Acting Headmistress Sadi Powell

October 14, 2011 9:40 AM
Considering the request for Sadi to step in as temporary Headmistress at Sonora while David Regal had been called away to a family emergency had been made at midterm, the former Ancient Runes professor had not expected to still be performing this temporary role by the year’s culmination. Yet, here she was, opening the Midsummer event. The Cascade Hall had been suitably altered for the occasion so it now no longer resembled itself: the walls were strewn with banners, streamers and tapestries. Along one side of the room were large oak tables, already decorated with candles and drapes, which would later bear a magnificent banquet of fresh meats and vegetables that might have been consumed around the time of Leith Clurican’s birth. The opposite side held a stage, where members of the most liberal branch of Pierces were ready to entertain with musical delights. The staff table had been replaced by a lower surface, covered in numerous re-filling goblets containing a variety of drinks, to which staff and students could help themselves throughout the evening. While the majority of the rest of the room was empty for dancing, there were several scattered chairs round the outskirts, clustered together in groups of two or three for conversation, and each chair had been dutifully transfigured to mimic an ornate medieval throne.

Even Sadi herself had made a transformation on a much smaller scale. While she usually wore simple robes in muted tones and her grayed hair was pulled neatly into a bun, her attire this evening consisted of earthy green robes that would have been in fashion five hundred years previously, and the bun was twisted a little more elegantly, sitting higher on her head; she had eventually decided against the traditional pointed hat. She had encouraged other faculty members to dress in appropriate costume, too, and hoped many of the students would take advantage of the opportunity. From her vantage point on the stage – keeping as best she could out of the way of the musicians – Sadi was able to survey all those who came into the hall. She watched people gather, some excited, some unsure of what to do with themselves, and even a few who looked as though they’d rather be somewhere else. As six o’clock approached, the Hall began to look nicely full, and so Sadi signalled to the Pierces that she was ready before casting the Sonorus charm.

“Good evening,” Sadi’s voice was magnified to be heard over chatter, the waterfalls, and the rustling of many gowns. “Thank you all for attending the Midsummer Ball this evening. Music will begin shortly, and the banquet will be served at eight. First, I have a couple of announcements to make.” It seemed the way that whenever an event occurred there were always announcements to be made first. “I’d like to begin by congratulating the current seventh year students on making it to their final year, and wish them all the best for the future.” From all accounts they’d been a very pleasant yeargroup on the whole, causing very little trouble other than asking incessant and pedantic questions. “Hopefully our current sixth years will follow their good example, led, of course, by their Head Boy and Head Girl.” The prefects would not be announced until the Opening Feast, but it was tradition to announce the most senior positions at the end of the year. “Congratulations to Jose Hernandez of Pecari, and Marissa Stephenson of Crotalus, who can collect their badges at the start of next term.” She led a short round of applause for the students who had been amongst those nominated by the faculty, but voted in by their fellow students.

“It is not only our seventh year students who will be leaving Sonora, but we’re also saying farewell to Medic Rocamboli, and to Professor McKindy, who will both be moving on to other exciting opportunities.” From a professional perspective, Sadi considered that this left a vacant position for Head of Pecari House, but she also experienced Aaron’s resignation on a personal level; next term would mark the first time in over a decade that neither of them was employed at Sonora. “We wish them all the best.” There was another short smattering of applause before Sadi resumed speaking for the last time. “Finally, I’m sure you’ll all join me in thanking everyone who has made this evening possible. So as the prefects lead the opening dance, let’s show our appreciation for the faculty, and for our guests from California.” One final round of applause, and Sadi cancelled the charm that amplified her voice, and vacated the stage as music began to play.

(OOC: As students are still posting in some classes the House points for this year have not yet been totalled, so look out for an OOC notice before the start of the new term to see which House has won this year.)
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Paul Bennett

October 22, 2011 7:30 PM
Sometimes, Paul thought meditatively, sisters could be a real inconvenience. He loved Lize, but she could make him even sorrier than he usually was to be a Crotalus, and sometimes even slightly embarrassed to be a Bennett. Did she have to wear that much red? It was like she was going out of her way to make a spectacle, to draw way more attention to herself than was smart or necessary. The large amount of thread of silver embroidery he could have passed over as just one of those extravagances she liked, like getting her nails done every week and her hair washed by someone else for some reason and even more often than usual now that she got to go to parties, but her dress was the single reddest object he had ever laid eyes on, as if to scream her House out at the world.

At least it wasn’t all about That Female. She had always liked red, and Mother had always not liked to let her wear it, so it made sense that when she found a way to wear it, she would go a little overboard. The rivalry between his mother and sister was another thing Eliza just wasn’t sensible about. Yeah, Paul found her irritating, too, but what was the point? It was just making trouble for herself that she didn’t have to, when Eliza had more than enough here that she – probably – hadn’t been able to help. He suspected enough of it was about wanting to make some kind of point against That Female, though, to be almost ashamed to be wearing robes which included, along with a good bit of fabric in a warm shade of brown, a lot of fabric in a much more subdued shade of red. At least his embroidery – much more subdued than his sister’s, really just a few unpretentious vertical lines here and there – was in gold.

That, he thought, that one detail, was why he was able to appreciate that they were very fine robes even past the superficial resemblance to his sister’s color scheme. If they had been scaled up to fit his father, they would have been very grand, and Paul would have thoroughly approved. As it was, he approved, but occasionally felt…odd. As though they didn’t quite fit, despite being tailored to him, and he was actually wandering around in his father’s clothes, the way Gemma liked to get into Mother’s and Eliza’s closets and do that. He was just too short for robes like this. He needed another five years or so to grow into them.

That, though, was definitely the kind of thought he was to keep to himself and not tell Miss Sally Manger about, so he just pretended to be taller as, hiding exasperation with being a first year and wending through the mad crowd here and irritation with Linus for grabbing Brianna and with himself for not asking Attoria instead of going outside of Crotalus behind a slight smile, he finally found Sally and bowed to her.

“Good evening, Miss Manger,” he said smoothly. He and Eliza had practiced this so often at home that it didn’t feel strange or unnatural at all for him to say it, the way it might have. These formalities were just part of him, like staying out of trouble whenever it was remotely possible and noticing clothes and the color of his eyes. “How are you this evening?” The compliment stage, the way he had learned it, came just slightly later, after the initial exchange of polite greetings. This wasn’t quite a party, but it was close enough.
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