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


Linus Macaulay

March 24, 2012 10:12 AM
If studied objectively, Linus' Sonoran career thus far couldn't in all honesty be marked a a true success. In his first year, he had landed himself, somehow, in a new world with new rules, and had even ended up in the House most governed by these. While nobody aside from Paul had yet to question him directly on his magical heritage (or lack thereof), Linus was certain that anyone who cared who he might be had already worked out who he was not. It hadn't escpaed his notice that some of his peers saw each other at oddly formal events over the holidays, and as Linus had never received an invitation to such, it was probably obvious by his absence from these events that he was nobody with whom they should concern themselves. This wasn't really a problem, as Linus was relatively proud of who he was in his Muggle environment, but it had made establishing his identiy as a wizard a rather more complicated affair. He couldn't just waltz in here claiming to be the best; people would doubt and question him. He was still adjusting to this concept.

In his second year, Linus had made some progress outside of academics by voluntarily assisting first years, both in classes as out, and he'd joined the Quidditch team... though admittedly his debut hadn't gone all that swimmingly, considering he'd definitely messed up at least one of Nic's saves and been partially responsbile for the total and complete destruction of one of the school's brooms. It was just as well Marissa had graduated - Linus thought he had more chance of making it back onto the team without his previous captain's bias against him.

So it was that third year had rolled around and Linus still wasn't as settled as he'd hoped to be by now. At least he wouldn't be joined by his brothers for them to witness him not being at the top of his game, which was too bad for them, but Linus was relieved. He had always enjoyed special priviledges born from being the oldest, and he intended to continue to enjoy them in solitude. magic wasn't something he was prepared to share with the rest of his family. They were Muggles; he was the special one, and that's just the way it was. He was far too gallant to say this to them, of course, but there was no denying its truth.

Preparing himself for another year of trials and tribulations, and working out how he fit into the bigger picture, Linus began to load his plate with chicken goujons and potato wedges. "Good summer?" he addressed his neighbor with a casual but limited interest.
0 Linus Macaulay Third time's the charm 205 Linus Macaulay 0 5


Paul Bennett

March 27, 2012 9:37 PM
As he entered the Cascade Hall, Paul looked around carefully to see if it looked any different now that he was allegedly taller, but it looked to him just the same as it always had. He shrugged slightly and went to find a seat at the Crotalus table, not feeling very upset about this. It was his parents’ theory that he had grown a few inches since this time last year, not his, and since he was nowhere near a midget, he couldn’t say there were many things in his life he cared about less than his height except when he was right in front of his mother and she was going on about how he was supposedly growing up fast, despite him having never noticed that she, despite having been at least present for the bringing up of five of them, was really that fond of small children.

Whether she was or not, though, Paul was pretty sure he could no longer be called one. He didn’t think being thirteen was all that impressive, but it was on the way. He was not the shortest person out of first year, anyway – he thought he might even turn out to be a little taller now than Arnold Carey, if they ever stood side by side and Paul felt like making the comparison – and that was enough to content him, as long as no one else made an issue out of it, which no one ever had. He thought, as he took a seat near Linus at the table, it helped that he was in Crotalus and that he had a roommate who was a lot better than he was at being obtrusive.

After the headmistress’ speech, though, Paul wondered for a moment if things would continue on in that excellent arrangement. It was just a guess on his part, but he thought it might be a little harder to lurk in the shadowy margins of the House, unremarked on by most, when his sister was the new prefect and her enemy was the Assistant Quidditch captain and Merlin only knew at the trouble the two of them were going to cause before the year was over. He hoped he would remain where he had been, but if he was ever going to not be, it would probably be this year, he thought.

He shrugged, putting the thoughts aside, when the Opening Feast began and his roommate asked after his summer. “I suppose so,” he said. Really, his summer had just been long and boring, with lots of dull parties which came with bad food, but he wasn’t going to say that at the table, even to Linus. Others might overhear, and he could just imagine the look on Mother’s face if she heard a Bennett had been criticizing the party system. She and Father had both seemed a little more tense than their usual for the past week or so, now that he thought about it. “My brothers tried to be irritating, but Father kept me busy enough most of the time that they didn’t have much of a chance.”

