around the butte.
Adam stuck his head back down through the hatchway and had to stretch hard to reach one of the emergency packs, then once grabbing the pack, he returned sitting on the conduit and dug through the small box of supplies until he found the macrobinocualrs.
Standing up now, for a better view, he looked through the scope. The range finder showed that it was only five kilometers to the particular butte that Adam had seen. The macrobinoculars also showed that indeed some sort of scaffolding had been erected around it. Winding around the rock all the way up to its top, metal girders and supports twisted around it. At the very top of the butte was some sort of small platform, perhaps a docking platform and the very idea raised Adams spirits.
But the cheery sensation died quickly as he zoomed in on the structures. The metal was warped and worn, even rusted in some places. There were parts where supports had failed and large chunks of the structure had fallen away. Clearly, this outpost or whatever it was, had been here for a long time.
Adam sighed and was about to put the binos down before he caught sight of something else, down towards the bottom of the rock formations. He couldn’t quite make out what it was, but it was another structure.
He toggled the focus knob for a better look but still couldn’t get a clear picture of the structure. It was small, block shaped at the bottom of the rock spiral. At this distance, it appeared to be made out of the rock, or perhaps carved into the formation itself. It was clearly a different building than what was created with the metal scaffolding. Maybe older, perhaps newer, he thought.
Certain that both were deserted but somehow a bit happy in that perhaps there were supplies that could help them out in their dire situation, Adam replaced the binos and called down through the hatch to Derec.
“We’ve got some abandoned outpost of some sort a couple clicks to our starboard. Get your but up here and let’s see if we can find something to help us over here.” He called.
There was some mumbling and grumbling that echoed up through the dark hatch and after a few minutes, Derec clambered up through the hole. He had brought his own emergency pack and the grumpy looking mechanic turned toward starboard and asked where these ‘ruins’ were.
Adam pointed and as Derec looked he grumbled out “Maybe they have a stash of converters and coupling for our drive.”
Adam just smiled a dry smile; nothing he could say right now could cheer up his partner. Derec’s baby was the Second Chance. He loved the ship and knew her every nook and cranny. Derec didn’t like it when the ship was running a bit out of spec, so Adam knew that having the ship wreck on the barren surface of this planet was just killing his friend.
Adam set out without a word, but as the duo got further and further away from the ship, Derec started muttering more and more under his breath about all the things that needed to be fixed on the Second Chance.
Adam knew Derec, and thus knew that his friend wasn’t trying to start a conversation. The muttering was more of a stress relief thing than mere talk. But from it, Adam discovered the extent of their problems on this world. After an hour’s worth of walking and Derec’s muttering, Adam was convinced it would take nothing less than a space dock to get their ship up and running again.
They had covered over three quarters of the distance before his friend started actually talking to him again, as the slim man turned to him and said, “I don’t get it. That coupling didn’t look fatigued or anything. Hell, it was only a couple years old. That should have lasted a few more years. I don’t get what made it pop?”
Adam could only shrug his shoulders. He could fly the ship, and even do some routine maintenance, but hyperdrive repair was definitely Derec’s department.
“Could have hit a gravity wave or other mass shadow that is uncharted.” He ventured.
Derec himself shrugged at this. “Possible, but that’s more to do with the cut out. To do it, we’d have to basically be right on top of this planet and the cut out not working to blow the coupling. But I checked the cut out. It seems to be working fine. How the hell could this planets ‘shadow’ not be detected by the cut out and pop the coupling so far out in orbit?”
“I don’t know.” Was all that Adam could say.
The two men went on in silence for another kilometer and as the duo came up out of a draw and over a small berm, they saw their destination. The rock spiral loomed in front of them. The metal platforms and structures clearly visible, as was the age and misuse of them.
But down at the bottom of the butte, some sort of stone structure came jutting out of the rock. It was simple and blocky, like a bunker and little more than a frame for an entranceway that lead into the butte itself.
