Headmaster Regal

June 06, 2011 1:11 AM
The start of a new year, the start of his second term as Headmaster, and David Regal couldn’t be more excited to be back. After a year of getting used to his new job, he could admit to himself that he absolutely loved it and had gotten used to be behind a desk instead of in a classroom, teaching. Both jobs had their good things and bad things, but after 30-odd years of teaching, the now-Headmaster was happy with his new responsibilities.

The day of the start of term, he kissed his wife goodbye and Apparated to Sonora to make sure that everything and everyone was getting ready to receive the returning students and the new first-years. It was going to be an exciting year, with the help of some of the staff, he had planned the festivities for the year, and they were going to be amazing. David walked through the school’s grounds making sure everything was in order, he was happy with his current staff, even if a lot of changes had happened from last term to this new one. He ended his walk of the school in his office, going through some last minute paperwork. He stayed there for the rest of the time before the start of the Opening Feast.

David entered the Cascade Hall about fifteen minutes before the students were scheduled to arrive at the school, and smiled at the congregated staff members, including the new Staff members. People he would get to know during the term. Finally everyone started to arrive. The Headmaster smiled at the returning students, and waited for them to settle down before making the welcome speech. He had a lot of announcements this term. He could hardly contain the excitement for the upcoming activities.

“Welcome to Sonora,” he began with his speech. His eyes briefly scanned the Hall and stopped on the new first years. He smiled at them, trying to ease their nervousness. “For those who don’t know me, I am Headmaster David Regal.” He cleared his throat, “New students, please be kind enough to take a sip from the potion Coach Pierce will hand out to you. The potion will turn your skin into the color of the house you have been sorted into.” He watched as the first years turned into different colors, he found the sorting ceremony quite amusing. Their skin would change into the color of the chosen house. “If you turned red you are now a Crotalus, blue for Aladren, sunshine yellow for Teppenpaw and brown for Pecari,” he told them smiling. David applauded as they looked for their new housemates.

He waited a few minutes for them to settle in, “I have a few announcements before we can enjoy the delicious feast. Charlotte Abbot and Daniel Nash will continue with their duties as Head Students,” he clapped politely. “The new Prefects are: Veronica Kerrigan for Aladren, Dulce Garcia for Teppenpaw, Nina Brocket for Pecari, and Rachel Bauer for Crotalus,” he applauded once again.

“There were some Staff changes, Professor Cohen had to leave, but Professor Kiva Kijewski decided to return to the school and take over Care of Magical Creatures. Miss Diaz has taken over the Divination classes, and last but not least, Coach Amelia Pierce is the new Deputy Head. Please show them some love,” he applauded one last time. “Before I forget, Crotalus won the House Cup. Let’s see who wins this year! Make your house proud.”

“I am almost done, just one last thing. This year we are celebrating the birthday of one of our founders, Leith Clurican. He was a pioneer on magical education, and helped built this amazing education institution. We will be honoring him throughout the year. The Ball at the end of the year will have a 16th century theme.” David smiled mysteriously, since he had decided to not mention the Outstanding Students Awards. He didn’t want students doing things just to get honored. No, the awards had to go to students that actually did it out of good-will.

Using his wand, he sent everyone a piece of parchment with some sheet-music and lyrics. During one of his wanderings through the Sonora Historical Archives, he found the school song. He didn’t remember Sadi mentioning it to him. It probably meant that it had been forgotten, but he wanted to revive it. It was a good song. “What I sent to you is the school’s song. Learn it! Live by it! Now, we will sing it and after that we can eat.” The Headmaster flicked his wand and the music could be heard throughout the Cascade Hall. He began to recite the verses.

Every day we strive
Learning to survive
Life’s hardships and to solve its mystery.
Learning to defend
Our honour and our friends,
Flying high to meet our destiny
We will stand and face those who want to harm us.
We won’t let the world transfigure, jinx or charm us
I won’t fight alone, as long as you are with me.
Sonora be my home, my tutor and my spirit
Vasita quoque floeat; Even the dessert blooms.


