Dune (66 page)

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Authors: Frank Herbert

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General

BOOK: Dune
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“But there was a cork sealing off my world, and that cork has been pulled.”

“There is no cork.”

“I would go south, Stilgar — twenty thumpers. I would see this land we
make, this land that I’ve only seen through the eyes of others.”

And I would see my son and my family, he thought. I need time now to
consider the future that is a past within my mind. The turmoil comes and if I’m
not where I can unravel it, the thing will run wild.

Stilgar looked at him with a steady, measuring gaze. Paul kept his attention
on Chani, seeing the interest quicken in her face, noting also the excitement
his words had kindled in the troop.

“The men are eager to raid with you in the Harkonnen sinks,” Stilgar said.
“The sinks are only a thumper away.”

“The Fedaykin have raided with me,” Paul said. “They’ll raid with me again
until no Harkonnen breathes Arrakeen air.”

Stilgar studied him as they rode, and Paul realized the man was seeing this
moment through the memory of how he had risen to command of the Tabr sietch and
to leadership of the Council of Leaders now that Liet-?Kynes was dead.

He has heard the reports of unrest among the young Fremen, Paul thought.

“Do you wish a gathering of the leaders?” Stilgar asked.
Eyes blazed among the young men of the troop. They swayed as they rode, and
they watched. And Paul saw the look of unrest in Chani’s glance, the way she
looked from Stilgar, who was her uncle, to Paul-?Muad’Dib, who was her mate.

“You cannot guess what I want,” Paul said.

And he thought: I cannot back down. I must hold control over these people.

“You are mudir of the sandride this day,” Stilgar said. Cold formality rang
in his voice: “How do you use this power?”

We need time to relax, time for cool reflection, Paul thought.

“We shall go south,” Paul said.

“Even if I say we shall turn back to the north when this day is over?”

“We shall go south,” Paul repeated.

A sense of inevitable dignity enfolded Stilgar as he pulled his robe tightly
around him. “There will be a Gathering,” he said. “I will send the messages.”

He thinks I will call him out, Paul thought. And he knows he cannot stand
against me.

Paul faced south, feeling the wind against his exposed cheeks, thinking of
the necessities that went into his decisions.

They do not know how it is, he thought.

But he knew he could not let any consideration deflect him. He had to remain
on the central line of the time storm he could see in the future. There would
come an instant when it could be unraveled, but only if he were where he could
cut the central knot of it.

I will not call him out if it can be helped, he thought. If there’s another
way to prevent the jihad . . .

“We’ll camp for the evening meal and prayer at Cave of Birds beneath
Habbanya Ridge,” Stilgar said. He steadied himself with one hook against the
swaying of the maker, gestured ahead at a low rock barrier rising out of the
desert.

Paul studied the cliff, the great streaks of rock crossing it like waves. No
green, no blossom softened that rigid horizon. Beyond it stretched the way to
the southern desert — a course of at least ten days and nights, as fast as they
could goad the makers.

Twenty thumpers.

The way led far beyond the Harkonnen patrols. He knew how it would be. The
dreams had shown him. One day, as they went, there ‘d be a faint change of color
on the far horizon — such a slight change that he might feel he was imagining
it out of his hopes — and there would be the new sietch.

“Does my decision suit Muad’Dib?” Stilgar asked. Only the faintest touch of
sarcasm tinged his voice, but Fremen ears around them, alert to every tone in a
bird’s cry or a cielago’s piping message, heard the sarcasm and watched Paul to
see what he would do.

“Stilgar heard me swear my loyalty to him when we consecrated the Fedaykin,”
Paul said. “My death commandos know I spoke with honor. Does Stilgar doubt it?”

Real pain exposed itself in Paul’s voice. Stilgar heard it and lowered his
gaze.

“Usul, the companion of my sietch, him I would never doubt,” Stilgar said.
“But you are Paul-?Muad’Dib, the Atreides Duke, and you are the Lisan al-?Gaib,
the Voice from the Outer World. These men I don’t even know.”

Paul turned away to watch the Habbanya Ridge climb out of the desert. The
maker beneath them still felt strong and willing. It could carry them almost
twice the distance of any other in Fremen experience. He knew it. There was
nothing outside the stories told to children that could match this old man of
the desert. It was the stuff of a new legend, Paul realized.

