Headmaster Regal

January 17, 2011 11:07 AM
David Regal was more than excited to start his career in the administration aspect of an educational institution. The sixty-year old man had been a Transfiguration professor for the last thirty-five years of his life, and even when he absolutely loved educating the young ones, there was a time in every man’s life that a radical change was needed. For the native Scottish, this was it. His two sons were already married, building a life with their new families and his wife was used to his long absences due to his previous job. Being the new Headmaster of Sonora would not change his life, just his responsibilities, and he was more than ready to take them. His wife had taken rather well the changes in his life, especially since the pay raise would give her more economical liberties. For him, it was a way of giving her a better chance of recuperating the life of luxuries that she had left behind when they got married and left England for the United States.

Months before the actual start of term, the new appointed Headmaster had spent a lot of time learning from Sadi about how Sonora worked. It had been nice of Sadi to show him the ropes, especially with her illness and how it had affected her. Some days it seemed that she was about to collapse of tiredness. It sadden him to see her like that, nobody should suffer through such a horrible illness. But alas, that was life, and he hoped researchers would find a cure for it. That was no way to live life, it also had made him see that life was fickle and it could change for the worse in an instant. Another of the reasons he was glad he had taken the job. It was never too late to start new endeavors, and at his 60 years old, he still felt pretty young. He was halfway through his life; one had to love how magic extended one’s life in comparison to the Muggles. More time to do what you wanted.

The dark-haired man Apparated to Sonora the morning of the new start of term, it was exciting. The 60-year old had brown hair marred by grey; it was hard to decide whether he was still brown-haired or completely grey-haired, both colors were prominent on his head. The Headmaster was smartly dressed for this joyous occasion, robes of the deepest blue pressed to perfection by his wife Addison. He had talked with his staff for a few minutes before walking through the extensive grounds of the school. When it was time for the students to arrive at the school, he promptly made his way back. Fortunately, he was in the Cascade Hall before anyone entered.

Once the older students settled down, and the first-years waited to be sorted, David addressed the Hall. “Welcome to Sonora! I am Professor David Regal, the new Headmaster. Headmistress Powell will be missed since she was an extraordinary Head,” his voice was solemn and serious. He had great respect for Sadi.

David had been happy to see that Donovan Cohen was employed at the school. He knew the man, and since he hadn’t spoken with his staff about the Deputy Head position, he asked for his help and appointed him Deputy Head for the time being. “First years, Professor Cohen will hand you a goblet. Please drink from it so you can be sorted accordingly.” David was excited about this part of the Opening Feast, since he wanted to see how the potion would affect the first-years skins. Sadi had told him that their skin would change into the color of the chosen house: deep red for Crotalus, blue for Aladren, sunshine yellow for Teppenpaw and muddy brown for Pecari.

Once the newly sorted first-years found seats with their housemates, David continued with his address to the school. “Before the feast can begin, I have a few announcements,” he took a deep breath and continued to talk, “Congratulations to our New Head Boy and Girl, Daniel Nash II of Aladren and Charlotte Abbott of Crotalus.” David clapped as they came to receive their badges. “Now let’s have a round of applause for the new Prefects! Edmond Carey of Aladren, Andrew Duell of Teppenpaw, Marissa Stephenson of Crotalus and Jose Hernandez of Pecari.” Again, he clapped before handing them their badges. He smiled at everyone, he didn’t know them, but was proud of them nonetheless.

“I am almost finished. Don’t fret,” David chuckled before finishing with his address. “Thanks to the generous donations of some families, you will be able to enjoy a new room designed to help cultivate your different talents, as well as to provide a place where you can escape for a while from your studies. Though, remember that you are here to learn! The room is still under construction, when it is finally ready we will have an appropriate inauguration.” The new Headmaster grinned. “The final announcements of the evening consist on letting you know that Professor Cohen will be the Deputy Headmaster until further notice, Andreas Stravinos will substitute the Astronomy class, and we have a new Librarian, Miss DiAnna Diaz.” He clapped for them and smiled at everyone.

“Let the Opening Feast begin!” when he uttered those words, the tables were instantly filled with food, it smelled delicious. Now that everyone started eating and chatting, he sat down and exhaled. His first Opening Feast had been a success, in his very humble opinion.