He smiled at the sound of the whole Sonora population singing it. It had been a great idea. After it was done, he smiled, “Let’s eat!” the food appeared, and he sat down to enjoy it.

OOC: Welcome First-years! Please refrain from posting on other boards until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech! Otherwise, have fun! Remember the site rules.

Also, thanks to the author of DiAnna Diaz, who was graceful enough to write such a pretty school song.
Subthreads:
0 Headmaster Regal Opening Feast! 0 Headmaster Regal 1 5


Dennis Couch

June 09, 2011 6:20 AM
OOC: This is continued from the Labyrinth Gardens, and also doesn't address the full post of the Sorting Feast yet. That will have to follow when/if Dennis is collared... BIC:

Dennis was less than gracious as he pushed the noise reduction earbud back into his ear, cutting out the rest of the explanation as he followed the girl with just the clothes he was wearing and his case - the trunk abandoned by the side of the path. What had his parents been thinking, sending him to a place they didn't have electricity. Just that magic stuff which apparently he had a gift for (and, in hindsight, perhaps explain a few of the stranger things he'd had happen during his life a little more thoroughly than the old explanation - Vegas - had). He wondered, with a sudden dropping of his stomach, whether there would even be a music department at this school. He'd always intended to get into Las Vagas Academy when he was old enough. The boarding school thing hadn't really been something he was fussed about, but his parents had seemed to think it was some kind of big deal and, despite not really being the type to let others opinions sway him, that they were his parents had left him with little say in the situation.

He wondered, briefly, whether he should have done more than given a cursary glance at his acceptance letter (possibly even wondered why he'd get an acceptance letter to a school he had no recollection at ever applying for even) and maybe listened when the representative had come to talk to his parents and Dennis himself.

They went into the Hall, and Dennis paused for a moment. There were actual waterfalls cascading down the walls. Inside. It wasn't quite like he'd never seen the like before - both his parents worked in Casinos, and he'd seen some pretty cool stuff inside them. But those were what you pulled off with ridiculous amounts of money when you wanted to impress other people with ridiculous amounts of money. And maybe distract them to get them to part with some of that money.

There was something going on closer to the front of the room where the rest of the new students were, but he wasn't paying attention to that, let alone even able to hear it with his ear buds in. He wandered closer to the walls, to see the cascading water closer. It was a pretty cool trick, but how, he wondered, did they manage it without the room being deluged? There wasn't a barrier or visible pool for it to gather in. He cut a fairly obvious figure against the pouring water. Not only was his bright red hair (only partly hidden by his baseball cap) a vast contrast to the flowing white and blue, but there was his red shirt, new jeans above his black chucks and the banjo case slung on his back.

His new school robes were buried in his trunk, unheeded.
39 Dennis Couch Making it to the Feast. Sort of. 0 Dennis Couch 0 5


Dana Smythe

June 09, 2011 7:21 AM
It was going reasonably well, Dana supposed. She'd gotten the first year into the Hall, and encouraged him to abandon his trunk to be seen to by the pairie elves. It didn't occur to her until she saw him in the same room as the other firts years that he wasn't wearign his uniform robes. She chewed the inside of her lip as she hesitated. She could just go and sit down, find Alison, and catch up on their summers. She could ignore the first year - it wasn't as though anyone expected her to take care of the younger students; she wasn't prefect or anything like that - and enjoy the opening feast. Of course, that wasn't what she was going to do. A thought that had occured to her a lot lost term had been that she always did what she was supposed to, what people expected of her. She was a good girl, and she'd already put so much effort into being the perfect daughter that it was foolish to go and ruin everything so close to her graduation. Her parents were probably going to be looking into potential betrothals this term so they didn't end up with a Cecily scenario, and Dana wasn't going to do anything to jeopardize that. Besides, she'd only feel guilty if little Muggleborn firstie got himself into troubel, and then what if he was in Pecari?

