Headmistress Sadi Powell

April 02, 2010 3:04 AM
It was a beautiful evening. Sunlight streamed in through the windows of the Cascade Hall, creating a dazzling display of ripples and rainbows as the final rays of the day were reflected by the waterfalls lining the room. Sadi had made her way to Sonora in her usual fashion: Apparition. She was wearing her customary plain brown robes and her graying hair was fastened, as usual, in a neat knot at the nape of her neck. She stood quietly in the far corner of the room as returning students noisily made their way into seats, and the first years were gathered by the door. The new students were greeted by Professor Dakin, newly instated Deputy Headmistress. It was the first time in a good long while that Sonora’s Head and Deputy had been of the same gender, but with Henry Flatt incapacitated and the majority of her staff being relatively new to the school, Sadi had little choice. Rowan had applied for the position, and she had been accepted. She was good with the students; while the Headmistress watched her new Deputy collecting the first years together, she was confident they would make an excellent team.

When all the wagons were empty, and every student had managed to find his or her way into the Hall, Sadi joined her colleagues at the staff table (although she stood in front of it, rather than sat behind) and called for attention. “Settle down, please,” she said, gentle but commanding, as always. When there was enough quiet to be heard without the assistance of charms, Sadi graced the students with a smile. “To our older students, welcome back. To our first year students, welcome to Sonora Academy.” With Rowan’s assistance, each new student was handed a goblet full of a clear, bubbling liquid. When swallowed, this potion would turn the drinker’s skin the corresponding color of the House to which they now belonged: blue for Aladren, yellow for Teppenpaw, red for Crotalus, and brown for Pecari.

Most students enjoyed watching the sorting of the first years. Sadi couldn’t deny that the event had held her interest more thoroughly when she’d been Head of Crotalus, and so could identify her future students, but it was nevertheless an entertaining spectacle. Therefore she waited patiently until all the students had settled once more before returning to her address.

“As always, the prairie elves have provided us with a magnificent feast,” she said, hoping to reel in the attention of those whose minds had wandered. “However, first I would like to make a few short announcements. Our returning student will probably have noticed that Professor Dakin, our Care of Magical Creatures professor, has taken on the role of Deputy Headmistress. She will also be Head of Teppenpaw House.” The fact that their government-appointed Deputy from last year brought only relief remained unspoken. “Secondly, I would like you all to welcome Ichabod Linn, who will be teaching Divinations," Sadi gestured to her new collegaue at the staff table. She had personal reservations about the subject, but it had seemed very popular last time it was available at the school. Perhaps it was time it was re-instated. "And," Sadi continued, "Janette Wolfe, who will be your new transfiguration professor.” Sadi had high hopes that this professor would stay around longer than a year. She almost believed it, but student rumours about the position being cursed refused to leave her thoughts entirely.

“Finally, I would like to present this year’s Head Boy and Head Girls with their badges.” The announcement of who would receive these titles had been made at the end of last year, but the Opening Feast made it official. “Could Talen and Lutece cone forward?” Sadi distributed the badges with a smile and ‘well done’ for each student. She waited for the applause to die down before attracting attention for the last time that evening. “Thank you for listening. I have no more announcements to make, so you are free to enjoy your food.” With a wave of Sadi’s hand, each and every table was suddenly groaning under a multitude of dishes, plates and jugs, each filled to the brim with one or another of an impressive variety of foods and drinks. Enough, indeed, that no student was ever likely to.
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0 Headmistress Sadi Powell Opening Feast! 0 Headmistress Sadi Powell 1 5

Nicodemus Sawyer

April 02, 2010 11:14 AM
Nic was dubious. Dubious was a good word. It meant 'Not convinced, questionable, open to suspicion.' Oh, he knew magic was real and everything. His dad was a wizard and the man had never made a secret about that. Nic might have liked it better if he had - or, more accurately, Nic would have liked it better if Dad had been able to keep it a secret but the guy seemed fundamentally incapable of acting or dressing himself like a normal person. Luckily, their neighbors just figured he was being all New Age-y and left it at that. Mom told fortunes out of the living room, after all.

