Tejori Lotor
Only the bright future lays ahead...

The X'us'R'iia lasted three and a half days.
Tejori finished one bottle of water and half of another, guarding her thirst, because she didn't know how long it would be until she'd be able to get into Jaken for more. She was out of food by the second day, and by the time the storm was over her headache was so intense she was lightheaded and had to go slowly when she moved around her little home.
She'd jury-rigged a computer using pieces scavenged from several crashed fighters over the years, including a cracked but still-usable display from an old BTL-A4 Y-wing. There were no radio communications to speak of — no way to transmit or receive and, frankly, nobody she wanted to talk to anyway. On the wreckage of a Zephra-series hauler, though, she'd once found a stash of data chips, and after painstakingly going through each and every one of them, she'd discovered three with their programs intact; one of them, to her delight, had been a flight simulator.
So when she wasn't sleeping or just sitting and listening to the storm or tinkering at her workbench, she flew. It was a good program, or at least she imagined it was. She could select any number of ships to fly, from small repulsor-driven atmospheric craft to a wide variety of fighters, all the way up to an array of stock freighters. She could set destinations, worlds she'd never visited and never imagined she would, and scenarios, from speed runs to obstacle courses to system failures.
At first, she'd been truly horrible at it, quite literally crashing a few seconds after takeoff every time. With nothing else to do, and with a perverse sense of determination that she would not allow herself to be beaten by a machine that she herself had put together with her own hands, she learned. She learned so much that there was little the program could throw her way that would challenge her now. She'd gotten to the point where she would, quite deliberately, do everything she could think of to make things hard on herself, just to see if she could get out of it. Full-throttle atmospheric re-entry with repulsor-engine failure? No sweat.
Multiple hull breach deep-space engine flameout? A walk in the park.
It was, if nothing else, a way to pass the time.
When Tejori finally ventured out, the sun was hot and mean. 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 went back inside long enough to get a few pieces from her workbench to offer for trade. She then closed up, mounted her speeder, and took the drive into Jaken. She went slowly, mindful that she wasn't at her best.
The little town — if you could call it a town, and she wasn't certain you could, but she didn't have much to compare it with — was still nearly deserted. The tarps over the washing station had been shredded by the X'us'R'iia, and there were two sentries out working on repairs. She parked between the station and the trader’s place and looked over at the little airfield out of habit, counting the ships. There were the same three ships parked there, the same three as ever. All of them looked like they'd survived the storm without damage.
She trudged over to the cleaning station, feeling the sun pummelling her. And she cast a watchful eye for the one she was avoiding. Who most people avoided if they could. There was no guarantee he’d be here today. Or any day. Which was part of the problem. Gang bosses were like that. Especially ones that saw themselves as crime lords.
She was the first one in. Which meant there was nowhere to hide.