Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

March 23, 2012 11:59 PM
The summer had brought about her quick nuptials with Jeffrey and the complete adoption to one another’s children. They were officially a family. Kiva regretted having waited so long to have a relationship with him, but she would never regret the quick engagement and wedding. It had been all so perfect. Of course, the wedding had been small. They had invited the other mothers of their play group, the one in which they had first met in, and a couple people from their places of work. Kiva had invited some of her zoologist friends as well as John Fawcett (Kiva felt they had a sort of kinship being that he began at Sonora as her sub and then took over all of her responsibilities when she left entirely) and Amelia, who was her Deputy and helped her through all the school events. It was small and simple and Kiva would have been just as happy with no wedding at all, but she was glad to have celebrated with everyone. Of course, now it was back to work.

When the first years were brought in, Kiva stood up and charmed herself to be heard over the crowd. She waited a few minutes for the returning students to settle down before she finally greeted the students. “First and foremost, I want to welcome all of our newest students to Sonora Academy and all of our returning students a welcome back. I do hope your summers were full of fun adventures, but I am happy to find that you have all returned to the school intact.” Kiva was only joking with them really. She knew that students both loved and hated returning to school. They loved it because they were able to see their friends again. They hated it because it meant that they had to do work again. She couldn’t really blame them.

“For those who do not know me, I am Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau, but feel free to call me Professor K. Our first priority for the moment is to have the first years sorted.” Kiva turned her hazel eyes to the newest group of students. “In order for this to be done, I need for each of you to step up one at a time to Coach Pierce and take a sip from the potion she will offer to you.” Kiva explained, nodded to Amelia to indicate who Coach Pierce was. “The potion is harmless. Once you have sipped it, your skin will turn into the color of the house you will be spending the next seven years in. Please note that this change is only temporary.” She didn’t want them being too scared to taste the potion. She could remember her taste and having been terrified she would have stayed that color. “Yellow is for Teppenpaws, blue is for Aladren, red is for Crotalus, and brown is for Pecari. Please, if you could form a line and begin…” She gestured for the first student to step up.

Once the sorting had ended, Kiva regained the students’ attention. “I first have a few announcements to make. First and foremost, I would like to introduce our new staff members. Professor Callaghan is our Substitute Professor, Professor Reddington is our new Muggle Studies Professor, and Professor O’Rourke, who is our new Astronomy Professor. Please show them how wonderful our school is and give them a warm welcome.” Kiva clapped after introducing each of them. She hasn’t seemed to rid Sonora of the curse of the constant stream of professors. Already the two members she gained last year have left for various reasons.

“I would like to have Rachel Bauer and Raines Bradley to please come up here and accept your new Head Boy and Head Girl badges.” Kiva called out and when both students approached, she grinned and handed each their appropriate badges. “Congratulations to you both.” She whispered to them before having them return to their seats. “I would also like to have Eliza Bennett, Kate Bauer, James Owen, and Sara Raines please come up here for a moment.” Kiva waited for the four to be standing at her side before continuing. “Everyone, I would like you to meet your newest Prefects. Congratulations to you four, please take your new badges.” Kiva gestured for the four to return to their seats. “This year’s Midsummer Event will be the School Concert. As the year continues, you will receive more information on the event and any suggestions you would like to make, please feel free to tell me or any other staff member.

“In honor of tradition, please refer to your music sheets as we begin the School Song.” Sheets of music appeared in front of the students. “Let’s begin.”

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 desert blooms.


Once the song ended, the food appeared before them. A feast of great magnum. “Please enjoy the rest of your evening. When it is time to head back to your Houses, your Head of House will call for your attention and bring you to your destinations. That is all.” Kiva concluded and then took her seat at the staff table.

OOC: Welcome First years! Please do not post on any other board until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech. Have fun at the feast and remember the site rules. Happy posting everyone!
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0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Welcome Students! Opening Feast. 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Fae Sinclair

March 24, 2012 1:06 AM
After this summer, Fae had grown accustomed to the idea of her siblings impending nuptials. She wasn’t sure where her acceptance of said things had come from or why it really mattered, but the fact still remained that she wasn’t so angry anymore over it. She had to admit that her sister was really happy about the whole affair. As jealous as Fae might be towards her sister in every way imaginable, she could acknowledge the part of her that was envious of her sister’s love for her betrothed. Victor even seemed to have similar feelings for her sister and only hoped that they continued along this path. Fae wasn’t dumb, she knew that if she were to get betrothed, there may not be any love and she could only hope to tolerate whoever he might end up being.

As for Jaiden… well, considering he hadn’t even known he was getting betrothed, he was certainly taking it well. And, if he was taking it well, what right did she have to be so crabby about it? None, that’s what. So, Fae had fought very hard with herself over the summer to come out of this with a better attitude. It helped that Shelby had wanted to start on some wedding stuff considering they would both be heading off to school, which left very little time during their holidays to get it done. Because of that, Fae was able to spend time with her sister and work with her on planning the wedding. It was only the small stuff because Shelby wanted to work with Victor on some things so that he’s happy with the wedding too. Even so, Fae was there when Shelby tried on wedding dresses and she was able to try out some bridesmaid dresses. When it was all said and done, they had even ventured out with their mother and picked raspberries like they used to do when they were young.

