Tejori Lotor
Only the bright future lays ahead...

The pod hit the ground with a severe jolt – then again – and again. It was skipping across the sand.
Finally, one impact stuck, slowing it down bit by bit as it tunnelled through Jakku's desert and very gradually came to a stop.
The pod jarred forward, into the air, so hard that it looked as if an explosive charge had been set off. But the deep roar she heard told her the truth. Whatever ship this had been ejected from had crashed into the planet, and the escape pod was being thrown forward along with a tsunami of dust and sand.
Tejoti was currently 100 metres above ground. On a rope. As quiclly as she could she made her way back down – head first. Oddly this direction of travel was more dangerous than heading the other way. Odd – but true.
From her viewpoint deep inside the old and abandoned Frigate, she’d seen the escape pod but not the main ship. She smiled. Most eyes would be on the ship – which from the sound of it came in so hot it was probably in flames. She may be the only one that saw the real prize.
She didn’t take her eyes off it as she descended. Slowly, the pod rolled to a stop again, this time apparently for good.
She risked a jump as she reached the floor (which was in fact the side of the ship here). She winced as she’d misjudged it in her greed. Greed was the killer here. Not dehydration or infections. But risks taken in the name of a new find.
She limped as she moved as fast as the pain would allow – deciding to walk as opposed to riding her makeshift speeder. The noise would draw attention away from the main wreck.
Her eyes hadn’t left the escape pod once. She closed the gap swiftly and finally reached it. She punched the button and recoiled from the heat. Covering her hand with her sleeve, she tried again.
The doors shivered. She hit the button a third time, this time with her boot. Then they slid open, sending a small cascade of sand streaming into the capsule. Inside was darkness to her. No doubt whoever was inside would be equally disarmed – this time by the brightness of the sun behind her. So she simply waited, allowing her eyes to see what she would see when they became accustomed to the light.
[member="Siobhan Kerrigan"]