Headmistress Marnett

June 09, 2006 11:00 PM
Headmistress Marnett knew she should be calm and collected on the first day of the term. The staff and especially the students would expect it, after all, and she never was one to fret or appear particularly worried. But it had been two years since she last stood in this place, as the head of Sonora about to welcome a new set of first years. And, much against her logical mind and generally down-to-earth disposition, the headmistress was feeling quite paranoid as to how her school would fare over the course of this term.

This past year, or at least the half in which Lucinda was present to witness, had been pleasantly peaceful. Everything went on without a hitch and Sonora once again seemed to gain well-deserved respect from the community. It was nice, as well as a much needed rest. The year before, however. That was an entirely different story. Utter disaster didn't even begin to describe it. The school, staff, and possibly a few traumatized students were left in to suffer the consequences as the weather system, keeping Sonora in livable conditions throughout the year, seemed intent on destroying everything. The entire, horrible debacle finally ended anti-climatically when a prairie elf vigorously cleaning the school was discovered as the source of all the problems. And then there was the year before...pleasantly peaceful once again. The headmistress couldn't remember if the year before that was at all unbearable, but the chance of this term being “pleasantly peaceful” was beginning to seem rather unlikely.

As it was, nothing yet had gone awry. The students had arrived by way of the usual stuffy, uncomfortable covered wagons. They were escorted into the Cascade Hall as Tavarius Mims the painting of Sonora’s points keeper looked on, commanding them, like any old, stodgy professor would, to stand straight and quiet down. Most important to this evening, the first years were once again each given a chalice of clear, bubbly potion at their table and then, as one large group, told to drink. Upon drinking the potion, each student would turn the prominent color of their house: a bright blue for Aladren, deep red for Crotalus, a sunshine shade of yellow for Teppenpaw, and of course a mud variety of brown for Pecari. It was as the traditional sorting ceremony decreed, and as the founders, amused as they were with rattling the new additions, would have wanted.

And now, with this important part of the night out of the way and the first years fading back to their original skin tone, it was time to enjoy the best part of any feast…the food. Of course, a speech was required of her first. She never did like to prolong a student’s hunger more than necessary, so of course, it would be short.

Headmistress Marnett stood, appearing even more fragile and worn than the previous year, and cleared her throat in an attempt to gather everyone’s attention. When it quieted down, she began her speech.

“Welcome to Sonora Academy. First years: seeing all these new, pleasant, colorful faces has always been one of my favorite parts of our opening feast. I am very glad to see that you have arrived in one piece and I am sure you will find that the rest of the year is much more enjoyable than a ride on one of our covered wagons.” She paused for a moment and drew her eyes over the student population. “I suppose all our returning students would like to hear is that it is time to eat, correct? Well, I will not delay any longer.” Lucinda smiled and the large feast appeared across the hall in an instant. The school year had officially begun.
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Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Marnett The Opening Feast – Year 4 1 Headmistress Marnett 1 5


Morgaine Carey

June 12, 2006 9:58 AM
She had grown over the summer. Instead of a miserable four-foot-six, she was now a miserable four-foot-eight - still an inch shorter than the twins had been when they started at Sonora. Unfortunately, Allie and Lila had grown as well, and the three of them had been forced to dress alike and get haircuts, Morgaine's hair being left longer than Allie's but shorter than Lila's. Add in that they vaguely resembled each other anyway, and the twins could pass for her sisters. Her older sisters.

Being the second daughter she could handle, but the third...that was one step too far down the ladder for her taste. That, and she already had an older sister and didn't appreciate her stupid step-aunt's attempts to make her two pretend ones. She broke away from the twins as soon as she crossed the threshold of the Cascade Hall, making a direct line for the Pecari table and trying to review any hexes she had picked up the previous year in case anyone asked her why she wasn't getting her potion with the "other" first years.

She paid little attention to where she was sitting, only making sure that she wasn't next to Eddie or the pseudo-Pierce vice president of Gwen's fan club. Everyone at Sonora was an enemy to some extent, but those two were worse than the others. Eddie had insulted her family on their first meeting, and psuedo-Pierce had been presumptuous enough to - well, whatever he had done with her sister. She wasn't entirely sure what it was, but a mudblood calling himself a Pierce had no business doing anything that wasn't worshiping from afar when it came to Gwenhwyfar.

She watched without any real interest as the first years were Sorted, noticing her filthy half-blood cousin go into Teppenpaw with a faint sneer and scanning the brown people for any faces she recognized from the parties she'd been hauled to as the only daughter of the Savannah Careys both old enough for society and out of disgrace. She didn't register any straight off, but that could have had something to do with the fact that she rarely paid any attention to the people around her at such functions. When the food appeared, she got herself helpings of chicken and boiled potatoes, stabbing one of the latter with her fork and biting into it only reluctantly. She hated potatoes.

