Frank Herbert - Dune Book 5 - Heretics of Dune

Home > Science > Frank Herbert - Dune Book 5 - Heretics of Dune > Page 41
Frank Herbert - Dune Book 5 - Heretics of Dune Page 41

by Frank Herbert


  Lucilla listened carefully. The words were understandable, relating how guards had been posted, but the green-eyed man's accent was one she had never before heard, a tumble of gutturals and consonants clicked off with surprising abruptness.

  "Is this a no-chamber?" she asked.

  "No." The answer was supplied by a man behind her speaking in that same accent. "The algae protect us."

  She did not turn toward the speaker but looked up instead at the light yellow-green algae thick on the ceiling and walls. Only a few patches of dark rock were visible near the floors.

  Burzmali broke off his conversation. "We are safe here. The algae is grown especially for this. Life scanners report only the presence of plant life and nothing else that the algae shields."

  Lucilla pivoted on one heel, sorting the room's details: that Harkonnen griffin worked into a crystal table, the exotic fabrics on chairs and couches. A weapons rack against one wall held two rows of long field-style lasguns of a design she had never before seen. Each was bell-mouthed and with a curling gold guard over the trigger.

  Burzmali had returned to his conversation with the green-eyed man. It was an argument over how they would be disguised. She listened with part of her mind while she studied the two members of their escort remaining in the room. The other three from the escort had filed out through a passage near the weapons cabinet, an opening covered by a thick hanging of shimmering silvery threads. Duncan, she saw, was watching her responses with care, his hand on the small lasgun in his belt.

  People of the Scattering? Lucilla wondered. What are their loyalties?

  Casually, she crossed to Duncan's side and, using the finger-touch language on his arm, relayed her suspicions. Both of them looked at Burzmali. Treachery?

  Lucilla went back to her study of the room. Were they being watched by unseen eyes?

  Nine glowglobes lighted the space, creating their own peculiar islands of intense illumination. It reached outward into a common concentration near where Burzmali still talked to the green-eyed man. Part of the light came directly from the drifting globes, all of them tuned into rich gold, and part of it was reflected more softly off the algae. The result was a lack of dark shadows, even under the furnishings.

  The shimmering silver threads of the inner doorway parted. An old woman entered the room. Lucilla stared at her. The woman had a seamed face as dark as old rosewood. Her features were sharply defined in a narrow frame of straggling gray hair that fell almost to her shoulders. She wore a long black robe worked with golden threads in a pattern of mythological dragons. The woman stopped behind a settee and placed her deeply veined hands on the back.

  Burzmali and his companion broke off their conversation.

  Lucilla looked from the old woman down to her own robe. Except for the golden dragons, the garments were similar in design, the hoods draped back onto the shoulders. Only in the side cut and the way it opened down the front was the design of the dragon robe different.

  When the woman did not speak, Lucilla looked to Burzmali for explanation. Burzmali stared back at her with a look of intense concentration. The old woman continued to study Lucilla silently.

  The intensity of attention filled Lucilla with disquiet. Duncan felt it, too, she saw. He kept his hand on the small lasgun. The long silence while eyes examined her amplified her unease. There was something almost Bene Gesserit about the way the old woman just stood there looking.

  Duncan broke the silence, demanding of Burzmali: "Who is she?"

  "I'm the one who'll save your skins," the old woman said. She had a thin voice that crackled weakly, but that same strange accent.

  Lucilla's Other Memories brought up a suggestive comparison for the old woman's garment: Similar to that worn by ancient playfems.

  Lucilla almost shook her head. Surely this woman was too old for such a role. And the shape of the mythic dragons worked into the fabric differed from those supplied by memory. Lucilla returned her attention to the old face: eyes humid with the illnesses of age. A dry crust had settled into the creases where each eyelid touched the channels beside her nose. Far too old for a playfem.

  The old woman spoke to Burzmali. "I think she can wear it well enough." She began divesting herself of her dragon robe. To Lucilla she said: "This is for you. Wear it with respect. We killed to get it for you."

  "Who did you kill?" Lucilla demanded.

  "A postulant of the Honored Matres!" There was pride in the old woman's husky tone.

  "Why should I wear that robe?" Lucilla demanded.

  "You will trade garments with me," the old woman said.

  "Not without explanation." Lucilla refused to accept the robe being extended to her.

  Burzmali took one step forward. "You can trust her."

  "I am a friend of your friends," the old woman said. She shook the robe in front of Lucilla. "Here, take it."

  Lucilla addressed Burzmali. "I must know your plan."

  "We both must know it," Duncan said. "On whose authority are we asked to trust these people?"

  "Teg's," Burzmali said. "And mine." He looked at the old woman. "You can tell them, Sirafa. We have time."

  "You will wear this robe while you accompany Burzmali into Ysai," Sirafa said.

  Sirafa, Lucilla thought. The name had almost the sound of a Bene Gesserit Lineal Variant.

  Sirafa studied Duncan. "Yes, he is small enough yet. He will be disguised and conveyed separately."