He served himself parmesan chicken. “How’d yours go?” he asked, using a tone very similar to the one Linus had, though he was somewhat more interested than he sounded. Some of the novelty of having a Muggleborn roommate had worn off over the past two years, but sometimes interesting things came out of it anyway.
0 Paul Bennett Is that possibly cause for alarm? 201 Paul Bennett 0 5


Linus

March 28, 2012 4:19 AM
Born, no doubt, from repeated exposure, Paul was probably the person with whom Linus could converse with greatest ease amongst his peers (Sometimes the girls could be easy to talk to, but Linus had never really understood girls, and several of them in his yeargroup seemed to be less bright than average). They didn't have a huge array of shared experiences or interests, but the longer they both spent being Crotalus students, the greater their similarities became, and Linus' developing understanding of Paul's view of the world made talking to him increasingly less strenuous. For example, he understood the content of his summer to have included some of those afore-mentioned social events, none of which Paul ever seemed to enjoy, which helped a great deal with Linus' ability to tolerate his exclusion from them.

"My brothers succeeded in being irritating," Linus commented when the question was returned to him, "and my Mom seemed to think it was necessary to let them." His tone here undoubtedly indicated his own aversion to the notion. Similarly, while Linus had never out-right declared to any of his schoolmates - even Paul - that his father had died, those to whom he spoke regularly about his family had probably noticed from his routine absence in Linus' conversation that the man wasn't around any more. "Johan didn't get an inviation to Sonora and was getting worked up about being a Muggle forever," Linus added some more depth to his short story. It was insulting to Muggles, really, that Johan had made such a fuss about it. After all, there had been many great muggles, including their own father. "I'm quite glad to back here and away from all the fuss," Linus admitted, lifting a forkful of food to his mouth.

Admittedly, there were other concerns at school, not least passing his classes and not destroying himself or further school property should he wish to rejoin the Quidditch team, but there were also the Crotalus girls to contend with, each one as crazy as the next in their own separate ways. Brianna seemed to be a little less crazy than the rest, but Paul had attested to his own sister's instability, and she had now been named House prefect, so there was little hope for the rest of them. "Congratulations on your sister making prefect," Linus thought to add, after what was probably just about an acceptable delay.
0 Linus I don't see it'll cause any harm 0 Linus 0 5


Paul

March 29, 2012 9:01 PM
“Too bad for him,” Paul attempted to sympathize, not really knowing what the appropriate response was to someone saying his brother was a Muggle and meaning that literally instead of as a high insult. The only way that could happen in his family was if someone had a Squib child, and that would be a tragedy and a source of deep shame for the whole family; Linus’ brother being a Muggle was, if Paul understood these things at all, much more normal than Linus himself having been lucky enough to have some magical talent, so it shouldn’t have been as bad for the Macaulays as it would have been for the Bennetts.

Unless, of course, there were wizards somewhere in Linus’ family tree and he merely preferred to say his family was made up of Muggles, but the only way Paul could see that making sense was if the wizard in question had been someone of such ill repute as to make history for it, and those didn’t happen very often, and seemed to happen less often in American history than many other places. He thought it was safer and better advised to assume that Linus was the anomaly in the Macaulay family.

“I’m sure he’ll adjust,” he added. Many magical families survived unfortunate things, after all. Paul’s own father had adjusted very well to having a brother in a psychiatric facility and a sister who lived with another woman. Linus did not seem very upset, which was promising and something Paul was happy to see since they had to live together and he had little experience in dealing with people who were upset outside of his immediate family, but it was best to be polite, he thought.

The subject of siblings wasn’t quite over, though. There was still Eliza, in all her newly promoted glory, to think about. “Thanks,” he said. “She’ll probably be okay at it. She’s a friend of a date of Rachel Bauer’s, so she shouldn’t have a problem with the other prefects, anyway.” If you had to be prefect, Paul could only assume it helped to be part of the same network as at least one of the other prefects of the same House, though he thought it would be better not to be part of that network through something as transitory as a dating relationship. If Rachel and Nic progressed to regular dating and immediately had a nasty break up this year, Eliza would be in an uncomfortable position then, since the only point of contact she had with either Bauer, that he knew of, was Nic Sawyer, Sam’s roommate.

“Mother and Father will be pleased. Eliza’s the first Bennett to come here, you know. It’s a good day for us.” He looked around the Hall, his eyes pausing for a moment on a girl at the Aladren table. “It’s a better one for the Bauers, though. Much more and they’ll run this place.” He ate another bite of his meal. “Are you looking forward to the Intermediate lessons?” he asked.
0 Paul Good, because I don't want to flee to a farm 0 Paul 0 5