The Novel Free

Chapterhouse: Dune



"Two days, Mother Superior. I am adjusting projection overlays where I will mark the desert's daily growth."



A brief nod. That had been in the original order: an acolyte to keep the map current. Odrade wanted to awaken each morning, her imagination ignited by that changing view, the first thing impressed on awareness at arising.



"I put a report in your workroom this morning, Mother Superior. 'Orchard Management.' Perhaps you did not see it."



Odrade had seen only the label. She had been late coming from exercises, anxious to visit Murbella. So much depended on Murbella!



"The plantations around Central must either be abandoned or action taken to sustain them," the acolyte said. "That's the gist of the report."



"Repeat the report verbatim."



Night fell and the room lights brightened as Odrade listened. Concise. Terse even. The report carried a note of admonishment Odrade recognized as originating with Bellonda. No Archival signature but Weather's warnings went through Archives and this acolyte had lifted some of the original words.



The acolyte fell silent, report concluded.



How do I respond? Orchards, pastures and vineyards were not merely a buffer against alien intrusions, pleasant decorations on the landscape. They supported Chapterhouse morale and tables.



They support my morale.



How quietly this acolyte waited. Curly blond hair and round face. Pleasing countenance, though the mouth was wide. Food remained on her plate but she was not eating. Hands folded in her lap. I am here to serve you, Mother Superior.



While Odrade composed her response, memory intruded - an old incident simulflowing over immediate observations. She remembered her ornithopter training course. Two acolyte students with instructor at midday high over the wetlands of Lampadas. She had been paired with as inept an acolyte as could have been accepted by the Sisterhood. Obviously a gene-choice. The Breeding Mistresses wanted her for a characteristic to be passed along to offspring. It certainly wasn't emotional balance or intelligence! Odrade remembered the name: Linchine.



Linchine had shouted at their instructor: "I am going to fly this damned 'thopter!"



And all the while a whirling sky and landscape of trees and marshy lakeshore dizzied them. That was how it seemed: us stationary and the world moving. Linchine doing the wrong thing every time. Each movement created worse gyrations.



The instructor cut her out of the system by pulling the disconnect only he could reach. He did not speak until they were flying straight and level.



"No way are you ever going to fly this, lady. Not ever! You don't have the right reactions. You have to begin training those into someone like you before puberty."



"I am! I am! I'll fly this damned thing." Hands jerking at the useless controls.



"You're washed out, lady. Grounded!"



Odrade breathed easier, realizing she had known all along that Linchine might kill them.



Whirling toward Odrade in the rear, Linchine screamed: "Tell him! Tell him he must obey a Bene Gesserit!"



Addressing the fact that Odrade, several years ahead of Linchine, already displayed a commanding presence.



Odrade sat in silence, features immobile.



Silence is often the best thing to say, some Bene Gesserit humorist had scrawled on a washroom mirror. Odrade found that good advice then and later.



Recalling herself to the needs of the acolyte in the dining hall, Odrade wondered why that old memory had come of itself. Such things seldom happened without purpose. Not silence now, certainly. Humor? Yes! That was the message. Odrade's humor (applied later) had taught Linchine something about herself. Humor under stress.



Odrade smiled at the acolyte beside her in the dining hall. "How would you like to be a horse?"



"What?" The word was startled out of her but she responded to Mother Superior's smile. Nothing alarming in that. Warm even. Everyone said Mother Superior permitted affections.



"You don't understand, of course," Odrade said.



"No, Mother Superior." Still smiling and patient.



Odrade allowed her gaze to quest over the young face. Clear blue eyes not yet touched by the engulfing blue of Spice Agony. A mouth almost like Bell's but without the viciousness. Dependable muscles and dependable intelligence. She would be good at anticipating Mother Superior's needs. Witness her map assignment and that report. Sensitive. Went with her superior intelligence. Not likely to rise to the very top but always in key positions where you needed her qualities.



Why did I sit beside this one?



Odrade frequently selected a particular companion at mealtime visits. Acolytes mostly. They could be so revealing. Reports often found their way to Mother Superior's workroom: personal observations from Proctors about one acolyte or another. But sometimes, Odrade chose a seat for no reason she could explain. As I did tonight. Why this one?



Conversation rarely occurred unless Mother Superior initiated it. Gentle initiation usually, easing into more intimate matters. Others around them listened avidly.



At such moments, Odrade often produced a manner of almost religious serenity. It soothed nervous ones. Acolytes were... well, acolytes, but Mother Superior was the supreme witch of them all. Nervousness was natural.