No, magic wasn't the problem. Lights turning on without using a switch, objects floating across the room, the cat getting turned into a step stool if McTabby happened to be the first thing to hand when Dad needed to get to the top shelf of the pantry - that was all old hat. Oh, the flying wagons were kind of neat and the waterfalls of the Cascade Hall were certainly something else, but Nic wasn't overly impressed or awed or stunned or anything.

Even drinking the potion and seeing his own skin turn red barely caused a flicker of concern. It wasn't the allergic reaction kind of red, and other people were turning equally strange colors, so obviously this was supposed to happen. He rolled with it and sat down at the table the red kids were supposed to sit at. No, that wasn't the problem either.

The reason he was dubious was that his denim jacket had been forcefully taken away from him and put into his suitcase, which Dad had then put a spell on so he couldn't open it again for six hours. And then his parents made him put on a stupid robe. A robe!

His school in Miami never made him wear a uniform and he wasn't sure he liked the precedent here. Especially since it was a robe. Seriously, didn't his parents dress weirdly enough? Now they were making him put on funky eccentric articles of clothing that had no place in Nic's awesome wardrobe? Seriously, a robe? How lame and girly could you get? Even his work boots couldn't entirely compensate, and he wasn't sure his earring or his shoulder length hair in its leather tie really gave off the same effect without his jeans and Hard Rock jacket.

Well, Sonora did have two things going for it anyway. The first and most important being that nobody was likely to run into his parents at the grocery store and realize how horribly uncool Nic's family was. The second was that the food looked great. Way better than what Miami's public schools dished out in their cafeterias. It almost made the robe uniform worth it.

Nic dug in, taking large helpings of every kind of food he could see. He was a growing boy, after all, and doing a better job of it than most eleven-year-olds. From what he'd seen of the other kids drinking the color changing potions, he had the same height advantage over most of his classmates here as he had at his old school.

When he noticed one of the other kids sitting nearby looking at him, he figured he was probably supposed to say something. So he said, "Food looks good. I'm Nic." The longer he could go without mentioning his full name, the happier he was going to be in this new school. Most people would assume Nic was short for Nicholas, and the longer he could avert people from finding out otherwise the smaller his chances were of people thinking he was a dork or that his parents hated him.
1 Nicodemus Sawyer But I don't even like the Redskins. Or football. 165 Nicodemus Sawyer 0 5


Cosette Miller

April 02, 2010 3:54 PM
There were two things Cosette Miller was looking forward to this school year: good food and a good place to sleep. Considering how quirky her parents were, it was hard for the girl to do anything with big changes besides side-stepping them or just going with it. After getting her letter to attend Sonora Academy, her parents were more eager and nervous than she’d ever been about anything before in her life. Those two were, without a doubt, probably the key reason she was as laidback as she was. She couldn’t imagine the climate of insanity that she’d be living in if she was as easily excitable and dramatic as those two were. She hoped, for her younger brother’s sake, he wouldn’t turn out like them while she was away.

But she really shouldn’t be focusing on her family’s abnormalities at a time like this, in a place chock full of strangeness. Though she didn’t mind the differences; the waterfalls made her drowsy (not that it was hard to do that) and the lights reflecting all over the room were something out of a dream. Her skin turning red after a delicate sip of potion only strengthened that thought. Being as small and thin framed as she was, she wondered if she’d be red longer than the larger kids.

As soon as she sat at the Crotalus table, she had started to anticipate being fed, having heard from both her parents how excellent food is at magic schools. Of course, there was a speech she had to sit through, first. Yeah, she slept through that, waking up just as it ended. Her large black eyes took in the delicious array of food before her and she couldn’t stop her hands from dropping a bit of everything in sight onto her plate.

It was when she was reaching for a heaping of Yorkshire pudding to add to the growing food zoo on her plate that she remembered that she’d be sharing her helpings with other people. Not liking the idea of sharing food here anymore than she had back home, she sighed and waited patiently, watching the boy and waiting for him to wrap it up. He was stacking up his plate (it had on as much food as hers did, which is something she hadn’t seen before) and not bothering to let up anytime soon. When he did, he must’ve noticed her staring.

