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发信人: emanuel (小飞象), 信区: SFworld
标 题: Dune Book 1 - 7
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (Thu Jul 13 12:33:15 2000), 转信
发信人: Sandoval (Companion Protector), 信区: SciFiction
标 题: Dune Book 1 - 7
发信站: The unknown SPACE (Tue May 30 19:22:29 2000) WWW-POST
On that first day when Muad'Dib rode through the streets of
Arrakeen with his family, some of the people along the way
recalled the legends and the prophecy and they ventured to
shout: "Mahdi!" But their shout was more a question than a
statement, for as yet they could only hope he was the one
foretold as the Lisan al-Gaib, the Voice from the Outer
World. Their atention was focused, too, on the mother,
because they had heard she was a Bene Gesserit and it was
obvious to them that she was like the other Lisan al-Gaib.
-from "Manual of Muad'Dib" by the Princess Irulan
The Duke found Thufir Hawat alone in the corner room to
which a guard directed him. There was the sound of men
setting up communications equipment in an adjoining room,
but this place was fairly quiet. The Duke glanced around as
Hawat arose from a paper-cluttered table. It was a
green-walled enclosure with, in addition to the table, three
suspensor chairs from which the Harkonnen "H" had been
hastily removed, leaving an imperfect color patch.
"The chairs are liberated but quite safe," Hawat said.
"Where is Paul, Sire?"
"I left him in the conference room. I'm hoping he'll get
some rest without me there to distract him."
Hawat nodded, crossed to the door to the adjoining room,
closed it, shutting off the noise of static and electronic
sparking.
"Thufir," Leto sad, "the Imperial and Harkonnen
stockpiles of spice attract my attention."
"M'Lord?"
The Duke pursed his lips. "Storehouses are susceptible
to destruction." He raised a hand as Hawat started to speak.
"Ignore the Emperor's hoard. He'd secretly enjoy it if the
Harkonnens were embarrassed. And can the Baron object if
something is destroyed which he cannot openly admit that he
has?"
Hawat shook his head. "We've few men to spare. Sire."
"Use some of Idaho's men. And perhaps some of the Fremen
would enjoy a trip off planet. A raid on Giedi Prime--there
are tactical advantages to such a diversion, Thufir."
"As you say, my Lord." Hawat turned away, and the Duke
saw evidence of nervousness in the old man, thought: Perhaps
he suspects I distrust him. He must know I've private
reports of traitors. Well--best quiet his fears immediately.
"Thufir," he said, "since you're one of the few I can
trust completely, there's another matter bears discussion.
We both know how constan a watch we must keep to prevent
traitors from infiltrating our forces . . . but I have two
new reports."
Hawat turned, stared at him.
And Leto repeated the stories Paul had brought.
Instead of bringing on the intense Mentat concentration,
the reports only increased Hawat's agitation.
Leto studied the old man and, presently, said: "You've
been holding something back, old friend. I should've
suspected when you were so nervous during Staff. What is it
that was too hot to dump in front of the full conference?"
Hawat's sapho-stained lips were pulled into a prim,
straight line with tiny wrinkles radiating into them. They
maintained their wrinkled stiffness as he said: "My Lord, I
don't quite know how to broach this."
"We've suffered many a scar for each other, Thufir," the
Duke said. "You know you can broach any subject with me."
Hawat continued to stare at him, thinking: This is how I
like him best. This is the man of honor who deserves every
bit of my loyalty nd service. Why must I hurt him?
"Well?" Leto demanded.
Hawat shrugged. "It's a scrap of a note. We took it from
a Harkonnen courier. The note was intended for an agent
named Pardee. We've good reason to believe Pardee was top
man in the Harkonnen underground here. The note--it's a
thing that could have great consequence or no consequence.
It's susceptible to various interpretations."
"What's the delicate content of this note?"
"Scrap of a note, my Lord. Incomplete. It was on minimic
film with the usual destruction capsule attached. We stopped
the acid action just short of full erasure, leaving only a
fragment. The fragment, however, is extremely suggestive."
"Yes?"
