
the corner. "This is Bilk, an... associate of mine." Bilk stepped forward slightly, and Lorn could now see
him well enough to recognize him as a Gamorrean. That explained the stench.
"Pleased to meet you, Bilk." He gestured at I-Five. "This is my associate, I-FiveYQ. I-Five, for short."
"Charmed," I-Five said dryly. "Now, if you don't mind, Til shut off my olfactory sensor before it
overloads." Zippa turned his bulbous gaze toward the droid. "Chut-chut! A droid with a sense of humor!
This I like. You want to sell him?" The Toydarian drifted closer and slightly higher, the better to evaluate
I-Five's worth. "Looks pretty cobbled together. Are those Cybot G7 powerbus cables? Haven't seen
them used in years.
Still, he might be worth something as a curi-osity. I'll give you fifty creds for him." Lorn kicked the droid
in his lower left servomotor coupling before I-Five could voice an indignant pro-test. "Thanks for the
offer, but I-Five's not mine to sell. We're business partners." Zippa stared at Lorn for a moment, then
broke into a wheezing laugh. "You got a weird sense of humor, Lorn. I never know when you're kidding.
Still, I like you." .
Bilk suddenly narrowed his beady eyes and rumbled deep in his throat, leaning truculently toward I-Five.
Probably only just now realizing that the droid's ear-lier remark had been an insult, Lorn surmised.
Gamor-reans weren't the brightest species in the galaxy, not by several decimal places.
Zippa drifted in front of his hulking bodyguard. "Relax, Bilk. We're all good friends here." He turned
back toward Lorn. "My friend, this is your lucky day." The Toydarian dug knobby fingers into a pouch
and pulled out a palm-sized crystal cube, which glowed a dull red in the semidarkness of the booth.
"What I have here is an authentic Jedi Holocron, reliably chronon-dated to be five thousand years old.
This cube contains secrets of the ancient Jedi Knights." He held the cube at Lorn's eye level. "For an
artifact such as this, you must agree that no price is too great.
Never-theless, all I am asking is a measly twenty thousand credits." Lorn made no attempt to touch the
object that the fence held before him. "Most interesting, and cer-tainly a fair price," he said. "If it is what
you claim it is." Zippa looked affronted. "Nifft! You doubt my word?" Bilk growled and cracked one set
of knuckles against the horny palm of his other hand. They sounded like bones snapping.
"No, of course not. I'm sure you believe what you say is true. But there are many unscrupulous vendors
out there, and even someone with your discerning eye might conceivably be taken in. All I'm asking for is
a little empirical proof." Zippa twisted his snout into a grin, exposing teeth scrimshawed with the remnants
of his last meal. "And how do you propose we get this proof ? A Jedi Holocron can be activated only by
someone who can use the Force. Is there something you're not telling me, Lorn? Are you perhaps a
closet Jedi?" Lorn felt himself go cold. He stepped forward and grabbed Zippa by his fleekskin vest,
jerking the sur-prised Toydarian toward him. Bilk growled and lunged at Lorn, then stopped cold as a
hair-thin laser beam scorched his scalp between his horns.
"Settle down," I-Five said pleasantly, lowering the index finger from which the beam had iked, "and I
won't have to show you the other special modifica-tions I've had installed." Ignoring the face-off between
the droid and the Gamorrean, Lorn spoke in a low voice to Zippa. "I know that was intended as a
joke-which is why I'm letting you live. But don't ever-ever-say anything like that to me again." He glared
into the Toydarian's protruding watery eyes for a moment longer, then re-leased him.
Zippa quickly assumed a position just behind Bilk, wings beating harder than ever. Lorn could see him
swallow the surprise and anger he was undoubtedly feeling as he smoothed away the wrinkles in his vest.
Inwardly, Lorn cursed himself; he knew it was a mis-take to let his temper get the best of him. He
needed this deal; he couldn't afford to antagonize the Toy-darian fence. But Zippa's remark had taken