“Food looks good,” was his explanation, she assumed, for him eating as much as he was. Cosette nodded in complete understanding. Yes, stranger, she thought, food looks amazing. “I’m Nic.”

Deciding he might be an okay person to share food with (they were in the same House anyway, so it was inevitable), Cosette smiled at him as she put pudding on her plate after he was done. “Agreed, it looks great. I’m Cosette, nice to meet you.”
0 Cosette Miller Football Never Did Make Much Sense to Me 0 Cosette Miller 0 5

Nic

April 03, 2010 9:44 AM
The girl across from him also had a goodly pile of food on her plate and he smiled as he passed her the serving spoon for the yorkshire pudding. Cosette, he learned her name was a moment later. Maybe, just maybe, 'Nicodemus' wasn't going to sound as strange in a magic school as it did in a normal muggle school. He still didn't like it.

"Good to meet you too," he returned, because that was the polite thing to say, but he wasn't quite sure where to go from there. They'd exchanged names and appreciation for the feast. What was he supposed to say now? Conversation had never been something he was terribly good at. Could they just eat in companionable silence or was it still too early for that?

He supposed it wouldn't kill him to ask after her background or something. See how much they had in common besides their new House designation. "So is magic new for you? My dad's a wizard." At least here he could say that, instead of trying to explain his father to the muggles he used to go to school with.
1 Nic I've only watched it for the commercials 165 Nic 0 5


Cosette Miller

April 03, 2010 10:36 AM
With her plate well overfilled, Cosette decided it was alright to actually start to eat. She was thrilled to learn firsthand that the food tasted as good as it looked and smelled. For the first time all night she didn’t feel compelled to sleep through something. She was already a quarter of the way through her plate when he spoke up again and told her it was good to meet her, too. With a nod and a smile, she went back to her food. While she recognized the fact that it’d be in her best interest to try and engage in a conversation, she didn’t really know what to say. Besides, she was happy to just be eating herself into heart attacks with food this wonderful, and she assumed Nic felt the same. It wasn’t like the silence was awkward, either. Unless the obnoxious sounds of people around them who couldn’t chew with their mouth closed was awkward to anyone. It was when she was halfway through her serving that Nic proved her wrong and spoke up once more.

"So is magic new for you? My dad's a wizard."

She felt envious over the fact he was a half-blood, though she’d been more jealous if he’d been a muggleborn. Growing up with magic in a muggle community made her always feel like magic was something to be made a secret out of, and she still didn’t quite overcome that guilty feeling she had being what she was. She sort of wished she’d been a squib sometimes, but nothing she could do about those matter now. Not to mention that having her two psychotic parents made her question if her background was something to talk about her dinner. Still, he seemed genuinely nice and apparently wanted to talk, so she took a quick sip of pumpkin juice and answered Nic. “My dad was a muggleborn and my mom was a pureblood, so I’ve been introduced to a lot of magic growing up. But since we lived in a muggle neighborhood, the most magic I ever saw was inside our house when the curtains were down.” There, that was a sufficient answer. She wanted to know about his background too, she realized. So she asked him, “Did you get to grow up with magic, or did you only find out recently that your dad was a wizard?”
0 Cosette Miller What Good Commercials They Are 0 Cosette Miller 0 5

Nic

April 03, 2010 11:27 PM
Nic took a short while to take a few bites of his food, using the opportunity to both enjoy the taste and decide how to answer Cosette's question. There was a short version and a long version of the story and he wasn't sure which would be the better option to tell. The short version had the advantage of, well, being short. The long version at least meant he wouldn't have to think too hard about what to talk about next because it would take the whole evening to explain this one thing.

He decided on the short version.

"I grew up knowing he was a wizard." After he said it though, it felt a little too short, like he hadn't really given her the whole truth, and he didn't really want to start at his new school by lying to his Housemates. So he expanded a little bit. "I think he meant to keep it a secret, but he's really bad at blending in and after a while he stopped trying." At least, Nic hoped the last few years worth of his father's behavior was 'not trying' and he wasn't going to let himself think otherwise.

