“I signed it thus in the presence of his lieutenants,” Jessica said. “It was a subterfuge of necessity.” And Jessica thought:
Only the slightest tone of resignation crept into Chani’s voice as she said: “Now you may say the thing that must be said.”
“You were needed here to help me revive Paul,” Jessica said. And she thought:
Chani took only a moment to calm herself, then: “What is it I may do?” She wanted to leap at Jessica, shake her and scream:
“I suspect,” Jessica said, “that the Harkonnens have managed to send an agent among us to poison Paul. It’s the only explanation that seems to fit. A most unusual poison. I’ve examined his blood in the most subtle ways without detecting it.”
Chani thrust herself forward onto her knees. “Poison? Is he in pain? Could I….”
“He is unconscious,” Jessica said. “The processes of his life are so low that they can be detected only with the most refined techniques. I shudder to think what could have happened had I not been the one to discover him. He appears dead to the untrained eye.”
“You have reasons other than courtesy for summoning me,” Chani said. “I know you, Reverend Mother. What is it you think I may do that you cannot do?”
“Chani,” Jessica said, “you may find this difficult to believe, but I do not know precisely why I sent for you. It was an instinct…a basic intuition. The thought came unbidden: ‘Send for Chani.’”
For the first time, Chani saw the sadness in Jessica’s expression, the unveiled pain modifying the inward stare.
“I’ve done all I know to do,” Jessica said. “That
“The old companion, Halleck,” Chani asked, “is it possible he’s a traitor?”
“Not Gurney,” Jessica said.
The two words carried an entire conversation, and Chani saw the searching, the tests…the memories of old failures that went into this flat denial.
Chani rocked back onto her feet, stood up, smoothed her desert-stained robe. “Take me to him,” she said.
Jessica arose, turned through hangings on the left wall.
Chani followed, found herself in what had been a storeroom, its rock walls concealed now beneath heavy draperies. Paul lay on a field pad against the far wall. A single glowglobe above him illuminated his face. A black robe covered him to the chest, leaving his arms outside it stretched along his sides. He appeared to be unclothed under the robe. The skin exposed looked waxen, rigid. There was no visible movement to him.
Chani suppressed the desire to dash forward, throw herself across him. She found her thoughts, instead, going to her son—Leto. And she realized in this instant that Jessica once had faced such a moment—her man threatened by death, forced in her own mind to consider what might be done to save a young son. The realization formed a sudden bond with the older woman so that Chani reached out and clasped Jessica’s hand. The answering grip was painful in its intensity.
“He lives,” Jessica said. “I assure you he lives. But the thread of his life is so thin it could easily escape detection. There are some among the leaders already muttering that the mother speaks and not the Reverend Mother, that my son is truly dead and I do not want to give up his water to the tribe.”
“How long has he been this way?” Chani asked. She disengaged her hand from Jessica’s, moved farther into the room.
“Three weeks,” Jessica said. “I spent almost a week trying to revive him. There were meetings, arguments…investigations. Then I sent for you. The Fedaykin obey my orders, else I might not have been able to delay the….” She wet her lips with her tongue, watching Chani cross to Paul.
Chani stood over him now, looking down on the soft beard of youth that framed his face, tracing with her eyes the high browline, the strong nose, the shuttered eyes—the features so peaceful in this rigid repose.
“How does he take nourishment?” Chani asked.
“The demands of his flesh are so slight he does not yet need food,” Jessica said.
“How many know of what has happened?” Chani asked.
“Only his closest advisers, a few of the leaders, the Fedaykin and, of course, whoever administered the poison.”
“There is no clue to the poisoner?”