Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

June 01, 2012 7:47 PM
Midterm had been eventful with Angel now living in the house, but Kiva was happy to have helped him and her family was warming up to the idea of having Angel around. Emery and Chloe had had the luxury of growing up together since Jeff and Kiva had become friends shortly after the two were born, so they were going to have a difficult time accepting someone else right off the bat. Chloe seemed to have taken to him rather easily, but then, Chloe took to most people rather easily. Kiva sometimes worried about how easy and open she was with people. Emery had a much more difficult time with accepting new people, but he eventually grew to trust them. Kiva wasn’t sure how well Angel had accepted all of this since he was so quiet and withdrawn, but hopefully, with time, he grew to accept all of them as family. He was stuck with them for the next five years.

She stood in front of the students waiting for them to all calm down she that she can get to the point of it. She couldn’t really blame them for being so excited. They had just spent the last two weeks at home, getting gifts of all sorts, probably had loads of sugar, and a crazy amount of free time that they wanted to tell all their friends about, which they could do… after the feast. Clearing her throat, Kiva cast the Sonorus charm on herself and called to the students to quiet down.

“Welcome back, everyone!” She greeted with a smile. “I hope that all of your midterms were eventual and full of good cheer. We have a few things to discuss before I can set you off to eat.” Kiva advised them all. “First, I would like to introduce to you are new Divinations teacher, Professor Lowrski. For those of you who would like to take her class, please be sure to advise your Head of House so that they can update your schedule.” Kiva waited for the murmurs to die down before continuing. “This year our Midsummer Event is the school concert. I’m excited to announce that we will be hosting this event in Phoenix and inviting your immediate family members to join us during the celebration. Because we are going to be showcases the school to your family, we are making it mandatory that all students participate in this Midsummer Event.” Kiva knew that she wasn’t going to have happy students with the announcement that it was going to be mandatory, but she felt that if the parents were going to be traveling to see them, they ought to have their children actually participating.

“Now, you don’t actually have to be on stage to participate. Backstage work, creating the show that you are going to put on, or whatever other role you may have at making this successful is just as well as being the person on the stage. We just want to make sure we are putting on a wonderful performance for your families in which everyone participates in. You are to choose how you do it. Whether as group performances or individual ones, we will be marking down what everyone is doing so that everyone is getting the proper credit and when the programs are printed, your families are aware of what your duties were.”

That was probably a lot for them to take in. That was alright. “If you have questions, please see any staff member or myself. Okay, that was all that I had to tell you, enjoy your feast!” And with that, the food appeared.
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0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Regina Parker

June 10, 2012 9:54 PM
Reggie’s midterm had been a little crazy to say the least. First day home, she had met her mother’s grandmother and her mother for the first time in fourteen years. Reggie had never cared to meet either woman, or thought that she hadn’t. Until she actually met them. Her Great Grandmother, Edith Bellrose, was a terrible woman. There was no heart in her chest. No feelings for anyone at all. Reggie was okay if she never saw the woman ever again. Her grandmother, Flora, however, was not at all what Reggie had expected. She seemed so… normal. Reggie had spent some of her New Year’s Eve with Flora as she helped her get ready for the party, and then a couple of additional days there after. Her father had been hesitant about allowing her time with the older woman, but after he had sat and talked with her, he had come to realize this was something they had both needed.

Still, minus the hiccup of her family, Reggie’s midterm had been wonderful and her New Year’s Eve had been like a movie! They were all dressed up so wonderfully, Reggie in her sparkling green flapper dress with glamor hair and all of her friends in equally amazing attires – it had been so worth it. She felt like it had been such a long time since she had really had fun. Sonora had its perks and she had fun with her friends, but it wasn’t the same. She was a girl around her friends at home and at Sonora she was just one of the gang. She sometimes liked to be a girl for no reason.

Reggie wandered over to the Teppenpaw table per her usual routine and flopped down beside her friends. She grinned enthusiastically to them, “Hey Everyone, good to see you all again.” They didn’t have long to chat though because the Headmistress was calling them to attention. Reggie listened with interest as she introduced the new Divinations professor. Leaning close to the person next to her Reggie whispered, “Do you think I’d be able to join that class even though I wasn’t in it last year?” After having discussions with her maternal grandmother, Reggie was interested in knowing how it all worked, even if the Professor didn’t actually know. And then the discussion turned to that of the concert. Reggie didn’t mind that it was mandatory, she was going to be a part of it anyway (she was, after all, friends with a large group within her own year). She already had an idea for it.