Littering the ground in front of the entrance way lay the remains of various statues. Humanoid like beings, judging from the arm-like and leg-like pieces. As the two men got closer, they could make out detailed torsos of the statures. Most seemed to be warrior like, holding spears of some sort. But as to the identity of the warriors, or the species, neither Derec nor Adam could tell. The few head pieces that remained seemed to be wrapped in stone hoods, or perhaps cloaks. It was as if all these statues, or the people they depicted, were adorned in robes, and though they could move freely in those robes, their faces were hidden within the deep hoods.
Derec seemed unnerved by the ominous specter of the statue warriors, but Adam had a very comforting feeling about the grim looking warriors and about the stone structure itself. It was calming in a way that he couldn’t quite explain. The two men walked up the stone steps towards the dark passageway that bored deep into the rock formation and as Adam stepped up to the doorway, Derec balked and stopped.
“I’m not going in there. Who the hell knows what’s down there?” He said in a shaky voice.
Adam tried to put a reassuring look on his face, “I’ve got a good feeling about this, Derec. Somebody used to live here, built that landing platform up there. Perhaps there are some parts in there, or who knows, maybe a hypercomm. Who knows, but we won’t if we don’t take a look around.”
Adam pulled off his pack and scavenged around a bit before coming back out with a glowrod. He looked over to Derec, and after a few seconds, the thin and nervous man nodded and dug into his pack for another glowrod.
The two walked into the dark passageway and moved back into the rock butte. The walls seemed to be sculptured, as if chiseled away with care. There was little high tech about this place, rather a feel of antiquity. Adam thought that perhaps it went back far enough to be part of the galactic civilization of old. But such things were hard to tell and Adam was hardly an academic
Every once in a while, large etchings would appear on the walls. Designs and symbols that Adam had never seen before, and when he asked Derec, neither had he. Some ways in, they came across another statue that Adam could only assume was a whole version of the broken ones he saw outside.
The statue was roughly the same size as a man, cloaked and hooded, with no facial features showing. The statue seemed to be guarding what may have once been a stone door, but somewhere along the way, someone had blasted it open and dug down into the rock. Adam and Derec followed this new path for a bit longer, but Derec started getting nervous and concerned again.
Adam could feel excitement tearing through him and he didn’t understand it. Logically, his brain told him, he should be as skeptical and nervous as Derec. They were in some ancient ruins, walking down stone passageways that were too old to tell how old they were. Who knows what's down here, animals, insects, gas pockets, collapsed tunnels. All manner of dangerous things could be just the next turn away, and yet Adam couldn’t worry about any of those. A euphoric sensation had come over him almost the minute he had first seen the structure way back on his ship. Some calm, yet driving need to be here, as if fate were tugging on his strings and he was little more than a puppet, force to walk down this path and perhaps forced to like doing it.
He calmed his friend down again and slowly started forward again, the tunnel angling down again, taking them deeper into the rock. After a time, though he was unsure how long since time had seemed to stop completely in these caves, he was surprised to see a faint glow up ahead of him.
Adam turned to his friend to tell him but Derec had already seen the distant light and nodded to Adam in turn to continue. For once on this adventure, Derec seemed more curious than frightened.
They continued down the passageway toward the light, and the further they went the brighter the light became until finally they exited out into a large chamber. Circular in shape, the room was as large as a landing bay or docking port. Adam figured he could land six or so Second Chances in the vast space.
Arranged in circular ranks, were more of the statues. Yet these ones had faces on them. Apparently they were more of a monument of people than the stone guardians at the entrance and doorways.
In the middle of the room, where the light was coming from, was some sort of large crystal with shafts of bright light beaming out of it. The crystal lit up the whole room and turning, Adam could see many other statues with faces lining the walls of the chamber.
He wasn’t sure what the place was supposed to be until he heard Derec answer his silent question for him, “It’s a mausoleum.” He said bluntly.
A quiet voice in Adams head agreed, and yet something else was here. Something that Adam was supposed to find. With wondering eyes, and an awed look on his face, Adam started to search the room. He lost track of time again, not knowing that he was wandering all over the room, walking to and from every statue in the mausoleum.