Now a Fourth year, Fae walked into the hall feeling far better than she had in a while. Her blonde hair was done in soft curls that Shelby told her would get her noticed. Her eyes were lightly lined in black, her lips had gloss over them, and her cheeks lightly dusted with blush. These were only small cosmetic changes, but her mother and sister both said that they were just enough to bring out her best features and get people to notice her without realizing why. Fae felt a little silly for wearing the makeup, but she wasn’t fussing. There was no coverup or anything nearly heavy enough to cause her any mind. Some gloss and eye liner wasn’t going to make her look like a clown. Although she had sworn off heels while in class, she wore them tonight for the feast and they matched perfectly to her light blue floral just about the knee dress. She wasn’t quite confident enough to wear mid-thigh length dress like her sister wanted, but Fae thought she looked pretty nice.

Taking a moment to see if she could find Arnold in the crowd, but giving up relatively quickly since even heels did not help her height any, Fae wandered over to the Crotalus table to enjoy the first feast back at Sonora. Fae watched as the new First years were sorted, amused by some of the looks they wore on their faces. She clapped for the new Prefects (this would be more important for her next year since there was a chance she would be one of those names being called) and then politely sang quietly when the school song was brought out. This was a normal routine, so Fae didn’t really pay all too much attention to any of it and only really focused once the food came out.

Sticking to her usual meal of salmon and salad, Fae looked up and leaned closer to her friend, “Did you have a good summer?”
6 Fae Sinclair Sitting amongst friends. 194 Fae Sinclair 0 5


Topher Calhoun

March 24, 2012 11:58 AM

Usually, Crotalus and Pecari were the big Houses while Aladren and Teppenpaw were the smaller ones, but Topher, not too much to his surprise, had ended up in an unusual year. In his year, there were tons of Aladrens and Teppenpaws, all of whom were a little unusual just in their own rights, and only four Crotali. An all-star lineup, admittedly, but a small one: just him, Fae, Alice, and Phoenix.  

On that first night, they had all been sitting together, a group small enough that they all shared one conversation, and it had turned into a kind of pattern. During the rest of the year, they might mix it up some, he and Fae in particular had different sets of friends in Aladren and Pecari, but at the Opening Feast, the four-member class of Crotalus, now the fourth year Crotali, seemed to sit together. Topher, then, found his seat, one with Fae, in accordance with the idea that they would all sit together again.


Only then did he really look at Fae, and for a moment it occurred to him to be very impressed by what he saw, but then Crotalus sensibility kicked in and kicked in hard in his head. Her friend in Pecari wasn’t much to worry about, but her friends in Aladren were the Carey twins, and he would be as surprised to find out that none of the three of them were thinking that purebloods came to school to meet other purebloods and them marry them after it as he would to hear that the revelation of his biological father’s identity would get him accepted into the society of, well, just about all Fae’s other friends. She might slap him herself if she knew he liked what he saw in a way he hadn’t thought too much about before; he knew sometimes that he was a little overly conscious about class, so it was hard to be sure how to interpret her to guess about what she thought of him beyond Crotalus unity. So, with a little effort and a little regret, he flushed slightly at the weirdness of the stuff he had almost been thinking and redirected his attention to the newly-renamed Headmistress.  

He clapped for the prefects, noting that one of them was Fae’s friend Sara and that whoever was responsible for appointments in his House was either crazy or had a really sick sense of humor to give both Renée Errant and Eliza Bennett a badge this year, sang the school song a little less enthusiastically than he might have in the self-conscious awareness that he might sound like an idiot, and then looked over as Fae leaned closer to ask about his summer.


He lied without thought or so much as a sliver of remorse. “Pretty boring,” he said with what he hoped was a casual grin. “Mom and Dad were Mom and Dad, the neighborhood was still the neighborhood.” Except that it wasn’t, because Caroline Gardiner had committed the unpardonable sin of infiltrating his home territory, but he had never mentioned Caroline to his friends at school and didn’t feel like starting now. Why did she have to look so damn normal? And so much, as much as he’d freaked out and tried to deny it when Mom first brought the subject up, like him? He decided it was okay to change the subject up.  “How was yours? Everybody’s engagements going okay?” He remembered that last year, she’d been kind of upset about her sister being maneuvered into that plunge, but she didn’t look remotely upset about anything this year.
0 Topher Calhoun I'll call that a good way to start a new year. 192 Topher Calhoun 0 5


Fae

March 24, 2012 9:37 PM
Even though Fae would say to anyone that Topher was a friend, there was a part of her that refused to acknowledge the reason why her heart beat a little faster when he looked at her or that she felt the need to straighten her posture and force her hand to stay down instead of fuss with her hair while he spoke. That part she was still struggling with. Fae needed to talk to someone about it. She had tried Shelby and her sister just giggled and told her to look pretty, but Fae didn’t know how to ‘look pretty’ and found the advice useless. Of course Fae was aware that her reactions were because she found Topher to be cute. These feelings had started last year, but she had refused to think of them, but now they were back again and sitting next to him wasn’t helping her.

Maybe she ought to talk to Sara about it. She needed to congratulate her as it was for being named Prefect and Sara seemed to have an understanding of things in a way that Alice didn’t. Sara was… human. And so, if Fae brought up her confusion about Arnold (like, why she was always so happy around him even though he didn’t necessarily make her heart race quite the way Topher did) and about Topher and how that could be problematic that could be. Not to say that she couldn’t speak with Alice about it and most likely would, but Alice was so to the point with things that Fae often felt stupid for having felt anything at all. Fae needed someone to gossip with and talk things out thoroughly, not someone who didn’t understand why it mattered to begin with.