OOC: Welcome First-years! Please refrain from posting on other boards until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech! Otherwise, have fun!
Subthreads:
0 Headmaster Regal Opening Feast 0 Headmaster Regal 1 5

Derwent Pierce IV

January 17, 2011 1:18 PM
The wagon ride from New Hampshire seemed to go on forever, but Derry honestly wouldn't have minded it to go on for a little longer. Watching the ground fly by like this was almost as good as watching it fly by under his broom, but also better because he wasn't allowed to fly this far away from home over such strange and unfamiliar landscapes on his broom. Mother would have a fit and Father would yell. (Of the two, not wanting to scare his mom was the reason he refrained from leaving the Pierce lands.)

But the wagon ride had come to an end and he'd seen tons of stuff he'd write about back to Thad because Thad didn't leave Mt. Pierce much more often than Derry did and he'd totally love to hear about the patchwork fields. (Derry didn't entirely believe that muggles did that, but whoever did, its still looked really cool.) And that wasn't even counting those weird sets of buildings that someone said were muggle cities. They'd been pretty far away from those, but they looked as unreal as muggles themselves, so Derry could almost, almost believe that they really were made by people without magic. Somehow.

Thad probably wouldn't believe him, but Derry wouldn't have either if he hadn't seen them with his own two eyes.

And Sonora was even more wow. Derry hoped down from the wagon and nearly killed himself when he was too busy staring at the school and the Gardens and the distant Quidditch Pitch to watch where he put his feet. He caught himself on the wheel, and managed not to face plant himself into the dirt which was good because he was wearing brand new robes (Sonora's green uniform was different from Salem's bronze robes and he was the first of his family to not go to the now-closed Institute of Magical Crafts) and a tri-corner hat that was about five years older than he was, and Mom would be upset if he ruined either of them.

He left his trunk for the elves to handle and went inside without a second thought for all of the worldly belongings he would have access to until midterm. The inside of the school was even more impressive than the outside. He stared at the moving portraits (not a new thing for him, but none of them were Pierces or anyone else he'd talked to for the last eleven years of his life when he couldn't find anyone alive or undead to talk to - he was curious about all of their stories and how they had ended up on the wall of a school's main entryway).

After he waved in greeting to the large people who were labeled underneath as 'Founders', he followed the rest of his new school mates to where the first years were being gathered. He spoke briefly to a couple of them, mostly to point at amazing things and say "Wow," but before he could quite get around to introducing himself to any of them or asking for their names in return, they were ushered into the Hall, which was even more amazing than the entryway.

Mt. Pierce was no rustic hunting lodge - Grandmother's House was the seat of the New Hampshire Pierce family, and his own home was the Heir's House. Both had, until today, seemed quite impressive in their own rights, but even they had nothing on the scale of the Cascade Hall. "Wow," he said again, then decided this particular amount of amazing required further comment and added, "Waterfalls are awesome. Walls made out of waterfalls are even more awesome." He couldn't thing of a word more awesome than awesome, so he had to make do with adverbs.

Derry felt his attention drawn back to the events at hand - namely his Sorting - as someone pushed a goblet into his hands. "Oh! Right," he smiled up at the man who gave it to him. "Thank you!" he said politely, as he had been raised to do, and took a sip of bubbly brew. After a few seconds his skin began to turn yellow.

"Neat!" he exclaimed, holding his arm out and inspecting his own hand in something akin to fascination as he examined the effect. He barely noticed the Deputy Head move on down the line to the next student. "I'm all sunshiney and bright!" he declared, deciding this was a good thing, and so smiled happily at the development.

He was pointed toward a table where other people who were sunshiney and bright were sitting. He went there and took an empty seat next to one of them. "Hi," he greeted the table in general.

Then the Headmaster started talking again and Derry tried to pay attention because that was the good and proper thing to do, but his attention was continually drawn away by the waterfalls and the other students and, well, pretty much anything his eye landed on. It had been a long time since he'd seen something new and now everything was new.

Then there was food. "Awesome!" Derry exclaimed with a bright smile because it looked delicious and he even clapped once in his delight. He looked around to allow the people around him to fill their plates in the order of their rank (at home, it was always father first, then mother, then him) but there did not seem to be any sort of 'orderly fashion' going on. Derry was good with that, and dove in to claim some turkey and potatoes (he avoided the corn, but took some peas because he could imagine Hamlet frowning at him if he didn't take any green vegetables).

