“I don’t like your taking this risk!” he said.
“Whoever’s out there mustn’t learn we have maulas—not yet.” She touched his arm. “I’ll be careful, keep my head down.”
As he remained silent, she said: “You know I’m the one who has to do this. Give me back my knife.”
Reluctantly he quested with his free hand, found her hand and returned the knife. It was the logical thing to do, but logic warred with every emotion in him.
He felt Ghanima pull away, heard the sandy rasping of her robe against the rock. She gasped, and he knew she must be standing.
Ghanima took a deep breath, braced her back against one wall of the cleft.
Carefully she probed with her sense of smell. Warm breath came from her left. She poised herself, drew in a deep breath, screamed: “Taqwa!” It was the old Fremen battlecry, its meaning found in the most ancient legends:
“It got my arm,” Ghanima said, trying to bind a loose fold of her robe around the wound.
“Badly?”
“I think so. I can’t feel my hand.”
“Let me get a light and—”
“Not until we get under cover!”
“I’ll hurry.”
She heard him twisting to reach his Fremkit, felt the dark slickness of a nightshield as it was slipped over her head, tucked in behind her. He didn’t bother to make it moisture tight.
“My knife’s on this side,” she said. “I can feel the handle with my knee.”
“Leave it for now.”
He ignited a single small globe. The brilliance of it made her blink. Leto put the globe on the sandy floor at one side, gasped as he saw her arm. One claw had opened a long, gaping wound which twisted from the elbow along the back of her arm almost to the wrist. The wound described the way she had rotated her arm to present the knife tip to the tiger’s paw.
Ghanima glanced once at the wound, closed her eyes and began reciting the Litany Against Fear.
Leto found himself sharing her need, but put aside the clamor of his own emotions while he set about binding up the wound. It had to be done carefully to stop the flow of blood while retaining the appearance of a clumsy job which Ghanima might have done by herself. He made her tie off the knot with her free hand, holding one end of the bandage in her teeth.
“Now let’s look at the leg,” he said.
She twisted around to present the other wound. It was not as bad: two shallow claw cuts along the calf. They had bled freely into the stillsuit, however. He cleaned it up as best he could, bound the wound beneath the stillsuit. He sealed the suit over the bandage.
“I got sand in it,” he said. “Have it treated as soon as you get back.”
“Sand in our wounds,” she said. “That’s an old story for Fremen.”
He managed a smile, sat back.
Ghanima took a deep breath. “We’ve pulled it off.”
“Not yet.”
She swallowed, fighting to recover from the aftermath of shock. Her face appeared pale in the light of the glowglobe. And she thought:
Leto, staring at his sister, felt a sudden wrenching sense of loss. It was a deep pain which shot through his breast. He and Ghanima must separate now. For all of those years since birth they had been as one person. But their plan demanded now that they undergo a metamorphosis, going their separate ways into uniqueness where the sharing of daily experiences would never again unite them as they once had been united.