But that was neither here nor there. She would worry about it later. For now, she had to focus only on the words Topher was saying and on nothing else. She wasn’t sure if his lack of detail was because there was no detail to give and thus honestly had a boring summer, or if he left things out because he didn’t find them necessary to discuss with her, but she was okay with that. If his summer was really so dull, she felt a little sorry for him. “Oh, they are going well, I think.” Fae said after a moment’s contemplation. “Shelby seems happy enough, at least. Victor – Mr. Stratford?” Fae wasn’t sure on the correct way of addressing her soon to be brother-in-law with others. “Seems smitten with her, but that’s hardly surprising considering my sister. She is quite lovely to look at and to be around.” Fae added to Topher since he had never met her before.

“I spent most of summer helping her plan her wedding. It was nice, actually. Well, I mean, not so much the planning part because that can be really exhausting, but spending time with her and Mother was nice.” Fae commented lightly, looking pleased. “Jaiden seems alright with his betrothal. A bit of a surprise, but he went to Eleanor’s party, so I can’t say he’s terribly upset by it. She seems like a lovely woman.” Fae took a small bite of her fish, enjoying the taste despite having had it so many times before.

“Topher, is your family betrothing you as well or are you safe from all of that?” Fae was curious to know how Topher’s family worked. If it was anything like their own or something less traditional as the Purebloods like to call it. She has never really had a chance to ask anyone before and often wondered what other lives were like.
0 Fae I like to believe that as well. 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

March 24, 2012 11:46 PM
Topher wished he had advice to offer when Fae stumbled over what to call her sister’s fiancé, but he had no idea how that kind of thing worked even among his own kind of people and so could only shrug, sympathizing with her confusion but not being able to do anything to alleviate it. He didn’t think it really mattered, anyway; it wasn’t like he was in any position to get upset about someone using the improper form of address unless they tried to muddle up his way too complicated legal name. And even then, he could really just correct them and not get upset about it until someone just wouldn’t let it drop.


“Well, so are you,” he said automatically when Fae theorized that Shelby’s future husband might like her because she was pretty and pleasant to be around. After he said it, he caught the part where she had mentioned that Victor Stratford was smitten with Shelby because of those qualities, but he decided to assume – or maybe just hope – that she would take the compliment the way he had meant it, rather than the way it had sort of come out. It was true, anyway; he’d noticed even before he really noticed earlier that Fae was pretty, and the number of people she got along with would seem to mean that he wasn’t the only person who thought she was pleasant to be around.  

Fae’s summer had been spent planning a wedding, being with her sister and mother. He had seen his mother enthuse over other women’s weddings before, so he guessed it was a girl thing and something he would never understand, but it was good for them, anyway. “That’s cool,” he said when she said her future sister-in-law seemed lovely and that her brother was getting used to her now. He didn’t think he’d ever be in a position to appreciate it, but he would guess that any time it was a surprise to find out you were getting married was something that had a good chance of not working out well. If it did, then that was just great luck on everyone’s part.


He tried not to laugh when Fae asked if his parents were going to arrange him a marriage, too, but didn’t completely succeed. “Sorry,” he said. “I just – never even thought of that before.” He honestly hadn’t. He knew of the concept, he lived in Illinois, where there were enough magical families of note that a mother who liked the society pages meant he just knew these things, but it had never occurred to him as anything that might affect him personally. “’Safe from all that’s’ a good way to put it,” he explained. “My parents aren’t that type, that’s not the kind of thing they do. They didn’t even get married until I was nearly six.”  

And that was something he had never mentioned to her before, and he was Crotalus enough to think of it as something that looked bad. He loved his mother, and he would take his Beater’s bat to anyone who said anything about her, but he knew the way he had come to exist was not something that looked good. He didn’t even know why he’d admitted it, really – unless it was just, after the summer, being tired of all of it. He didn’t know. He was just waiting to see how she took it.
0 Topher This is going to be the best year ever 0 Topher 0 5


Fae

March 25, 2012 12:55 AM
Fae had to repress a sigh when Topher shrugged. There were many things that Fae didn’t like when it came to the Pureblood rules, but one of them was proper ways of introductions and names. Victor was Victor to her because that was how Shelby referred to him as. He was not Mr. Stratford. But, by society’s rule, since she was not so informal with him, she ought to be calling him by his title. And even though Fae found it ridiculous, if she didn’t follow these rules, someone might think less of the family. At least Topher didn’t seem to be judging her on her failed attempt at trying.

His compliment threw her for a moment and she found herself staring at him. She wasn’t sure if that was an actual compliment because he believed it or if he simply said it to be nice. She found that most people gave compliments when they felt the other was putting themselves down. Fae might have done so without thinking. She usually always put Shelby on a pedestal that she could never live up to. But that had not been her intentions this time. Shelby was pretty and people did love her. Fae was awkward and as her Great Grandfather likes to remind her parents, she was also unnecessary. Knowing that her face was warm, which meant she was blushing, Fae looked away and tried not to seem too pleased by it because that wasn’t always so ladylike, “Thank you.” She said quietly, looking at her food for a moment. She rarely received compliments from people outside of her immediate family and wasn’t quite sure how to respond to them. Her mother said to compliment people back, but the only one she could think of was ‘you too’ and that didn’t seem like it would help the situation.

Fae gave him a smile, knowing that the wedding talk meant absolutely nothing to him. Shopping seemed to be completely a girl thing to do and even though Fae had enjoyed the dress part, she could understand why a boy wouldn’t care either way for it, but he had asked about her summer and that was what she had done. “It is.” She agreed when it came to Eleanor. When Jaiden was suddenly betrothed, they were worried about the fiancé. But, as it turned out, she was rather nice and Jaiden seemed relatively okay with it all.