He came out of his trance when he walked up to a statue on the far side of where he and Derec had entered the tomb. The statue he walked up to was man sized again, and seemed to be of an older man dressed in some sort of tunic and a hooded robe. But like most of the statues in the room, his hood was down and the features of the statue’s face showed. This man had smooth features, almost a youthful face, though it showed signs of being a mature if not an elderly man, the receding hairline being a give away to his age.
The statue’s arms came together in front of its torso and it was holding some sort of box or cube with intricate designs on it. The cube wasn’t made of stone, rather it was metal and had the air of a mechanical thing, rather than the immortalized stone of the statue.
Without ever thinking about it, Adam reached up and touched the cube. It was as if someone else had done it, Adam thought as he snatched back his hand. But something in his touch had activated the device, it hummed to life and then started to buzz.
Adam was aware that Derec had walked up behind him, yet he could not take his eyes off of the device as it rattled a bit and then finally shot out a beam of light in front of the statue. It was slightly blue in color and seemed to shake and wiggle a bit before an image appeared inside of it.
Slightly fuzzy itself, the blue image of the man the statue had obviously been made to resemble, appeared. Indeed, thought Adam, this man was old, but wise looking and strong. Not in physical appearance, but intelligence and willpower flowed out of his blue eyes.
Both men jumped visibly when the image spoke, “Greetings Adam Goodheart. Allow me to introduce myself. I am Jedi Master Luke Skywalker and if I’ve not misjudged my calculations, you are watching this four thousand years after I have recorded it.”
2
Adam Goodheart stood in front of his Master, after five long years of training. In some ways, it was hard to believe that it had been half a decade since he and Derec had found the chamber and activated the Holocron. Lots of things had changed, most of all Adam himself. He was leaner now, physically fit in a way that he would have never believed before his training. Master Skywalker had always said that a fit mind belonged in a fit body; his Master also told him repeatedly that the stronger his body was, the less he would need to rely on the Force for mundane tasks.
From that training, Adams body had hardened, his medium build had filled out a bit under the stress of the physical exercise, and his muscles were really quite toned. His light brown hair was as it always was, a close military crop, but he’d allowed his goatee to grow, and let the scruff on the side of his face to grow almost to a beard which helped frame his rugged, tanned face.
His Master had warned him that he would need to blend in, even in regard to his clothing, so Adam worn clothes similar to his Master. Master Skywalker had shown Adam pictures of what the Jedi of old had worn, various robes and layered, wrapped tunics. They had been in fashion back when the Order was powerful, wealthy and privileged. Master Skywalker, when he had rebuilt the Order, went with a more conservative and ordinary attire. Adam figured that such a philosophy would benefit him as well. No need to go out into the galaxy attracting attention by wearing obviously odd attire.
So Adam stood, with a pair of dark trousers that were a good fit if a bit loose, and simple boots. His tunic shirt was cloth and in a shade of grey and he sported a utility belt with all manner of pockets and equipment. He avoided a vest, though his Masters hologram always had one, Adam thought it would look out of place in most parts of the Core. He never really remembered seeing anyone wearing such a get up so decided against it. But the hooded cloak that his Master wore on occasion was something that Adam knew he could use and so had acquired one.
The most startling change to his appearance was one that his best friend in the entire galaxy had mentioned to him almost two years ago. While Adam had always had bright green eyes, Derec had pointed out that those eyes had become ‘old’, deep and intense as Adam slowly mastered the nature of the Force.
The Force, Adam mused, an ancient religion that had seemed to slip from the galaxy a few thousand years ago. And yet he had let the hologram of an ancient Master train him in that very religion. Adam Goodheart was the first Jedi to exist in over three thousand years and the responsibility was enormous. It had taken over a year of nothing but physical fitness and meditation for Adam to have his first breakthrough with the mystical Force, Master Skywalker’s hologram from the Holocron carefully guiding him as he went.
From that wonderful moment where Adam felt as it he was connected into the universe, things had only gotten better. Master Skywalker had shown him how to quiet his mind and listen to the Force, how to focus and peer inside of himself and let the Force move him along as it desired.