Someone behind Odrade whispered: "She has Streggi on the coals tonight."



On the coals. Odrade knew the expression. It had been used in her acolyte days. So this one was named Streggi. Let it be unspoken for now. Names carry magic.



"Do you enjoy tonight's dinner?" Odrade asked.



"It's acceptable, Mother Superior." One tried not to give false opinions, but Streggi was confused by the shift in conversation.



"They've overcooked it," Odrade said.



"Serving so many, how can they please everyone, Mother Superior?"



She speaks her mind and speaks it well.



"Your left hand is trembling," Odrade said.



"I'm nervous with you, Mother Superior. And I've just come from the practice floor. Very tiring today."



Odrade analyzed the tremors. "They have you doing the long-arm lift."



"Was it painful in your day, Mother Superior?" (In those ancient times?) "Just as painful as today. Pain teaches, they told me."



That softened things. Shared experiences, the patter of the Proctors.



"I don't understand about horses, Mother Superior." Streggi looked at her plate. "This cannot be horse meat. I'm sure I..."



Odrade laughed loudly, attracting startled looks. She put a hand on Streggi's arm and subsided to a gentle smile. "Thank you, my dear. No one has made me laugh that much in years. I hope this is the beginning of a long and joyous association."



"Thank you, Mother Superior, but I -"



"I will explain about the horse, my own little joke and no intent to demean you. I want you to carry a young child on your shoulders, to move him more rapidly than his short legs will carry him."



"As you wish, Mother Superior." No objections, no more questions. Questions were there, but the answers would come in their own time and Streggi knew it.



Magic time.



Withdrawing her hand, Odrade said: "Your name?"



"Streggi, Mother Superior. Aloana Streggi."



"Rest easy, Streggi. I will see to the orchards. We need them for morale as much as for food. You report to Reassignment tonight. Tell them I want you in my workroom at six tomorrow morning."



"I will be there, Mother Superior. Will I continue to mark your map?" As Odrade was rising to leave.



"For now, Streggi. But ask Reassignment for a new acolyte and begin training her. Soon, you will be much too busy for the map."



"Thank you, Mother Superior. The desert is growing very fast."



Streggi's words gave Odrade a certain satisfaction, dispelling gloom that had hampered her most of the day.



The cycle was getting another chance, turning once more as it was impelled to do by those subterranean forces called "life" and "love" and other unnecessary labels.



Thus it turns. Thus it renews. Magic. What witchery could take your attention from this miracle?



In her workroom, she issued an order to Weather, then silenced the tools of her office and went to the bow window. Chapterhouse glowed pale red in the night from reflections of groundlights against low clouds. It gave a romantic appearance to rooftops and walls that Odrade quickly rejected.



Romance? There was nothing romantic about what she had done in the Acolyte Dining Hall.



I have finally done it. I have committed myself. Now, Duncan must restore our Bashar's memories. A delicate assignment.



She continued to stare into the night, suppressing knots in her stomach.



I not only commit myself but I commit what remains of my Sisterhood. So this is how it feels, Tar.



This is how it feels and your plan is tricky.



It was going to rain. Odrade sensed it in the air coming through the ventilators around the window. No need to read a Weather Dispatch. She seldom did that these days, anyway. Why bother? But Streggi's report carried a potent warning.



Rains were becoming rarer here and rather to be welcomed.



Sisters would emerge to walk in it despite the cold. There was a touch of sadness in the thought. Each rain she saw brought the same question: Is this the last one?



The people of Weather did heroic things to keep an expanding desert dry and the growing areas irrigated. Odrade did not know how they had managed this rain to comply with her order. Before long, they would not be able to obey such commands, even from Mother Superior. The desert will triumph because that is what we have set in motion.



She opened the central panes of her window. The wind at this level had stopped. Just the clouds moving overhead. Wind at higher elevations harrying things along. A sense of urgency in the weather. The air was chilly. So they had made temperature adjustments to bring this bit of rain. She closed the window, feeling no desire to go outside. Mother Superior had no time to play the game of last rain. One rain at a time. And always out there the desert moving inexorably toward them.



That, we can map and watch. But what of the hunter behind me - the nightmare figure with the axe? What map tells me where she is tonight?



Religion (emulation of adults by the child) encysts past mythologies: guesses, hidden assumptions of trust in the universe, pronouncements made in search of personal power, all mingled with shreds of enlightenment. And always an unspoken commandment: Thou shalt not question! We break that commandment daily in the harnessing of human imagination to our deepest creativity.