Perhaps having asked him about betrothal possibility had been a mistake if the laugh was any indication, but she honestly hadn’t known. She had no idea what other families did. What Muggles did or Muggleborns, or Halfbloods, or less acceptable Purebloods. These were not things that were discussed around her. All she knew was that there would come a day when she would be taken to a male. For a long time she had assumed all families worked this way. Fae was looking at him when he was speaking and it took a moment for his last comment to catch up to her. “Really?” She asked, perplexed by the idea of not being married but having children. It happened, obviously. She heard of scandals with various prominent Purebloods who had children from affairs, but not of two people who clearly wanted to be together and stayed together for six years with a child but with no marriage.

“I don’t know if it’s polite to say that not being a part of it makes you lucky, but sometimes I wish my Great Grandfather would forget about me. He already finds me useless. I haven’t been good enough for his tastes. But, he still wants a connection and now I’m of age for a betrothal to be formed.” Fae was no longer hungry and pushed her plate away from her. She lost herself in her thoughts for a moment, thinking of being connected to a person and then deciding that she didn’t want to think of it anymore. “Why did it take them so long to be married?” She asked him, her blue eyes looking back up at him, giving him her full attention. “I mean, I’m assuming since betrothals don’t exist for you, marriage is then something done voluntarily, why wait?”
0 Fae At the very least, better than next year. 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

March 25, 2012 5:31 PM
Fae was blushing, but what that meant, Topher had no idea. The only thing he knew for sure about girls was that he knew nothing, really, about girls, despite living with so many of them all year. He’d noticed that they seemed to get a little stranger every year, or at least that he seemed to have less of an idea what they thought and why they thought it, but he didn’t know if that was because of them or because of him. He just knew that she looked pretty while turning red as well as she did when she looked normal and that at least the comment didn’t seem to have been scene-causingly out of line, which was good.


Still, he was glad when they moved on to safer topics of conversation, right until he went from just opening his mouth and inserting his foot to crashing the conversation into a cement wall, or at least thinking he might have.  

Topher wasn’t ashamed of his family. He loved his parents, and he didn’t really care how they’d gotten to be his parents. Sometimes, though he’d deny thinking it with a vengeance if anyone ever asked because it was ridiculously sappy and girly, he thought he might even like his dad more because of how things were, because he had, so to speak, walked into the situation of having a kid with his eyes wide open, having no illusions about six-year-olds that might make him think they were never complete brats. But he knew how Crotali thought about people like them, how people in general in the wizarding world could be kind of weird about the adoption thing, and while he hadn’t hidden it all from his school friends, neither had he ever gone out of his way to mention it, so as far as Fae knew, his parents were just his parents, like hers – an impression she had strongly enough to think that they might even be in an arranged marriage, like her parents presumably were.

For a moment, he was tempted to answer her question about why his parents hadn’t gotten married for so long with “Hippies,” but he didn’t think about it long. It would be practically an insult to his mom and his dad to say something like that, not least because he just couldn’t, no matter how hard he tried, picture Dad that way. The picture was wrong enough that he had to squint to even hold it together for a second. So instead, he said, as matter-of-factly as he could, “I’m half-adopted. Mom and Dad started dating when I was four, but they didn’t get married for a while because Mom wanted to be sure Dad was really up for the whole kid thing. And then they didn’t change my name ‘til I was seven, but Dad’s still around, so I guess he was okay with it all.”

Thankfully. Though he could remember bits and pieces of when his dad hadn’t been around, Topher couldn’t remember what it had been like, and he didn’t really want to. He was sure things wouldn’t have been as good as they were if Grace Proctor hadn’t gotten distracted and temporarily lost her left foot on Michael Calhoun’s shift at the Magical Accidents and Catastrophes office that May day all those years ago.
0 Topher Those CATS might be kind of a bummer, yeah 0 Topher 0 5


Fae

March 25, 2012 9:23 PM
Fae felt that maybe all this talk about betrothals and marriages had been a bad idea. It began as something nice and simple with Topher asking after her siblings, but she had forced the ugly hand of the Pureblood ways and now things may be suddenly more awkward than they needed to be. Fae was going to be betrothed sooner or later, that was a fact that she could not get away from unless she wanted to be disowned. Topher was from a different sort of family where they had the freedom to love whoever they wanted and to marry them whenever they chose too.

She would never really understand why forced marriages still had to happen. The bloods of the magical were mixing daily now, no matter how much people didn’t want it to happen. If it didn’t happen than the magical race would die out. Sooner or later, connections would intertwine and there would be no one left to betroth that wasn’t already related to everyone else. She knew, of course, that such a thing wouldn’t happen in her lifetime or probably the few lifetimes that happened after, but it would happen if these rules still remained in place.

Fae listened intently as Topher explained his family life to her. She had never really thought about his father being a step-father. It made sense though, of course, now that she thought about it. How lucky though, he must be, because he knows where his father’s heart truly lays within their relationship. The man walked into the lives of a single mother and chose to stay in it. That was love. A love for both a mother and a son. Not that Fae questioned her father’s love for her or her siblings. Her father would bend over backwards to make sure that she and her siblings were as happy as they could be. Her mother too. Their love was a love from birth. A love that came naturally between parents and a child. But Topher’s step-father didn’t have to have that love for him. But he did anyway. Topher knew for sure that his step-father loved his mother and loved him too. It must be a nice feeling to have.