Hawat rubbed at his lips. "It says: ' . . . eto will
never suspect, and when the blow falls on him from a beloved
hand, its source alone should be enough to destroy him.' The
note was under the Baron's own seal and I've authenticated
the seal."
"Your suspicion is obvious," the Duke said and his oice
was suddenly cold.
"I'd sooner cut off my arms than hurt you," Hawat said.
"My Lord, what if . . ."
"The Lady Jessica," Leto said, and he felt anger
consuming him. "Couldn't you wring the facts out of this
Pardee?"
"Unfortunately, Pardee no longer was among the living
when we intercepted the courier. The courier, I'm certain,
did not know what he carried."
"I see."
Leto shook his head, thinking: What a slimy piece of
business. There can't be anything in it. I know my woman.
"My Lord, if--"
"No!" the Duke barked. "There's a mistake here that--"
"We cannot ignore it, my Lord."
"She's been with me for sixteen years! There've been
countless opportunities for--You yourself investigated the
school and the woman!"
Hawat spoke bitterly: "Things have been known to escape
me."
"It's impossible, I tell you! The Harkonnens want to
destroy the Atreides line--meaning Paul, too. They've
already tried once. Could a woman conspire against her own
son?"
"Perhaps she doesn't conspire against her son. And
yesterday's attempt could've been a clever sham."
"It couldn't have been a sham."
"Sire, she isn't supposed to know her parentage, but
what if she does know? What if she were an orphan, say,
orphaned by an Atreides?"
"She'd have moved long before now. Poison in my drink .
. . a stiletto at night. Who has had better opportunity?"
"The Harkonnens mean to destroy you, my Lord. Their
intent is not just to kill. There's a range of fine
distinctions in kanly. This could be a work of art among
vendettas."
The Duke's shoulders slumped. He closed his eyes,
looking old and tired. It cannot be, he thought. The woman
has opened her heart to me.
"What better way to destroy me than to sow suspicion of
the woman I love?" he asked.
"An interpretation I've considered," Hawat said. "Still
. . . "
The Duke opened his eyes, stared at Hawat, thinking: Let
him be suspicious. Suspicion is his trade, not mine. Perhaps
if I appear to believe this, that will make another man
careless.
"What do you suggest?" the Duke whispered.
"For now, constant surveillance, my Lord. She should be
watched at all times. I will see it's done unobtrusively.
Idaho would be the ideal choice for the job. Perhaps in a
week or so we can bring him back. There's a young man we've
been training in Idaho's troop who might be ideal to send to
the Fremen as a replacement He's gifted in diplomacy."
"Don't jeopardize our foothold with the Fremen."
"Of course not, Sire."
"And what about Paul?"
"Perhaps we could alert Dr. Yueh."
Leto turned his back on Hawat. "I leave it in your
hands."
"I shall use discretion, my Lord."
At least I can count on that, Leto thought. And he said:
"I will take a walk. If you need me, I'll be within the
perimeter. The guard can--"
"My Lord, before you go, I've a filmclip you should
read. It's a first-approximation analysis on the Fremen
reigion. You'll recall you asked me to report on it."
The Duke paused, spoke without turning. "Will it not
wait?"
"Of course, my Lord. You asked what they were shouting,
though. It was 'Mahdi!' They directed the term at the young
master. When they--"
"At Paul?"
"Yes, my Lord. They've a legend here, a prophecy, that a
leader will come to them, child of a Bene Gesserit, to lead
them to true freedom. It follows the familiar messiah
pattern."
"They think Paul is this . . . this . . . "
"They only hope, my Lord."Hawat extended a filmclip
capsule.
The Duke accepted it, thrust it into a pocket. "I'll
look at it later."
"Certainly, my Lord."
"Right now, I need time to . . . think."
"Yes, my Lord."
The Duke took a deep sighing breath, strode out the
door. He turned to his right down the hall, began walking,
hands behind his back, paying little attention to where he
was. There were corridors and stairs and balconies and halls
. . . people who saluted and stood aside for him.
In time he came back to the conference room,found it
dark and Paul asleep on the table with a guard's robe thrown
over him and a ditty pack for a pillow. The Duke walked
softly down the length of the room and onto the balcony
overlooking the landing field. A guard at the corner of the
balcony, recognizing the Duke by the dim reflection of
lights from the field, snapped to attention.
