"You said the Emperor doesn't fear exposure."
"Don't play games with me, Baron!"
"When I see such an order above the Imperial seal I'll obey it," the Baron said. "But I'll not submit to your whim."
"You think it whim?"
"What else can it be? The Emperor has obligations to me, too, Fenring. I rid him of the troublesome Duke."
"With the help of a few Sardaukar."
"Where else would the Emperor have found a House to provide the disguising uniforms to hide his hand in this matter?"
"He has asked himself the same question, Baron, but with a slightly different emphasis."
The Baron studied Fenring, noting the stiffness of jaw muscles, the careful control. "Ah-h-h, now," the Baron said. "I hope the Emperor doesn't believe he can move against
"He hopes it won't become necessary."
"The Emperor cannot believe I threaten him!" The Baron permitted anger and grief to edge his voice, thinking:
The Count's voice went dry and remote as he said: "The Emperor believes what his senses tell him."
"Dare the Emperor charge me with treason before a full Landsraad Council?" And the Baron held his breath with the hope of it.
"The Emperor need
The Baron whirled away in his suspensors to hide his expression.
"It's the Emperor's sincere hope he'll never have to charge you with treason," the Count said.
The Baron found it difficult to keep irony out of his voice and permit only the expression of hurt, but he managed. "I've been a most loyal subject. These words hurt me beyond my capacity to express."
"Um-m-m-m-ah-hm-m-m," said the Count.
The Baron kept his back to the Count, nodding. Presently he said, "It's time to go to the arena."
"Indeed," said the Count.
They moved out of the cone of silence and, side by side, walked toward the clumps of Houses Minor at the end of the hall. A bell began a slow tolling somewhere in the keep—twenty-minute warning for the arena gathering.
"The Houses Minor wait for you to lead them," the Count said, nodding toward the people they approached.
He looked up at the new talismans flanking the exit to his hall—the mounted bull's head and the oil painting of the Old Duke Atreides, the late Duke Leto's father. They filled the Baron with an odd sense of foreboding, and he wondered what thoughts these talismans had inspired in the Duke Leto as they hung in the halls of Caladan and then on Arrakis—the bravura father and the head of the bull that had killed him.
"Mankind has ah only one mm-m-m science," the Count said as they picked up their parade of followers and emerged from the hall into the waiting room—a narrow space with high windows and floor of patterned white and purple tile.
"And what science is that?" the Baron asked.
"It's the um-m-m-ah-h science of ah-h-h discontent," the Count said.
The Houses Minor behind them, sheep-faced and responsive, laughed with just the right tone of appreciation, but the sound carried a note of discord as it collided with the sudden blast of motors that came to them when pages threw open the outer doors, revealing the line of ground cars, their guidon pennants whipping in a breeze.
The Baron raised his voice to surmount the sudden noise, said, "I hope you'll not be discontented with the performance of my nephew today, Count Fenring."
"I ah-h-h am filled um-m-m only with a hm-m-m sense of anticipation, yes," the Count said. "Always in the ah-h-h process verbal, one um-m-m ah-h-h must consider the ah-h-h office of origin."
The Baron hid his sudden stiffening of surprise by stumbling on the first step down from the exit.
But the Count chuckled to make it seem a joke, and patted the Baron's arm.