“Your father sounds like a very nice man.” She commented after Topher had finished explaining things to her. She could have chosen a different word from ‘nice’, but she wasn’t sure how else to say it. “It takes quite a bit of love for someone to enter into a family so willingly and without hesitation.” Fae smiled and placed a hand on his arm for reasons she could not explain. “The way you talk about him, I would have never known.”
0 Fae CATS and weddings 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

March 26, 2012 12:36 AM
Knots of tension in Topher’s shoulders and chest that he hadn’t even really noticed were there before relaxed when Fae’s comment about his somewhat less than conventional situation at home was to say that his dad sounded like a nice guy. He didn’t even know why it mattered to him, honestly – both his parents had always said it shouldn’t matter what anyone thought about anything about him, including but not limited to them – but he didn’t want people looking down on him and his family, and it just made him mad when people implied, or even outright brought up, anything about his ‘real’ father. He could make an educated guess, based on how he and Caroline honestly could pass for siblings, but he didn’t even really know what Daniel Gardiner looked like.


“Eh, you say that because you haven’t seen him and Mom gang up on me about not living up to my potential,” he said, automatically trying to lighten the mood with a joke. “Nah, Dad is, he’s great.” He stopped there, before his mouth wandered into much more emotional territory than he really wanted it to. He was a Crotalus Beater, for Merlin’s sake. He had to keep up at least a little bit of an image. 

Still, though, he thought she was telling the truth. Mom had, he knew, told his dad who Topher’s biological father was; a Canadian politician was, admittedly, easier to live with than one closer to home would have been, but there was still the fact that rich purebloods were probably a worldwide brotherhood, at least in the face of little people like him and his family. Marrying Grace anyway had essentially been Michael Calhoun, American nobody, telling the system that he didn’t care if it wanted to cause him problems. Topher didn’t know, in the same position, if he’d have the guts to do it. He had learned to work in the system, pretty much, and even usually be okay with it on an individual basis. His dad had not only had to make his peace with Mom’s past, but also with having a potentially very tenuous and maybe even bad personal relationship with the whole thing.

It made him redden again for a second, but Topher found he kind of liked her hand on his arm. “I never really thought about it any other way,” he said. “He’s just Dad. I don’t remember another one.” He decided to change the subject. “So,” he said, “anything besides wedding stuff happen in your summer? Are your parents already going postal about CATS? Mom spent half the summer talking about how I’ve got to buckle down and work hard, two years isn’t nearly as long as I think it is, yadda yadda yadda.” He grinned. “You’d never think she flunked her Potions one, but I found the evidence going through some old boxes one time.”
0 Topher Is there anything else we should look out for? 0 Topher 0 5


Phoenix Lucore

March 29, 2012 9:15 PM
Another year older. Another year weirder. Over the summer, he had begun to notice the female population much to his displeasure. Some would probably think he was crazy to feel this way, but then most people didn’t know what it was like to be veela. He could probably have nearly any girl he picked, but that was the problem. He would have picked her, but did she really want him too? They might act like they liked him, but that didn’t mean they actually did. It had something to do with his hormones. Additional ones were emitted from veelas that seemed to make them irresistible. He hated it. He wanted to be like a normal teenager and be able to like a girl and have her either like him or not. Unfortunately, it seemed the only girl he would ever be able to know truly liked him would have to be part veela as well. Given the size of the population, it seemed a slim chance, which was just sad.

Trying not to be distracted by his interest in the pretty girls that were at his table since they would never really like him anyhow, he turned his attention to the Headmistress. The sorting was only mildly of interest since he was not a prefect and would never be one in addition to the fact that he would probably never have a class with the first years. It was continued with the same thing as last year. He clapped for the prefects and the Heads. During which his stomach gave a plaintive rumble. Yet, there was still the song to go, which seemed to last forever. Finally, it was over and he helped himself to the delicious courses that lined the table. The food was always something to be excited about, especially now that it seemed like he could never eat enough. He helped himself to spoonfuls of this and that until his plate was piled high.

Digging in, he turned an ear to the conversation going on nearby. Fae and Topher. He felt a bit closer to Fae since hanging out with her at the Fair at the end of last school year. He had tried to write her over the summer, but nothing he had written seemed good enough and so he had just written nothing. It didn’t change that he wanted to try and forge stronger friendships since it was going to be the only type of relationships he would ever engage in. Despite being a halfbreed, as some liked to say, he had the same emotional needs as every other person. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to be like every other person, because nothing he ever had would ever be real. Phoenix wished more than anything he could be free of the chains that bound him to this half-life. Like his namesake, he wished he could fly.

Unfortunately, that was not an option and matters that were pressing were now being discussed. Deciding to join in, he said, smiling at both, “My parents are crazy about it too. Do you think that they’re going to be hard?” His parents had gone on and on about how it was important to do well to ensure that he would have a good future. He interpreted as that the only way that it would be overlooked that he was only a half wizard would be to score well on the tests. He hated the stress of it all. “My mom never even had to take them.” He laughed slightly. “You should use the evidence as blackmail to get a new broom or something.” He was joking about it and hoped that Topher took it as such since he didn’t want to offend his roommate.
0 Phoenix Lucore Me? 0 Phoenix Lucore 0 5


Fae

March 31, 2012 12:23 AM
Fae gave a small laugh with Topher’s joke. She knew exactly what that was like whether he was serious or not. Her parents tried to encourage her with her school work and her social skills, but her Great Grandfather liked to remind her that she was nothing more than a connection for them to make and the only thing she was good for was to look pretty and do as her husband says. If it weren’t for her mother and her sister, Fae might have felt what her Great Grandfather said was how it was supposed to be. But with her mother having always been a strong personality of her parents and Shelby has always been a spitfire who was now betrothed to an Heir. Still, it hurt to know that he thought so little of her and knowing that her grades at Sonora weren’t helping him think differently only made it all the worse for her.