Once his plate was full to his satisfaction, he looked around again, waiting for everyone else to finish doing the same. Other people were already eating, though, so he shrugged, mentally thanked Hamlet for warning him that things were different outside of Mt. Pierce, and took his own first bite of the meal.

After he had finished properly chewing and swallowing it, he turned his smile on his nearest neighbors. "Hi, I'm Derry Four, who are you guys?" Then he remembered his manners and his eyes widened a little, and was quick to correct himself, "I mean, I am Derwent Pierce the Fourth, of the New Hampshire Pierces." He gave a small seated bow. "I am pleased to make your acquaintance. May I inquire as to your names?" Father was going to kill him if word got back that he'd messed up his first public introduction so bad. But he thought he probably fixed it in time. Maybe. He hoped. He smiled, silently hopeful that his new Housemates might forget his initial impropriety and not take offense.
1 Derwent Pierce IV Sunshiney and Bright 189 Derwent Pierce IV 0 5


Madeline Parry

January 17, 2011 3:07 PM
It’s just like any other school, Madeline told herself firmly as she walked, along with everyone else who’d ridden the wagon that stopped in Georgia, toward the big school building. Okay, so every other school has a website, and I didn’t find out about it in a way the Weekly World News would pay me for an interview about, but still. School. I know school. No school can be weirder than the one with the yoga mats, or Dad’s last appointment, even if it does have magic.

That thought, unlike the one about tabloids, really did make her feel a little less nervous. One of the perils of having a history professor as a father was not only having to adjust to new elementary schools and entire local cultures if a better opportunity arose in another state, but also having to adjust to whatever weirdness existed on the campuses Dad taught at and they usually lived on. There were a lot of older people here, but she was sure there were few high schoolers, boarding school wizards or not, who were as strange as undergraduates in large groups.

Once they made it into the building, she noticed the crest on the floor and immediately stepped around it, figuring there had to be a tradition saying any new person who stepped on the crest on their first day would never graduate, or have all their hair fall out, or something. Magic, from what she had read in her still-smallish but growing collection of books on the topic, meant it was probably smarter to both assume academic traditions and superstitions existed and that the superstitions might be cold, hard realities.

She also noticed the moving paintings, but managed to stop herself from stopping to gawk. For one thing, she’d seen pictures move enough in her textbooks to be almost used to it, and assure herself one of the paintings hadn’t just told her hello, though she did smile at it just in case. For another, she was afraid of getting trampled. In the huge – she guessed it was ‘dining hall,’ which the copy of A Brief History of Sonora Academy of Witchcraft and Wizardry she’d picked up over the holidays called the Cascade Hall, though, she had to stop short for a second once she noticed the walls. She guessed a normal school could put fountains over all the dining hall windows, if they really wanted to and could afford the astronomical water bills, but they would need basins to keep from flooding the place. Magic school seemed to suffer from no such need.

Physics, 0. Sonora Academy, 1. Madeline Parry, -1.

She took the bubbly drink from an adult with a nervous smile and a “thank you,” though she wasn’t really sure thanks were what she wanted to be expressing. Her first magic potion happening five minutes into her second day as a real witch in a witchy place was really big, something that seemed like it should be bigger than this – and this was pretty big. With the others, though – how many of them was this an everyday thing for? – she drank it, and wasn’t sure how she should feel when she turned yellow. She did feel excited, but wasn’t sure if she was right to or not.

Yellow, in her book, was one of the Teppenpaw colors, so Madeline guessed she was a Teppenpaw. Dad had liked the concept of Pecari best, but diplomatic skills were kind of like political science, so she could sell that, even if she’d never really seen herself that way. Taking the lead from her fellow yellows, she went to sit down at a table and listen to the Headmaster talk.

Once he finished, the tables filled with food, and Madeline gave Sonora another point for surprising her before automatically glancing toward the head of the table for Dad to say grace. When no paternal unit or other person in charge of her spiritual well-being was there, though, she bowed her head and whispered to herself very quickly before starting to serve herself. It had been a long day, and she was hungry. And more than willing to go on accepting her mom’s conclusion that it was only people who were religiously witches who had a problem, that this was like being very smart, or something else that was a gift she could use for good or ill, but which wasn’t inherently bad in and of itself, at least for now.

