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


Mellie Goodwin

June 06, 2011 9:18 AM
Mellie Goodwin knew a lot of things. She knew that she lived in the most awesome neighborhood ever to exist, and that her cousin Alison was a goddess among witches. She knew that Russell Layne was the cutest male specimen to walk the earth, or at least the aforementioned awesome neighborhood. And she knew that coming to Sonora Academy was going to be one of the coolest things ever.

Deep down, she was nervous. She’d been away from her parents before, it was one of those things that just happened when her mom was with the Magical Law Enforcement Squad and her dad was an Obliviator, but not away from everyone she knew except a couple of other kids. There had always been a comforting grid of familiar adults there to look at and assure herself that things were going the way they were supposed to and were going to continue to do so. Now, though, there just…weren’t. Everything was huge and unfamiliar; when she saw Alison sitting at one of the tables and talking to someone, for a moment, Mellie wasn’t sure who she was.

Which was craziness. It was school. People went there, and most of them seemed to make it out alive. Mel herself hadn’t always expected to come, but Alison had been here three years already, so she’d had plenty of time to get used to the idea. She’d been legitimately excited, all the way through, just a few hours ago. She just needed to, as her dad would say, get her head on straight, that was all, maybe find a professor who looked nice to assure herself that the adults would turn out to be all right. One lady she saw, just in a quick glance, looked nice; Mellie knew it was just her imagination, but she even looked a little familiar for some reason.

A lady with pretty black hair and bright blue eyes Mellie would have killed to have instead of her own plain looks handed all the first years a cup of potion, which Mellie decided to approach the way she did medicine, by pinching her nose and swallowing fast without waiting to see if it actually tasted bad. Her skin began to darken almost at once, stopping at what she was going to bet was the ‘brown’ color the headmaster had mentioned as meaning she was in Pecari. Since all the students in the hall weren’t brightly colored, she had to assume it was going to wear off in a while, so she was okay with that. A little unsure, despite exchanging smiles with her, what she thought of being in her cousin’s House, but okay. She went to sit down with the other first years.

Most of the things that the headmaster was saying didn’t mean much to her. She didn’t know who Daniel Nash and Charlotte Abbott were, Nina Brockert was the prefect, but Mellie wasn’t sure which of the four girls going up front she was, and the staff changes weren’t changes for her, since whoever had held all those positions before had been before her time. She clapped for them all, though, sure she’d work out who they were and like them eventually, and feel bad then if she didn’t clap now. The idea of a ball also tickled her, though she though there was something a little strange about how the headmaster smiled after he mentioned dressing up like it was the fifteen hundreds.

All this was driven out of her mind, though, by the arrival of a school song. They had a school song. How cool was that? She couldn’t read music at all, so what she sang was a little out of step with what she was probably supposed to be singing, but, most of her enthusiasm back, she was sure she’d have the tune by next year.

The invitation to eat made her think of something, and she dug into some dishes she didn’t recognize. At home, she was always told not to do that, but here, she could try all she wanted. First, though, she guessed she should greet some other new people. “Hiya,” she said, smiling widely. “I’m Mellie. This is cool, isn’t it?”
16 Mellie Goodwin This is going to be awesome! 206 Mellie Goodwin 0 5


Sullivan Quincy

June 06, 2011 10:06 AM
Sullivan Quincy was dressed in green wizard robes, and had been since he woke up this morning. The matching green conical hat (Simon said it wasn't a required part of the uniform, but if Sully was doing this wizard thing, he was going to do this wizard thing right) didn't go on until after lunch but by the time the Sonora Covered wagon stopped in at the Las Vegas magical transportation center (which Simon was nice enough to show them how to find) he'd been wearing it for a couple of hours.

There had been some looks as they left the apartment building, of course, but they probably weren't as long, frequent, or curious as they might have been anywhere but Vegas. He guessed people were probably figuring he was trying out for a show somewhere, especially the ones who already knew Mom was a dancer. Those barely even blinked at him. They'd seen Mom wearing much stranger things than a set of robes and a weird hat.

They got to the transport station, Sully got on the wagon, and the flight was amazing. There were some older kids from California on the wagon - including Simon's cousin, of all people - and he was able to ask Jose a bunch of questions he wasn't quite comfortable asking Simon in front of Mom.

Stuff like 'Am I going to be the only person there with braces on my teeth?' - to which, the answer seemed to be 'yes' much to his dismay. Though, to be fair, there was some hope that the nurse might be able to much reduce the length of time he needed to wear them. That was the single most amazing thing he'd learned about magic so far.

He shifted that down to second place after he walked into Cascade Hall. Jose pointed him over to the other congregating first years. Sully did so, and soon found himself drinking a questionable beverage that shortly had him hallucinating that his skin was brown and the other first years had also turned various colors.

