"Herbert, Frank - Chapterhouse Dune" - читать интересную книгу автора (Herbert Brian & Frank)The big machine trundled past her out of the yard, its operator not sparing her another glance. He had seen her once. Why look twice? Her hosts had made a wise choice in this hiding place, she thought. A sparsely populated area with trustworthy workers in the immediate vicinity and little curiosity among the people who passed. Hard work dulled curiosity. She had noted the character of the area. when she was brought here. Evening then and people already trudging toward their homes. You could measure the urban density of an area by when work stopped. Early to bed and you were in a loosely-packed region. Night activity said people remained restless, twitchy with inner awareness of others active and vibrating too near. What has brought me to this introspective state? Early in the Sisterhood's first retreat, before the worst onslaughts of the Honored Matres, Lucilla had experienced difficulty coming to grips with belief that "someone out there is hunting us with intent to kill." Pogrom! That was what the Rabbi had called it before going off that morning "to see what I can do for you." She knew the Rabbi had chosen his word from long and bitter memory, but not since her first experience of Gammu before this pogrom had Lucilla felt such confinement to circumstances she could not control. I was a fugitive then, too. The Sisterhood's present situation bore similarities to what they had suffered under the Tyrant, except that the God Emperor obviously (in retrospect) never intended to exterminate the Bene Gesserit, only to rule them. And he certainly ruled! Where is that damned Rabbi? He was a large, intense man with old-fashioned spectacles. A broad face browned by much sunlight. Few wrinkles despite the age she could read in his voice and movements. The spectacles focused attention on deeply set brown eyes that watched her with peculiar intensity. "Honored Matres," he had said (right here in this bare-walled upper room) when she explained her predicament. "Oh, my! That is difficult." Lucilla had expected that response and, what was more, she could see he knew it. "I have Siona blood. He cannot see me." "Nor me nor any of my people and for the same reason. We Jews adjust to many necessities, you know." "This Edric is a gesture," she said. "He can do little." "But they have brought him. I'm afraid there is no way we can get you safely off the planet." "Then what can we do?" "We will see. My people are not entirely helpless, you understand?" She recognized sincerity and concern for her. He spoke quietly of resisting the sexual blandishments of Honored Matres, "doing it unobtrusively so as not to arouse them." "I will go whisper in a few ears," he said. She felt oddly restored by this. There often was something coldly remote and cruel about falling into the hands of the medical professions. She reassured herself with the knowledge that Suks were conditioned to be alert to your needs, compassionate and supportive. (All of those things that can fall by the wayside in emergencies.) She bent her efforts to restoring calm, focusing on the personal mantra she had gained in solo death education. If I am to die, I must pass along a transcendental lesson. I must leave with serenity. That helped but still she felt a trembling. The Rabbi had been gone too long. Something was wrong. |
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