@Desert Kris, your detailed and incisive review of DitC was a delight to read. I don't visit TBBS very often, so this was a surprise and a treat.
Yes, my writing style is convoluted and drives many readers (and the occasional editor) bonkers, but my mind works in Celtic knots and except for a handful of YA novels that were part of a group project, I've never written in a straight line.
Thanks to any reader who has the patience to stay with me.
As for the Warrantors, the concept grew out of a medieval custom (though it may have gone back to the Romans...it's been decades since I wrote this thing) where a ruler - whether a king or some local lord - would send one of his children to live in another ruler's household (and vice versa). The goal was twofold. First, to have the child tutored in the ways of other families/cultures, and second, to assure that the neighboring lord or king would not invade one's own country and risk your tendency to slaughter his child if he did so.
IIRC, Philip II of France was raised in the court of Henry II of England. Of course, in those days they were all cousins, which might have made it an "all in the family" thing, though that still didn't stop them from attacking each other periodically.
In order to bring it into the Trek era, I tossed in a little technology (a very little; as those of you who know me are aware, I'm the Great Fake - the English major who never took high school physics).
A lot of the detail that
@Desert Kris has gone into is almost new to me. (I wrote that? Really?) Guess I should reread my own work periodically, eh?
But thank you all, especially for the ancient Usenet nastiness, of which I was completely unaware until now...and probably just as well.