A hand gripped his shoulder.

Paul looked at it, followed the arm to the face beyond it — the dark eyes
of Stilgar exposed between filter mask and stillsuit hood.
“The one who led Tabr sietch before me,” Stilgar said, “he was my friend. We
shared dangers. He owed me his life many a time . . . and I owed him mine.”

“I am your friend, Stilgar,” Paul said.

“No man doubts it,” Stilgar said. He removed his hand, shrugged. “It’s the
way.”

Paul saw that Stilgar was too immersed in the Fremen way to consider the
possibility of any other. Here a leader took the reins from the dead hands of
his predecessor, or slew among the strongest of his tribe if a leader died in
the desert. Stilgar had risen to be a naib in that way.

“We should leave this maker in deep sand,” Paul said.

“Yes,” Stilgar agreed. “We could walk to the cave from here.”

“We’ve ridden him far enough that he’ll bury himself and sulk for a day or
so,” Paul said.

“You’re the mudir of the sandride,” Stilgar said. “Say when we . . .” He
broke off, stared at the eastern sky.

Paul whirled. The spice-?blue overcast on his eyes made the sky appear dark,
a richly filtered azure against which a distant rhythmic flashing stood out in
sharp contrast.

Ornithopter!

“One small ‘thopter,” Stilgar said.

“Could be a scout,” Paul said. “Do you think they’ve seen us.”

“At this distance we’re just a worm on the surface,” Stilgar said. He
motioned with his left hand. “Off. Scatter on the sand.”

The troop began working down the worm’s sides, dropping off, blending with
the sand beneath their cloaks. Paul marked where Chani dropped. Presently, only
he and Stilgar remained.

“First up, last off,” Paul said.

Stilgar nodded, dropped down the side on his hooks, leaped onto the sand.
Paul waited until the maker was safely clear of the scatter area, then released
his hooks. This was the tricky moment with a worm not completely exhausted.

Freed of its goads and hooks, the big worm began burrowing into the sand.
Paul ran lightly back along its broad surface, judged his moment carefully and
leaped off. He landed running, lunged against the slipface of a dune the way he
had been taught, and hid himself beneath the cascade of sand over his robe.

Now, the waiting . . .

Paul turned, gently, exposed a crack of sky beneath a crease in his robe. He
imagined the others back along their path doing the same.

He heard the beat of the ‘thopter’s wings before he saw it. There was a
whisper of jetpods and it came over his patch of desert, turned in a broad arc
toward the ridge.

An unmarked ‘thopter, Paul noted.

It flew out of sight beyond Habbanya Ridge.

A bird cry sounded over the desert. Another.

Paul shook himself free of sand, climbed to the dune top. Other figures
stood out in a line trailing away from the ridge. He recognized Chani and
Stilgar among them.

Stilgar signaled toward the ridge.

They gathered and began the sandwalk, gliding over the surface in a broken
rhythm that would disturb no maker. Stilgar paced himself beside Paul along the
windpacked crest of a dune.

“It was a smuggler craft,” Stilgar said.

“So it seemed,” Paul said. “But this is deep into the desert, for
smugglers.”

“They’ve their difficulties with patrols, too,” Stilgar said.

“If they come this deep, they may go deeper,” Paul said.

“True.”
“It wouldn’t be well for them to see what they could see if they ventured
too deep into the south. Smugglers sell information, too.”

“They were hunting spice, don’t you think?” Stilgar asked.

“There will be a wing and a crawler waiting somewhere for that one,” Paul
said. “We’ve spice. Let’s bait a patch of sand and catch us some smugglers. They
should be taught that this is our land and our men need practice with the new
weapons.”

“Now, Usul speaks,” Stilgar said. “Usul thinks Fremen.”

But Usul must give way to decisions that match a terrible purpose, Paul
thought.

And the storm was gathering.

= = = = = =

When law and duty are one, united by religion, you never become fully conscious,
fully aware of yourself. You are always a little less than an individual.
-from “Muad’Dib: The Ninety-?Nine Wonders of the Universe” by Princess Irulan

The smuggler’s spice factory with its parent carrier and ring of drone
ornithopters came over a lifting of dunes like a swarm of insects following its
queen. Ahead of the swarm lay one of the low rock ridges that lifted from the
desert floor like small imitations of the Shield Wall. The dry beaches of the
ridge were swept clean by a recent storm.

