|
Dragonchoice
- Necessity or Destiny?
Sexuality, then, is not as crucial to a dragonet's choice
as Anne insists. It is difficult to accept that a newborn
dragonet selects his rider based on a sexual preference that
the pre-pubescent candidate may not even be old enough to
have, and the logic of blue dragons choosing gay riders does
not hold up. Yet the apparent preponderance of gay blue and
green riders in the later Passes implies that sexuality does
have a bearing on the choice of any given colour.
Perhaps, then, the issue of sexual preference is not so important
to the dragonet as it is to the candidate. By an early stage
in the development of the Weyr, no candidate would have been
ignorant of the roles taken by the various colours in mating
flights, and as female green riders became scarce and males
dominated on the smallest dragons, blue dragons became more
attractive to gay men and less attractive to straight. One
young man, knowing himself to be heterosexual by preference,
might have small interest in riding a blue or green dragon,
while another, perhaps persecuted at home for showing signs
of attraction to other boys, might covet a green over any
other colour. A lad completely fixated on Impressing a bronze
would not be immediately attractive to any other colour, in
the same way that queen candidates, focusing totally on the
golden egg, do not generally draw green dragonets. In this
way, perhaps, do the candidates themselves determine in part
the colours they Impress, by being open only to the dragonets
who meet their own requirements.
Yet the dragonet's will to survive can override a candidate's
desires, and in such a situation a blue or green might choose
a rider with conflicting needs. By the end of a Hatching,
the candidate fixated on a bronze might have lowered his own
aims, becoming open to Impressing another colour, or else
chosen anyway as the last remaining candidate with the required
empathic potential. Perhaps Mirrim's father was one such -
heterosexual by preference, but chosen nonetheless by a blue
dragon.
One factor that is seldom considered in the study of Impression
is that by tradition many Hatching ceremonies are attended
solely by Weyrbred candidates. In Dragonquest, T'ron
declares, "'Weyrbred is best for dragonkind. Particularly
for greens'" (Dragonquest, p 39). As with Kylara,
it would be facile to dismiss T'ron's opinion on the basis
of his role as the antagonist: it is also interesting to note
that D'ram agrees, explaining that Ista Weyr's lower caverns
have sufficient likely boys for the next Hatching. With greens
making up fifty percent of all dragons, and blues another
twenty or twenty-five percent, the statistical likelihood
of there being enough homosexual boys in the lower caverns
of a suitable age with the correct empathy and personality
to Impress so many dragonets is very low.
The acceptance of the Weyrbred of the needs of dragons and
the sexual flexibility of their riders should not be underestimated.
Weyrbred candidates, brought up around dragonriders, would
likely attach little importance to the implications of Impressing
greens - while the bronzes carry the most prestige, Impressing
any dragon is better than Impressing none. Growing up in the
Weyr environment, the concept of having flight sex with partners
not of their choosing, or of their preferred gender, would
be quite normal to Weyrbred boys, and in most cases no bar
to Impression. In mating flights, as we are so frequently
reminded, the dragon decides and the rider complies; preference
is not part of the equation.
Back to What about
the tent peg? | On to Anomalies
|