Star Wars_ The Approaching Storm - Alan Dean Foster [124]
Studying the Januul multitude drawn up before them, Luminara made a hasty estimate of their numbers. Less than a thousand, she guessed, but all of them well armed and clad in striking, hand-worked armor. Standing alongside her, Obi-Wan concurred with her assessment.
“No heavy weapons.” He leaned slightly forward as he carefully scrutinized the tightly packed lines of warriors. “No laser cannons, no launchers of any size.” He remarked on this to Bayaar.
Their friend looked horrified. “Haja, no! If either the Borokii or the Januul were to employ such deadly offworld devices, one clan or the other might well win this and all other similar confrontations, but they would be shunned by every other clan on the planet. Besides, such an escalation would mean that the opposing side would have to acquire similar weapons to defend itself. And then where would the proud Alwari be?”
“Staring down the barrel of self-extermination,” Anakin ventured from nearby. Though he would never have admitted to it, he personally found the barbaric display, with armored Ansionians riding equally flamboyantly garbed sadains and a few magnificently invested suubatars, oddly beguiling. From a purely academic point of view, of course, he hastened to assure himself. While today’s confrontation might mean a great deal to its Ansionian participants, to him it was only another episode in his education.
Barring, of course, the possibility that he and his friends might die.
“So these are the Januul.” Luminara indicated the massed warriors. “They are pretty impressive.”
“Along with the Situng Borokii, the Hovsgol Januul have always been one of the overclans, yes,” Bayaar admitted. “But with your help, the matter of who reigns truly supreme among the Alwari will finally be settled.”
“I hope so,” Obi-Wan told him quietly. “That’s what we’re here today to decide. By setting an example for both the Borokii and the Januul.”
Now, that seemed a strange thing to say, Bayaar thought. But then, the flat-eyed offworlders often seemed to speak in riddles.
Having been ordered to stay out of the fight and remain back with the noncombatants, Kyakhta and Bulgan were in an agony of frustration. They had promised their lives to the offworlders who had helped them, and yet now they would be forced to stand and watch as their new friends risked their lives on behalf of fellow Alwari. It was almost too much to bear. Tooqui, on the other hand, had no difficulty whatsoever in agreeing to stay out of the forthcoming fight.
“There are only four of them.” From their vantage point slightly higher up on the hill overlooking the river and the Januul encampment, Kyakhta strained to see. “Strong and skilled as they are, how can our friends possibly make a difference in the midst of a battle among so many?”
“I don’t know.” Bulgan rubbed nervously at his eye patch. “But you know as well as I that these offworlders are full of surprises.”
“Tooqui know what going happen.” The two much bigger Alwari turned to look down at him. “Jedi going do something stupid stupid.” He moved to the edge of the slight overlook, trying to keep Barriss in view.
Frowning, Kyakhta was sorely tempted to smack the little Gwurran. “You’re lucky Master Luminara ordered me not to hit you. You should show some respect. Whatever happens, I’m sure they’re not going to allow themselves to be killed. Their mission here is too important to them.”
Tooqui looked back up at him. “Who say somethings about them get killed? Tooqui not say that.” The Gwurran returned his attention to the unfolding spectacle below. “Tooqui say they do stupid stupid. Maybe they think of something stupid stupid to do all over stupid stupid heads of Alwari.”
The guides exchanged a confused glance with the equally puzzled Bayaar. Then, realizing that it was a waste of time to try to make sense of something as patently nonsensical as Gwurran gibberish, they all moved to the edge of the slight overlook the better to follow the proceedings unfolding below.
Up close, the savage spectacle was even more impressive than it was from the top of the