In the con-?bubble of the factory, Gurney Halleck leaned forward, adjusted
the oil lenses of his binoculars and examined the landscape. Beyond the ridge,
he could see a dark patch that might be a spiceblow, and he gave the signal to a
hovering ornithopter that sent it to investigate.

The ‘thopter waggled its wings to indicate it had the signal. It broke away
from the swarm, sped down toward the darkened sand, circled the area with its
detectors dangling close to the surface.

Almost immediately, it went through the wing-?tucked dip and circle that told
the waiting factory that spice had been found.

Gurney sheathed his binoculars, knowing the others had seen the signal. He
liked this spot. The ridge offered some shielding and protection. This was deep
in the desert, an unlikely place for an ambush . . . still . . . Gurney signaled
for a crew to hover over the ridge, to scan it, sent reserves to take up station
in pattern around the area — not too high because then they could be seen from
afar by Harkonnen detectors.

He doubted, though, that Harkonnen patrols would be this far south. This was
still Fremen country.

Gurney checked his weapons, damning the fate that made shields useless out
here. Anything that summoned a worm had to be avoided at all costs. He rubbed
the inkvine scar along his jaw, studying the scene, decided it would be safest
to lead a ground party through the ridge. Inspection on foot was still the most
certain. You couldn’t be too careful when Fremen and Harkonnen were at each
other’s throats.

It was Fremen that worried him here. They didn’t mind trading for all the
spice you could afford, but they were devils on the warpath if you stepped foot
where they forbade you to go. And they were so devilishly cunning of late.

It annoyed Gurney, the cunning and adroitness in battle of these natives.
They displayed a sophistication in warfare as good as anything he had ever
encountered, and he had been trained by the best fighters in the universe then
seasoned in battles where only the superior few survived.

Again Gurney scanned the landscape, wondering why he felt uneasy. Perhaps it
was the worm they had seen . . . but that was on the other side of the ridge.
A head popped up into the con-?bubble beside Gurney — the factory commander,
a one-?eyed old pirate with full beard, the blue eyes and milky teeth of a spice
diet.

“Looks like a rich patch, sir,” the factory commander said. “Shall I take
‘er in?”

“Come down at the edge of that ridge,” Gurney ordered. “Let me disembark
with my men. You can tractor out to the spice from there. We’ll have a look at
that rock.”

“Aye.”

“In case of trouble,” Gurney said, “save the factory. We’ll lift in the
‘thopters.”

The factory commander saluted. “Aye, sir.” He popped back down through the
hatch.

Again Gurney scanned the horizon. He had to respect the possibility that
there were Fremen here and he was trespassing. Fremen worried him, their
toughness and unpredictability. Many things about this business worried him, but
the rewards were great. The fact that he couldn’t send spotters high overhead
worried him, too. The necessity of radio silence added to his uneasiness.

The factory crawler turned, began to descend. Gently it glided down to the
dry beach at the foot of the ridge. Treads touched sand.

Gurney opened the bubble dome, released his safety straps. The instant the
factory stopped, he was out, slamming the bubble closed behind him, scrambling
out over the tread guards to swing down to the sand beyond the emergency
netting. The five men of his personal guard were out with him, emerging from the
nose hatch. Others released the factory’s carrier wing. It detached, lifted away
to fly in a parking circle low overhead.

Immediately the big factory crawler lurched off, swinging away from the
ridge toward the dark patch of spice out on the sand.

A ‘thopter swooped down nearby, skidded to a stop. Another followed and
another. They disgorged Gurney’s platoon and lifted to hoverflight.

Gurney tested his muscles in his stillsuit, stretching. He left the filter
mask off his face, losing moisture for the sake of a greater need — the
carrying power of his voice if he had to shout commands. He began climbing up
into the rocks, checking the terrain — pebbles and pea sand underfoot, the
smell of spice.

Good site for an emergency base, he thought. Might be sensible to bury a few
supplies here.

He glanced back, watching his men spread out as they followed him. Good men,
even the new ones he hadn’t had time to test. Good men. Didn’t have to be told
every time what to do. Not a shield glimmer showed on any of them. No cowards in
this bunch, carrying shields into the desert where a worm could sense the field
and come to rob them of the spice they found.

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