The Count moved up beside the Baron, and they turned, facing the wall so their lips could not be read.
“We’re not satisfied with the way you ordered the Sardaukar off Arrakis,” the Count said.
Straight talk! the Baron thought.
“The Sardaukar could not stay longer without risking that others would find out how the Emperor helped me,” the Baron said.
“But your nephew Rabban does not appear to be pressing strongly enough toward a solution of the Fremen problem.”
“What does the Emperor wish?” the Baron asked. “There cannot be more than a handful of Fremen left on Arrakis. The southern desert is uninhabitable. The northern desert is swept regularly by our patrols.”
“Who says the southern desert is uninhabitable?”
“Your own planetologist said it, my dear Count.”
“But Doctor Kynes is dead.”
“Ah, yes … unfortunate, that.”
“We’ve word from an overflight across the southern reaches,” the Count said. “There’s evidence of plant life.”
“Has the Guild then agreed to a watch from space?”
“You know better than that, Baron. The Emperor cannot legally post a watch on Arrakis.”
“And I cannot afford it,” the Baron said. “Who made this overflight?”
“A … smuggler.”
“Someone has lied to you, Count,” the Baron said. “Smugglers cannot navigate the southern reaches any better than can Rabban’s men. Storms, sand-static, and all that, you know. Navigation markers are knocked out faster than they can be installed.”
“We’ll discuss various types of static another time,” the Count said.
Ah-h-h-h, the Baron thought. “Have you found some mistake in my accounting then?” he demanded.
“When you imagine mistakes there can be no self-defense,” the Count said.
He’s deliberately trying to arouse my anger, the Baron thought. He took two deep breaths to calm himself. He could smell his own sweat, and the harness of the suspensors beneath his robe felt suddenly itchy and galling.
“The Emperor cannot be unhappy about the death of the concubine and the boy,” the Baron said. “They fled into the desert. There was a storm.”
“Yes, there were so many convenient accidents,” the Count agreed.
“I do not like your tone, Count,” the Baron said.
“Anger is one thing, violence another,” the Count said. “Let me caution you: Should an unfortunate accident occur to me here the Great Houses all would learn what you did on Arrakis. They’ve long suspected how you do business.”
“The only recent business I can recall,” the Baron said, “was transportation of several legions of Sardaukar to Arrakis.”
“You think you could hold that over the Emperor’s head?”
“I wouldn’t think of it!”
The Count smiled. “Sardaukar commanders could be found who’d confess they acted without orders because they wanted a battle with your Fremen scum.”
“Many might doubt such a confession,” the Baron said, but the threat staggered him. Are Sardaukar truly that disciplined? he wondered.
“The Emperor does wish to audit your books,” the Count said.
“Any time.”
“You … ah … have no objections?”
“None. My CHOAM Company directorship will bear the closest scrutiny.” And he thought: Let him bring a false accusation against me and have it exposed. I shall stand there, promethean, saying: “Behold me, I am wronged. ” Then let him bring any other accusation against me, even a true one. The Great Houses will not believe a second attack from an accuser once proved wrong.
“No doubt your books will bear the closest scrutiny,” the Count muttered.
“Why is the Emperor so interested in exterminating the Fremen?” the Baron asked.
“You wish the subject to be changed, eh?” The Count shrugged. “It is the Sardaukar who wish it, not the Emperor. They needed practice in killing … and they hate to see a task left undone.”
Does he think to frighten me by reminding me that he is supported by bloodthirsty killers? the Baron wondered.
“A certain amount of killing has always been an arm of business,” the Baron said, “but a line has to be drawn somewhere. Someone must be left to work the spice.”
The Count emitted a short, barking laugh. “You think you can harness the Fremen?”
“There never were enough of them for that,” the Baron said. “But the killing has made the rest of my population uneasy. It’s reaching the point where I’m considering another solution to the Arrakeen problem, my dear Fenring. And I must confess the Emperor deserves credit for the inspiration.”
“Ah-h-h?”
“You see, Count, I have the Emperor’s prison planet, Salusa Secundus, to inspire me.”
The Count stared at him with glittering intensity. “What possible connection is there between Arrakis and Salusa Secundus?”
The Baron felt the alertness in Fenring’s eyes, said: “No connection yet.”
“Yet?”
“You must admit it’d be a way to develop a substantial work force on