Monthly Archives: January 2014

Local Custom – Chapter 23

In which a new day begins with mixed omens.

This chapter really illustrates the relationship between Daav and Kareen. (And, even is his absence, between each of them and young Pat Rin.)

Another subtle bit of Liaden culture here, tying in with what we’ve already had: that Daav, however careless he may be of getting dirt on the rest of him, takes great care to keep his face clean.

It appears to be my fate that whenever I say here that I don’t remember any other instances of a thing, another will present itself within the next few chapters.

Local Custom – Chapter 22

In which Er Thom and Daav discuss the present and the future.

Daav is having his own problems comprehending the situation – he also isn’t coming easy to the idea of a Liaden lifemating a Terran, and he has his own personal jealousy issue to deal with – but he’s putting in more effort than Petrella to be reasonable (and, just as importantly, compassionate).

And he never once says that he’s acting for the good of the clan. He doesn’t need to.

Local Custom – Chapter 21

In which Daav has some conversation before dinner.

Petrella has got herself into a position that’s likely to cause trouble and is going to be difficult to get out of even if she decides she wants to: she’s stopped considering the details of the situation and started defining success entirely in terms of whether she gets her own way. She says it’s for the good of the clan, and presents to the delm that it’s in his interests for Er Thom to be obedient, but one may take leave to doubt that version of the story, particularly since the delm himself appears to have no qualms about Er Thom’s obedience.

The epigraph of this chapter suggests a thing which I don’t think is suggested so strongly anywhere else in the series: that there is, or has been within the recorded history of Terran-Liaden relations, an actual planet called Terra. I don’t recall anywhere else in the series where Terra is spoken of except as a used-to-be place.

Local Custom – Chapter 20

In which Petrella yos’Galan is surprised by her guest.

A reward for the detail-oriented, here: the golden hair ribbon that Anne remembers losing in this chapter is surely the same golden ribbon that was among Er Thom’s treasures, way back in the first chapter, threaded with a scrap of silk the color of the silk they used as a ground cover. Which suggests that Er Thom remembers that night at least as affectionately as Anne, if there were still any doubt on that point.

Liadens clearly take hospitality seriously: even knowing that his mother does not in the least want Anne as a guest, Er Thom sees nothing remarkable in the lengths she’s gone to to ensure the guest’s comfort. (It is surely, as Anne hints, sometimes an expensive standard to live up to; Korval can afford it, but how do less wealthy Liaden houses manage?)

Local Custom – Chapter 19

In which the Master Trader negotiates with the thodelm.

It’s interesting that Petrella is so dismissive of Terrans, when she was a Trader and presumably had to deal with them on their own turf. But perhaps dealing with them in the line of business is one thing and having one show up on one’s own doorstep is another.

And, to be fair to her, I think she’d have taken it better before the disaster. That, I judge, has affected her thinking both personally, in that coping with her illness has left her with fewer reserves to spare for being well-disposed to others, and in her melant’i as the head of the line, being less free to tolerate eccentric behaviour from Er Thom when the entire future of the line depends on him.

Liaden Universe Constellations

Both volumes of A Liaden Universe Constellation are now available in print and e-book form. Between them they collect all the Liaden short stories published in paper chapbooks.

Volume 1 contains “To Cut an Edge”, “A Day at the Races”, “Where the Goddess Sends”, “A Spell for the Lost”, “Moonphase”, “Pilot of Korval”, “Breath’s Duty”, “The Wine of Memory”, “Certain Symmetry”, “Balance of Trade”, “A Choice of Weapons”, “Changeling”, “A Matter of Dreams”, “Phoenix”, “Naratha’s Shadow”, “Heirloom”, and “Sweet Waters”.

Volume 2 contains “Veil of the Dancer”, “Quiet Knives”, “This House”, “Lord of the Dance”, “Necessary Evils”, “The Beggar King”, “Fighting Chance”, “Prodigal Son”, “Daughter of Dragons”, “Dragon Tide”, “Shadow Partner”, “Persistence”, “Misfits”, “Hidden Resources”, “Moon on the Hills”, and “Skyblaze”.

Local Custom – Chapter 18

In which Er Thom has no appetite at nuncheon.

The unique hand-woven rug is the more impressive for the detail about it breaking around the fireplace, which suggests that it was made – hand-made, over many years – specifically for this room.

Local Custom – Chapter 17

In which Korval Sees Shan yos’Galan.

Hah. I wonder how much difference it would have made if Anne had been less careful of decorum and had kissed Er Thom like a lifemate in front of his kinsman and Delm. (Perhaps not so much, though; after all, Daav knows if anyone does that the significance of such gestures may be less depending on local custom. He and his current bedfriend are not careful of the face taboo, and only see how that will turn out.)

This chapter gives our first solid indication of how long it’s been since the great migration, though I could wish for it to be solider. Anne says that if the Tree is the same tree Jela had, it must be, she guesses, nine hundred years old. Older, says Er Thom, but it’s not clear whether that means Anne’s lowballed the distance from Jela’s time, or just that he’s acknowledging that the Tree had some years on it before ever it met Jela.

Local Custom – Chapter 16

In which there are sparkles to touch, and sparkles not to touch.

The conversation with the shocked driver is an interesting illustration of mode. It’s not possible to directly express concern for a person’s well-being in Employer to Employee, but it may be possibly to express it indirectly. (There’s another similar demonstration of the restrictions of the mode, following a different kind of shock, in “Intelligent Design”, when we get there.)

It’s also an illustration of Er Thom’s melant’i: I bet it’s not every high-ranking Liaden would deal so gently with an employee who nearly ran his son over, even if it was the kid’s fault and nobody was actually harmed.

The epigraph for this chapter is interesting, since it relates to nothing that happens in the chapter. It does, however, help set the scene for chapters to come.

Local Custom – Chapter 15

In which Er Thom yos’Galan comes home.

The first mention by name of Er Thom’s elder brother, Sae Zar yos’Galan. (Who is – was – about the same age as Kareen, apparently. Perhaps they were intended agemates, like Er Thom and Daav. I wonder how well that worked out.)

Unlike “Shan”, which Er Thom has already remarked is not a yos’Galan name, “Er Thom” and “Sae Zar” are both yos’Galan names of long, long standing: Tor An had relatives with those names, back in Clan Alkia before Korval was founded. Thinking about that makes me wonder where yos’Phelium gets its family names, since they appear to have decided against reusing “Cantra” or “Jela”, and neither of those worthies had any families to speak of. Though, come to think of it, we do know where the name of Cantra and Jela’s son came from: if memory serves, she named him “Val Con”, which is a play on the Liaden word for “dragon”. Perhaps after that, when people from Line yos’Phelium married people from other clans they let their spouses suggest baby names, and kept the ones they liked.