Sighing, Dana followed to where he was apparently inspecting the waterfalls. She said 'hey' a couple of times, and then tapped him on his shoulder for good measure. She would tell him to go stand with the other first years and be sorted, ask him where his school robes were and ask him to put them on, and when he was sorted and seated at the right table then she could leave him be. If he was sorted into Pecari, Dana's own House, then she would leave him with some other first or second years and then find a seat somewhere they weren't required to communicate. It was nothing to do with him - he was probably lovely - but she didn't like being out of her depth in conversation with an eleven-year-old.

"Do you have your school robes?" she asked the kid once she'd gotten his attention. Then, because it might be easier to get his attention in the future, she said, "What's your name?"
0 Dana Smythe Escorting you further 142 Dana Smythe 0 5


Dennis

June 09, 2011 9:42 AM
Dennis started at the tap on his shoulder, the movement almost causing him to dislodge the banjo case. He automatically corrected it as he turned around, using the same hand to slip an earbud out again.

"Huh?" he said, even as he recognised it as the much older girl from before. "Wha- robes?" For the first time he noticed what she was wearing. And, a moment later, what the rest of the people in the room were wearing. Well, most. Those who were clearly students. "We have to wear those?" he asked, distaste clear in the wrinkling of his overly long nose - an awkward manouver to witness at the best of times.

It had been bad enough having to wear the new shirt and jeans, rather than his own preferred clothes. Now they expected him to wear a uniform? He wondered, briefly, if it was too late to ask for a ride back home.

"I thought those were some kind of joke," he confessed. "I think they're stuffed in my trunk with that stick I had to get." He paused for a moment, as a vague recollection filtered through. "Wand, I mean," he ammended. "Oh, Dennis. That's me. My name." He glanced up. "Pity there isn't time to do anything but go to that sorting thing, eh?" he commented, not in the least bit sorry. He didn't really care if he stuck out because he wasn't wearing the same thing as everyone else. Truth be told, he preferred it. Uniforms were a bizarre concept.
39 Dennis Going to open your own BSC? 0 Dennis 0 5


Dana

June 09, 2011 9:57 AM
This conversation might actually be getting worse, Dana considered. He couldn't hear when he had those things in his ears, he didn't know they had to wear robes, and so they were in his trunk... didn't they tell Muggleborns about things like this? All of that, and Dennis didn't seem to care that he was the only first year not wearing robes. He was the reason a headache was starting to develop at her temples.

"My name's Dana, I'm in seventh year," she told him. "I would find you some robes, but I'm not sure there's actually time," she frowned as she saw Coach Pierce preparing to bring over the potion and Headmaster Regal standing to call attention. "You don't have to wear them all the time," she commented on the uniform robes, "but to classes and important events like the opening feast you really need to wear them." She probably would have made more of an effort to get him some robes if he'd actually seemed to care.

"Come on over here," she ushered him to where the other first years were standing. She was aware that she probably stood out herself, now, being taller than the first years even though she was a little below average for her own age group. "You just have to drink this p- this liquid," for some reason she felt it wouldn't help the matter to call the drink a potion, "and then you'll know which House you're in and you can go and meet your Housemates." Please, she begged internally, just let him take the potion and not be in Pecari.
0 Dana It's not on my to-do list 0 Dana 0 5


Dennis

June 10, 2011 5:34 AM
"Mmmhmm," Dennis said, non-committally. He'd never attended a school where there was a mandatory uniform and wasn't convinced.

The girl - Dana - was looking a little frazzled, he noted, as she herded him towards the other newbie students. He glanced at them as she went on about having to drink something.

"How can a drink tell you were I go?" he asked, even as he was handed his own and had the chance to peer dubiously at it. "Looks like sprite," he commented. "No chance this comes in coke or creaming soda flavour?" He flicked his eyes up to gauge the look on her face and decided he might as well get this over with at least. His own personal escort might have some kind of fit otherwise. He downed it in one, like he would a particularly distasteful but necessary medicine.