  "No!" Lucilla said. "I am commanded to guard him!"

  "You are being foolish," Sirafa said. "They will be looking for a woman of your appearance accompanied by someone of this young man's appearance. They will not be looking for a playfem of the Honored Matres with her companion of the night . . . nor for a Tleilaxu Master and his entourage."

  Lucilla wet her lips with her tongue. Sirafa spoke with the confident assurance of a House Proctor.

  Sirafa draped the dragon robe over the back of the settee. She stood revealed in a clinging black leotard that concealed nothing of a body still lithe and supple, even well rounded. The body looked much younger than the face. As Lucilla looked at her, Sirafa passed her palms across her forehead and cheeks, smoothing them backward. Age lines grew shallow and a younger face was revealed.

  A Face Dancer?

  Lucilla stared hard at the woman. There were none of the other Face Dancer stigmata. Still . . .

  "Get your robe off!" Sirafa ordered. Now her voice was younger and even more commanding.

  "You must do it," Burzmali pleaded. "Sirafa will take your place as another decoy. It's the only way we'll get through."

  "Get through to what?" Duncan asked.

  "To a no-ship," Burzmali said.

  "And where will that take us?" Lucilla demanded.

  "To safety," Burzmali said. "We will be loaded with shere but I cannot say more. Even shere wears off in time."

  "How will I be disguised as a Tleilaxu?" Duncan asked.

  "Trust us that it will be done," Burzmali said. He kept his attention on Lucilla. "Reverend Mother?"

  "You give me no choice," Lucilla said. She undid the quick fasteners and dropped her robe. She removed the small handgun from her bodice and tossed it onto the settee. Her own leotard was light gray and she saw Sirafa making note of this and of the knives in their leg sheaths.

  "We sometimes wear black undergarments," Lucilla said as she slipped into the dragon robe. The fabric looked heavy but felt light. She pivoted in it, sensing the way it flared and fitted itself to her body almost as though it had been made just for her. There was a rough spot at the neck. She reached up and ran a finger along it.

  "That is where the dart struck her," Sirafa said. "We moved fast but the acid scarred the fabric slightly. It is not visible to the eye."

  "Is the appearance correct?" Burzmali asked Sirafa.

  "Very good. But I will have to instruct her. She must make no mistakes or they will have both of you like that!" Sirafa clapped her hands for emphasis.

  Where have I se
en that gesture? Lucilla asked herself.

  Duncan touched the back of Lucilla's right arm, his fingers secretly quick-talking: "That hand clap! A mannerism of Giedi Prime."

  Other Memories confirmed this for Lucilla. Was this woman part of an isolated community preserving archaic ways?

  "The lad should go now," Sirafa said. She gestured to the two remaining members of the escort. "Take him to the place."

  "I don't like this," Lucilla said.

  "We have no choice!" Burzmali barked.

  Lucilla could only agree. She was relying on Burzmali's oath of loyalty to the Sisterhood, she knew. And Duncan was not a child, she reminded herself. His prana-bindu reactions had been conditioned by the old Bashar and herself. There were abilities in the ghola that few people outside of the Bene Gesserit could match. She watched silently as Duncan and the two men left through the shimmering curtain.

  When they were gone, Sirafa came around the settee and stood in front of Lucilla, hands on hips. Their gazes met at a level.

  Burzmali cleared his throat and fingered the rough pile of clothing on the table beside him.

  Sirafa's face, especially the eyes, held a remarkably compelling quality. The eyes were light green with clear whites. No lens or other artifice masked them.

  "You have the right look about you," Sirafa said. "Remember that you are a special kind of playfem and Burzmali is your customer. No ordinary person would interfere with that."

  Lucilla heard a veiled hint in this. "But there are those who might interfere?"

  "Embassies from great religions are on Gammu now," Sirafa said. "Some you have never encountered. They are from what you call the Scattering."

  "And what do you call it?"

  "The Seeking." Sirafa raised a placating hand. "Do not fear! We have a common enemy."

  "The Honored Matres?"

  Sirafa turned her head to the left and spat on the floor. "Look at me, Bene Gesserit! I was trained only to kill them! That is my only function and purpose!"

  Lucilla spoke carefully: "From what we know, you must be very good."

  "In some things, perhaps I am better than you. Now listen! You are a sexual adept. Do you understand?"

  "Why would priests interfere?"

  "You call them priests? Well . . . yes. They would not interfere for any reason you might imagine. Sex for pleasure, the enemy of religion, eh?"

  "Accept no substitutes for holy joy," Lucilla said.

  "Tantrus protect you, woman! There are different priests from the Seeking, ones who do not mind offering immediate ecstasy instead of a promised hereafter."

  Lucilla almost smiled. Did this self-styled killer of Honored Matres think she could advise a Reverend Mother on religions?

  "There are people here who go about disguised as priests," Sirafa said. "Very dangerous. The most dangerous of all are those who follow Tantrus and claim that sex is the exclusive worship of their god."

