
Originally Posted by
Chris Moeller
Thor's got it. The majority of conquered worlds deep inside Vaylen space are garden worlds, where only the governing powers are Vaylen, and the humans are left to develop as naturally as possible. There is an unobtrusive harvesting, using different mechanisms depending on taste (lottery, "tax", age, whatever), to cull off hosts for the ruling clan's hungry Naiven. But the Vaylen are good caretakers for the most part. A human world is the goose that lays the golden egg... it doesn't pay to get greedy. How many unhappy humans do you have to kill when a world rises in revolution? What a tragic waste. Such a clan proves it is unfit to hold something so precious. Perhaps they should be deprived of it...
The vaylen are organized into a few overarching clan lineages as outlined in the book, but each of those is composed of countless smaller off-shoots, some wealthy, some struggling, some falling into the great unwashed masses. There are two basic types of these (sub) clans... those that are established, and those that are hungry to become established. It's the latter that fuel the invasions into human space. Theoretically, there will come a day when there are no independent human worlds left. How Vaylen culture will cope, nobody knows. But that's a long way off, and for now, there are more human worlds than even the humans know of (the Void is composed of millions of human worlds that have fallen out of contact with the Iron Empires).
The Vaylen are a more unified power than the human empires, but that doesn't mean there isn't very polite, very serious jockeying for position. That said, unlike the humans, the Vaylen will only very rarely turn on their own openly. There are hard-wired reactions to treachery. If a clan steps too far out of line, unless it is very lucky, it will be stripped of its holdings by common action, and its line exterminated. Outright warfare between Vaylen is almost unheard of. Assassination and intrigue (the subtler forms of warfare) are more commmon.
And Tim, you're right, there are any number of possiblities for the Vaylen farm worlds in the interior. In the fairly recent past there was a huge human crusade into Vaylen space (of course it fell apart almost before it had begun), but I wonder what sorts of horrors they discovered the farther into Vaylen space they plunged?
Different clans will have different priorities and strategies for how to "raise humans". Ultimately, the Vaylen try to be as hands-off as possible. They are painfully aware of the limits of their social engineering skills. They know they aren't human, and can't raise children as successfully as human parents. I imagine they wrecked a lot of worlds before they learned that nature worked best.