Topher switched topics on her and forced her brain to think of the CATS exams that were to be looming over them next year. She was about to share in sympathy with him over crazy parents when another familiar voice broke in. The sudden intrusion had Fae snatching her hand off of Topher’s arm as if she was caught doing something scandalous. Her blue eyes immediately went to the other blonde. The sight of Phoenix had Fae’s mind go blank and a goofy smile appear on her face. Her hands went to play with her hair, something she would never normally do and what she had restrained herself from doing just a moment before in front of Topher.

She had no idea why she was doing this. In the back of her mind, she knew this behavior was wrong. But she couldn’t stop herself. She just kept staring like an idiot at Phoenix with a smile on her face that was making her cheeks hurt and just hoping that Phoenix will look at her and smile only for her. In her confusion, Fae began to blush again. She knew she didn’t like Phoenix in that way. He was nice and he stayed with her through the Fair, and he was nice looking, but she wasn’t interested in him that way. Right?

Right.

This new revelation opened up the doors for her to control her body once more. Closing her eyes and shaking herself mentally, Fae brought herself back into the conversation. She didn’t understand what just happened or why, but she hoped neither boy noticed. How embarrassing would that be? “Your mother didn’t have to take the exams?” Fae asked, surprised by such a thing. “My parents remind me that I need to have passing grades for the exams, but they haven’t quite begun their badgering just yet.” Fae admitted to both of them. She supposed gender may be to blame for this, but she kept that thought to herself. “It could be because they are preoccupied with other things, though.”
0 Fae This... is unexpected. 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

March 31, 2012 7:45 PM
Phoenix joined in the conversation, and Topher became aware of a rather startling change in the girl sitting beside him. Her moving away like she’d been scalded, he could understand, if not like – there had been something kind of tense there between them for a moment, and being jolted back to reality was a little disconcerting, especially when she was a Sinclair and he was, well, him, complete with the family history he had just partially revealed to her – but why did she look like she’d gone goofy at the same moment she’d looked at Phoenix? Yeah, the guy was good-looking, this was not completely a new thing, but he’d never known his roommate and Fae to have that much to do with each other.  

Maybe that was just what she did when she got really surprised. Maybe? He didn’t know. Girls were weird, purebloods were weirder, and though they got along most of the time, Fae was still both.


“Yeah,” he said, accepting Phoenix’s joke as just a joke rather than a serious suggestion that he try to blackmail his mother. For one thing, he just didn’t see her being all that amused by it. His mother was usually cheerful, sweet, friendly, understanding, and otherwise the next thing to the poster child for Teppenpaw House, but she had a temper when she thought that people were trying to pull something over on her somehow. “I see that going over well. Easy as robbing the bank.” Honestly, Topher thought he might take being chased by a dragon over trying to blackmail Mom, but neither really appealed to him as a career choice. He’d have to find something else to do, he guessed.  

He hadn’t really caught the detail about how Phoenix’s mother didn’t have to take her CATS, but he was curious when Fae did. That was kind of weird. He wondered if she’d dropped out or something. He made it a practice not to ask people too many questions about their families, but if Phoenix volunteered the information, he was interested to see how she had done that, even if, by the sounds of it, they weren’t going to be able to do the same thing, because Phoenix’s parents were being a pain about them, too. “Nothing’s ever as bad as parents say it is,” he said about how hard the tests would be, offering the wisdom of fourteen years of not paying too much attention, but seeing a few things along the way by mistake. “Plus, look at some of the people who’ve survived before us. Maybe your parents just see that, Fae.”


Or who knew what, her parents were purebloods and one of them was a girl so they were going to be incomprehensible by nature, but it seemed like the thing to say, anyway, so he did. They probably would nag her sometime, but in his opinion, the later parents got nervous and started doing that, the better. He could have happily gone without it, period.
0 Topher And yet still somehow inevitable 0 Topher 0 5


Phoenix

April 03, 2012 12:38 PM
Sigh. The weird looks Fae was giving him were similar to what he had been experiencing over the summer. Phoenix had hoped that she would be unaffected by the unexplained irresistibility that was all in his heritage rather than himself. He could probably say the strangest things and girls would still find him to be witty and charming. It was disgusting really. As a result, he tensed slightly, shifting his attention more to Topher, who was paying attention to Fae, which was interesting, while waiting to see what played out. Thankfully, Fae seemed to gain control of herself since she noticed the reality of what he had said rather than just to think it was simply wonderful.

Unfortunately, that put him into an awkward position. He brushed the blonde hair that hung over his face away, a nervous habit. How was he to explain that the reason that his mother didn’t have to take her CATS was due to the fact of being veela? Oh, and the fact that his grandfather had run out on his grandmother when he had learned of the pregnancy. The only thing he knew about the man was that he had been a wizard. So, his grandmother had done the only thing that made sense to her and had raised her daughter as a veela rather than as a wizard. Though, this hadn’t prevented his mother from marrying a wizard, a pure one at that. They had met at a party that his mother had crashed. Phoenix never knew why his mother had been at the party or ever thought to ask.

