"No doubt about it, we're doomed," he recited mournfully as Artoo righted
himself, returning to full activation. "Do you think they'll melt us down?" He
became silent for several minutes, then added, "It's this waiting that gets to me."
Abruptly the far wall of the
chamber slid aside and the blinding white glare of a
Tatooine morning rushed in on them. Threepio's
sensitive photoreceptors were hard
pressed to adjust in time to prevent serious damage.
Several of the repulsive-looking jawas scrambled agilely into the
chamber, still
dressed in the same swathing and filth Threepio had observed on them before.
Using hard weapons of an unknown design, they prodded at the machines. Certain
of them, Threepio noted with a mental swallow, did not stir.
Ignoring the immobile ones, the jawas herded those still capable of movement
outside, Artoo and Threepio among them. Both robots found themselves part of an
uneven mechanical line.
Shielding his eyes against the glare, Threepio saw that five of them were
arranged
alongside the huge sandcrawler. Thoughts of escape did not enter his mind.
Such a concept was utterly alien to a mechanical. The more intelligent a robot was,
the more abhorrent and unthinkable the concept. Besides, had he tried to escape,
built-in sensors would have detected the
critical logic malfunction and melted every
circuit in his brain.
Instead, he
studied the small domes and vaporators that indicated the presence of
a larger
underground human
homestead. Though he was
unfamiliar with this type of
construction, all signs pointed to a modest, if isolated,
habitation. Thoughts of being
dismembered for parts or slaving in some high-temperature mine slowly faded. His
spirits rose correspondingly.
"Maybe this won't be so bad after all," he murmured
hopefully. "If we can
convince these bipedal vermin to unload us here, we may enter into sensible human
service again instead of being melted into slag."
Artoo's sole reply was a noncommittal chirp. Both machines became silent as
the jawas commenced scurrying around them, striving to
straighten one poor machine
with a badly bent spine, to disguise a dent or
scrape with liquid and dust.
As two of them bustled about, working on his sand-coated skin, Threepio fought
to
stifle an expression of disgust. One of his many human-analog functions was the
ability to react naturally to
offensive odors. Apparently
hygiene was unknown
among the jawas. But he was certain no good would come of pointing this out to
them.
Small insects drifted in clouds about the faces of the jawas, who ignored them.
Apparently the tiny individualized plagues were regarded as just a different sort of
appendage, like an extra arm or leg.
So intent was Threepio on his observation that he failed to notice the two figures
moving toward them from the region of the largest dome. Artoo had to nudge him
slightly before he looked up.
The first man wore an air of grim, semi-perpetual
exhaustion, sandblasted into
his face by too many years of arguing with a hostile
environment. His graying hair
was frozen in tangled twists like gypsum helicites. Dust frosted his face, clothes,
hands, and thoughts. But the body, if not the spirit, was still powerful.
Proportionately dwarfed by his uncle's wrestler-like body, Luke
strode slump-
shouldered in his shadow, his present attitude one of dejection rather than
exhaustion.
He had a great deal on his mind, and it had very little to do with farming. Mostly it
involved the rest of his life, and the commitment made by his best friend who had
recently
departed beyond the blue sky above to enter a harsher, yet more rewarding
career.
The bigger man stopped before the assembly and entered into a peculiar squeaky
dialogue with the jawa in charge. When they wished it, the jawas could be
understood.
Luke stood nearby, listening
indifferently. Then he shuffled along behind his
uncle as the latter began inspecting the five machines, pausing only to mutter an
occasional word or two to his nephew. It was hard to pay attention, even though he
knew he ought to be learning.
"Luke-oh, Luke!" a voice called.
Turning away from the conversation, which consisted of the lead jawa extolling
the unmatched virtues of all five machines and his uncle countering with derision,
Luke walked over to the near edge of the subterranean
courtyard and peered down.
A stout woman with the expression of a misplaced sparrow was busy working
among
decorative plants. She looked up at him. "Be sure and tell Owen that if he
buys a translator to make sure it speaks Bocce, Luke."
Turning, Luke looked back over his shoulder and
studied the motley collection of
tired machines. "It looks like we don't have much of a choice," he called back down
to her, "but I'll remind him anyway."
She nodded up at him and he turned to
rejoin his uncle.
Apparently Owen Lars had already come to a decision, having settled on a small
semi-agricultural robot. This one was similar in shape to Artoo Detoo, save that its
multiple subsidiary arms were tipped with different functions. At an order it had
stepped out of the line and was wobbling along behind Owen and the temporarily
subdued jawa.
Proceeding to the end of the line, the farmer's eyes narrowed as he concentrated
on the sand-scoured but still flashy
bronze finish of the tall, humanoid Threepio.
"I
presume you function," he grumbled at the robot. "Do you know customs
and protocol?"
"Do I know protocol?" Threepio echoed as the farmer looked him up and down.
Threepio was determined to
embarrass the jawa when it came to selling his abilities.
"Do I know protocol! Why, it's my primary function. I am also well-"
"Don't need a protocol 'droid," the farmer snapped dryly.
"I don't blame you, sir," Threepio rapidly agreed. "I couldn't be more in
agreement. What could be more of a
wasteful luxury in a climate like this? For
someone of your interests, sir, a protocol 'droid would be a useless waste of money.