Nic shrugged, "My mom is a professional psychic, so nobody ever expected her husband to be normal anyway. They figure it's all part of the 'image' and chalk up anything strange to marketing. When I was little and talked about magic to muggles, people just figured I was either making things up or reading too much into the fortune telling thing. Seriously, muggle psychics are the best camouflage for real magic because people are too skeptical to think anything going on in their house could be anything but special effects to fool the tourists."

He grimaced and added, "The only hiding I ever had to do was denying any relation to my parents." In verbal descriptions they were bad enough, but he could at least acknowledge them since lying wasn't quite justified. They sounded eccentric, sure, but the full mortification factor didn't become obvious until one was actually in their presence. Words could never truly portray exactly how embarrassing Nic's parents were.
1 Nic Yeah, I'm partial 165 Nic 0 5


Cosette

April 05, 2010 1:40 AM
Most kids thought their parents were bizarre. Until just now, Cosette had always thought they were stupid for thinking such things. How could they run around acting ashamed of their parents when hers were the freakiest people in existence? It frustrated her to no end to hear people complain about the latest quirky tic of their mom or dad. If they thought their parents were so horrible, Cosette could bet those whiners wouldn’t last five minutes in her shoes.

As soon as Nic started on about his dad, she was afraid it was going to take a turn for the worst. He gave a brief, quick comment on his dad than cut it off, like he was embarrassed or something. All the times she’d heard kids bad-mouth their parents, it started off sort of like that – a few sentences that left more questions than answers – before they broke into a ‘parents are sooo lame, they don’t get me, they’re unfair’ monologue. It was rather upsetting, since he seemed like a pretty cool person otherwise.

But then, he surprised her, and didn’t do anything of the sort. Instead, he told her about his mother being a psychic. She’d hoped he didn’t see her cringe at that. She’d heard too many tales about how muggle psychics were more-or-less con artists that only the most gullible muggles fell for.

And hearing him recollect how people made assumptions about him because of her job made her stomach twist. She knew all too well what it was liked to be judged because of a parent, but this seemed to be a more public issue than hers had been. The only pro the situation had going was the shield that a psychic provided; talking about magic isn’t so far-fetched if muggles chalk it up as fake with little care to figure if it’s real or not for themselves.

He finished his answer by saying, "The only hiding I ever had to do was denying any relation to my parents." Well, so much for making this a good day for everyone. She felt bad that he had to deal with so much family drama before coming here. It was enough to make light conversations heavy talk. Her eyes fell to her empty plate and she wondered how many times he was going to have to repeat the story to people while he was here, introducing himself to everyone else. It seemed like a complete drag, really. If she was him, she would’ve just gave the same stupid anti-parent rant she originally thought he was going to give.

She appreciated his openness, though. Nic seemed to be giving this whole ‘get-to-know-your-Housemate’ thing some effort. At least more than she had wanted to. Just to even out the playing field, she decided she’d let him in on something herself. “I can sorta relate, though I don’t know if my issues have anything on yours,” she said slowly as she was filling her plate with her second helping. “You see, my mom has this chronic dissociative amnesia. So once every month or so for a day or two she’ll just forget who she is, and her therapy doesn’t do much to stop it. Nothing too serious most of the time, but the neighbors with no lives like to gossip too much about it. Gets real old after awhile, y’know?" She wondered if she shared something too personal when she finished. She hated to be that impulsive. With a dejected sigh she resumed eating, hoping she wouldn’t say anything else stupid if her mouth was full.
0 Cosette I do get hockey, however 0 Cosette 0 5

Nic

April 05, 2010 9:10 AM
Nic resumed eating after he finished explaining his magical background. The last bit had crept in without him quite meaning to. He normally kept his complaining to himself - most because if he complained then he'd have to explain why he was complaining and silence about the elder Sawyers was golden - but she'd asked, and he'd explained, and it was kind of a relief to tell someone, besides Mom and Dad themselves, that his parents were less than ideal for his public image.

Just this one, he felt happier for getting it off his chest and he dug back into his food without noticing the damper it had put on Cosette. As far as Nic was concerned, the meet and greet was going quite well.

