babi_scrappa
Successor to ''When the Ashes Settle'', this is the second installment in the duology.
Thirteen years after the war ended, peace moves across Pandora in calm rhythm, like a lake that almost convinces you it'd never seen thunder.
Tamtey leads the Sarentu as olo'eykte, with Ri'nela as her tsahìk and So'lek at their side, loyal as ever. Leadership fits them like it always meant to, a blade sharpened through meticulous hands. They welcome three children into the world who each reflect them in different ways.
Ivä, fierce and commanding; Kha'lo, careful and perceptive; then little Fika, so small she only knew laughter.
The Sarentu reclaim their identity as nomads and storytellers, traveling from clan to clan, place to place, welcomed and respected as their ancestors once were. For awhile, the freedom made them feel untouchable.
But far across Pandora, the humans have been festering like an open wound.
They return not as miners or soldiers, but as architects and playwrights crafting spectacle. With Earth collapsing under pollution, famine, and disease, the wealthy are offered salvation in the form of avatar bodies and a newly crafted frontier made specially for them.
A vast city rises. Glass towers replace drill rigs, cafés and boutiques bloom beside glowing flora, not on top of it. Pandora becomes the luxury destination it was always meant to be in the eyes of humans.
Celebrities and corporate elites arrive to perform and be showered in gifts beneath floating mountains. Visitors purchase "authentic" artifacts while posting selfies to their timelines.
Wealth remains the deity, and exploitation has simply changed its costume.
Thirteen years of peace had taught Tamtey how to believe in it again, but it also taught her how to recognize the comings of a storm.
This time, would they be able to waver it?