
"Thank you. I do not intend to be destroyed."
He raised his head up again as the droid finally followed its clattering, whirring comrades to the waiting
ship.
The crowd had reached the ancient stone causeway connecting the atoll-city of Imthitill to the
abandoned fishing platform Dorsk now crouched on. It seemed they were all on foot, which meant all he
had to do was pre-vent them from crossing the causeway.
With a single bound, Dorsk propelled his thin body up onto the causeway, forsaking the cover of the
step down to the fishing platform. Lightsaber held at his side, he watched the mob approach.
/am a Jedi, he thought to himself.A Jedi knows no fear.
Almost surprisingly, he didn't. His training with Mas-ter Skywalker had been fretted with attacks of
panic. Dorsk was the eighty-second clone of the first Khommite to bear his name. He'd grown up on a
world well satis-fied with its own peculiar kind of perfection, and that hadn't prepared him for danger, or
fear, or even the un-expected. There were times when he believed he could never be as brave as the
other Jedi students or live up to the standard set by his celebrated predecessor, Dorsk 81.
But watching the large, dark eyes of the crowd that was drawing close, he felt nothing but a gentle
sadness that they had been driven to this. They must fear the Yuu-zhan Vong terribly.
The destruction of droids had begun small, but in a
few days had become a planetwide epidemic. The gov-ernment of Ando—such as it was—neither
condoned nor condemned the brutality, so long as no non-droids were killed or injured in the mess.
Without help from the po-lice, Dorsk 82 was the only chance the droids had, and he didn't plan to fail
them. He had already failed too many.
He ignited his lightsaber and for an instant saw every-thing around him at once. The setting sun had
spilled a glorious slick of orange fire into the ocean and lit the high-piled clouds on the horizon into castles
of flame. Higher, the sky faded to gold-laced jade and aquamarine and then the pale of night. The lights in
the cylindri-cal white towers of Imthitill were winking on, one by one, and so, too, were the lights of the
fishing platforms floating in the deeps, spangling the ocean with lonely constellations.
His own planet hadn't any such untamed spectacles. Khomm's weather was as predictable and
homogenous as its people. Likely he, Dorsk 82, was the only person of his entire species who could
appreciate this sky, or the iron-dressed waves of the sea.
Salt air buffeted around him. He lifted his chin. Some-how, after all of these years, he felt he was doing
the thing he had dreamed about at last.
One of the Aqualish stepped before the rest. He was smaller than many, his tusks incised in the local
style. He wore the dappled slicksuit of a tug worker.
"Move, Jedi," he commanded. "These droids are none of your business."
"These droids are under my protection," Dorsk re-plied calmly.