Another yellow, a boy, smiled at her as she finished loading her plate, so, though it was a more general smile than a Madeline-specific smile, she smiled back. She liked his first introduction better than the second, but decided to take it as a sign that he wasn’t too likely to be terribly snotty that the informal one had come first. It wasn’t his fault he had a numeral. “I’m Madeline Parry,” she said. “From all over the place.” Mostly New York state, but she lived in Georgia now, and had come there from Tennessee by way of Ohio, so she thought it qualified. “It’s, um, nice to meet you,” she added, tucking a piece of her strawberry blonde hair behind her ear and including a little formality of her own so she didn’t look like she didn’t know how to behave.
0 Madeline Parry It's very 'in' this year 188 Madeline Parry 0 5


Regina Parker

January 17, 2011 5:16 PM
Regina was extremely excited about being at Sonora. Sure she would miss her dad and in some ways, her mother as well, but this was a whole knew category in her life and she couldn’t want to start the experience. Regina had gone to muggle school before coming to Sonora under her father’s wishes. He was a muggleborn and he wanted her to experience everything she could in both worlds. Regina’s mother wasn’t around much during her childhood, so anything that her father wanted usually is what came to pass. Not that Regina minded. Her father did what he could by her and made sure she was happy. Regina did as little as possible to make that effort difficult for him.

Regina liked the muggle world. She liked that they expand and are forever changing. She liked that they were flawed and acknowledged those flaws. She loved the noise that their creations created. The muggle world thrived and it amazed her. But that world wasn’t the one she necessarily belonged in. She wanted to know about the magical world. She already knew so much from her mother and father, but she wanted to know if for herself.

So, when she hopped onto the wagon – not even thinking twice about how crazy even that was – Regina impatiently awaited her arrival to the school that would be her home for the next seven years of her life.

Catching sight of the school almost had Regina wetting herself. It was amazing. Beyond amazing. It was everything she had hoped for and so much more! Looking at it more closely as the wagon landed, Regina had a peculiar sense of déjà vu. She had no idea where it had come from but shrugged it off by assuming she had caught a glance of the school from a brochure.

Her hazel eyes were wide with excitement as she looked around. The Gardens were fantastic! She couldn’t wait to get in there and start exploring. She wanted to know every inch of the gardens and the school. She wanted to know every secret, every hidden spot, every portrait, and every corridor available for her to find. Or maybe even not so available for her to find. She just wanted to know every crevice, every flaw, every beautiful moment that the school could offer her. She was a sponge and she wanted to absorb it all up.

Her small frame moved along with the rest of the first years, following the path that led up to the school. Oh and what a beautiful school. Spanish influence, traditional. Full of history. Regina would learn so much here! She just couldn’t wait! And the smile that was plastered across her face was a sure enough sign of just how thrilled she was to finally be in a magical school. Oh she knew how difficult it will be in the coming years and how lonely her father will be without her, but she was ready for the challenge. And, she was ready to make a few friends.

Regina had smiled along the way, glancing at the portraits as she went. It was only polite to smile, even if a few of them gave her grumpy looks back. Upon entering the Cascade Hall, Regina almost stopped short. Growing up in both worlds, Regina was well aware of how magic could do anything, but she had never seen walls of Waterfalls before. Ever. And she wasn’t even so sure she could imagine something like that to be either. Oh yes, she was going to have a ball here. No doubt about that.

“Thank you, Sir!” Regina exclaimed, taking the goblet and quickly taking a sip of the contents. Under normal circumstances, Regina wouldn’t have taken a strange substance from a strange (and huge) man because her father and her mother’s job as an Auror taught much better than that, but Regina assumed she could trust the Heads of her school. It only took a moment for her skin to turn a lovely shade of yellow. Awesome.

Glancing around, she found the other group of yellow people and headed over to sit with them. She smiled around to everyone, but most seemed transfixed on the remaining sorting event and the Headmaster. So, Regina did the same. She listened to the Headmaster make some announcements, but Regina didn’t have a clue what any of it meant. She assumed ‘Prefects’ were like hall monitors at her muggle school and Head Boy/Girl were like class Presidents. She’ll have to read about it to figure it all out though.