- Bene Gesserit Credo



Murbella sat cross-legged on the practice floor, alone, shivering after her exertions. Mother Superior had been here less than an hour this afternoon. And, as often happened, Murbella felt she had been abandoned in a fever dream.



Odrade's parting words reverberated in the dream: "The hardest lesson for an acolyte to learn is that she must always go the limit. Your abilities will take you farther than you imagine. Don't imagine, then. Extend yourself."



What is my response? That I was taught to cheat?



Odrade had done something to call up the patterns of childhood and Honored Matre education. I learned cheating as an infant. How to simulate a need and gain attention. Many "how-to's" in the cheating pattern. The older she got, the easier the cheating. She had learned what the big people around her were demanding. I regurgitated on demand. That was called "education." Why were the Bene Gesserit so remarkably different in their teaching?



"I don't ask you to be honest with me," Odrade had said. "Be honest with yourself."



Murbella despaired of ever rooting out all of the cheating in her past. Why should I? More cheating!



"Damn you, Odrade!"



Only after the words were out did she realize she had spoken them aloud. She started to put a hand to her mouth and aborted the movement. Fever said: "What's the difference?"



"Educational bureaucracies dull a child's questing sensitivity." Odrade explaining. "The young must be damped down. Never let them know how good they can be. That brings change. Spend lots of committee time talking about how to deal with exceptional students. Don't spend any time dealing with how the conventional teacher feels threatened by emerging talents and squelches them because of a deep-seated desire to feel superior and safe in a safe environment. "



She was talking about Honored Matres.



Conventional teachers?



There it was: Behind that facade of wisdom, the Bene Gesserit were unconventional. They often did not think about teaching; they just did it.



Gods! I want to be like them!



The thought shocked her and she leaped to her feet, launching herself into a training routine for wrists and arms.



Realization bit deeper than ever. She did not want to disappoint these teachers. Candor and honesty. Every acolyte heard that. "Basic tools of learning," Odrade said.



Distracted by her thoughts, Murbella tumbled hard and stood up, rubbing a bruised shoulder.



She had thought at first that the Bene Gesserit protestation must be a lie. I am being so candid with you that I must tell you about my unswerving honesty.



But actions confirmed their claim. Odrade's voice persisted in the fever dream: "That is how you judge."



They had something in the mind, in memory and a balance of intellect no Honored Matre had ever possessed. This thought made her feel small. Enter corruption. It was like liver spots in her feverish thoughts.



But I have talent! It required talent to become an Honored Matre.



Do I still think of myself as an Honored Matre?



The Bene Gesserit knew she had not fully committed herself to them. What skills do I have that they could possibly want? Not the skills of deception.



"Do actions agree with words? There's your measure of reliability. Never confine yourself to the words."



Murbella put her hands over her ears. Shut up, Odrade!



"How does a Truthsayer separate sincerity from a more fundamental judgment?"



Murbella dropped her hands to her sides. Maybe I'm really sick. She swept her gaze around the long room. No one there to utter these words. Anyway, it was Odrade's voice.



"If you convince yourself, sincerely, you can speak utter balderdash (marvelous old word; look it up), absolute poppylarky in every word and you will be believed. But not by one of our Truthsayers."



Murbella's shoulders sagged. She began to wander aimlessly around the practice floor. Was there no place to escape?



"Look for the consequences, Murbella. That's how you ferret out things that work. That's what our much-vaunted truths are all about."



Pragmatism?



Idaho found her then and responded to the wild look in her eyes. "What's wrong?"



" I think I'm sick. Really sick. I thought it was something Odrade did to me but..."



He caught her as she fell.



"Help us!"



For once, he was glad of the comeyes. A Suk was with them in less than a minute. She bent over Murbella where Idaho cradled her on the floor.



The examination was brief. The Suk, a graying older Reverend Mother with the traditional diamond brand on her forehead, straightened and said: "Overstressed. She's not trying to find her limits, she's going beyond them. We'll put her back into the sensitizing class before we let her continue. I'll send the Proctors."



Odrade found Murbella in the Proctor's Ward that evening, propped up in a bed, two Proctors taking turns testing her muscle responses. A small gesture and they left Odrade alone with Murbella.



"I tried to avoid complicating things," Murbella said. Candor and honesty.



"Trying to avoid complications often creates them." Odrade sank into a chair beside the bed and put a hand on Murbella's arm. Muscles quivered under the hand. "We say 'words are slow, feeling's faster.' " Odrade withdrew. "What decisions have you been making?"



