The Harkonnen guard released his arm, said "Wait over there out of the way."
Abruptly, Yueh saw himself as cast away in this place of destruction, spared nothing, given not the smallest pity.
Another guard bumped into him, barked: "Stay out of the way, you!"
"Wait for the Baron!" a guard officer snarled.
Yueh nodded, walked with controlled casualness along the front of the house, turned the corner into shadows out of sight of the burning palms. Quickly, every step betraying his anxiety, Yueh made for the rear yard beneath the conservatory where the 'thopter waited—the craft they had placed there to carry away Paul and his mother.
A guard stood at the open rear door of the house, his attention focused on the lighted hall and men banging through there, searching from room to room.
How confident they were!
Yueh hugged the shadows, worked his way around the 'thopter, eased open the door on the side away from the guard. He felt under the front seats for the Fremkit he had hidden there, lifted a flap and slipped in the ducal signet. He felt the crinkling of the spice paper there, the note he had written, pressed the ring into the paper. He removed his hand, resealed the pack.
Softly, Yueh closed the 'thopter door, worked his way back to the corner of the house and around toward the flaming trees.
Once more, he emerged into the light of the blazing palms. He pulled his cloak around him, stared at the flames.
—the Princess Irulan: "Introduction to A Child's History of Muad'Dib"
The Baron Vladimir Harkonnen stood at a viewport of the grounded lighter he was using as a command post. Out the port he saw the flame-lighted night of Arrakeen. His attention focused on the distant Shield Wall where his secret weapon was doing its work.
Explosive artillery.
The guns nibbled at the caves where the Duke's fighting men had retreated for a last-ditch stand. Slowly measured bites of orange glare, showers of rock and dust in the brief illumination—and the Duke's men were being sealed off to die by starvation, caught like animals in their burrows.
The Baron could feel the distant chomping—a drumbeat carried to him through the ship's metal:
He adjusted one of the little suspensors that guarded his fat body against the pull of gravity. A smile creased his mouth, pulled at the lines of his jowls.
A door opened behind him. The Baron studied the reflection in the night-blackened viewport before turning.