“A very old one but with new rules.”
“Your rules!”
“Would you rather I turned it all back to CHOAM and Landsraad and the Great Houses?”
“The Tleilaxu say there is no more Landsraad. You don’t allow any real self-rule.”
“Well then, I could step aside for the Bene Gesserit. Or maybe the Ixians or the Tleilaxu? Would you like me to find another Baron Harkonnen to assume power over the Empire? Say the word, Duncan, and I’ll abdicate!”
Under this avalanche of meanings, Idaho again shook his head from side to side.
“In the wrong hands,” Leto said, “monolithic centralized power is a dangerous and volatile instrument.”
“And your hands are the right ones?”
“I’m not certain about my hands, but I will tell you, Duncan, I’m certain about the hands of those who’ve gone before me. I
know
them.”
Idaho turned his back on Leto.
What a fascinating, ultimately human gesture,
Leto thought.
Rejection coupled to acceptance of his vulnerability.
Leto spoke to Idaho’s back.
“You object quite rightly that I use people without their full knowledge and consent.”
Idaho turned his profile to Leto, then turned his head to look up at the cowled face, cocking his head forward a bit to peer into the all-blue eyes.
He is studying me,
Leto thought,
but he has only the face to measure me by.
The Atreides had taught their people to know the subtle signals of face and body, and Idaho was good at it, but the realization could be seen coming over him: he was beyond his depth here.
Idaho cleared his throat. “What’s the worst thing you would ask of me?”
How like a Duncan!
Leto thought. This one was a classic. Idaho would give his loyalty to an Atreides, to the guardian of his oath, but he sent a signal that he would not go beyond the personal limits of his own morality.
“You will be asked to guard me by whatever means necessary, and you will be asked to guard my secret.”
“What secret?”
“That I am vulnerable.”
“That you’re not God?”
“Not in that ultimate sense.”
“Your Fish Speakers talk about rebels.”
“They exist.”
“Why?”
“They are young and I have not convinced them that my way is better. It’s very difficult convincing the young of anything. They’re born knowing so much.”
“I never before heard an Atreides sneer at the young that way.”
“Perhaps it’s because I’m so much older—old compounded by old. And my task gets more difficult with each passing generation.”
“What is your task?”
“You will come to understand it as we go along.”
“What happens if I fail you? Do your women eliminate me?”
“I try not to burden the Fish Speakers with guilt.”
“But you would burden me?”
“If you accept it.”
“If I find that you’re worse than the Harkonnens, I’ll turn against you.”
How like a Duncan. They measure all evil against the Harkonnens. How little they know of evil.
Leto said: “The Baron ate whole planets, Duncan. What could be worse than that?”
“Eating the Empire.”
“I am pregnant with my Empire. I’ll die giving birth to it.”
“If I could believe that …”
“Will you command my Guard?”
“Why me?”
“You’re the best.”
“Dangerous work, I’d imagine. Is that how my predecessors died, doing your dangerous work?”
“Some of them.”
“I wish I had the memories of those others!”
“You couldn’t have and still be the original.”
“I want to learn about them, though.”
“You will.”
“So the Atreides still need a sharp knife?”
“We have jobs that only a Duncan Idaho can do.”
“You say … we …” Idaho swallowed, looked at the door, then at Leto’s face.
Leto spoke to him as Muad’Dib would have, but still in the Leto-voice.
“When we climbed to Sietch Tabr for the last time together, you had my loyalty then and I had yours. Nothing of that has really changed.”
“That was your father.”
“That was me!” Paul Muad’Dib’s voice of command coming from Leto’s bulk always shocked the gholas.
Idaho whispered: “All of you … in that one … body …” He broke off.
Leto remained silent. This was the decision moment.
Presently, Idaho permitted himself that devil-may-care grin for which he had been so well known. “Then I will speak to the first Leto and to Paul, the ones who know me best. Use me well, for I did love you.”
Leto closed his eyes. Such words always distressed him. He knew it was love to which he was most vulnerable.
Moneo, who had been listening, came to the rescue. He entered and said: “Lord, shall I take Duncan Idaho to the guards he will command?”
“Yes.” The one word was all that Leto could manage.
Moneo took Idaho’s arm and led him away.
Good Moneo,
Leto thought.
So good. He knows me so well, but I despair of his ever understanding me.
I know the evil of my ancestors because I am those people. The balance is delicate in the extreme. I know that few of you who read my words have ever thought about your ancestors this way. It has not occurred to you that your ancestors were survivors and that the survival itself sometimes involved savage decisions, a kind of wanton brutality which civilized humankind works very hard to suppress. What price will you pay for that suppression? Will you accept your own extinction?
—THE STOLEN JOURNALS
As he dressed for his first morning of Fish Speaker command, Idaho tried to shake off a nightmare. It had awakened him twice and both times he had gone out on the balcony to stare up at the stars, the dream still roaring in his head.
