C.J. Cherryh. Chanur’s Venture

It made her nervous, in a way that camera-view did not, that picked up the wider

vanes, the rakish lines of the vane-columns. That was plain to inspection. The

heart and core of it was not, that added some twenty percent to their unladed

mass and threw varied percentages into the figures of moving that mass. Old

familiar reckonings went by the board. They had to lean on comp entirely, trust

it without the dead-reckoning knowledge what the answers ought to be, when it

told them The Pride could make a jump that she could never in a mahen hell have

survived half a week before.

“We go with it,” she said.

Continued in

THE KIF STRIKE BACK

Appendix Species of the Compact

The Compact

The Compact is a loose affiliation of all trading species of a small region of

stars who have agreed by treaty to observe certain borders, trade restrictions,

tariffs, and navigational procedures. It is an association, not a government,

has no officials and maintains no offices, except insofar as all officials of

the various governments are de facto officers of the Compact.

The hani

Native to Anuurn, hani may be among the smaller species of the Compact, but the

size range, particularly among males, is so extreme that individual hani may

overreach and outbulk the average of other, taller species. Their fur is short

over most of their bodies except for manes and beards. It ranges in color from

red gold to dull red brown with blackish edges, and in texture from crimped

waves to curls to coarse straightness.

Hani were a feudal culture divided into provinces and districts a few centuries

previous to the events of The Pride of Chanur. They had well-developed trade and

commerce when they were contacted by the spacefaring mahendo’sat (qv) and flung

from their middle ages, with its flat-earth concept and territoriality, into

interstellar trade.

The way of life previous to that age had been this: that individual males carved

out a territory by challenge and maintained it with the aid of their sisters,

currently resident wives, and female relatives of all sorts, so long as the male

in question remained strong enough to fend off other challengers. Actual running

of the territory rested with a lord’s sisters and other female relatives, at

least a few of whom, if he was fortunate, would prove skillful traders, and

whose marriages with outclan males would form profitable links with the females

of other clans. Such males as lived to become clan lords were sheltered and

pampered, kept in fighting trim at the urging of their female relatives, and

generally took no part whatsoever in interclan dealings or in mercantile

decisions, which were considered too exacting and stressful for males to cope

with. The male image in most households was that of a cheerful, unworldly fellow

mostly involved in games and hunts, and existing primarily for the siring of

children and, in time of challenge, idolized for those natural gifts of

irrational temper and berserker rage which would greet the sight of another

male. The females stood between him and all other vicissitudes of life. Much of

hani legendry and literature, of which they are fond, involves the tragic

brevity of males; or the cleverness of females; or the treks and voyages of

ambitious females out to carve out territory for some unlanded brother to

defend.

Under the management of certain great females, vast estates grew up. Certain

estates contained crucial trade routes, shrines, mountain passes, dams — things

which were generally the focus of ambition. Certain clans formed amphictionies,

associations of mutual interest to assure the access of all members to areas of

regional importance, which was usually done by declaring the area in question

protected. Out of such protected zones grew the concept of the Immune Clan; that

is, a clan whose hold over a particular resource must not change, because of the

need of the surrounding clans to have that resource managed over the long term

by a clan with experience and peculiar skill: such clans devoted themselves to

public service and dressed distinctively. Immune males enjoyed great ceremonial

prestige and were generally cloistered and pampered, while the sons of Immune

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