"You let me make decisions?"



"Don't sneer." She lifted a hand to prevent interruption. "I didn't take your previous conditioning into sufficient account. The Honored Matres left you practically incapable of making decisions. Typical of power-hungry societies. Teach their people to diddle around forever. 'Decisions bring bad results!' You teach avoidance."



"What's that have to do with me collapsing?" Resentful.



"Murbella! The worst products of what I'm describing are almost basket cases - can't make decisions about anything, or leave them until the last possible second and then leap at them like desperate animals. "



"You told me to go the limit!" Almost wailing.



"Your limits, Murbella. Not mine. Not Bell's or those of anyone else. Yours."



"I've decided I want to be like you." Very faint.



"Marvelous! I don't believe I've ever tried to kill myself. Especially when I was pregnant."



In spite of herself, Murbella grinned.



Odrade stood. "Sleep. You're going into a special class tomorrow where we'll work on your ability to mesh your decisions with sensitivity to your limits. Remember what I told you. We take care of our own."



"Am I yours?" Almost whispered.



"Since you repeated the oath before the Proctors." Odrade turned out the lights as she left. Murbella heard her speak to someone before the door closed. "Stop fussing with her. She needs rest."



Murbella closed her eyes. The fever dream was gone but in its place was her own memory. "I am a Bene Gesserit. I exist only to serve."



She heard herself saying those words to the Proctors but memory gave them an emphasis not in the original.



They knew I was being cynical.



What could you hide from such women?



She felt the remembered hand of the Proctor on her forehead and heard the words that had possessed no meaning until this moment.



"I stand in the sacred human presence. As I do now, so should you stand some day. I pray to your presence that this be so. Let the future remain uncertain for that is the canvas to receive our desires. Thus the human condition faces its perpetual tabula rasa. We possess no more than this moment where we dedicate ourselves continuously to the sacred presence we share and create."



Conventional but unconventional. She realized that she had not been physically or emotionally prepared for this moment. Tears flowed down her cheeks.



Laws to suppress tend to strengthen what they would prohibit. This is the fine point on which all the legal professions of history have based their job security.



- Bene Gesserit Coda



On her restless prowlings through Central (infrequent these days but more intense because of that), Odrade looked for signs of slackness and especially for areas of responsibility that were running too smoothly.



The Senior Watchdog had her own watchwords: "Show me a completely smooth operation and I'll show you someone who's covering mistakes. Real boats rock."



She said this often and it became an identifying phrase the Sisters (and even some acolytes) employed to comment on Mother Superior.



"Real boats rock." Soft chuckles.



Bellonda accompanied Odrade on today's early morning inspection, not mentioning that "once a month" had been stretched to "once every two months" - if that. This inspection was a week past the mark. Bell wanted to use this time for warnings about Idaho. And she had dragged Tamalane along although Tam was supposed to be reviewing Proctor performance at this hour.



Two against one? Odrade wondered. She did not think Bell or Tam suspected what Mother Superior intended. Well, it would come out, as had Taraza's plan. In its own time, eh, Tar?



Down the corridors they stalked, black robes swishing with urgency, eyes missing little. It was all familiar and yet they looked for things that were new. Odrade carried her Ear-C over her left shoulder like a misplaced diving weight. Never be out of communication range these days.



Behind the scenes in any Bene Gesserit center were the support facilities: clinic-hospital, kitchen, morgue, garbage control, reclamation systems (attached to sewage and garbage), transport and communications, kitchen provisioning, training and physical maintenance halls, schools for acolytes and postulants, quarters for all of the denominations, meeting centers, testing facilities and much more. Personnel often changed because of the Scattering and movement of people into new responsibilities, all according to subtle Bene Gesserit awareness. But tasks and places for them remained.



As they strode swiftly from one area to another, Odrade spoke of the Sisterhood Scattering, not trying to hide her dismay at "the atomic family" they had become.



"I find it difficult to contemplate humankind spreading into an unlimited universe," Tam said. "The possibilities..."



"Infinite numbers game." Odrade stepped across a broken curb. "That should be repaired. We've been playing the infinity game since we learned to jump Foldspace."



There was no joy in Bellonda. "It's not a game!"



Odrade could appreciate Bellonda's feelings. We have never seen empty space. Always more galaxies. Tam's right. It's daunting when you focus on that Golden Path.



