But Hacom classifies Reger "old enough to be excused". Not immunity to the Red Hour, then, but simple retirement. That Reger also says he can "escape the directives" is no proof that he avoided the Red Hours; had he done that, Hacom would probably know, and he's not able to "escape the directives" and would snitch. Probably Reger is just suggesting that the resistance movement consists of old men who thus don't get caught when the most obvious moment of obedience and Being of the Body, the Red Hour, strikes.
Possibly we are supposed to think that Tula was born out of rape by Reger? But this is projecting things onto the evidence, even if the writer wants us to do such projecting. That the young are drunk as skunks, and don't stop to talk much when engaging in their courtship, need not be defined as nonconsensual or otherwise objectionable.
If children were only conceived during Red Hours, we would probably see synchronicity of ages here. Although since we don't know the frequency of the Hours, we can't deduce much from that.
Timo Saloniemi