He looked up again when she started talking and he felt a little bad for complaining about his folks. Sure, they were as mortifying as anything, but they were at least healthy.

"That sucks," he said, and realized immediately he was probably understating it. But conversation was hard enough; surely he couldn't be expected to be any good at sympathetic or tactful, either. Was he supposed to change the subject or say something reassuring? Nothing reassuring came to mind, so he decided to got with the first option.

"So. Muggle neighborhood, magic parents. How did that happen? That's not normal for wizardkind, is it?"

1 Nic I'm from Florida. What's this 'hock-ee' you speak of? 165 Nic 0 5


Cosette

April 05, 2010 9:47 AM
“Definitely not normal for them,” Cosette said to Nic’s question. “At least, I don’t think it is. I heard wizards who are really into muggle studies try to live like them, so I guess it’s not that weird.”

She took a few more bites before continuing, “I don’t know how much you know about purebloods, but they generally like to marry other purebloods to keep ‘the blood clean’ or whatever that’s supposed to mean. So when pureblood mom fell for muggleborn dad, it wasn’t like they could hang out at her place and hang out, so she just went to his house a lot, and I guess she really liked the way muggles lived. So when they got hitched, they just decided to live in the same neighborhood they spent most of their time in anyways.” It wasn’t like she had never been to any magical places, she mused to herself. Vacation had always had some rather magical twist, generally involving Floo Powder for speedy and cheap travel.

“What about your parents? How’d a wizard end up with a muggle?” Cosette never grasped how half-blood relationships would work unless the magical one in the relationship kept it quiet. She just couldn’t picture a muggle being all that accepting or much of a secret keeper if they knew they were dating someone who had gifts they couldn’t understand themselves. Though she could bet his mom wasn’t like many muggles she’d ever met.
0 Cosette Only the greatest muggle sport ever 0 Cosette 0 5

Nic

April 05, 2010 4:05 PM
Nic took Cosette's word for it that most wizards didn't live in muggle communities and her reason for why her parents did seemed to make sense. They still lived in the house Mom had grown up in, and if Gramma were alive, she'd still be there now.

Theoretically, Dad's parents were alive and well someplace, but he was pretty sure they were from Canada. To hear Mom tell of it, that was like Siberia or Antartica - remote, far away, and freezing cold. They didn't visit and the Grandparents Sawyer never visited either. He'd always thought it was a little weird but he'd never been motivated enough to ask about it.

He wondered if maybe they were like Cosette's mom's parents and weren't so happy about Dad marrying Mom. Though honestly? Dad was lucky he got Mom. Even accounting for the fact that he was a wizard living in a muggle world, he was the sort of guy who should not normally get pretty women to look at him never mind marry him. And Mom could be pretty, when she lost the crystals and the freaky clothes. Mom cleaned up nicely.

Dad, on the other hand, had trouble matching his shoes. Nic had seen him leave the house wearing one flip flop and one winter boot before. He was willing to bet that wasn't a failing of the entire wizarding world, as Mom had often claimed, else the clothing of the other Sonora students would be much more painful to look at.

Oh, there was something to her claim - the school uniform was, as previously noted, a robe - but there didn't seem to be a society induced pathological inability to dress themselves without looking like an idiot.

Cosette was hardly the first person to ever ask him how his parents met, though she was probably the first to do so because of their differing magical backgrounds. Usually it was in amazement that Dad had managed to find a wife when he couldn't even find the sunglasses sitting on top of his head.

Nic sighed. "My mom's a psychic." According to the story Mom usually told, she'd just Known that dad was The One when she laid eyes on him. The true story was a little more complicated, but it didn't actually vary in that key element. "There's actually a little bit of overlap between the magical world and the muggle world when you start talking about psychics with some real talent."

"Don't get me wrong, most muggle psychics are fakes, and even Mom fakes her way through most of her readings unless there's something really significant about to happen, but she's genuine enough to be able to tell when she needs to be somewhere. I remember one time I got into a fight at school, and Mom was at the principal's office before I was."