Women … weaponless women in black armor … rushing at him with the hoarse, mindless shouting of a mob … waving hands moist with red blood … and as they swarmed over him, their mouths opened to display terrible fangs!
In that moment, he awoke.
Morning light did little to dispel the effects of the nightmare.
They had provided him with a room in the north tower. The balcony looked out over a vista of dunes to a distant cliff with what appeared to be a mud-hut village at its base.
Idaho buttoned his tunic as he stared at the scene.
Why does Leto choose only women for his army?
Several comely Fish Speakers had offered to spend the night with their new commander, but Idaho had rejected them.
It was not like the Atreides to use sex as a persuader!
He looked down at his clothing: a black uniform with golden piping, a red hawk at the left breast. That, at least, was familiar. No insignia of rank.
“They know your face,” Moneo had said.
Strange little man, Moneo.
This thought brought Idaho up short. Reflection told him that Moneo was not little.
Very controlled, yes, but no shorter than I am.
Moneo appeared drawn into himself, though … collected.
Idaho glanced around his room—sybaritic in its attention to comfort—soft cushions, appliances concealed behind panels of brown polished wood. The bath was an ornate display of pastel blue tiles with a combination bath and shower in which at least six people could bathe at the same time. The whole place invited self-indulgence. These were quarters where you could let your senses indulge in remembered pleasures.
“Clever,” Idaho whispered.
A gentle tapping on his door was followed by a female voice saying: “Commander? Moneo is here.”
Idaho glanced out at the sunburnt colors on the distant cliff.
“Commander?” The voice was a bit louder.
“Come in,” Idaho called.
Moneo entered, closing the door behind him. He wore tunic and trousers of chalk-white which forced the eyes to concentrate on his face. Moneo glanced once around the room.
“So this is where they put you. Those damned women! I suppose they thought they were being kind, but they ought to know better.”
“How do you know what I like?” Idaho demanded. Even as he asked it, he realized it was a foolish question.
I’m not the first Duncan Idaho that Moneo has seen.
Moneo merely smiled and shrugged.
“I did not mean to offend you, Commander. Will you keep these quarters, then?”
“I like the view.”
“But not the furnishings.” It was a statement.
“Those can be changed,” Idaho said.
“I will see to it.”
“I suppose you’re here to explain my duties.”
“As much as I can. I know how strange everything must appear to you at first. This civilization is profoundly different from the one you knew.”
“I can see that. How did my … predecessor die?”
Moneo shrugged. It appeared to be his standard gesture, but there was nothing self-effacing about it.
“He was not fast enough to escape the consequences of a decision he had made,” Moneo said.
“Be specific.”
Moneo sighed. The Duncans were always like this—so demanding.
“The rebellion killed him. Do you wish the details?”
“Would they be useful to me?”
“No.”
“I’ll want a complete briefing on this rebellion today, but first: why are there no men in Leto’s army?”
“He has you.”
“You know what I mean.”
“He has a curious theory about armies. I have discussed it with him on many occasions. But do you not want to breakfast before I explain?”
“Can’t we have both at the same time?”
Moneo turned toward the door and called out a single word: “Now!”
The effect was immediate and fascinating to Idaho. A troop of young Fish Speakers swarmed into the room. Two of them took a folding table and chairs from behind a panel and placed them on the balcony. Others set the table for two people. More brought food—fresh fruit, hot rolls and a steaming drink which smelled faintly of spice and caffeine. It was all done with a swift and silent efficiency which spoke of long practice. They left as they had come, without a word.
Idaho found himself seated across from Moneo at the table within a minute after the start of this curious performance.
“Every morning like that?” Idaho asked.
“Only if you wish it.”
Idaho sampled the drink: melange-coffee. He recognized the fruit, the soft Caladan melon called
paradan.
My favorite.
“You know me pretty well,” Idaho said.
Moneo smiled. “We’ve had some practice. Now, about your question.”
“And Leto’s curious theory.”
“Yes. He says that the all-male army was too dangerous to its civilian support base.”
“That’s crazy! Without the army, there would’ve been no …”
“I know the argument. But he says that the male army was a survival of the screening function delegated to the nonbreeding males in the prehistoric pack. He says it was a curiously consistent fact that it was always the older males who sent the younger males into battle.”
“What does that mean,
screening function
?
”
“The ones who were always out on the dangerous perimeter protecting the core of breeding males, females and the young. The ones who first encountered the predator.”
“How is that dangerous to the … civilians?”
Idaho took a bite of the melon, found it ripened perfectly.
“The Lord Leto says that when it was denied an external enemy, the all-male army always turned against its own population. Always.”
“Contending for the females?”
“Perhaps. He obviously does not believe, however, that it was
that
simple.”
“I don’t find this a curious theory.”
“You have not heard all of it.”
“There’s more?”
“Oh, yes. He says that the all-male army has a strong tendency toward homosexual activities.”
Idaho glared across the table at Moneo. “I never …”