"At ease," the Duke murmured. He leaned against the cold
metal of the balcony rail.
A predawn hush had come over the desert basin. He looked
up. Straight overhead, the stars were a sequn shawl flung
over blue-black. Low on the southern horizon, the night's
second moon peered through a thin dust haze--an unbelieving
moon that looked at him with a cynical light.
As the Duke watched, the moon dipped beneath the Shield
Wall cliffs, frosting them, and in the sudden intensity of
darkness, he experienced a chill. He shivered.
Anger shot through him.
The Harkonnens have hindered and hounded and hunted me
for the last time, he thought. They are dung heaps with
village provost minds! Here I make my stand! Andhe thought
with a touch of sadness: I must rule with eye and claw--as
the hawk among lesser birds. Unconsciously, his hand brushed
the hawk emblem on his tunic.
To the east, the night grew a faggot of luminous gray,
then seashell opalescence that dimmed the stars. There came
the long, bell-tolling movement of dawn striking across a
broken horizon.
It was a scene of such beauty it caught all his
attention.
Some things beggar likeness, he thought.
He had never imagined anything here could be as
beautiful as that shatered red horizon and the purple and
ochre cliffs. Beyond the landing field where the night's
faint dew had touched life into the hurried seeds of
Arrakis, he saw great puddles of red blooms and, running
through them, an articulate tread of violet . . . like giant
footsteps.
"It's a beautiful morning. Sire," the guard said.
"Yes, it is."
The Duke nodded, thinking: Perhaps this planet could
grow on one. Perhaps it could become a good home for my son.
Then he saw the human figures moving into the flower
fields, sweeing them with strange scythe-like devices--dew
gatherers. Water so precious, here that even the dew must be
collected.
And it could be a hideous place, the Duke thought.
= = = = = =
"There is probably no more terrible instant of enlightenment
than the one in which you discover your father is a
man--with human flesh."
-from "Collected Sayings of Muad'Dib" by the Princess Irulan
The Duke said: "Paul, I'm doing a hateful thing, but I
must." He stood beside the portable poison snooper that had
been brought into the conferece room for their breakfast.
The thing's sensor arms hung limply over the table,
reminding Paul of some weird insect newly dead.
The Duke's attention was directed out the windows at the
landing field and its roiling of dust against the morning
sky.
Paul had a viewer in front of him containing a short
filmclip on Fremen religious practices. The clip had been
compiled by one of Hawat's experts and Paul found himself
disturbed by the references to himself.
"Mahdi!"
"Lisan al-Gaib!"
He could close his eyes and recll the shouts of the
crowds. So that is what they hope, he thought. And he
remembered what the old Reverend Mother had said: Kwisatz
Haderach. The memories touched his feelings of terrible
purpose, shading this strange world with sensations of
familiarity that he could not understand.
"A hateful thing," the Duke said.
"What do you mean, sir?"
Leto turned, looked down at his son. "Because the
Harkonnens think to trick me by making me distrust your
mother. They don't know that I'd sooner distrust myself."
"I don't uderstand, sir."
Again, Leto looked out the windows. The white sun was
well up into its morning quadrant. Milky light picked out a
boiling of dust clouds that spilled over into the blind
canyons interfingering the Shield Wall.
Slowly, speaking in a slow voice to contain his anger,
the Duke explained to Paul about the mysterious note.
"You might just as well mistrust me," Paul said.
"They have to think they've succeeded," the Duke said.
"They must think me this much of a fool. It must look real.
Even your mother maynot know the sham."
"But, sir! Why?"
"Your mother's response must not be an act. Oh, she's
capable of a supreme act . . . but too much rides on this. I
hope to smoke out a traitor. It must seem that I've been
completely cozened. She must be hurt this way that she does
not suffer greater hurt."
"Why do you tell me, Father? Maybe I'll give it away."
"They'll not watch you in this thing," the Duke said.