It was from here, that a Jedi learned his true powers, and his true responsibilities. Here, in this state, buried within the loving embrace of the Force, the universe was laid bare. The future, the present and the past were all played out in front of Adam. Images and whispers of thought and conversations, and most importantly, truths were opened and brought out of the dark.
Some of these truths were uncomfortable and even terrifying, yet they were the truth and one can gain strength from knowing the truth about themselves and about the universe in general. This was the true power of the Jedi, to float on the wind of the Force that blew throughout the universe, to be a part of everything and being part of everything, to understand how these things interconnect in the universe and a glimpse of how things will work out in the end.
Adam learned though, that to get to that stage, one’s mind was to be as fit as Master Skywalker wanted one’s body. Adam learned how to control his mind, to focus like he would have never believed possible. He also learned how to let his mind go, to release himself and to absorb everything around him, to become everything around him.
All of these had interesting effects when coupled with the Force. Since the Force was everywhere and was a part of everything, it allowed Adam to connect with those things at an amazing and intimate level. Using his hardened and strengthened mind, Adam could affect those things he felt through the Force. Simply put, Adam learned that with his conditioned mind and using the connections through the Force, he could perform telekinesis and a form of telepathy.
The telepathy was more empathy than anything, feeling emotions and urges rather than reading the mind like some sort of book, but Adam learned that when he was calm and centered, the empathetic signals he could feel rolling off of other people could lead him right into the warm embrace of the Force and that amazing spot where the universe unveils itself.
It had the effect of Adam becoming his subject, and knowing rather than reading what was going on inside the person. It was quite remarkable and revealing on how various people and beings thought and acted. He had learned, though, that very alien beings were very difficult to understand even when Adam was touching them through the Force.
His ability with telekinesis was extraordinary, though. Feeling something through the Force and then exerting his control over it, Adam could now lift and carry objects with nothing but his mind. He could do it even with himself and after many, many practice sessions, use the effect to become an amazing gymnast and he could now perform amazing leaps and twists.
Agility, balance, grace. All were enhanced when Adam nuzzled himself inside the warmth of the Force. His Master showed him all this and more. Adam glanced down to his waist where a long cylinder hung from his belt. When Derec had first seen it, he thought it looked like Adam broke the handle off of something and stuck it through his belt.
But the truth of it was it was a weapon. A weapon that had not been seen in millennia and the technology to produce had been lost long ago. If not for the memory bank of the Holocron, Adam was sure that it would never have been seen in the galaxy again. For that cylinder was his lightsaber. The weapon of a Jedi. And the weapon that Master Luke had taught him how to use.
With his weapon, he could defend himself against blasters and all manner of threats. With his weapon, he could cut his way out of just about any situation he could possibly imagine. But in the end, it was a tool, dependent on how the user wielded it. Master Skywalker taught Adam to use it for defense, never for attack and Adam knew the truth of it, even as the hologram of his Master spoke the words. But his training even went past the Jedi Arts, and into history. His Master had explained to Adam the past. Had explained to him how the great Galactic society had torn at itself through war and changed itself into an Empire and then back again. How the civilization that spanned the known galaxy had been invaded by intergalactic raiders and eventually beat them as well. How the Jedi Order had stood as guardians for the Galactic society for thousands of years, only to be destroyed by evil forces and rebuilt again by Master Skywalker.
It was in these history lessons, that Adam caught glimpses of what he thought Master Skywalker expected out of him. History as Adam knew it before he crashed here was slightly different than what his Master taught him. History, as Adam learned in his youth, did indeed say that there once was a galaxy spanning civilization. But that crumbled thousands of years ago.
In it’s place, thousands of fiefdoms sprung up and as Adam’s youthful education would have him believe, it was for the better. The major powers in the galaxy were of course in the Core. The Federation laid claim to being what was left of the once great galactic civilization. Centered around the planet of Denon, the Federation claimed thousands of Core worlds and considered itself the diplomat of the galaxy. Always trying to get the rest of the kingdoms to unite with them and bring peace to the core.
