“In each instance, action is illusory. Like appointing a committee to study a problem. The more people on the committee, the more preconceptions applied to the problem.”
Lucilla pitched her voice in its most reasonable tones. “You live by a past-magnified and try to understand some unrecognized future.”
“We don’t believe in prescience.”
“Dama, please. There’s always something unbalanced about confining yourself to a tight circle of laws.”
Great Honored Matre’s chair creaked as she shifted in it. “But laws are necessary!”
“Necessary? That’s dangerous.”
“How so?”
“Necessary rules and laws keep you from adapting. Inevitably, everything comes crashing down. It’s like bankers thinking they buy the future. ‘Power in my time! To hell with my descendants!’”
“What are descendants doing for me?”
“Honored Matres originated as terrorists. Bureaucrats first and terror as your chosen weapon.”
“When it’s in your hands, use it. But we were rebels. Terrorists? That’s too chaotic.”
“Isn’t it odd, Dama . . .”
“Hah! And I thought you would tell me something new. We know that one: ‘Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.’”
“Wrong, Dama. Something more subtle but far more pervasive: Power attracts the corruptible.”
“You dare accuse me of being corrupt?”
“I? Accuse you? The only one who can do that is yourself. I merely give you the Bene Gesserit opinion.”
“And tell me nothing!”
“Yet we believe there’s a morality above any law, which must stand watchdog on all attempts at unchanging regulation.”
“Power always works, witch. That’s the law.”
“And governments that perpetuate themselves long enough under
“Morality!”
“I’ve really tried to help you, Dama. Laws are dangerous to everyone—innocent and guilty alike. No matter whether you believe yourself powerful or helpless. They have no human understanding in and of themselves.”
“There’s no such thing as human understanding!”
“Laws must always be interpreted. The law-bound want no latitude for compassion. No elbow room. “‘The law is the law!’”
“It is!”
“That’s a dangerous idea, especially for the innocent. People know this instinctively and resent such laws. Little things are done, often unconsciously, to hamstring ‘the law’ and those who deal in that nonsense.”
“How dare you call it nonsense?” Half rising from her chair and sinking back.
“Oh, yes. And the law, personified by all whose livelihoods depend on it, becomes resentful hearing words such as mine.”
“Rightly so, witch!”
“‘More law!’ you say. ‘We need more law!’ So you make new instruments of non-compassion and, incidentally, new niches of employment for those who feed on the system.”
“That’s the way it’s always been and always will be.”
“Wrong again. It’s a rondo. It rolls and rolls until it injures the wrong person or the wrong group. Then you get anarchy. Chaos.”
“How did we wander so far away from politics, witch? Was this your intention?”
“We haven’t wandered a fraction of a millimeter!”
“I suppose you’re going to tell me you witches practice a form of democracy.”
“With an alertness you cannot imagine.”