But soon the speech was over and the food had magically appeared in front of her face. “Wicked!” She said quietly to herself as she made her way around to various items and plopping them on her face. A boy near her began to speak and introduced himself twice over to the girl beside her. Her father had told her that there would a few who had introductions like these. Regina thought he was full of it. Apparently she was wrong. “I’m Regina Parker from no place of importance, but everyone back home calls me Reggie.” Regina greeted, interrupting the two of them. “Are you both excited to be here as I am? This place is the cat’s meow, I swear!”
6 Regina Parker I don't think yellow goes with my hair... 187 Regina Parker 0 5


Jessica Applerose

January 17, 2011 5:37 PM
Jessica was more nervous than excited about going to boarding school. She felt homesick immediately and missed her friends. She'd definitely have to send a letter back home soon. But she was only a state away, so that comforted her just a bit. But still, she was away from home and that was what counted.

She changed into her forest green robes and pulled her short brown, curly hair so it didn't get caught. She slung a bookbag on her shoulder, her older sister's used one, and got onto the wagon taking her to her new home. The thought made her want to cry.

Jessica was rather attached to her life back home. She had it good; she was wealthy, had lots of friends, and she was a pureblood which meant some connections with other families. She wasn't quite sure how prestigious the name "Applerose" was, or whatever, but apparently it mattered a lot in pureblooded England, her birthplace. Whatever. Jessica nervously played with little silver dress she wore around her neck. It had an emerald in the center, for whatever reason. She'd forgotten who'd given it to her, it'd been so long. Playing with it, however, gave her some comfort, and she looked out of the wagon to see the school. It was magnificent, and huge. How was she going to find her way around? Anxiety began to plague her again.

Jessica got out and followed the rest of the first years to wherever they were heading, her blue eyes taking everything in. It was enormous, and that scared her a lot. She hated change.

When she entered the dining hall, she assumed, she was handed a goblet, and her skin turned a yellow, which made her cringe. It was ugly, but she supposed it meant she was to be in the house with all the other yellow-skinned people. Heading over to them, she sat down next to a group of people who looked her age, determined not to be alone.

She listened to the welcoming speech and decided right off that she was going to become a Prefect one day. Her parents had told her to be ambitious, and that's what she was going to be! The speech finished, and the food appeared. Her stomach was too knotted for her to really feel hungry, so she looked at her peers instead. Three people introduced themselves, so she piped up herself.

"Hi guys, I'm Jessica Applerose." She made sure her voice was loud; though she was shy inside, she knew the only way to make friends was to really be outgoing and friendly. She could do that, even in this new environment. Her southern California accent seemed different from the others, and it made her feel nervous again. She didn't want to be the "different" one.

Jessica smiled at Reggie's introduction. She seemed friendly enough. "I'm really nervous, actually," she told her. "I've never been away from home before." She hoped it didn't make her sound like a sissy.

The boy's introduction made him seem formal, and she realized that he must be a pureblood. She had a faint memory of her time in England surrounded by the prestigious pureblooded society, and her hand unconsciously went to toy with her necklace again. She nervously looked at her peers, hoping that her face didn't betray her anxiety. Hopefully they'd all become great friends.
0 Jessica Applerose Hopefully it'll fade? 0 Jessica Applerose 0 5

Derry Four

January 17, 2011 6:40 PM
Whew. Nobody seemed to be upset by his informality and, in fact, most of them seemed to continue the trend. That was a giantly huge relief. He could behave around his new Housemates the same way he did around Thad. That was really really really good.

He took note of each of their names as she said it. First, was Madeline from Everywhere. That was cool. He'd only ever been in New Hampshire until now, and all of his family lived on the same mountain he did so he was never more than a mile or so from home. He wondered what states her family was in.

Then Regina from Nowhere. Or Reggie, which was almost as much of an improvement over its original as Derry was to Derwent. He wasn't quite sure how her family could be from 'nowhere of importance' but he would take her at her word, though he had to wonder if maybe she was from some forgotten island on the border with Canada that was so small that nobody ever bothered to determine which country it was in, nevermind what state. And while it might be unimportant, it was still totally fascinating.

