Hunters of Dune - Brian Herbert [130]
She was rail-thin and petite, two years his junior. Though she had grown up far from the arid wastelands of Arrakis, her body’s metabolism, genetically adapted from her Fremen heritage, still did not squander water. Chani wore her dark red hair pulled back in a braid. Her brown skin was smooth and her mouth quick to flash a smile, especially when she was with Paul.
Her eyes were a natural sepia, not the blue-within-blue eyes of spice addiction, which Paul had seen in every historical image of an older Chani, the beloved concubine of Muad’Dib and mother of his twin children.
As they descended from one deck to another, making their way to the aft engine section of the great no-ship, Paul let his hand slip into hers. Though they were still just children, it seemed a comfortable thing to do, and she did not pull away. All their lives they had played together, explored together, and never questioned that they were supposed to be partners, just like in the old stories.
“Why do you find the engines so fascinating, Usul?” she said, calling him by the Fremen name that she had learned from her own diaries and journal recordings in the ship’s archives.
In ancient, preserved poetry, the first Paul Muad’Dib had described Chani’s voice as “the perfectly beautiful tones of fresh water chuckling over rocks.” Listening to her now, the new Paul could see how he had once come to that conclusion.
“The Holtzman engines are so strange and powerful, able to take us anywhere we can imagine going.” He reached out to tap her small, pointed chin with his fingertip, then said in a conspiratorial whisper, “Or maybe the real reason is because nobody watches us in the engine rooms.”
Chani’s brow furrowed. “On a ship this size, there are plenty of places for us to be alone.”
Paul shrugged, smiling. “I didn’t say it was a very good reason. I just wanted to go there.”
They entered the giant engineering bay, where in normal times only certified Guildsmen could go. Under the present circumstances, Duncan Idaho, Miles Teg, and some Reverend Mothers knew enough about these foldspace engines to keep them functioning. Fortunately, no-ships were so exquisitely and sturdily built that little went seriously wrong, even after so many years without standard upkeep. The Ithaca’s major operating systems and self-repair mechanisms were sufficient to perform regular maintenance. The more important the component, the more redundancy was designed into it.
Nevertheless, both Teg and Duncan, using their Mentat abilities, had set about studying and memorizing all known specifications of the immense vessel to prepare themselves for any crisis that might occur. Paul supposed Thufir Hawat would also contribute his wisdom, once he grew up and became a Mentat again.
Now the boy and girl stood surrounded by throbbing machinery. Although the no-field projectors were located in different parts of the ship, with repeaters and reinforcing stations mounted throughout the hull, these giant engines were similar to the foldspace designs that had been used back in the time of Muad’Dib, and much earlier in the Butlerian Jihad. Tio Holtzman’s then-dangerous foldspace engines had been the key to ultimate victory over the thinking machines.
Paul stared up at the massive machines, trying to sense their driving mathematical force, though he didn’t understand it all. Chani, a few inches shorter than he, surprised him by standing on her tiptoes and kissing his cheek. He spun to face her, laughing.
She saw the surprise on his face. “Isn’t that what I’m supposed to do? I’ve read all the files. We’re destined for each other, aren’t we?”
Growing serious, Paul held her small shoulders and gazed into her eyes. Then he reached out to stroke her left eyebrow, and drew his fingers down her cheek. He felt awkward doing this. “It’s strange, Chani. But I can sense a tingle . . .”
“Or a tickle! I feel it, too. A memory just beneath the surface.”
He kissed