The Corellian Confederation was probably the second largest nation in the Core. Corellia had for thousands of years been a civilized planet, and for most of that time, had been a center for starship production. CEC had produced more starships in it’s time than sentient beings existed on the planet.
The Corellians were an independent lot, as were their colonies. But in times of crisis, they would pull together and their remarkable toughness and resilience would see them through the day. It was said that in the Corellia Confederacy, there were only three jobs one could profit in, Starship Construction, Piracy, and Smuggling. Most Corellians dabbled in at least two in their lifetimes, and most people were fairly surprised at how often Piracy was one of the choices.
Their chief rival was the Kuati. Another legendary starship producing star system, the Kuati vied for domination of the Core worlds. Their noble classes seeing it as their birthright to rule the civilized planets.
All three of these nations had client states out in the Mid Rim and even in the Outer Rim worlds, where warlords and petty dictators ruled.
Adam had grown up taught that such things were normal, that people should decide their own destiny and that a large galactic scale government was unrealistic. But hearing Master Skywalker talk about the Republic, the love in his eyes and the warmth that flowed through the hologram, Adam had to revise his previous thoughts on the matter.
According to his Master, the Galactic Civilization had lasted over twenty five thousand years. Far longer than any of the smaller kingdoms Adam was used to and the sheer thought of millions and millions of species interacting and cooperating was an astonishing thought. The miracles such a society could make, well, could be boundless.
It was during these lessons that Adam discovered why Master Skywalker had reached out through the dust of time, delved deep into the Force to see who and where he could reach out to and touch after so long, to change the galaxy. Adam Goodheart stood in front of his Master. The first Jedi Knight to exist in three millennia and he knew that his Master wanted him to change the Galaxy. It was an enormous responsibility.
“Back in the old days,” His Master said, a slight smile on his face as he said ‘old days’. “Jedi Padawans would have to pass a Trial before being anointed a Jedi Knight. These tests were to put in place for the Padawan to prove the level of confidence in his or her abilities.”
The old hologram sighed, “Unfortunately, there is no obstacle course I can send you through, nor some written test I can formulate for your Trails, Adam. And I apologize. The terms and methods of which I was to train you, obviously forbid such tests.”
He smiled again, a kind smile, one a father does for his son in proud moments. “I’m afraid that your ascension to Knighthood will be as troubling and trying as my own and again I apologize. Your trial, and your mission, as I’m willing to bet that you have already guessed, is to bring together the broken pieces of the galaxy and to restore the Republic.”
Derec, who had been sitting in the back listening quietly, coughed at hearing the ancient Master assign the mission, though he had spent hours if not days discussing such a potential mandate with Adam.
“I know that it is a daunting task, and an awesome responsibility. But have faith in the Force, I have seen in my visions that you are indeed the man to do this. The future is always in motion, so the specifics of your task are unclear. But the one thing I am sure of is that training you, now, at this time, is the right thing to do. The Force would not put such things into motion if there was no chance of success.” The ancient Master continued.
“Always beware of the Darkside, or a tyrannical Empire will be wrought, or worse, the continuation of this Dark Age of the Galaxy. But while you are cautious of the Darkside, do not repeat my errors. Feel the Force, let it guide you into action. If no one is willing to act, then the horrid state of affairs in the galaxy will continue.” He had a mournful look in his eye, and perhaps, Adam thought, a bit of guilt.
After a second, the hologram said, “You are the first of the new Jedi, and if you succeed in your mission, you will have learned far more than I could ever teach you, even if I could travel the dark and dusty path of time and be there with out. If you need advise, don’t hesitate to turn to your friends, nor should you forget all the data and lore I’ve encrypted on the Holocron and the Archive Records I’ve left you. Remember that the Valley of the Jedi is now your home and all the records and equipment that I’ve saved for you will be here waiting if you need it. The Valley itself will be a quiet place of solitude for you to center yourself in times of turmoil.”