And the last was Jessica from Unspecified, which he guessed was just because she forgot to mention it like he almost had. Everyone had been kind and forgave him, so even if he wasn't inclined to do so anyway, he would have to extend the same curtesy. She also said the most extraordinary thing.

"I've never been away from home before either," he offered in reassurance, assuming of course that the other Pierce homes on the mountain didn't count as 'being away' because they were still family property, "but it's totally exciting," he assured her, feeling certain that he could make her nervousness go away just by willing her to feel the same excitement he did. "You get to see all new things and meet all new people and learn all new magic. It'll be great."

He decided maybe Jessica didn't yet need to know about the dangerous imposter who was Head of Crotalus, or the potentially evil California Pierce who he was pretty sure just got named Prefect of Pecari, both of whom his dad had warned him against. With luck, none of them - as first year Teppenpaws - would have to run into them very often and he'd make sure he warned them all if it ever did become an issue. Now wasn't the time to worry about that. The other staff would make sure bad stuff didn't happen.

Now was the time to feast and be merry and make new friends; to ease fears, not create new ones.

"This food is really good, isn't it?" he asked after he finished swallowing a forkful of truly excellent mashed potatoes.
1 Derry Four Why would you want it to? 189 Derry Four 0 5


Madeline

January 17, 2011 8:58 PM
Madeline laughed as Regina Parker, called Reggie, declared Sonora the cat’s meow. She’d read it a few times, but it mostly reminded her of Dr. Archer, the head of the history department at the little liberal arts college Dad was teaching at now. He was always saying things like that, usually in a way where it was hard to tell if he knew he was speaking in anachronisms, and he had the coolest office known to mankind. It had busts of Greek gods and Civil War generals in it in equal measure, ship models Dr. Archer had built himself were on top of the shelves, and the walls were completely lined in books. The reminder made her automatically more inclined to like Reggie.

“I’m excited,” she said. “And nervous,” she added, including Jessica. It seemed that everyone in a year and House, unless they were really huge for some reason, shared one room – which seemed really strange to her, she’d never heard of a school where more than two or three people shared one room, but whatever floated Sonora’s boat, she guessed, so long as they could all get along okay – so she wanted to get along with all the other girls in her House a lot, even more than she wanted to get along with people in general.

She was a little worried about what would happen if they did all clash in some big way, but still glad she had roommates instead of being the only girl in Teppenpaw. She’d learned everything she could about the magical world during the last part of the summer, but still expected she was going to need a lot of help navigating it for a while.

Because it was a world. Not like another planet, which was almost disappointing, but still. She wasn’t used to reading books and not knowing so many of the words that she had to use the catalogue she’d picked up at the magic bookstore to order a special dictionary because her children’s dictionary, the little red dictionary her mother had given her from her tech school days, the short, fat, paperback one she’d gotten in her going-to-middle-school Merriam-Webster boxed resource set, and the library’s copy of the OED had all proven inadequate to the task. If she couldn’t read a textbook meant for eleven-year-olds, it was safe to assume that everything she was going to encounter was going to be at least a little different.

“But I agree with you, Derwent. I think it’s going to be really cool, being here.” She looked at her plate, which was still untouched because of all the meeting and greeting. “It smells really good,” she said, then tasted some asparagus. “Oh, it’s good. Do they use magic on it, too?” Madeline realized that might sound like a stupid question. “Sorry – magic’s completely new to me. I didn’t know it existed until last month, and I know our books can’t have everything wizards can do in them.”
0 Madeline It and the green robes make us look kinda like soda bottles? 0 Madeline 0 5


Regina Parker

January 17, 2011 9:37 PM
Right after Reggie’s introduction, another girl chimed in and introduced herself. Looking around, it seemed as though Reggie was going to have quite a bit of roommates during her stay here at Sonora. She wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or not. Regina was an only child and had never had to share a room before. She was excited, of course, at the prospect of having them. They were like already built in friends. But she was also a little nervous. You can never really know a person until you lived with them. Reggie was usually very tidy, but she’s never handled anyone who didn’t pick up after themselves. What happens if one of them did that? Or grabbed her things without asking? Reggie didn’t want to go all ape on them, but she just might. Or, at least, that will be something they will all discover a long the way.