She gave the person next to her a cursory glance upon noticing that they were observing her. "Evening," she said flatly, taking another bite of her potato and grimacing. Eating was laborious enough with so many people - she didn't like eating even when she wasn't being observed, but it was twice as bad when there were large numbers of people congregated around her - but being stared at for real instead of in her head made it that much worse. \n\n
0 Morgaine Carey Here reluctantly, but here just the same. 81 Morgaine Carey 0 5

Saul Pierce

June 12, 2006 1:17 PM
The second year wasn't really any less impressive than the first when you got right down to it. Sure, Saul didn't turn brown again, but it was fun to see that the kids who did were just as surprised as his group last year (only this time he hadn't seen anyone crying or shouting which was probably a good thing). He glanced toward the girl sitting next to him because he was pretty sure she'd been one of the ones violently opposed to her placement the year before. Morgaine Something-Snobby-Sounding of the Someplace-Snobby-Sounding Something-Snobby-Soundings. Regina probably would have been able to say who she was a little more accurately, but Saul couldn't. Wasn't really all that important anyway.

He looked back toward the new kids as they found seats in their little color groups, and it felt kind of weird, being older than all of them. Been there, done that, got the t-shirt. He was a second year now, and not being the new kid at the school was nearly as awesome as being the new kid. A glance around the room showed nothing glaringly out of place from the previous year and he felt oddly grown-up because of its familiarity. He thought maybe he could even go so far as to adopt one of the new kids, take them under his wing, show them the ropes. After all, he was experienced now.

He was about to get up and scoot further down the table to be nearer the firsties when his eye fell on Morgaine again. He couldn't help it. She was doing something completely non-sensible. She didn't appear to like potatoes, but she was eating them anyway. That was the single most best thing about Sonora. You didn't have any parents, aunts, or uncles staring at you, making you eat tofu, or whatever else you didn't like. Here, you leave the vegtables aside and just eat the meat. The juicy succulent animal flesh. The devine, perfect, and to-die-for-or-at-least-go-to-school-for meat.

And Morgaine was eating potatoes. Saul stared.

She noticed, of course, but Saul hadn't really been hiding it. "Evening," she snapped at him, obviously not friendly. No doubt she wanted him to go away, or at least look away.

Saul wasn't quite ready to do that, though. Especially when she took another bite and grimaced. Maybe she was just so oppressed in that pureblood home she came from that she didn't realize that at Sonora she was free to eat as she pleased? "Why're you eating the potatoes if you don't like them?"\n\n
1 Saul Pierce I'm probably not much of a better option, huh? 82 Saul Pierce 0 5


Morgaine Carey

June 13, 2006 10:53 AM
"Why're you eating the potatoes if you don't like them?"

Morgaine looked at her neighbor directly this time, more from surprise than from any desire to see him. The question seemed...random. Out of place. She'd just given him a greeting that had 'get lost' written all over it, and he asked her about potatoes. More evidence that Clarence wasn't the only example of a Pecari being weird. Not that, after a year here, she needed much more evidence to draw a definitive conclusion about that. Even she was a little weird, albeit in a different way from most of her Housemates. She had it half on her mind to make a retort about cannibalism being illegal or something similar, but then she recognized him as being two things: both the only one of her House-and-yearmates who hadn't, in her opinion, done her a personal wrong, and as the fellow Gwen had almost killed the previous year.

Her ideas of what was moral and proper were a little off by most people's standards, but she held to them. Two of the codes were that she was only the initiator of the conflict if absolutely necessary and that she avoided making the family look any worse than it already did if at all possible. She scowled reflexively, then put down her fork. "Habit," she said, deciding that neither code required her to be nice. "Blame it on my aunt." Aunt. Step-aunt-in-law. Same difference. Either way, Sarah was an old hag who'd made Morgaine and Allie her replacement people to nag since Anne disappeared. With them, though, it wasn't something as easily faked as an outlook on life Sarah was out to fix. She'd been rigidly monitoring every bite of food either of them consumed since her falling-out with Eileen, complaining that Allie was too fat and Morgaine was too thin. Lila, of course, was perfect. As always.

