not know everything. The Tleilaxu returned from the Scattering and the Honored Matres she maligned so bitterly had provided the Tleilaxu with a sexually loaded weapon that would not be shared, no matter the promises made here!

Taraza digested Waff's reactions silently and decided on a bold lie. 'When we captured your Ixian conference ship, your new Face Dancers did not die quite fast enough. We learned a great deal.'

Waff poised himself on the edge of violence.

Bullseye! Taraza thought. The bold lie had opened an avenue of revelation into one of the more outrageous suggestions from her advisors. It did not seem outrageous now. 'The Tleilaxu ambition is to produce a complete prana-bindu mimic,' her advisor had suggested.

'Complete?'

All of the Sisters at the conference had been astonished by the suggestion. It implied a form of mental copy going beyond the memory print about which they already knew.

The advisor, Sister Hesterion from Archives, had come armed with a tightly organized list of supporting material. 'We already know that what an Ixian Probe does mechanically, the Tleilaxu do with nerves and flesh. The next step is obvious.'

Seeing Waff's reaction to her bold lie, Taraza continued to watch him carefully. He was at his most dangerous right now.

A look of rage came over Waff's face. The things the witches knew were too dangerous! He did not doubt Taraza's claim in the slightest. I must kill her no matter the consequences to me! We must kill them all. Abominations! It's their word and it describes them perfectly.

Taraza correctly interpreted his expression. She spoke quickly: 'You are in absolutely no danger from us as long as you do not injure our designs. Your religion, your way of life, those are your business.'

Waff hesitated, not so much from what Taraza said as from the reminder of her powers. What else did they know? To continue in a subservient position, though! After rejecting such an alliance with the Honored Matres. And with ascendancy so near after all of those millennia. Dismay filled him. The minority among his councillors had been right after all: 'There can be no bond between our peoples. Any accord with powindah forces is a union based upon evil.'

Taraza still sensed the potential violence in him. Had she pushed him too far? She held herself in defensive readiness. An involuntary jerking of his arms alerted her. Weapons in his sleeves! Tleilaxu resources were not to be underestimated. Her snoopers had detected nothing.

'We know about the weapons you carry,' she said. Another bold lie suggested itself. 'If you make a mistake now, the whores will also learn how you use those weapons.'

Waff took three shallow breaths. When he spoke, he had himself under control: 'We will not be Bene Gesserit satellites!'

Taraza responded in an even-toned, soothing voice: 'I have not by word or action suggested such a role for you.'

She waited. There was no change in Waff's expression, no slightest shift in the unfocused glare he directed at her.

'You threaten us,' he muttered. 'You demand that we share everything we -'

'Share!' she snapped. 'One does not share with unequal partners.'

'And what would you share with us?' he demanded.

She spoke with the chiding tone she would use to a child: 'Ser Waff, ask yourself why you, a ruling member of your oligarchy, came to this meeting?'

His voice still firmly controlled, Waff countered: 'And why did you, Mother Superior of the Bene Gesserit, come here?'

She spoke mildly: 'To strengthen us.'

'You did not say what you would share,' he accused. 'You still hope for advantage.'

Taraza continued to watch him carefully. She had seldom sensed such suppressed rage in a human. 'Ask me openly what you want,' she said.

'And you will give it out of your great generosity!'

'I will negotiate.'

'Where was the negotiation when you ordered me... ORDERED ME! to - 'You came here firmly resolved to break any agreement we made,' she said. 'Not once have you tried to negotiate! You sit in front of someone willing to bargain with you and you can only -'

'Bargain?' Waff's memory was hurled back to the Honored Matre's anger at that word.

'I said it,' Taraza said. 'Bargain.'

Something like a smile twitched the corners of Waff's mouth. 'You think I have authority to bargain with you?'

'Have a care, Ser Waff,' she said. 'You have the ultimate authority. It resides in that final ability to destroy an opponent utterly. I have not threatened that, but you have.' She glanced at his sleeves.

Waff sighed. What a quandary. She was powindah! How could one bargain with a powindah?

'We have a problem that cannot be resolved by rational means,' Taraza said.

Waff hid his surprise. Those were the very words the Honored Matre had used! He cringed inwardly at what that might signify. Could Bene Gesserit and Honored Matres make common cause? Taraza's bitterness argued otherwise, but when were the witches to be trusted?

Once more, Waff wondered if he dared sacrifice himself to eliminate this witch. What would it serve? Others among them surely knew what she knew. It would only precipitate the disaster. There was that internal dispute among the witches, but, again, that might just be another ruse.

'You ask us to share something,' Taraza said. 'What if I were to offer you some of our prize human bloodlines?'

There was no mistaking how Waff's interest quickened.

He said: 'Why should we come to you for such things? We lave our tanks and we can pick up genetic examples almost anywhere.'

'Examples of what?' she asked.

Waff sighed. You could never escape that Bene Gesserit incisiveness. It was like a sword thrust. He guessed that he had revealed things to her that led naturally to this subject. The damage already had been done. She correctly deduced (or spies had told her!) that the wild pool of human genes held little interest for the Tleilaxu with their more sophisticated knowledge of life's innermost language. It never paid to underestimate either the Bene Gesserit or the products of their breeding programs. God Himself knew they had produced Muad'dib and the Prophet!

'What more would you demand in exchange for this?' he asked.

'Bargaining at last!' Taraza said. 'We both know, of course, that I am offering breeding mothers of the Atreides line.' And she thought: 'Let him hope for that! They will look like Atreides but they will not be Atreides!'

Waff felt his pulse quicken. Was this possible? Did she have the slightest idea what the Tleilaxu might learn from an examination of such source material?

'We would want first selection of their offspring,' Taraza said.

'No!'

'Alternate first selection, then?'

'Perhaps. '

'What do you mean, perhaps?' She leaned forward. Waff's intensity told her she was on a hot trail.

'What else would you ask of us?'

'Our breeding mothers must have unfettered access to your genetic laboratories.'

'Are you mad?' Waff shook his head in exasperation. Did she think the Tleilaxu would give away their strongest weapon just like that?

'Then we will accept a fully operational axlotl tank.'

Waff merely stared at her.

Taraza shrugged. 'I had to try.'

'I suppose you did.'

Taraza sat back and reviewed what she had learned here. Waff's reaction to that Zensunni probe had been

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