The food arrived and Reggie went right for the pasta. She had enough ham and turkey for a while, so she wanted something different. Pasta it was. “So, you all know the movie I was trying to work out? How cool would it be to put that on as the concert? I’m sure they can set up a screen for everyone to watch. I can’t work out a decent script, so I might aim it more for a silent film. What to you all think?” Reggie went to take a bite, but paused for a brief moment to add, “Also, how were your holidays?”
6 Regina Parker Magic in the making! 187 Regina Parker 0 5


Madeline Parry

June 15, 2012 12:34 AM
For some reason – probably the economy, since neither her parents in person nor Nana over the phone had seemed like anything other than the usual holiday woes was wrong in their worlds when the subject came up – the Parry family hadn’t gone north to visit their family this year after Madeline got home, instead staying in the small rented house they had been using since Dad stopped being a residence director after becoming Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs. It hadn’t snowed once, despite the nervousness of the locals, and this to Madeline made the holiday feel unsatisfactory and weird, as though it hadn’t really been her midterm break from school at all. If there hadn’t been presents, and the same fake tree they had used for all her life and had only even bothered to deconstruct when it made the move from New York state with them, she wasn’t sure the manger scene at church would have even convinced her, since they normally attended her grandfather’s at Christmas.

She had missed making snowmen, but had tried to make the best of it and appreciate the novelty value. She had suggested a picnic on Christmas Eve, but it had been too chilly for that in the end, as her parents – more familiar with the winter part of the year there than she was – had predicted, and then it had started raining. They had stuck to fake snow on tables and windowsills and drinking lots of hot chocolate – since, to her relief, it was not so warm in the winter in the south that hot chocolate was inappropriate at the holidays; after that first summer, she had wondered – and wearing colorful sweaters with fuzzy balls or sequins and pictures of holiday-themed objects on them instead, and found a station that played the Rudolph movie so that part of holiday traditions, anyway, didn’t lapse. In the end, she guessed it had been a pretty good midterm, and she could at least still look at the upside that it stood out from the other Christmases she could remember.

She came into the Cascade Hall with a gaggle of other people, most of them not ones she knew even if she did recognize their faces just after four years in such a small school, and looked around until she found her friends, at which point she made a beeline for that part of the Teppenpaw table. “Hi!” she said quickly as she sat down, smiling at everyone as she settled in, swinging the bag of pens and paper – she had never had the heart to tell her dad that it was virtually impossible to write on the wagon – and books and cookies her parents had put together for her to carry on the wagon off her shoulder and dropping it beside a chair.

Madeline clapped for the new teacher, whispered back, after shrugging, a quick “can’t hurt to ask” to Reggie’s question about the class, and raised her eyebrows slightly at the mention of the school Concert. She had assumed a midterm event was going to happen this year, since one happened every year, but she hadn’t expected everyone to need to be in something. It wasn’t a problem, since she felt pretty confident in thinking that she and the other Teppenpaws would stick together, but even with some people working backstage on things, she expected it was going to be a very long evening. Sonora was a small school, but it had enough people to keep paying the staff and put forth prefects and a Head Girl and Boy (even if it had only been just barely this year, apparently) every year.

Reggie’s idea, proposed as they all filled their plates, was a pleasant surprise anyway, though, because she was pretty sure it was going to be something different from what most people put together. Madeline was expecting a lot of musical numbers, somehow – maybe just because of the word ‘concert,’ she didn’t know. Different would be good.

“Fine” she said about her midterm. “Weirdly warm, but fine. And that sounds neat, about the movie.” She took a piece of chicken for her plate. “At least we’d probably stand out. I don’t think many people would think to try anything like it here.” The anti-technology thing, after all, was one of the things about Sonora that was hard to get used to at first, but then sort of became part of the scenery, almost, just something she was used to, so it was almost a shock to see cell phones and microwaves and electric lights when she went home for vacations.
0 Madeline Parry It'll be brilliant 188 Madeline Parry 0 5

Derry Four

June 15, 2012 8:24 AM
Derry's midterm had been great. Ben was starting to talk, even if he was a little hard to understand yet at two years old, and Boston was starting to be not quite as weird as it had been over the summer. (This did not mean to say it was not weird because it really really was; it just wasn't as weird and he could now make himself breakfast without being confused by the kitchen.)

He was also going to have to say it was millions of times better than last Christmas since his parents were not in the last throes of divorce, with sniping, arguing, ignoring, and then finally culminating in The Announcement. Still, he kind of wished he got to see Thad over the break more often than just the wagon ride to and from the school.