"You'll keep the secret. You must." He walked to the
windows, spoke without turning. "This way, if anything
should appen to me, you can tell her the truth--that I
never doubted her, not for the smallest instant. I should
want her to know this."
Paul recognized the death thoughts in his father's
words, spoke quickly: "Nothing's going to happen to you,
sir. The--"
"Be silent, Son."
Paul stared at his father's back, seeing the fatigue in
the angle of the neck, in the line of the shoulders, in the
slow movements.
"You're just tired, Father."
"I am tired," the Duke agreed. "I'm morally tired. The
melancholy degeneration of the reat Houses has afflicted me
at last, perhaps. And we were such strong people once."
Paul spoke in quick anger: "Our House hasn't
degenerated!"
"Hasn't it?"
The Duke turned, faced his son, revealing dark circles
beneath hard eyes, a cynical twist of mouth. "I should wed
your mother, make her my Duchess. Yet . . . my unwedded
state gives some Houses hope they may yet ally with me
through their marriageable daughters." He shrugged. "So, I .
. . "
"Mother has explained this to me."
"Nothing wins more loyalty for leader than an air of
bravura," the Duke said. "I, therefore, cultivate an air of
bravura."
"You lead well," Paul protested. "You govern well. Men
follow you willingly and love you."
"My propaganda corps is one of the finest," the Duke
said. Again, he turned to stare out at the basin. "There's
greater possibility for us here on Arrakis than the Imperium
could ever suspect. Yet sometimes I think it'd have been
better if we'd run for it, gone renegade. Sometimes I wish
we could sink back into anonymity among the people, beome
less exposed to . . . "
"Father!"
"Yes, I am tired," the Duke said. "Did you know we're
using spice residue as raw material and already have our own
factory to manufacture filmbase?"
"Sir?"
"We mustn't run short of filmbase," the Duke said.
"Else, how could we flood village and city with our
information? The people must learn how well I govern them.
How would they know if we didn't tell them?"
"You should get some rest," Paul said.
Again, the Duke faced his son. "Arrakis has another
advantage I almost orgot to mention. Spice is in everything
here. You breathe it and eat it in almost everything. And I
find that this imparts a certain natural immunity to some of
the most common poisons of the Assassins' Handbook. And the
need to watch every drop of water puts all food
production--yeast culture, hydroponics, chemavit,
everything--under the strictest surveillance. We cannot kill
off large segments of our population with poison--and we
cannot be attacked this way, either. Arrakis makes us moral
and ethical."
Paul started to spek, but the Duke cut him off, saying:
"I have to have someone I can say these things to, Son." He
sighed, glanced back at the dry landscape where even the
flowers were gone now--trampled by the dew gatherers, wilted
under the early sun.
"On Caladan, we ruled with sea and air power," the Duke
said. "Here, we must scrabble for desert power. This is your
inheritance, Paul. What is to become of you if anything
happens to me? You'll not be a renegade House, but a
guerrilla House--running, hunted."
Paul groped for words, could fnd nothing to say. He had
never seen his father this despondent.
"To hold Arrakis," the Duke said, "one is faced with
decisions that may cost one his self-respect." He pointed
out the window to the Atreides green and black banner
hanging limply from a staff at the edge of the landing
field. "That honorable banner could come to mean many evil
things."
Paul swallowed in a dry throat. His father's words
carried futility, a sense of fatalism that left the boy with
an empty feeling in his chest.
The Duke took an antifatigu tablet from a pocket,
gulped it dry. "Power and fear," he said. "The tools of
statecraft. I must order new emphasis on guerrilla training
for you. That filmclip there--they call you 'Mahdi'--'Lisan
al-Gaib'--as a last resort, you might capitalize on that."
Paul stared at his father, watching the shoulders
straighten as the tablet did its work, but remembering the
words of fear and doubt.
"What's keeping that ecologist?" the Duke muttered. "I
told Thufir to have him here early."
= = = = = =
--
... In 2345, on the 10th aniversary of the Shivan attack
on Ross 128, the Vasudan emperor Khonsu II addressed the
newly formed GTVA General Assembly. The emperor inaugurated
an ambiguous and unprecedented joint endeavor: the GTVA
Colossus...
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