Memories of explorations gave the Sisterhood a statistical handle on it but little else. So many habitable planets in a given assemblage and, among those, an expected additional number that could be terraformed.



"What's evolving out there?" Tamalane demanded.



A question they could not answer. Ask what Infinity might produce and the only answer possible was, "Anything."



Any good, any evil; any god, any devil.



"What if Honored Matres are fleeing something?" Odrade asked. "Interesting possibility?"



"These speculations are useless," Bellonda muttered. "We don't even know if Foldspace introduces us to one universe or many... or even an infinite number of expanding and collapsing bubbles."



"Did the Tyrant understand this any better than we do?" Tamalane asked.



They paused while Odrade looked into a room where five Advanced acolytes and a Proctor studied a projection of regional melange stores. The crystal holding the information performed an intricate dance in the projector, bouncing on its beam like a ball on a fountain. Odrade saw the summation and turned away before scowling. Tam and Bell did not see Odrade's expression. We will have to start limiting access to melange data. Too depressing to morale.



Administration! It all came back to Mother Superior. Delegate heavily to only the same people and you fell into bureaucracy.



Odrade knew she depended too much on her inner sense of administration. A system frequently tested and revised, using automation only where essential. "The machinery" they called it. By the time they became Reverend Mothers, all of them had some sensitivity to "the machinery" and tended to use it without question thereafter. There lay the danger. Odrade pressed for constant improvements (even tiny ones) to introduce change into their activities. Randomness! No absolute patterns that others could find and use against them. One person might not see such shifts in a lifetime but differences over longer periods were sure to be measurable.



Odrade's party came down to ground level and onto the major thoroughfare of Central. "The Way," Sisters called it. An in-joke, referring to the training regimen popularly known as "The Bene Gesserit Way."



The Way reached from the square beside Odrade's tower to the southern outskirts of the urban area - straight as a lasgun beam, almost twelve klicks of tall buildings and low ones. The low ones all had something in common: they had been built strong enough to expand upward.



Odrade flagged an open transporter with empty seats and the three of them crowded into a space where they could continue to talk. Frontage on The Way carried an old-fashioned appeal, Odrade thought. Buildings such as these with their tall rectangular windows of insulating plaz had framed Bene Gesserit "Ways" through much of the Sisterhood's history. Down the center ran a line of elms genetically tailored for height and narrow profile. Birds nested in them and the morning was bright with flitting spots of red and orange - orioles, tanagers.



Is it dangerously patterned for us to prefer this familiar setting?



Odrade led them off the transporter at Tipsy Trail, thinking how Bene Gesserit humor came out in curious names. Waggish in the streets. Tipsy Trail because the foundation of one building had subsided slightly, giving that structure a curiously drunken appearance. The one member of the group stepping out of line.



Like Mother Superior. Only they don't know it yet.



Her Ear-C buzzed as they came to Tower Lane. "Mother Superior?" It was Streggi. Without stopping, Odrade signaled that she was on-line. "You asked for a report on Murbella. Suk Central says she is fit for assigned classes."



"Then assign her." They continued down Tower Lane: all one-story buildings.



Odrade spared a brief glance for the low buildings on both sides of the street. A two-story addition was being made to one of them. Might be a real Tower Lane here someday and the joke (such as it was) abandoned.



It was argued that naming was just a convenience anyway and they might as well enjoy this venture into what was a delicate subject for the Sisterhood.



Odrade stopped abruptly on a busy walkway and turned to her companions. "What would you say if I suggested we name streets and places after departed Sisters?"



"You're full of nonsense today!" Bellonda accused.



"They are not departed," Tamalane said.



Odrade resumed her prowling walk. She had expected that. Bell's thoughts could almost be heard. We carry the "departed" around in Other Memory!



Odrade wanted no argument here in the open but she thought her idea had merit. Some Sisters died without Sharing. Major Memory Lines were duplicated but you lost a thread and its terminated carrier. Schwangyu of the Gammu Keep had gone that way, killed by attacking Honored Matres. Plenty of memories remained to carry her good qualities... and complexities. One hesitated to say her mistakes taught more than her successes.



Bellonda increased her pace to walk beside Odrade in a relatively empty stretch. "I must speak of Idaho. A Mentat, yes, but those multiple memories. Supremely dangerous!"



They were passing a morgue, the strong smell of antiseptics even in the street. The arched doorway stood open.



"Who died?" Odrade asked, ignoring Bellonda's anxiety.



"A Proctor from Section Four and an orchard maintenance man," Tamalane said. Tam always knew.



