Hussir

The Hussirs are a small race of humanoids from an unknown planet in The Silk and the Song novelette by Charles Louis Fontenay.

Physiology
The Hussirs were only about half the size of humans, with big heads and large pointed ears sticking straight out on each side, with thin legs and thick tails that help balance themselves. Though smaller than humans a single male was strong enough to overpower a human female. Hussir language is mostly composed of whistling, but they are capable enough to speak human language.

History
Thousands of years ago a rocketship from Earth landed on the Hussir homeworld containing a dozen or more men and women.

Historical records are uncertain, but according to the traditional teachings of the Refuge, the human settlers befriended the primitive Hussirs, who saw their powers to be great and strange. The humans gave them technological wonders such as glass and writing. Rather being grateful to humans, the Hussirs saw a potential use to exploit these creatures overwhelmed the explorers through sheer numbers. The Hussirs stripped the humans of their clothes and technology, enslaving them, capturing the rocket ship which they named the Star Tower and built their capital Falkyn around it.

Three of the party managed to escape into the mountains and created the Haven or later the Haafin, a resistance group of humans that desired to take back the Star Tower and send for help.

Using their new slaves, the Hussirs converted the humans into livestock, breeding them to impressive proportions for thousands of years.

The descendants of human settlers have since then been reduced to beasts of burden and transportation by the native Hussir. Except for a small band living wild, who have a couple of ancient artifacts and nursery rhymes linking them to a more glorious past, a past to which the Star Tower stands mute testament. A young boy named Alan risked all to flee his owner, and was able to make his way into the Haafin.

Alan planned a assault on Falkyn with the intents of freeing his fellow humans, as the city only number ten thousand while forty thousand humans existed in the city.

The Hussirs had the advantage unfortunately, their lies of the Wild Humans won over the hearts of the city humans would turned on their fellows. Luckily the Wild Humans stripped themselves of their clothes and vanished into the crowd of City Humans. Alan and Mara managed to safely infiltrate into the heart of Falkyn, where the Star Tower was located, after overpowering the guards, they entered the vessel, sealing the door from the inside.

Using the ancient nursery rhyme they were able to proceed with the launch sequence and enter suspended animation for a return journey to Earth.. The end of the novel ends with speculation, but it is obvious that the pair will reach Earth and the Hussir age of dominating the humans on their world will come to an end once help from Earth arrives.

Culture
The Hussirs were a feudalistic race, living various castle keeps that depend on trade with the major cities. Their technology level was around the Neolithic Age, as they mostly used polished wood blocks for their architecture with stone being the highest prestige material.

Most of their technological advancements were due in thanks to the human descendants that their ancestors captured. From them they learned to make glass and writing.

However to maintain their power over their humans, they began to spread lies that the Wild Humans that lived free were cannibals to dissuade escape. They deprived the humans of every basic right as sentient beings. They strictly forbade humans from wearing clothes to establish them as just beasts. Males were used as steeds as transportation and labor. Females were used as breeders and dairy producers. When both genders failed they were used and butchered for meat.

The Hussirs also pressured and rigidly enforced mating seasons unto the humans, segregating the genders, preventing formal family relationships, for there were no social traditions behind people who for generations had been nothing more than domestic animals. Their propoganda was successful as all the town humans that lived in Falkyn stayed loyal towards the Hussirs and turned on their Wild Human brothers and sisters.