The next part was the hard one. She hated trying to act civil, but she had to. Father most likely didn't know, and Gwen...well, Morgaine had watched her over the course of her first year, fought with her more than once, and had come to the conclusion that while Gwen's values might have changed, other things about her never would. She was willing to put money on it that Saul - she thought that was his name, it was hard not to learn at least someone's first name after a year of classes with him - had never been in any way compensated for the accident of the year before. "My family apologizes," she said stiffly, "for my sister's attempt to murder you last year. It was nothing to do with us, though." \n\n
0 Morgaine Carey Not much is better than not at all. 81 Morgaine Carey 0 5

Saul

June 14, 2006 11:05 PM
Saul stared at her, utterly flabbergasted. First, the attack on the Pitch was a consequence of Quidditch, not an attempted murder, even he realized that. He wasn't expecting an apology from that Gwen girl, nevermind Morgaine who he hadn't completely realized was even related. They didn't even look a whole lot alike. And while he did know a lot of 'purebreds' were a bit interbred, he hadn't expected the two to be sisters.

At least, he was assuming the bludger hit was the murder attempt she was talking about. It was the only time he could recall nearly dying last year and he didn't think he had any missing days hidden in there.

Still surprised nearly to shock, he made a vague waving gesture with his hand. "Yeah, no hard feelings," he assured her, wondering even as he said it if maybe he should refuse the apology all together, though that seemed kind of rude somehow. Not that the California Pierces were really up on manners. Still, it seemed rude to him and she hadn't done anything to warrant rudeness. After all, if she was eating potatoes against her better judgement, she was clearly far more oppressed herself than she was an oppressor.

He decided they ought to get back to a safer topic than murder or lack thereof. Except, she was a Something-Snobby-Sounding and he was, well, not. Okay, he admitted 'Saul Pierce of the California Pierces' might sound snobby to the uninitiated, but the sound of it and the reality of it were rather strikingly different. He doubted they had much of anything in common beyond their age and House.

Which left really only one topic to discuss. "You should stand up for what you believe in," he urged her. "Boycott potatoes. They're evil and starchy." It was immaterial that he actually sort of did like potatoes himself. At least, they were a far better than most other garden variety foods. But it was the principle that mattered.\n\n
1 Saul huh? 82 Saul 0 5


Morgaine Carey

June 18, 2006 11:13 PM
Morgaine shifted into a defensive mode without even realizing it as Saul stared at her. What had he expected, a sack of Galleons as a sign of the Carey family’s remorse? She had apologized, completely on her own, to protect the family from seeming like the remorseless, win-or-die-trying types most of them were. He couldn’t have forgotten about almost being knocked to an inevitable and painful death. She hadn’t been there to see it all – it hadn’t seemed prudent, both because of the controversy surrounding the game and because her sister was on the opposing House’s team – but she always double-checked information when she could, and more than one person had been observed talking about it. It had happened.

Finally, once he had his eyes back in his head and had reclaimed his tongue from whatever force had seized it, he accepted the apology. He hadn’t actually said that the apology was accepted, but ‘no hard feelings’ conveyed the same basic message. She’d take it. “Good,” she said, a bit less grumpily. People were probably talking so badly about her family these days that the ones who got caught in the crossfire could, most likely, be excused for thinking that the Savannah Careys had no sense of propriety. “None from us, either.” She didn’t have the authority to make that proclamation, officially, but since she had no intention of ever letting her father know anything about Gwen’s attempts to follow in his footsteps, it didn’t matter.

He was back on potatoes. Her potatoes, specifically. Though there were much worse things about her he could have fixated on, she found she didn’t like the idea of one of her yearmates being obsessed with her diet. “Potatoes can’t be evil,” she argued, deciding to let the bit about standing up for her beliefs slide. If she ever felt suicidal, she might try that. Until then, she’d do as she was told. “They might be starchy, but cooked vegetables can’t have worldviews.” It didn’t occur to her that she might have taken his statement just a little bit too literally.\n\n
0 Morgaine Carey Confusion is fun. 81 Morgaine Carey 0 5

Saul

June 20, 2006 9:20 PM
For a moment, Saul didn't know how to respond. Then it dawned on him. She was joking. Feeling really dumb for taking so long to figure that out, he laughed belatedly, as much at himself as at her deadpan humour. Who knew snobby families produced comedians? She had a great delivery for deadpan.

He decided to try to match her and did his best to wipe the grin off his face before arguing, "That's not true. One of the best orators in early California was a large stalk of broccoli. Granted, that was because an attempt to become an animagus went very wrong and the Alcalde of Los Angeles was never quite right again, but he looked like a cooked vegetable."

Not a word of it was true, of course, but improv stories were the only sort of entertainment he was any good at. It was also the reason why the cousins usually opted for him to be the spokesperson whenever they got caught troublemaking. Not saying his stories were ever believable but they were generally creative enough that the Aunt or Uncle who caught them generally thought it was either too ridiculous to have been made up, or funny enough to let them off light.\n\n
1 Saul Yeah, I guess so. 82 Saul 0 5