'Master. .,' Barriss began. Turning, the Jedi put a reassuring hand on her Padawan's shoulder.

'Not everything is assured in advance, my dear.' Her hand slid off the strong shoulder. 'I know what I'm doing. I just don't know what the surepp are going to do.' Taking a couple of steps back, she took a deep breath and nodded at Bayaar.

It was not for him to try to dissuade the offworlder. He had already done all he properly could to apprise her of the danger she had chosen to face. Raising a hand high, he signaled to his right. Down the fence line, the operator in charge of this section of the corral responded with a gesture of acknowledgment. Something went softly ssizzt.

'The barrier here has been shut down,' he told the visitors. 'If you really mean to do this thing, you have to do it now.'

'I know,' Luminara replied. Whereupon she stepped carefully through the unelectrified fence line, gathered herself, and leapt onto the back of the nearest surepp.

Chapter 16

Rising above the twilight clamor from the town and the communal mewling and burbling of the tightly packed beasts, the collective intake of breath from the audience of watching Borokii was plainly audible. Their astonishment was paralleled by that of the two Padawans, even though they had been given some idea of what to expect.

Exhibiting the strength of a weight lifter, the agility of a gymnast, and the training of a Jedi adept, Luminara sped not through the herd but over it. Across it, rather, Anakin thought as he looked on in amazement and admiration. Touching down only long enough to kick off and launch herself to another expansive, woolly spine, Luminara raced across the backs of the Borokii herd, heading for its ap proximate heart. Occasionally, disturbed by the contact, a sleepy surepp would look up in surprise. Unable to discern any threat or danger, it would then lower its head and return to its quiet dozing.

While her friends were able to monitor her progress via their macrobinoculars, Kyakhta, Bulgan, Tooqui, Bayaar, and the other observing Borokii could only strain to see with their eyes. Unable to stand the suspense, the sentinel finally sidled over next to the offworlder called Obi-Wan.

'How is your friend doing?' he found himself asking. 'She is still alive, or you would have reacted.'

'Moving fast.' Obi-Wan spoke without lowering the device. 'Back and forth. Fast enough that I couldn't keep her in focus, but this viewing device does it for me.'

What seemed like hours but were in reality only minutes passed in tense silence before the Jedi murmured softly but excitedly, 'There!' His voice rose despite his efforts to keep it under control. 'She's got it!'

'So soon?' Bayaar was all but struck dumb with astonishment. 'She moves very swiftly indeed, your female.'

'Not my female,' Obi-Wan hurriedly corrected him. 'We are colleagues, equals. Like you and your fellow warriors.'

'Ah,' murmured Bayaar without quite understanding the offworlder.

'Yes, she's quick,' Obi-Wan added. 'On her way back now.' Suddenly he jerked visibly, lowered the macrobinoculars from his eyes, then raised them again.

'What? What's happening?' Turning toward the herd, Bayaar strained to see. His night vision was excellent, but no match for the advanced viewer. 'I think I see some disturbance.'

'She slipped.' The offworlder's voice was not quite as neu tral as before. 'Slipped and fell. I–I can't see her anymore.' A rising mewling reached them from the place within the massed herd where Luminara had gone down. Even without aid, he could see that several animals were stirring uneasily. Beside them, others were waking from their evening torpor.

There was no time to discuss alternatives. They had to act before the disturbance spread.

'We're going after her,' he told the two attentive Padawans. Though he could see the anxiety writ large in their expressions, there was no time to reassure them, no time for coddling.

'Concentrate,' he ordered them. 'Concentrate as hard as you ever have concentrated. Focus. And stay together.' Taking Barriss's hand in his right and Anakin's in his left, Obi- Wan led them through the barrier.

Pushed, pressed by the focusing of the Force from not one but three trained individuals, the surepp gave way. Mewling and hissing, they parted to make a path for the striding offworlders. Triple eyes glared angrily at the bipeds, furious at the intrusion. But something kept them at bay, prevented them from trampling the trio beneath massed, sharp- toed feet.

If any of them lost heart, Obi-Wan knew, if either Padawan panicked or lost concentration, he and whoever remained fo cused might not be able to sustain the intensity necessary to hold the surging, increasingly restless herd back. He tried to will his own mastery into the two learners, to lend some of his own strength to each of them. Yet as they marched deliberately forward, ever deeper into the herd, a strange thing happened.

While Barriss held her own, Anakin seemed to grow stronger. It was as if, faced by the challenge and the very real proximity of death, the Force grew within him. Obi-Wan did not entirely understand what was happening, but at the moment he was far too preoccupied to examine the phenomenon. Right then, one thing and only one mattered.

They found Luminara lying unconscious on the ground, a trickle of blood trailing from her forehead. A quick glance showed Obi-Wan that the injury was not deep. Still, he could not see what she might have suffered internally when she fell. A muscular trill ran through his fingers where he held Barriss's. He could see the concern in her face, could feel the distress. But Barriss Offee was her Master's student. As a healer, she might have been expected to drop immediately to the ground to begin ministering to her Master. As an incipient Jedi, she knew that what mattered now was not individual healing, but sustaining the Force against the powerful animals that were hissing and pawing at the ground all around them.

Displaying his physical as well as mental strength, Anakin hoisted the unconscious Jedi onto his shoulders. Together, they turned and began to retrace their steps. A growing section of the herd had been alerted to the presence of intruders in their midst. Even though no danger had manifested itself, and none among the herd had

Вы читаете The Approaching Storm
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×