Tejori Lotor
Only the bright future lays ahead...

The locals called the storm X'us'R'iia. It had a name because they believed there was only the one, the same one that returned again and again. It was the breath of the god R'iia, they said.
R'iia was not a benevolent god, and thus the storm was blamed for a great many things. It was the source of the famine that had plagued Tash-Taral for years. It was the reason the water had gone away. It was why their luggabeasts turned unruly. It was responsible for the interlopers who plagued their lands. It was, significantly, what had brought the great shards of metal filled with many, many soft beings crashing to the sands so many years before. The ship graveyards were a monument to R'iia's anger, they said.
They were a warning, one that the interlopers in Jaken consistently failed to heed, much to the local’s annoyance. Most of the locals were harmless, scavengers in their own way, much like Tejori and the others. There were zealots, though, those who were known to attack both their brethren and the salvagers, claiming what they did was a blasphemy to R'iia. R'iia would punish them all for their sins. The X'us'R'iia would punish them all.
Tejori didn't believe a word of it, but she didn't believe in much outside of herself.
She'd been high on the superstructure of one of the old battle cruisers half-buried in the sands, hoping to find something to salvage that the other scavengers had missed. She looked out and saw the storm forming on the horizon. She knew immediately that it would be a big one. It was time to go.
She'd been free-climbing the wreck, and it was — perhaps paradoxically — always quicker going up than it was going down. Going down, you had to worry about gravity in a whole different way, and hurrying was a good plan to get yourself hurt.
She knew that from experience.
She took it fast, anyway — almost too fast — then risked jumping the last three meters to the ground. The sand could be soft if you were close enough, but she wasn't. From that height, it was like landing on metal. The shock of impact jarred her ankles and ran a sharp pain up her calves and into her knees.
Which was when she heard the ship…
[member="Fanus Ren"]