Bellonda was furious at being ignored and made no attempt to hide it. "Will you two stick to the point?"



"What is the point?" Odrade asked. Very mild.



They emerged on the south terrace and stopped at the stone rail to look over the plantations - vineyards and orchards. The morning light had a dusty haze in it not at all like the mists created of moisture.



"You know the point!" Bell would not be deflected.



Odrade stared at the vista, pressing herself against the stones. The railing was frigid. That mist out there was a different color, she thought. Sunlight came through dust with a different reflective spectrum. More bounce and sharpness to the light. Absorbed in a different way. The nimbus was tighter. The blowing dust and sand crept into every crevice the way water did but the grating and rasping betrayed its source. The same with Bell's persistence. No lubrication.



"That's desert light," Odrade said, pointing.



"Stop avoiding me," Bellonda said.



Odrade chose not to answer. The dusty light was a classical thing, but not reassuring in the way of the elder painters and their misty mornings.



Tamalane came up beside Odrade. "Beautiful in its own way." The remote tone said she made Other Memory comparisons similar to Odrade's.



If that's how you were conditioned to look for beauty. But something deep within Odrade said this was not the beauty for which she longed.



In the shallow swales below them, where once there had been greenery, now there was dryness and a sense of the earth being gutted the way ancient Egyptians had prepared their dead - dried to essential matter, preserved for their Eternity. Desert as deathmaster, swaddling the dirt in nitron, embalming our beautiful planet with all of its jewels concealed.



Bellonda stood behind them, muttering and shaking her head, refusing to look at what their planet would become.



Odrade almost shuddered in a sudden thrust of simulflow. Memory flooded her: She felt herself searching Sietch Tabr's ruins, finding desert-embalmed bodies of spice pirates left where killers had dropped them.



What is Sieteh Tabr now? A molten flow solidified and without anything to mark its proud history. Honored Matres: killers of history.



"If you won't eliminate Idaho, then I must protest your using him as a Mentat."



Bell was such a fussy woman! Odrade noted that she was showing her age more than ever. Reading lenses on her nose even now. They magnified her eyes until she had the look of a great-orbed fish. Use of lenses and not one of the more subtle prostheses said something about her. She flaunted a reverse vanity that announced: "I am greater than the devices my failing senses require. "



Bellonda was definitely irritated by Mother Superior. "Why are you staring at me that way?"



Odrade, caught by abrupt awareness of a weakness in her Council, shifted her attention to Tamalane. Cartilage never stopped growing and this had enlarged Tam's ears, nose and chin. Some Reverend Mothers adjusted this by metabolism control or sought regular surgical correction. Tam would not bow to such vanity. "Here's what I am. Take it or leave it."



My advisors are too old. And I... I should be younger and stronger to have these problems on my shoulders. Oh, damn this for a lapse into self-pity!



Only one supreme danger: action against survival of the Sisterhood.



"Duncan is a superb Mentat!" Odrade spoke with all the force of her position. "But I use none of you beyond your capabilities."



Bellonda remained silent. She knew a Mentat's weaknesses.



Mentats! Odrade thought. They were like walking Archives but when you most needed answers they relapsed into questions.



"I don't need another Mentat," Odrade said. "I need an inventor!"



When Bellonda still did not speak, Odrade said: "I am freeing his mind, not his body."



"I insist on an analysis before you open all data sources to him!"



Considering Bellonda's usual stance, that was mild. But Odrade did not trust it. She detested those sessions - endless rehashing of Archival reports. Bellonda doted on them. Bellonda of Archival minutiae and boring excursions into irrelevant details! Who cared if Reverend Mother X preferred skimmed milk on her porridge?



Odrade turned her back on Bellonda and looked at the southern sky. Dust! We would sift more dust! Bellonda would be flanked by assistants. Odrade felt boredom just imagining it.



"No more analysis." Odrade spoke more sharply than she had intended.



"I do have a point of view." Bellonda sounded hurt.



Point of view? Are we no more than sensory windows on our universe, each with only a point of view?



Instincts and memories of all types... even Archives - none of these things spoke for themselves except by compelling intrusions. None carried weight until formulated in a living consciousness. But whoever produced the formulation tipped the scales. All order is arbitrary! Why this datum rather than some other? Any Reverend Mother knew events occurred in their own flux, their own relative environment. Why couldn't a Mentat Reverend Mother act from that knowledge?



"Do you refuse counsel?" That was Tamalane. Was she siding with Bell?
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