Nic shrugged, figuring that was as much verification of his mother's talents as was necessary, and continued the story. "So, anyway, she just Knew she was supposed to go into this one building on this one particular day, so she did. It turned out, there was some kind of Divination conference going on. Dad was there, newly graduated, and hoping to find a master diviner to apprentice under. Mom just wandered around, learning a few new things about the Art, not even realizing that she'd crashed an event for witches and wizards, and none of them noticed she was a muggle either." Nic had realized pretty early on that fortune tellers - magical or muggle - could be oblivious like that.

"Then, Dad walks up to the table where she was discussing the finer points of tarot reading with a witch. She turns and takes one look at him and says, 'I'm going to marry you,' and he says, 'I know,' and, three hours and some legal paperwork in front of the nearest judge later, she did."

Nic sighed, and rolled his eyes. "For a couple who eloped after knowing each other less than a day, they've been married for fifteen years and haven't ever had a real fight so far as I can tell. I think it took them a week to figure out she didn't have magic but he did. They both had the Gift and that was the talent that really mattered to them." He shrugged, "Magic was just icing."

Speaking of icing, was that cake? It was. Nic reached over to cut himself a slice.

"I'm pretty sure that's not how most wizards meet muggles, though," he added to be fair. He was reasonably certain his situation was fairly unusual, not that he really knew a lot of half-bloods.
1 Nic I think I prefer Beach Volleyball 165 Nic 0 5


Cosette

April 05, 2010 5:53 PM
Maybe his mom had some Seer in her. Most muggles had some magical background, even if they were unaware of it, and it wouldn’t be too outlandish of the thing to believe. The way Nic spoke about her abilities made Cosette think that this might be the case. How else could she get into a Divination Convention? After all, wizarding meetings are typically warded with spells to make the common muggle remember they had to be somewhere else miles away. Then again, it wasn’t impossible that they decided against spell barriers for whatever reasons.

"Then, Dad walks up to the table where she was discussing the finer points of tarot reading with a witch.” She was about to ask what Tarot cards looked like exactly since she’d never really knew much about Divination, but she held her tongue to hear the rest of the story. “She turns and takes one look at him and says, 'I'm going to marry you,'” - Cosette almost dropped her fork – “and he says, 'I know,' and, three hours and some legal paperwork in front of the nearest judge later, she did."

Wow, talk about being self-assured. Then they were married for fifteen years without major fights to mention? Cosette suddenly didn’t think Divination was such a foolish subject as she had before she came here. It seemed to be like any other real magic, if not more powerful. Maybe her parents were wrong when they bashed it for being ‘fake’ magic. How could anything that’s fake work so well?

Nic got a piece of cake (wait, cake? how’d she miss cake?!) and said, “I'm pretty sure that's not how most wizards meet muggles, though."

“It makes more sense than any scenario I would’ve guessed,” she admitted brazenly. “It works well since they both are into Divination too, I’d think. So does that mean that you like the subject, too?” She chanced a look at the Divination professor, apparently the first one after a brief period of time without the course. “Or is it something only your parents are into?”
0 Cosette Tennis can be fun, too 0 Cosette 0 5

Nic

April 05, 2010 8:35 PM
The cake tasted every bit as good as everything else had and he enjoyed his first couple of bites of it immensely before he followed Cosette's look to the staff table. By the turn in the conversation and the vague interest he'd taken in the Headmistress's speech, he gathered she was looking at the new Divination teacher. He'd taken note of the man to see if he recognized the guy as one of Dad's occassional visitors, but if he was, Nic didn't made the connection. He usually made himself scarce when the folks had visitors, though, so that didn't necessarily mean anything.

He gave a small short laugh at the idea that he might enjoy Divinations just because his parents did. So far, he hadn't demostrated any particular Gift in the subject, and he really hoped it stayed that way.

"My skill with divinations so far is knowing it's going to hurt when I fall off my bike. That's pretty much where I expect it's going to stay and I have no plan to change it. Fortune telling is my parents' thing, not mine. I'm trying to stay as far away from it as I can."
1 Nic Yeah, that's not bad. 165 Nic 0 5