He sighed, “My young apprentice, I have faith in you, the Force, and in those you meet along your path, that you will succeed and a new Republic will be born. And perhaps a new Jedi Order to protect her. Good luck, Jedi Goodheart. And may the Force be with you.”
The hologram derezzed and Adam was standing by himself in the center of the vast chamber. He had indeed known it was coming. But standing here, listening to his Master tell him his mandate, was shocking.
“He sure doesn’t know how to soften blows, does he?” Derec came up behind him. “At the very least, he could have given you a place to start. Not just dump this in your lap and say ‘Go!’. He continued.
Adam turned to his friend, his fingers interlocked in front of him in thought. “The futures a tricky thing, Derec. I’m sure that if Master Skywalker knew where to start, he would have forewarned me.”
Derec glanced down at Adam’s hands and smiled. “I thought you wanted to blend in with the rest of us humans? Going around like some weird monk isn’t going to exactly ‘blend’ in.” He laughed.
Adam returned a tight smile, “Hmm, I suppose there are quite a few habits I’ve developed here at the Valley that I’ll have to be aware of.” He gave a beaming smile at his friend, “Thank the Force that I have you here to show me the way.”
“Well,” Said Derec, “It’s not like you’ve been here constantly over the last five years. We had that good time on Androffa.” Adam chuckled at the memory.
Derec continued, laughing lightly, “Oh, and when I took you to Nar Shadda for your homework on Jedi mind tricks. Remember that poor old Niemoidian and the two Kowakian monkey-lizards?”
Derec was laughing hysterically now and Adam joined him for a bit, thinking back to all the good times the two had been though in the last half a decade, if not longer. Derec had pretty much been unchanged over the last few years. His dark hair hid his face, particularly when he was hunched over a terminal or piece of equipment studying it.
His built was a lot like Adams, but the mechanic spent more hours reading and tinkering with things, so his mid section was loosing the war with gravity. His eyes always smiled and Adam had recently been shocked at how old they were getting when he noticed the laugh lines around his friends features.
However, as jolly as his friend was, Derec was a purpose driven person, so while Adam was learning the ways of the Force, Derec had spent two years rebuilding the Second Chance. Master Skywalker may not have foreseen how to unite the galaxy, but at least he had seen the method of Adams arrival to the Valley of the Jedi.
While the central chamber to the valley may be the most important part of the facility, the ancient ruins had other rooms. In these rooms, Master Skywalker had left various bits and pieces of technology that perhaps he thought Adam could use. Among these, sealed in ancient crates, were various parts for starships and engines.
Derec was overjoyed when he first saw them, even happier after he had time to tinker and play with them. The mechanic had explained to Adam years ago how advanced those replacement parts were,’ More efficient’ if Adam remembered correctly. Derec had found all the pieces that he needed to get the Second Chance up and running and was overjoyed at how well she ran after her repairs.
Derec had occasionally left the Valley of the Jedi for supplies and once he left for a month for professional repairs to the ship that he just couldn’t do himself. Adam went with him once or twice, as instructed by his master, practical experience and practice of certain techniques, Skywalker had said.
Master Skywalker had also left a library computer that complemented the Holocron. Inside of the massive data banks, Adam could read up on just about every species he’d ever heard of, and some he hadn’t. A vast, twenty five thousand year history lesson.
He had fallen into a contemplative state and Derec joggled him out of it, “So, where to first? If we have to save the galaxy, I’d like to start now. Maybe we can be done before dinner.”
Adam smiled again, “Perhaps we should go to where it ended, then?”
“The Federation?” Asked Derec.
Adam clapped him on the back, “It sounds like a start. Besides, I somewhat vaguely remember some sort of summit there for the Core in the next few weeks.”
Derec made a dismissive sound, “They always have a summit or peace council or some such going on there. They’re all a joke. Why would Corellia or Kuat want to bow down to the Federation? But you’re the Jedi, if you want to go to the Federation, off we go to the Federation.”
The two men wrapped their arms about each other as if to support each others weight and headed off to the hangar and their ship.