After a moment, the Headmaster clarified that it wasn't in his head and they really had changed colors. He was evidently a Pecari now. He went over to the table indicated for the brown people, and took a seat. He listened with most of an ear to the remainder of the Headmaster's speech, but mostly he was staring around at everything else, trying to take it all in.

When sheet music showed up directly in front of him without seeming to come from anywhere else, he jumped a little, and may have made a small sound of surprise, but he tried his best to cover it up by joining readily (if not very loudly or talentedly) into the school song.

Once that was over, he did manage not to jump again when the food appeared. He was, apparently and thankfully, only good for one good jump caused by impossible materializations directly in front of him. That seemed like it was going to be a major blessing in this place.

Filling his plate full of things that would not get horribly caught in his braces, he looked around at his new table and house mates. He was just about to say *So, magic. Pretty cool, huh?* when one of the other girls at the table more-or-less beat him to it.

"Way cool," he agreed. "I'm Sully." Though they weren't really dirty, he took his glasses off, just to make sure his eyes weren't playing tricks on him, and those walls really were made of waterfalls, cleaned them on his shirt, and then peered at the room around them again. The lack of tiny dirt specks only made the place look even more amazing than before. "So, I guessing the waterfalls are done by magic and not fountain pumps, right?"
1 Sullivan Quincy Does blond hair look okay with brown skin? 207 Sullivan Quincy 0 5


Mellie

June 06, 2011 11:12 AM
A blond boy in glasses, who had metal things on his teeth that would have slightly alarmed her if she hadn’t seen similar ones during field trips into the Muggle world, agreed with her that this was all cool. His name was Sully.

His parents definitely had originality points over Melanie with that one. It might, like the name she preferred, be short for something, but since she couldn’t think of anything off the top of her head that abbreviated to Sully and could think of at least four – Melanie, Melissa, Melisande, and Melinda – that could shorten to Mellie in about a second, it was still doing okay in the race. She didn’t mind having a kind of plain name most of the time, but hearing more interesting ones was still fun. Even if this one, in particular, made her think of something else she couldn’t quite remember, like whatever it was she was associating with the name Sully was right on the tip of her mental tongue and wouldn’t come off.

“I guess so,” Mellie said, not entirely sure what fountain pumps were, but inferring from context that it was how fountains could work. “I think anything with that much water out here – “ she gestured vaguely around the hall, hoping to encompass the grounds and what lay outside them as well – “is pretty much made of magic.” There were things, Mom in particular said, that just worked better with old-fashioned work, that was like cooking, and some that were best with a combination that favored old-fashioned work, that was like building houses, but they were in the middle of a desert. Mellie knew she wasn’t a genius, but she knew enough to know that part of the definition was that it didn’t rain, and that the water cycle normally didn’t work so good without rain.

That sort of thing was interesting to her. How things went together and worked out. She’d never been so good at accepting ‘it just is’ as an answer unless the subject in question was boring. Then, it wasn’t quite so hard.

“It’s really pretty, though,” she said. “It must have been a lot of work to make.” She knew some spells were much harder than others, though listening to her parents gripe had cemented the idea much more than her earlier education had. “I can’t wait until we start classes and learn spells.”
16 Mellie There are worse combinations. 206 Mellie 0 5


Sullivan Quincy

June 06, 2011 1:25 PM
Even as he asked the question, Sully realized the waterfalls were making no noise. As tall as they were, though should have been, if not deafening, then at least easily audible, but he couldn't even hear quiet splashing. Definitely magic involved there somehow. Mellie confirmed it, and Sully took her word for it even though she didn't sound entirely certain of her answer. He hadn't even thought about it being the middle of the dessert, though he really should have.

He nodded, also accepting Mellie's word that it was pretty. He wasn't really the world's best authority on pretty, but he'd definitely agree it was awesome. He was even less of an expert on how much work doing something like that by magic would be. Given that most of the things he'd seen Simon do were all just very simple tricks, he was more than willing to believe the silent waterfalls fell into the 'a lot of work' category.

"Me either," he agreed, equally as ready to get into classwork and spells of his own as she seemed to be. Not that he really liked classwork or anything, but in this particular case, he thought he could make an exception. These were classes about magic after all. "Are you a, a," he struggled, trying to remember the word, "what did Simon call it? A muffleborn, too? Someone who never saw magic before?"

He laughed a little, "I mean, I'd seen it, on a stage act, but I thought it was a trick, but it turns out Simon the Magnificent actually does do real magic. How freaky is that?"
1 Sullivan Quincy Yeah, I guess a red haired Crotalus is in trouble 207 Sullivan Quincy 0 5


Mellie Goodwin

June 07, 2011 1:24 PM
It had occurred to Mellie a second too late that she might look kind of like a loser for being excited about classes, of all things, but happily, that didn’t seem to be the case, since Sully was interested, too. She didn’t expect to be much good at them, because she was lousy at some of the theory stuff and wasn’t terribly scholastic in general, but the accumulated evidence of the years suggested she wasn’t bordering on Squib territory magically, so she expected that she would at least be able to learn the spells, and Mom had always said she could be better at schoolwork if she tried more anyway.