“Uh, my mother was homeschooled,” Phoenix replied, his brain finally coming up with a reasonable answer or what he thought was one at any rate. “So, that’s why she didn’t have to take the CATS.” It was pretty much the truth and he had heard of wizards being homeschooled. He wasn’t sure though if they had to take anything equivalent to CATS or if they still had to take them and they were just mailed. His mother hadn’t had to worry about it, because she was raised in the veela community. “My mom is probably only saying it cause my dad is. He says that they’re super important. Plus, I have to live up to the fact that he scored really well on them.” His little sister, Ephanie, got her smarts from their dad, which was probably why she was in Aladren. Of course, this wasn’t to say he was dumb. He just didn’t think he would be able to compete with nearly perfect scores.

“Topher’s probably right, though,” Phoenix said with a nonchalant shrug. “Other people have survived them so we will too. And if we need to, we can always pick Al-an Aladren’s brain.” He had been about to say Alice’s, but didn’t want to hurt her feelings if she overheard him. The girl was quite odd and he was never sure how she would react since she seemed to take everything so literally. “Plus, we can all study together. I’m sure between the three of us, we can come up with great scores on the CATS,” he continued in an attempt to be encouraging. He figured he was being cheesy and changed the subject, as he took a few more bites. “So, what do you think of the new professors?”
0 Phoenix Well, I couldn't let you have all the fun. ;) 0 Phoenix 0 5


Fae

April 03, 2012 9:35 PM
Maybe it would have been better if Fae hadn’t asked him a question because the moment he started talking and she looked at him, she felt herself become an idiot again. She had no idea why her body was reacting this way or why she feeling rather fuzzy whenever she caught a glimpse of him. This was not like her at all. She knew better than to behave this way. She had struggled hard to not react this very same way with Topher, whom she knew even without admitting it to anyone else that she liked, but she was certain she did not like Phoenix in that way. Which meant only one thing…

Magic.

That had to be the reason she was acting like such a twit around him. Either someone placed a spell on her or she drank some potion that was affecting her only with Phoenix. The very thought of someone doing that to her was disturbing and could only see the reasoning for it as a way to embarrass her. Why this would be the case was beyond her as Fae couldn’t see a reason anyone would want to embarrass her. As far as she knew, she was always nice to everyone. Then again, she had thought that before and found out that Josephine hadn’t liked her at all.

Was it Josephine?

Fae’s blue eyes traveled the length of the Pecari table, but did not see the other fourth year. Instead, her eyes landed on her over at the Teppenpaw table with the other fourth years. Fae hadn’t realized that Josephine had merged into that group and found it somewhat strange. Not because Fae didn’t see the friendships as possible, but because… well, she really didn’t really know how to explain her current feelings. Either way, it wasn’t Josephine who had done her wrong. She seemed far too preoccupied.

Fae decided that her best course of action was to not look at him. Which was difficult and rude of her, but she didn’t know what else to do. She couldn’t even focus on what he was saying. “Oh…” Fae commented after a moment. “I would have thought all forms of schooling had to take the exams for standardized testing. But, I really have no idea, so I agree that your mother was lucky to never have to worry about them.” She was rambling and staring purposefully at her plate of half eaten food.

She knew they were both right, they were just tests and really, hers didn’t matter too much anyway. She was just meant to graduate and be married. Nothing more, nothing less. It looked better for the family if she had some brains in her because it meant for better genetics, but she supposed just looking pretty was enough too. “I can have Alice help us.” Fae commented after a moment. She didn’t think she’d be able to study alone with these two without people raising an eyebrow or her going completely insane. She felt that Alice would be a nice barrier for her. “She’s rather good with lessons and helps me out a lot anyway.”

At the mention of the new professors, Fae looked up to the staff table, taking in the new faces for the first time. “Three this year?” Fae asked, trying to remember. They lost two from the year before, so really, it was like only having one new one. “They look normal.” She said with an uncertain shrug. Looking normal did not mean that they were normal. “Will either of you be taking Muggle Studies?” Fae asked them. “I don’t think I’m supposed to, but I am sort of curious about what they’ll talk about in that class.” She admitted with a sheepish smile.
0 Fae There is nothing fun about this! 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

April 04, 2012 10:50 AM
Topher had known some people who were homeschooled, since their teacher had also been his teacher when he was too young to come to school and his mom just hadn’t felt up to the task of teaching him all the basics everyone had to know herself, but he had never asked anyone if they had to take exams still, since he hadn’t even known what the exams were himself then. So he couldn’t argue for or against Phoenix’s story about why his mother hadn’t taken the exams and accepted it as it was. Maybe there was more to the story, maybe there wasn’t – but even feeling at least a touch threatened, for some reason he couldn’t quite put his finger on, by his roommate, he couldn’t help but remember that he’d never exactly spilled his guts about his full life history, either. “Yeah,” he said, glancing at Fae as she rambled and wondering seriously now what was up with her.


“My dad, too,” he contributed about Phoenix’s father setting a standard he had to live up to with his own long-distant CATS scores. “’Course, you know, he works for Accidents and Catastrophes, and I think he’s always secretly wanted me to do something like that, too, and you’d need good CATS for it.” He did not mention his parents’ apparent conviction that he was secretly a genius who was just very good at hiding it, because he guessed that was just a parent thing, because it certainly wasn’t true. He could break his back, he guessed, and get those over-the-top grades, but he was pretty sure they weren’t much use when getting them resulted in having to move to the psych ward to sip calming draughts all day, and working like that wasn’t what his parents had in mind anyway. They just thought he was a lot smarter than he really was. 

