Herbert, Frank – Dune 6 – Children of the Mind

“What, and you were just standing too close?”

“That’s right,” said Valentine.

“I hurt you,” said Ender. “I hurt all three of you.”

“We don’t hold people responsible for convulsions,” said Novinha.

Ender shook his head. “I’m talking about … before. I lay there listening. Couldn’t move my body, couldn’t make a sound, but I could hear. I know what I did to you. All three of you. I’m sorry.”

“Don’t be,” said Valentine. “We all chose our lives. I could have stayed on Earth in the first place, you know. Didn’t have to follow you. I proved that when I stayed with Jakt. You didn’t cost me anything — I’ve had a brilliant career and a wonderful life, and much of that is because I was with you. As for Plikt, well, we finally saw — much to my relief, I might add — that she isn’t always in complete control of herself. Still, you never asked her to follow you here. She chose what she chose. If her life is wasted, well, she wasted it the way she wanted to and that’s none of your business. As for Novinha –”

“Novinha is my wife,” said Ender. “I said I wouldn’t leave her. I tried not to leave her.”

“You haven’t left me,” Novinha said.

“Then what am I doing in this bed?”

“You’re dying,” said Novinha.

“My point exactly,” said Ender.

“But you were dying before you came here,” she said. “You were dying from the moment that I left you in anger and came here. That was when you realized, when we both realized, that we weren’t building anything together anymore. Our children aren’t young. One of them is dead. There’ll be no others. Our work now doesn’t coincide at any point.”

“That doesn’t mean it’s right to end the –”

“As long as we both shall live,” said Novinha. “I know that, Andrew. You keep the marriage alive for your children, and then when they’re grown up you stay married for everybody else’s children, so they grow up in a world where marriages are permanent. I know all that, Andrew. Permanent — until one of you dies. That’s why you’re here, Andrew. Because you have other lives that you want to live, and because of some miraculous fluke you actually have the bodies to live them in. Of course you’re leaving me. Of course.”

“I keep my promise,” Ender said.

“Till death,” said Novinha. “No longer than that. Do you think I won’t miss you when you’re gone? Of course I will. I’ll miss you as any widow misses her beloved husband. I’ll miss you whenever I tell stories about you to our grandchildren. It’s good for a widow to miss her husband. It gives shape to her life. But you — the shape of your life comes from them. From your other selves. Not from me. Not anymore. I don’t begrudge that, Andrew.”

“I’m afraid,” said Ender. “When Jane drove me out, I’ve never felt such fear. I don’t want to die.”

“Then don’t stay here, because staying in this old body and with this old marriage, Andrew, that would be the real death. And me, watching you, knowing that you don’t really want to be here, that would be a kind of death for me.”

“Novinha, I do love you, that’s not pretense, all the years of happiness we had together, that was real — like Jakt and Valentine it was real. Tell her, Valentine.”

“Andrew,” said Valentine, “please remember. She left you.”

Ender looked at Valentine. Then at Novinha, long and hard. “That’s true, isn’t it. You left me. I made you take me.”

Novinha nodded.

“But I thought — I thought you needed me. Still.”

Novinha shrugged. “Andrew, that’s always been the problem. I needed you, but not out of duty. I don’t need you because you have to keep your word to me. Bit by bit, seeing you every day, knowing that it’s duty that keeps you, how do you think that will help me, Andrew?”

“You want me to die?”

“I want you to live,” said Novinha. “To live. As Peter. That’s a fine young boy with a long life ahead of him. I wish him well. Be him now, Andrew. Leave this old widow behind. You’ve done your duty to me. And I know you do love me, as I still love you. Dying doesn’t deny that.”

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