Now that Regina thought about it, she hadn’t really been ‘away’ from home either. But she had gone to school, so she wasn’t stuck in the house the entire time either. She wondered if that’s what Jessica meant? Like she was a Flowers in the Attic type of girl (minus the incest, Reggie hoped) by being locked away in a room until she turned eleven. Was that even allowed? Reggie didn’t think so, but there was quite a bit that she was unaware of and she didn’t really know what the magical world was allowed to do or not. She had never really asked her dad. She did know that stuff wasn’t allowed in the muggle world though, so Reggie just took that to mean that she wasn’t a muggleborn.

Derwent also admitted to not having left home either. “What exactly do the two of you mean by ‘haven’t been away from home before’?” Reggie asked, curious at the two of them. “I mean, I can interpret that in many different ways. Like, I have never left my home town, but I have left my home on occasion to go places. I have not, however, left home for a boarding school before.” If she was dealing with people who were locked away for years, Reggie wanted to be sure to approach them appropriately. They were strangers after all and her mother always said that it was better find out the stories first before determining the direction in which you take the relationship.

Her mother had issues with people.

Regina agreed with Derwent. This was all just so exciting! Already she was meeting some really odd but completely awesome people. Who was to say that this wouldn’t occur on a regular basis? This was all just too much fun. She couldn’t wait until the classes started. Reggie wondered exactly what their first few lessons would entail. Either way, she would get to use her wand and she had been itching to do that since her father had taken her to get it. “Don’t worry, Jessica, we’ll totally make this fun for you.” Reggie smiled openly at her because, really, how could she not have the best time at Sonora?

Nodding along with Madeline, Reggie chowed down some of the food she had slopped onto her plate. Her father would be slightly appalled by her eating skills at the moment, but she was starving from all the excitement. She choked on her food for a moment though when Madeline admitted to never having known of magic before.

“Oh!” Reggie exclaimed once her food had dislodged from her throat. “I’m half-“ Reggie didn’t consider the fact that Madeline might not have any knowledge of blood types. “But my dad wanted me to be educated in both muggle and magical, so I went to a muggle elementary school until I got my letter here. We can discuss which is better. They are just so different!”
6 Regina Parker We call them pop bottles 'round here. 187 Regina Parker 0 5


Jessica Applerose

January 17, 2011 9:54 PM
Jessica smiled. They were all so friendly! Perhaps her stay wouldn't be too bad. The boy seemed nice, and he comforted her a bit. As she looked at the other two girls, she realized that she'd be sharing a room with them. Sharing a room. The thought was foreign to her.

Though she'd lived with her two older siblings at one time, her sister, closest to her age, was eight years older than her, and so she didn't have much in common with her, nor did she see her often. Her siblings had some beef with her parents, something she didn't quite understand. So she'd grown up as an only child, and just the thought of sharing a room frightened her a little.

She focused instead on her new friends. The way Derwent (she wanted to call him Dewey) spoke as well as Regina excited her just a little. Enough to make the knots ease a bit. She still couldn't eat her food, so just moved it around her plate as she listened to Madeline talk.

Jessica was surprised when Regina asked what they meant by "never leaving home." "I've left my house, of course," she said. Didn't everyone? "But I've never been outside of California, which is where I'm from. And, well, I guess I've been to England because I was born there, but I don't remember it." The British girl bit her bottom lip. At least she had something in common with Derwent! "And I've never been without my parents before." She was only eleven, really.

Jessica brightened when Regina admitted to going to a muggle elementary school. She'd gone to one too! She didn't really understand all the blood prejudices. She'd been taught by her parents to accept everyone, and she practiced it daily. She loved making new friends, and sometimes she felt like she had more in common with muggleborns than with purebloods. She remembered the last time her sister had come to visit two years ago, and she'd been shocked. She hadn't seen Darla since.

The thought of her sister both saddened her and angered her, but she kept it in, not wanting to make a strange face. Instead, she piped up, "I'm a pureblood, but I went to a muggle elementary school too. Our dads sound the same." She smiled. So far she liked the people of her house, and that was always a good thing.
0 Jessica Applerose Soda bottles for the west! 0 Jessica Applerose 0 5