Tejori Lotor
Only the bright future lays ahead...

When Tejori finally ventured out, it took her an hour to get her door open. The sand was piled so high and packed so hard against it that she could move it only by centimetres at first. With each push, more of the desert rushed into her home. When she finally did have the door open, she had to spend another hour cleaning up, but that was mostly because she was working very slowly. Every time she bent and straightened up again, the lightheadedness would return and she would have to stop and steady herself with a hand on the wall.
The sun was hot and mean when she finally emerged. Miraculously, her speeder had been spared the worst of the storm. She dusted it off, checked the power, started the engine, and was pleasantly surprised when it responded without hesitation. She then closed up, mounted her speeder, and took the drive into the graveyard. She went slowly, mindful that she wasn't at her best.
The graveyard wasn't, strictly speaking, just one area but a vast expanse, and you could go for kilometres without seeing signs of anything, then crest some high dune and suddenly find yourself looking down at a field of wreckage. The storm had done more than reveal new finds, however; it had changed the terrain, reshaped the desert — as it so often did and it was a while before she realised how far out she'd gone, how long she'd been riding.
She stopped. Maybe two hours of daylight left, she calculated, and she'd need most of that to get back home. The temperature plummeted at night, got as cold as it could be hot during the day. And then there were the predators — most of which were nocturnal. Getting caught in the dark wouldn't be good.
She'd lost the day, but her mind was ticking over. If she found somewhere here to hold up for the night, she’d get an early start in the morning. She shut down the speeder, dismounted and climbed the nearest and tallest ship for a better view.
The metal, hot from a day in the sun, burned under her hands as she climbed. She used the edges of her wrap as makeshift gloves, but still the heat seeped through. There were more handholds and footholds than it had at first seemed, and she ascended quickly, focusing on what she was doing rather than what was above or quickly growing farther away below. Finally she stopped, then wedged herself into a gap where she could almost sit. It wasn't comfortable, but it was secure, at least for the moment.
The view was amazing. She'd climbed maybe a hundred metres, maybe higher, she thought. Looking back the direction she'd come, she could just make out what she guessed was Jaken, shimmering and distorted in the heat haze. Between her and the town stretched the majority of the known graveyard, the edge marked by the dead Destroyer, and from there even that appeared small. Tejori shifted her weight to the side and pulled her macrobinoculars from her satchel. Only one of the lenses worked, so it was more a macromonocular, she figured, but it worked all the same. She brought it to her eyes and scanned the desert spread out before her.
There were a couple of Teedos on the horizon, the range finder on the macros telling her they were over fifty kilometres out. They were walking their luggabeasts instead of riding them, which meant they'd been out on a long search and were returning home. She swept her gaze to the left, over the featureless desert. It was disappointing. There was nothing new to see, and the few wrecks she knew to be out that way were gone now, eaten once more by the desert.
Something dug at her vision, a flash-metal or glass — just for an instant, and Tejori swung her view back, slower, and felt her heartbeat quickening. She forced herself to look slowly and tried to retrace the path her eyes had taken, but it took genuine willpower to do it. The sun was dropping, and Tejori knew that whatever the light had caught, it had been a case of right place, right time; in minutes, perhaps even seconds, the sun would drop even lower, and what had been revealed might vanish forever.
She saw it again — the flare of sunlight glinting off exposed metal — and she refocused the macros and pulled out. What she found nearly made her fall off her perch.
It was a ship.
Tejori lowered the macros. She checked the sun again. By the time she climbed down, she'd have just enough time to make it back home before darkness fell. If she pushed to the wreck she would make it with daylight left, but there'd be no way to get back to her home before the desert turned cold and dangerous with nightfall and everything that came with it. She could leave it for tomorrow, head out at dawn, and hope that she would be able to find the wreck again and that nobody else would discover it before she could claim it.
It was those last two unknowns that made her decision: the fear that she would never be able to find it again and that someone would steal it from her.
She stuffed the macros back in her satchel and began the long climb down.
[member="Fiore Cœur de Noir"]