No, sir-versatility is my middle name. See Vee Threepio-Vee for versatility-at
your service. I've been programmed for over thirty secondary functions that require
only..."
"I need," the farmer broke in, demonstrating
imperiousdisregard for Threepio's
as yet unenumerated secondary functions, "a 'droid that knows something about
binary language of
independently programmable moisture vaporators."
"Vaporators! We are both in luck," Threepio countered. "My first post-
primary
assignment was in programming binary load lifters. Very similar in
construction and memory-function to your vaporators. You could almost say..."
Luke tapped his uncle on the shoulder and whispered something in his ear.
His uncle nodded, then looked back at the attentive Threepio again.
"Do you speak Bocce?"
"Of course, sir," Threepio replied,
confident for a change with a wholly honest
answer. "It's like a second language to me. "I'm as fluent in Bocce as-"
the farmer appeared determined never to allow him to conclude a sentence.
"Shut up." Owen Lars looked down at the jawa. "I'll take this one, too."
"Shutting up, sir," responded Threepio quickly, hard put to conceal his glee at
being selected.
"Take them down to the
garage, Luke," his uncle instructed him. "I want you to
have both of them cleaned up by suppertime."
Luke looked askance at his uncle. "But I was going into Tosche station to pick
up some new power converters and..."
"Don't lie to me, Luke," his uncle warned him
sternly. "I don't mind you
wasting time with your idle friends, but only after you've finished your chores. Now
hop to it-and before supper, mind."
Downcast, Luke directed his words irritably to Threepio and the small
agricultural robot. He knew better than to argue with his uncle.
"Follow me, you two." They started for the
garage as Owen entered into price
negotiations with the jawa.
Other jawas were leading the three remaining machines back into the
sandcrawler when something let out an almost
pathetic beep. Luke turned to see a
Artoo unit breaking
formation and starting toward him. It was immediately
restrained by a jawa wielding a control device that activated the disk sealed on the
machine's front plate.
Luke
studied the
rebellious 'droid curiously. Threepio started to say something,
considered the circumstances and thought better of it. Instead, he remained silent,
staring straight ahead.
A minute later, something pinged sharply nearby. Glancing down, Luke saw
that a head plate had popped off the top of the agricultural 'droid. A grinding noise
was coming from within. A second later the machine was throwing internal
components all over the sandy ground.
Leaning close, Luke peered inside the expectorating mechanical. He called out,
"Uncle Owen! The servomotor-central on this
cultivator unit is shot. Look..."
He reached in, tried to adjust the device, and pulled away
hurriedly when it began a
wild sparking. The odor of crisped insulation and corroded circuitry filled the clear
desert air with a pungency redolent of mechanized death.
Owen Lars glared down at the nervous jawa. "What kind of junk are you trying
to push on us?"
The jawa responded loudly,
indignantly, while
simultaneouslytaking a couple of
precautionary steps away from the big human. He was distressed that the man was
between him and the soothing safely of the sandcrawler.
Meanwhile, Artoo Detoo had scuttled out of the group of machines being led
back toward the mobile
fortress. Doing so turned out to be simple enough, since all
the jawas had their attention focused on the argument between their leader and Luke's
uncle.
Lacking sufficient armature for wild gesticulation, the Artoo unit suddenly let
out a high whistle, then broke it off when it was apparent he had gained Threepio's
attention.
Tapping Luke gently on the shoulder, the tall 'droid whispered conspiratorially
into his ear. "If I might say so, young sir, that Artoo unit is a real bargain. In top
condition. I don't believe these creatures have any idea what good shape he's really
in. Don't let all the sand and dust deceive you."
Luke was in the habit of making instant decisions-for good or bad-anyway.
"Uncle Owen!" he called.
Breaking off the argument without
taking his attention from the jawa, his uncle
glanced quickly at him. Luke gestured toward Artoo Detoo. "We don't want any
trouble. What about swapping this-" he indicated the burned-out
agricultural 'droid-"for that one?"
The older man
studied the Artoo unit professionally, then considered the jawas.
Though inherently cowards, the tiny desert scavengers could be pushed too far. The
sandcrawler could
flatten the
homestead-at the risk of inciting the human
community to lethal
vengeance.
Faced with a no-win situation for
wither side if he pressed too hard, Owen
resumed the argument for show's sake before
gruffly assenting. The head jawa
consented
reluctantly to the trade, and both sides breathed a mental sigh of relief that
hostilities had been avoided. While the jawa bowed and whined with impatient
greed, Owen paid him off.
Meanwhile, Luke had led the two robots toward an opening in the dry ground.
A few seconds later they were striding down a ramp kept clear of drifting sand by
electrostatic repellers.
"Don't you ever forget this," Threepio muttered to Artoo, leaning over the
smaller machine. "Why I stick my neck out for you, when all you ever bring me is
trouble, is beyond my capacity to comprehend."
The passage widened into
garage proper, which was cluttered with tools and
sections of farming machinery. Many looked heavily used, some to the point of
collapse. But the lights were comforting to both 'droid, and there was a hominess to
the
chamber which hinted at a tranquillity not
experienced by either machine for a
long time. Near the center of the
garage was a large tub, and the aroma drifting from
it made Threepio's principal olfactory sensors twitch.
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