“We do not deal in possibilities, Piter. What of the missing ’thopter? Does that suggest anything to my Mentat?”
“One of the Duke’s men obviously escaped in it, m’Lord. Killed our pilot and escaped.”
“Which of the Duke’s men?”
“It was a clean, silent killing, m’Lord. Hawat, perhaps, or that Halleck one. Possibly Idaho. Or any top lieutenant.”
“Possibilities,” the Baron muttered. He glanced at the swaying, drugged figure of the Duke.
“The situation is in hand, m’Lord,” Piter said.
“No, it isn’t! Where is that stupid planetologist? Where is this man Kynes?”
“We’ve word where to find him and he’s been sent for, m’Lord.”
“I don’t like the way the Emperor’s servant is helping us,” the Baron muttered.
They were words through a cottony blanket, but some of them burned in Leto’s mind.
“Where is the ducal signet ring?” the Baron demanded. “His finger is bare.”
“The Sardaukar say it was not on him when he was taken, my Lord,” the guard captain said.
“You killed the doctor too soon,” the Baron said. “That was a mistake. You should’ve warned me, Piter. You moved too precipitately for the good of our enterprise.” He scowled. “Possibilities!”
The thought hung like a sine wave in Leto’s mind:
He remembered part of it now:
Someone had told him to remember the tooth. The tooth was in his mouth. He could feel its shape with his tongue. All he had to do was bite sharply on it.
The someone had told him to wait until he was near the Baron. Who had told him? He couldn’t remember.
“How long will he remain drugged like this?” the Baron asked.
“Perhaps another hour, m’Lord.”
“Perhaps,” the Baron muttered. Again, he turned to the night-blackened window. “I am hungry.”
Time became a sequence of layers for the Duke. He drifted up through them.
There was a table. Leto saw the table quite clearly. And a gross, fat man on the other side of the table, the remains of a meal in front of him. Leto felt himself sitting in a chair across from the fat man, felt the chains, the straps that held his tingling body in the chair. He was aware there had been a passage of time, but its length escaped him.
“I believe he’s coming around, Baron.”
“So I see, Piter.”
Leto sensed increasing definition in his surroundings. The chair beneath him took on firmness, the bindings were sharper.
And he saw the Baron clearly now. Leto watched the movements of the man’s hands: compulsive touchings—the edge of a plate, the handle of a spoon, a finger tracing the fold of a jowl.
Leto watched the moving hand, fascinated by it.
“You can hear me, Duke Leto,” the Baron said. “I know you can hear me. We want to know from you where to find your concubine and the child you sired on her.”
No sign escaped Leto, but the words were a wash of calmness through him.
“This is not a child’s game we play,” the Baron rumbled. “You must know that.” He leaned toward Leto, studying the face. It pained the Baron that this could not be handled privately, just between the two of them. To have others see royalty in such straits—it set a bad precedent.
Leto could feel strength returning. And now, the memory of the false tooth stood out in his mind like a steeple in a flat landscape. The nerve-shaped capsule within that tooth—the poison gas—he remembered who had put the deadly weapon in his mouth.
Drug-fogged memory of seeing a limp corpse dragged past him in this room hung like a vapor in Leto’s mind. He knew it had been Yueh.
“Do you hear that noise, Duke Leto?” the Baron asked.
Leto grew conscious of a frog sound, the burred mewling of someone’s agony.
“We caught one of your men disguised as a Fremen,” the Baron said. “We penetrated the disguise quite easily: the eyes, you know. He insists he was sent among the Fremen to spy on them. I’ve lived for a time on this planet, cher cousin. One does not spy on those ragged scum of the desert. Tell me, did you buy their help? Did you send your woman and son to them?”