She had tried a few spells out with adults’ wands, and in the past few weeks with her wand, in secret, like pretty much everyone did, but it would be so much better to be able to do everything honest and out in the open. Mellie thought she was going to like that a lot better, and learn a lot better than she could sneaking around. Rules were one thing, she could be a little relaxed about the rules when she needed to be to fit in, but laws were another thing, at least when her parents were The Law and at least paid lip service to the underage magic restrictions and she didn’t know if they meant it or not. Plus, she just wasn’t that great with the whole secretive, cloak-and-dagger thing.

Simon the Magnificent wasn’t a name she knew, but she’d heard Dad complain about what sounded like the type. Mom wasn’t as worked up about that, being Muggleborn herself and so, she said, aware of how good Muggles were at ignoring stuff in a way that people who grew up around magic couldn’t understand, but Dad complained about that kind of thing a lot, because, he said, sooner or later, it always meant more forms he had to fill out in triplicate.

“I guess it would be kind of weird,” she agreed, thinking about what she knew about what Muggles called magic – stuff that looked a little like conjuring and Transfiguration, and some stuff that couldn’t work at all or would at least involve a team of trauma Healers to pull off and be really messy and serious instead of a stage thing, but was really just mirror tricks and stuff. Dad did love that kind of stuff, at least as long as it didn’t involve actual magic that eventually led to forms being filled out in triplicate. “But I’m half-blood. Mom’s Muggleborn, though.”

She nodded down the table a little. “That one with the dark hair, that’s my cousin Alison,” she said. “She’s Muggleborn, too – “ they guessed, anyway; Mom speculated that her brother-in-law must have had a pretty recent Squib ancestor or something, for Alison to have magic when the only other evidence of it in the family was Mom, but if her uncle did, he either didn’t know or wasn’t admitting it – “and a prefect.” But him being Muggleborn enough to still get the word wrong meant it would be kind of silly to ask if he had family here as well, so…. “Who’s Simon the Magnificent?” she asked.
16 Mellie Goodwin Red haired Aladrens have it bad, too, I think. 206 Mellie Goodwin 0 5


Sully

June 07, 2011 8:21 PM
"Oh," Sully said as Mellie corrected his assumption. Half-bloods, he guessed from context, were people with one non-magical and one magical parent. Or maybe it had to do with grandparents, since she clarified that her mom was muggleborn (that was the word Simon used!). So her mom was definitely magical, her mom's parents definitely weren't, and Sully wasn't sure if 'half' meant her dad was totally magical or totally not magical, but decided it probably didn't make a huge amount of difference either way: because of her Mom, Mellie knew some magic stuff and some not-magic stuff, and that had been mostly what he'd been trying to get at in the first place.

And she had a cousin here, which had to be pretty cool. There were tons of questions he'd have been asking Karen for years, if she'd started going here two years ago. But Karen wasn't special like him and two years ago she'd started middle school instead of Sonora. Sully hadn't really had any questions about that. He made a mental note of who Alison was, so if he had any questions later, he could maybe ask her. She was a prefect, after all. Now he knew who all three of those were since he'd watched which of the four new prefects named tonight had walked back to the Pecari table and was therefore Nina. And obviously, he'd already met Jose.

He almost jumped a little at how closely her next question followed his line of thought. Jose was only a very short leap away from Simon the Magnificent.

"He's a friend of my Mom's. They both perform at the same casino at home - I'm from Las Vegas. When I got my letter, the first thing Mom did with it was take it to a professional magician to check that it wasn't a scam or something." Sully shrugged, then grinned a little, knowing how the story ended. "He not only told us it wasn't a scam, but that he used to work here!"

"He help me get all my stuff and everything, and answered all the questions I could think of. Then, when the wagon came, he introduced me to his cousin, who was already on it." This time it was Sully who pointed down the table, to Jose. "That's him, with the two badges. Jose Hernandez. He's a prefect, too."
0 Sully Black haired Tepps might look like bumblebees 0 Sully 0 5


Mellie

June 09, 2011 6:09 PM
Mellie looked over to see the boy Sully was indicating and nodded when she picked up the two badges. That probably meant he outranked Alison, which made her feel a little better about having mentioned her cousin in the first place. She wasn’t totally sure, because she was used to only people she’d known practically if not literally since birth, but she was pretty sure that it was in bad taste to brag, and, as usual, it had only occurred to her how something could sound after she’d said it.