  "How will I know them?" Lucilla heard sincerity in Sirafa's voice and a sense of foreboding.

  "That is not a concern. You must never act as though you recognize such distinctions. Your first concern is to make sure of your pay. You, I think, should ask fifty solari."

  "You have not told me why they would interfere." Lucilla glanced back at Burzmali. He had laid out the rough clothing and was taking off his battle fatigues. She returned her attention to Sirafa.

  "Some follow an ancient convention that grants them the right to disrupt your arrangement with Burzmali. In actuality, some will be testing you."

  "Listen carefully," Burzmali said. "This is important."

  Sirafa said: "Burzmali will be dressed as a field worker. Nothing else could disguise his weapon's calluses. You will address him as Skar, a common name here."

  "But how do I deal with a priest's interruption?"

  Sirafa produced a small pouch from her bodice and passed it to Lucilla, who hefted it in one hand. "That contains two hundred and eighty-three solari. If someone identifying himself as a divine . . . You remember that? Divine?"

  "How could I forget it?" Lucilla's voice was almost a sneer but Sirafa paid no heed.

  "If such a one interferes, you will return fifty solari to Burzmali with your regrets. Also, in that pouch is your playfem card in the name of Pira. Let me hear you say your name."

  "Pira."

  "No! Accent much harder on the 'a'!"

  "Pira!"

  "That is passable. Now listen to me with extreme care. You and Burzmali will be on the streets late. It will be expected that you have had previous customers. There must be evidence. Therefore, you will . . . ahhh, entertain Burzmali before leaving here. You understand?"

  "Such delicacy!" Lucilla said.

  Sirafa took it as a compliment and smiled, but it was a tightly controlled expression. Her reactions were so alien!

  "One thing," Lucilla said. "If I must entertain a divine, how will I find Burzmali afterward?"

  "Skar!"

  "Yes. How will I find Skar?"

  "He will wait nearby wherever you go. Skar will find you when you emerge."

  "Very well. If a divine interrupts, I return one hundred solari to Skar and --"

  "Fifty!"

  "I think not, Sirafa." Lucilla shook her head slowly from side to side. "After being entertained by me, the divine will know that fifty solari is too small a sum."

  Sirafa pursed her lips and glanced past Lucilla at Burzmali. "You warned me about her kind but I did not suppose that . . ."

  Using only a touch of Voice, Lucilla said: "You suppose nothing unless you hear it from me!"

  Sirafa scowled. She was obviously startled by Voice, but her tone was just as arrogant when she resumed. "Do I presume that you need no explanation of sexual variations?"

  "A safe assumption," Lucilla said.

  "And I do not need to tell you that your robe identifies you as a fifth-stage adept in the Order of Hormu?"

  It was Lucilla's turn to scowl. "What if I show abilities beyond this fifth stage?"

  "Ahhhhh," Sirafa said. "You will continue to heed my words, then?"

  Lucilla nodded curtly.

  "Very good," Sirafa said. "May I presume you can administer vaginal pulsing?"

  "I can."

  "From any position?"

  "I can control any muscle in my body!"

  Sirafa glanced past Lucilla at Burzmali. "True?"

  Burzmali spoke from close behind Lucilla: "Or she would not claim it."

  Sirafa looked thoughtful, her focus on Lucilla's chin. "This is a complication, I think."

  "Lest you get the wrong idea," Lucilla said, "the abilities I was taught are not usually marketed. They have another purpose."

  "Oh, I'm sure they do," Sirafa said. "But sexual agility is a --"

  "Agility!" Lucilla allowed her tone to convey the full weight of a Reverend Mother's outrage. No matter that this might be what Sirafa hoped to achieve, she had to be put in her place! "Agility, you say? I can control genital temperature. I know and can arouse the fifty-one excitation points. I --"

  "Fifty-one? But there are only --"

  "Fifty-one!" Lucilla snapped. "And the sequencing plus the combinations number two thousand and eight. Furthermore, in combination with the two hundred and five sexual positions

  "Two hundred and five?" Sirafa was clearly startled. "Surely, you don't mean --"

  "More, actually, if you count minor variations. I am an Imprinter, which means I have mastered the three hundred steps of orgasmic amplification!"

  Sirafa cleared her throat and wet her lips with her tongue. "I must warn you then to restrain yourself. Keep your full abilities unexpressed or . . ." Once more, she looked at Burzmali. "Why didn't you warn me?"

  "I did."

  Lucilla clearly heard amusement in his voice but did not look back to confirm it.

  Sirafa inhaled and expelled two hard breaths. "If any questions are asked, you will say you are about to undergo testing for advancement. That may quiet suspicion."

&
nbsp; "And if I'm asked about the test."

  "Oh, that is easy. You smile mysteriously and remain silent."

  "What if I'm asked about this Order of Hormu?"

  "Threaten to report the questioner to your superiors. The questions should stop."

  "And if they don't?"

 

‹ Prev