He considered making a joke about how Fae could provide the introductions when Phoenix mentioned picking an Aladren’s brain for CATS advice, but wasn’t sure how she’d take it. He didn’t even know what was going on with her and the Carey twins anyway, or how on earth she and Stratford dealt with being almost in-laws, kinda. So instead, he said, “Pretty sure their only condition would be getting to break one of my arms first. You know, Quidditch and all.”


He had, after all, injured Arnold Carey a number of times – never badly enough to prevent Aladren from beating Crotalus, to his annoyance, but he had probably hit the guy the most of any Beater now playing, if his counts were any good. Plus, there was just the Aladren-Crotalus thing in general. It wasn’t the same in his mind as it had been before last year’s general weirdness, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t now even worse in the minds of the Aladrens for all he knew, and he couldn’t imagine a Crotalus Beater who presented himself to an Aladren as an ally getting a very warm reception, at least not if that Aladren was in their own year.  

Studying together sounded like a proposition much more likely to work well, particularly if Alice could help them out. She was literal, and smart enough that the rest of them would probably feel kind of idiotic at the end of the study session, but he was willing to bet that they would have things right. “Aye aye, captain,” he replied lightly to Phoenix’s inspirational comments. “Yeah, we’ll do fine.” If he convinced them or himself, then that was all to the good, he thought. Mom said confidence couldn’t hurt, anyway, and he was prepared to try anything if there was a chance it would work.  


He glanced at the professors. “Guess we’ll see soon enough,” he said, and nodded about Muggle Studies. “Yeah, Mom talked me into it. She says it’s important to be well-rounded.” Plus, Mom liked some Muggle stuff herself. Movies were her ‘Grace-thing,’ as she put it, something she could do sometimes just for herself. Or on a date with Dad, but he definitely wasn’t going to admit to his friends that his parents were mushy enough that they actually still dated each other. There were some things the world just did not need to know; he wished he didn’t know himself, sometimes. “I guess it’ll be pretty interesting. I’ve been to the Muggle side of town before – not for long, but I’ve been there. You can just look around quick and tell it’s different.”
0 Topher Not even a little? 0 Topher 0 5


Phoenix

April 05, 2012 4:42 PM
“Really?” Phoenix asked, his interest perked, when Topher said that his dad worked for Accidents and Catastrophes. “That sounds like it would be a really cool job. My dad is a Healer, which I guess is all right, but he can’t discuss anything interesting that happens. Patient confidentiality and all.” Phoenix wasn’t really sure what he wanted to do with his life, but he knew that Healer wasn’t on the list. It was all well and fine for his dad, but it wasn’t the life for him. He didn’t want to have to stay in school that long or work long hours or deal with the stress. His dad was lucky though. He had one of the rare, cushy jobs that allowed him to set his own hours and get paid more for it. Though, he had to wonder if his father’s patients ever suffered from the fact. No, it definitely wasn’t the life for him.

Neither was Quidditch. He cringed a bit at the joke Topher made about getting his arms broken. The flying part of Quidditch was great. It was everything else that wasn’t. He had no desire to have any part of him broken, especially for something that he didn’t consider to be a worthwhile cause. It was a sport and yes, he did enjoy watching it. However, he didn’t want to say that he had gotten this scar from the time some other player hit him with a bludger. No, he wanted to say ‘I got this scar from the time that I stood up for something. I did what was right in a time of wrong.’ If he tried to explain it to someone, it would probably make no sense since he wasn’t even sure if he was making sense to himself, but he knew that he wanted to do good.

He supposed that meant he should try to do well on CATS and was glad that Topher and Fae were on board with it. Plus, Fae brought up having Alice help so that was good. He felt a little more confident that they could not only get through the CATS, but also get through them with fairly decent scores. “That’ll be great,” he said, encouragingly towards Fae. She was definitely acting weird. Maybe he should have a private talk with her? She was the only girl friend he had and he didn’t want things to get weird between them over something he had no control over. He just didn’t want everyone in the school to know, because he was afraid of being treated differently. He hated labels, all labels. He just wanted to be Phoenix, nothing more, nothing less.

Phoenix nearly scoffed as Fae’s use of the word normal. It was such a relative term. Sure, they might look normal. He looked normal, but looking normal didn’t mean anything. He looked normal and he tried to act normal, but he wasn’t what others would consider normal. In the wizarding community, some would think he was absolutely amazing for simply possessing veela genes and others would find him lower than low for being half anything less than pure wizard. In the veela community, he was looked down upon for possessing wizarding genes. It was really a no win situation and all because he didn’t fit the definition of normal. So, he wondered if they really were ‘normal’ or if there were things about them that weren’t normal. And what was it like for those that couldn’t hide the fact that they were different?

The topic of Muggle Studies brought up the entire question of being normal. Was taking Muggle Studies and being ‘well-rounded’ normal or was not taking the class normal? He supposed it was relative depending on if you were old-fashioned pure or not. “My parents didn’t really say anything about it, but then they aren’t for or against muggles. I’m not sure if I want to take it or not. I mean it’s interesting and all, but what’s the point unless you do something involving muggles? You can’t really live in their world, because you have to keep what you can do a secret. Plus, it gives you an unfair advantage.” Look who was talking. He felt like the biggest hypocrite in the world when he was keeping a secret of his own. “I guess it’s fair though to learn about muggle heritage since some of our classmates come from it,” he said thoughtfully. “I wish we could learn about other groups as well.” Would he think differently of the veela part if he knew more about it?
0 Phoenix I think it's rather amusing. 0 Phoenix 0 5