Still, it had worked out all right, and now she at least knew the name and appearance of someone else here who might be helpful if she got lost or something. She didn’t think she was likely to get lost, she thought she had an okay sense of direction, but it couldn’t hurt to be at least a little prepared. Not carrying-nutrition-bars-in-her-bag-against-the-maze prepared, that was a little crazy, but knowing-of-two-adult-approved-older-students prepared was fine, dandy, and a good idea.

“That was really nice of him,” she said. She didn’t know that a lot of her dad’s coworkers especially would take the time to give her directions to the toilet, never mind go through the hassle of school shopping and making introductions and stuff. Mom’s might, some of them, but they’d probably still stop short of the introductions. Maybe Sully knew his mom’s coworkers a lot better than she knew her parents’. She looked at him curiously, though, for another reason.

“What was it like?” she asked. “Finding out about magic, I mean.” Another thought occurred to her. She wasn’t too up on politics, it seemed like boring adult stuff to her, but she knew that blood stuff was kind of touchy for lots of people. Purebloods, mostly, but… “Is that rude to ask? I really didn’t mean to be. I grew up with it, both of my parents are magic, so I’ve just always wondered, you know, about that.”
16 Mellie Black haired Aladrens might look like walking bruises. 206 Mellie 0 5


Sully

June 10, 2011 11:27 PM
"Yeah," Sully agreed that Simon had been very nice to both him and his mom for all his help. Possibly even a little too nice. Possibly suspiciously nice. He'd had at least one store employee ask him directly if Simon was his dad. After that, he'd been watching for it, but the guy hadn't tried to kiss Mom when he walked them home, so it was probably just a false alarm and he really was just nice.

Asked about what learning magic was real was like, he just shrugged. "I don't know. We didn't really know what to think when we got the letter. I mean, stuff sometimes exploded for no reason around me, especially when I got mad, but that was just something that happened. Bad wiring in the House or something, we thought. Or like street lights that seem to only go out because you're walking under them. It seems like its related, but logic tells you it can't be, so it's gotta just be a freak chance."

"So anyway, the letter comes, and we have no idea what to make of it. Mom says she'll ask Simon, and he says it's real, and he does magic professionally, so we took his word for it - plus he gave us a demonstration - and then this other wizard shows up the next day and tries to explain it too, but by then we'd gotten most of the story out of Simon so when he offered to take us shopping we just said we already had someone to go with. He asked who, and mom said, like she was quoting something, 'Simon Tellerman of the California Pierces' - which is apparently some kind of big deal in the wizarding world I guess cuz the guy just kind of said 'Oh!' and said we were in good hands."

He frowned curiously. "What's a California Pierce? Are they like a wizard rock band or something?" He'd seen a guitar in Simon's dressing room the time they'd swung by there, and he was pretty sure Simon didn't play it for the Casino. And he hadn't really wanted to ask Simon himself or his cousin. He didn't want to look like some kind of celebrity hound or something.
0 Sully Blond Teppenpaws are monochromatic 0 Sully 0 5


Mellie Goodwin

June 16, 2011 12:23 AM
“Not exactly,” Mellie said when Sully asked her if the California Pierces were a rock band. “Er – as far as I know, anyway. I’m pretty sure it’s talking about something else.”

Where to begin with that, she wasn’t too sure. This was the kind of information she picked up on wireless soaps, not the kind of thing she used in her real life. It wasn’t terribly relevant to being Melanie Goodwin, a half-blood at best, on any day.

“You know how, like, everyone in the country’s from a state, right?” she tried, aware that this sounded like a really dumb way to begin. “Unless you’re from Puerto Rico or something, but let’s not go there. Okay…Purebloods, people whose families have been magic for a long time, sometimes some of their relatives move away, or get disowned – that’s being thrown out of your family, like, completely, I think you’re considered someone else and your old self is legally dead or something.” Mellie did not have a fine grasp of the legal technicalities associated with these things, nor did she want one. Her parents might get mad at her for something, but she couldn’t see them ever pretending she was dead.

“So they go to different states, so where you had – my last name’s Goodwin, we’d be the Illinois Goodwins if we were pureblood, but if I had a brother and he moved to Missouri and I’m not completely sure how this works, but eventually, they might be the Missouri Goodwins. But that would be if we were important enough for anyone to care. Ordinary people saying that…I’m pretty sure they’d just get laughed at.”

She twisted a piece of her hair around her finger. “All I know about these people, though, is what’s on the cover of tabloids, so I mostly only see the people who are doing weird things in my state. The Raines’, Gardiners, Smythes…I think there’s some Pierces in New England, and they all look alike or something, but…” She shrugged, a gesture she felt neatly summed up the situation they had at hand here. “Mom’s Muggleborn and Dad’s half-blood. We try not to see people who introduce themselves by state if we can help it.”
16 Mellie Goodwin As are brown-haired Pecaris. 206 Mellie Goodwin 0 5