"So," he asked, looking at Dana again. "I don't feel any difference. Where do I go?" This school was seeming weirder and stranger by the moment.
39 Dennis Possibly for the best 0 Dennis 0 5


Dana

June 11, 2011 9:17 AM
"It's a carefully concocted potion that reflects certain qualities in the drinker - specifically those looked for in the students of each House - in a viewable format," she said, being sure that dennis had swallowed the potion before she offered her explanation. Dennis said he didn't feel any different after drinking the potion, which was normal until a kid saw the effects. "In other words, your skin turns the representetive color of your House," she added, and tried not to be too horrified as his skin too on the muddy brown hue of her own House.

"You're in Pecari," she said levelly, avoiding the exasperation this result instigated, but not quite managing the congratulatory tone she perhaps should have used. "That's the House I'm in, too. We sit over here for the Opening Feast," she said, walking towards where the other Pecaris were already sitting, and the first years were settling into the empty seats, "but you can sit where you like for the rest of the year."

She purposefully guided Dennis to an empty seat she'd spotted with some younger students. She wasn't keen to hang around him much longer; she was at this point quite pleased she'd not been made prefect, because then she definitely would have felt obligated to stay with him a little longer. "Listen to the rest of the speech, then there'll be food," she advised. "At some point your Head of House, Professor mcKindy - he's the one wearing the pink hat - will show you to the commons room, okay?" she hoped that was clear because she was preparing to make a swift exit. "I'm going to go and find my friends now." At this stage, with their parting in sight, she finally managed the friendly smile that should have been there from the start. "Welcome to Sonora."
0 Dana I agree 0 Dana 0 5


Dennis

June 14, 2011 10:55 AM
Dennis examined his arm.

"Is my hair brown too?" he asked, peering up and seeing the bright red strands had indeed turned as muddy brown as the rest of him. "Huh."

It was kind of like turning momentarily African American without the features. He pondered briefly about how long it would last, but didn't worry too much.

"Pecari, eh?" The name meant absolutely zilch to him, but he decided it was probably the name of some famous magician. He followed Dana over towards the table where other brown younger students were conglomerating and was pulling the seat out when she told him to keep listening to the speech. He shrugged in response, turning the movement effortlessly into a practised bounce of his shoulder which aided in shifting the banjo case so he could pull it off and balance it against the table.

She was still talking at him. Pink hat? Right. Something about food. And she had friends.

"Bye," Dennis said, taking his seat. Belatedly he added, "Thanks." His parents had said something about remembering his manners while he was away. And then his Dad had muttered something that Dennis wasn't supposed to hear, which he did anyhow thanks to his fairly good hearing.

So... speech. He glanced around at the other new Pecaris, shifted his case a little closer to get it away from one exuberant new housemate. His attention shifted towards the staff table - Pink hat. Right. That was worked out now - and the Headmaster who was nattering on about Prefects. Dennis listened for half a minute before he got bored and pulled his case closer, flicking open the fastenings so he could make certain his instrument had survived the trip - and the entrance into the bizarre new place where electricity suddenly didn't work, not that it ran on electicity - unscathed.

It looked fine, and he gently ran his fingers over the strings - not strongly enough to elicit any sound from them at first, and then softly, softly. He flicked a fingernail at one string, and an absent smile had just started to form as a sheet of parchment flew into him. He sat up straight in his seat, blinking and wondering what had happened before he noticed the parchment now perched on top of his banjo.

Music.

Okay, maybe this school wouldn't be a complete washout he decided, completely on the evidence now presented to him. He took a moment to glance over the sheetmusic. It seemed straightforward enough. He made a couple of minor edits in his head, and cocked his ear as music started to play. After a couple of nods of his head, to get himself in line with the rhythm he joined in, picking the notes simply at first as he got the hang of the melody before speeding things up to a more normal note rate and adding a couple of simple flourishes of his own.

Yep, maybe this place had some potential after all.

Maybe.
39 Dennis Make good your escape ;) 0 Dennis 0 5