George J. Smith wrote:IIRC, from Worlds of Honor 6 (Beginnings) in the short story Beauty and the Beast, the link between Alison & Alfred was akin to bonding, and in the Best Laid Plans story before he bonded with Honor Nimitz mentioned that he may have bonded with Alfred if Alfred had not "bonded" with Alison.
It seems as though changes have manifested in the thought processes of the Harrington clan.
That seems to have been a one-off bond experience thing however. As we originally saw Alfred and Alison Harrington (HotQ I believe), they were a regular couple who enjoyed teasing their daughter just a little, but still regular parents without any ESP/bond thing.
Then the Beauty and the Beast story showed that Alfred could unerringly point towards her, and later tracks her down to rescue her. She was also aware of him which is two-way treecat bond there, not simply one-way Harrington modified genes acting similar to treecats only due to repeated long-endurance association.
Later stories, written after BatB, again present the Harrington family as the same as any others. Thrust a little more into the spotlight due to Honor's escapades, but still a generic hetero-couple without even the slightest ESP. Now I'll grant that really we haven't needed to see any of that, or that perhaps RFC hadn't quite decided yet if that was how he wanted to explain Honor's particular acute sensitivity.
The fullout treecat level bond during the BatB, is very interesting though. That was an all-up bond, started by and maintained by a human, to a human. And I think it was mentioned how they were almost inseparable after the rescue by Alison's brother/twin which is very reminiscent of the often mentioned "new bonds, the bondee doesn't want to put the cat down, ever. Physical contact is very important to the bond, etc etc".
There also appeared to be at least a short-term, uhmm transfer is the best word I suppose, of Alfred's Marine training to Alison. She adapted extremely quickly for the holding action they fought for someone who, right up until the very latest books, didn't think she needed a Grayson Armsman full-time because "who'd want to hurt her?" That's indicative of someone who hasn't taken any form of self-defense course whether melee or sidearm. Which further extrapolation, and the story having taken place on decadent, licentious Beowulf, means she wouldn't have had even basic sidearm training while a medical doctor either.