That wasn't possible though, and Derry was actually kind of relieved that he wouldn't have to see some of the other people on the Mountain. Grandmother had always made him feel nervous and like he was doing something wrong, and honestly, not having Father around made the whole holiday feel so much happier, which was terrible to say but true.

Hamlet came by for a few days, and even Berta dropped in for a couple of hours. They were dead and the family couldn't do anything about them socializing with outcasts.

Derry even got an invitation to a party Eliza was having, which had been both kind of surprising and kind of relieving since it kind of meant people hadn't forgotten he existed just because he wasn't set to inherit the Pierce family someday anymore. Mom had advised him to politely decline though, and since he didn't really know Eliza that well and because he had other plans that evening that he had been looking forward to with some of his new friends in the neighborhood, he had penned a very nice letter thanking Eliza for inviting him, but that he was unable to attend.

Now back at school, he joined his Teppenpaw friends in the Cascade Hall, waving bye to Thad as his cousin headed over to the Aladren table, and greeted them all before the Headmistress began her speech.

He was kind of glad that Divination was coming back because he had enjoyed that class. On the wagon, Thad had mentioned his research into the midsummer activities suggested the last one that Derry hadn't experienced yet would be a concert, so he wasn't too surprised by that part of the announcements. He barely noted that it was mandatory because he couldn't imagine not being involved.

"Yeah," he agreed after Madeline guessed that Reggie could still take Divination. "The professor wasn't teaching it last year either, and we're still in intermediates like everybody just starting out. I can share my notes, too, if you need help getting up to speed."

Then Reggie made her suggestion for their concert activity (he had naturally assumed he'd be working with this group and it seemed she had too, which worked out well for all of them) and he grinned and nodded in eager agreement. "Yeah, I got to see one of these moo-vees over Christmas, just to see what you were talking about, and they are totally cool." He was less sure how it would work without sound, but he was sure Reggie knew what she was talking about. "Are we still thinking of the zombie love story? That would just be a lot of zombie-groaning anyway, wouldn't it, like," he held his hands out in front of him, canted his head a little to the side, adopted a somewhat vacant expression and said, "Uuurrrrrr."

1 Derry Four Glorious even 189 Derry Four 0 5


Reggie

June 24, 2012 7:56 PM
Maddie and Derry were both right about Divinations. There probably wasn’t any issue about joining the class and the worst she could do after she asked was to be told ‘no’. If she couldn’t get into the class, it wasn’t like she could ask anyone about her ‘abilities’. Now that she knew Flora, she had a bit of a connection to her mother’s family (even though they didn’t discuss the ‘Bellrose Gift’ during the break because they had been too busy getting to know one another), but she also had Derry’s relative with whom Reggie could meet and talk about everything with (besides, it gave her an excuse to check out Derry’s relatives). “Thanks, Der!” Reggie exclaimed with a smile, “I would love to make copies of your notes if I get into the class.”

Reggie had been working on the idea of the movie for a long time. Ever since last year’s Charms class, really. And even though she felt that a script would make it that much better, she wasn’t actually a writer and couldn’t figure out how to make it work. She could, however, picture it in her head just fine and as long as they did it scene by scene, they could capture her vision rather well. They would just have to make sure they had enough zombies and maybe find someone who is more equipped to handle a camera than she was. But, she figured, with everyone having to participate, it shouldn’t be too difficult to find extras for their film. Although, their school is mostly filled with people from Derry’s background, Reggie wasn’t sure if they would have any idea to what she was asking them to do, but she would work on that when that problem arrived. For now, just getting people was an issue.

She laughed into her hand when Derry demonstrated a zombie to them. She was really happy that they agreed to do the movie with her. The concert provided them with a ton of opportunities that they could have really done what they wanted, so it felt good knowing that they didn’t mind doing something with her. Especially since the movie was completely on her. Man, she really hoped it worked out for them all…

“Sort of like that, Derry.” Reggie said, “Less Frankenstein’s monster and more blood, but I think you get the idea quite well. My idea of the movie was that a scientist wanted to find the cure of some horrific disease that had taken the life of his family, but in the process, he, instead developed this awful virus that kills and is transferred through bites. Starts with a lab rat and it is just an awful mess after that. And the main characters would be a young couple in love who get mixed into the whole thing and the male gets bitten, so they have to say farewell to one another. But, instead of like most zombie flicks, the male zombie still sort of remembers her and it’s a forever eternal struggle not to try to eat her.” Reggie explained quickly, leaving her slightly breathless, both from running out of air and from excitement. “How does that sound?”
6 Reggie I'm so happy you agree! 187 Reggie 0 5