Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

October 26, 2012 7:42 PM
Midterm had come and gone along with Christmas and New Years. This was the first year of holidays with both Angel and Ayita. Kiva had no idea if they appreciated or enjoyed the holidays with the entire family, but they were both pleasant and everyone seemed to enjoy them. Hopefully, things would only get better. Angel had been officially adopted and that was because both of his parents were deceased and his caretaker and signed over all guardianship. Ayita’s was a little more tricky and they had to seek out legal counsel on what to do. But, they were still determined to complete it. Especially now that they were expecting.

Kiva was hitting her fourth month into the pregnancy. She would be able to remain throughout the entire term, but she was pushing it close to her due date. Although her robes were hiding any trace of her upcoming new motherhood, if she were wearing her usual garnets, her coworkers would be able to spot the baby bump without trouble. Still not quite that large, she was definitely growing faster than with Emery. She wasn’t going to make an announcement or anything and she had already told the staff, but everyone else could figure it out on their own.

Standing in front of the student body, Kiva allowed them a few minutes of chit chat to allow them that moment of excitement before forcing them to calm down again. Finally deciding that they had enough time for greetings and initial welcome hugs, Kiva began, “Hello everyone! Welcome back! I hope all of your holidays were pleasant and fun.” She greeted, smiling happy. She loved the holidays, but sometimes it was nice to come back to a routine.

“I’m going to make this short and sweet.” She advised them. She had no new staff members or anything, so there wasn’t a need for anything too long winded. “This year our Midsummer Event is the bonfire. Normally, we like to have the students contribute something during each of the events, but this year, we wanted to give you all a break. We have been very impressed with past years’ behaviors that we wanted to have this be an award.” Kiva explained to them. “We’ll be having a camp out in the Pitch and you’ll get to do nothing more than roast smores and have fun with friends. You’ll hear more about it when we get closer to the end of term. For now, enjoy your dinner.” With that, Kiva sent them off and the food began to arrive.
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Topher Calhoun

October 28, 2012 8:59 PM
The staff tried, with the feast mirroring the start-of-term one and all, to add a little something to the return from winter break, but Topher didn’t think it quite worked. After summer, they were all glad to see their friends and excited by the new surroundings after two months of the same thing, which was some consolation in the face of months of actual work in addition to friends time, but it just wasn’t the same after Christmas. They hadn’t been home long enough to get bored with it all at home, so coming back to school was just kind of a drag.  
 
At least, Topher thought so. Who knew, maybe everyone else in the school was just thrilled to be back. Outside of people with lousy families and Aladrens, though, he thought his stance on things was more likely to be that of the majority.
 
Professor Kijewski’s news about the end of term event, though, was somewhat cheering. Topher had enjoyed doing that movie with the Teppenpaws last year, sure, but in his CATS year, any chance he had to do nothing more strenuous than burning marshmallows to a crisp was welcome, especially since that would be after they had to play, short of a complete freak of nature (which, he was careful to remind himself, was always possible) happening, Aladren for the final again. Between that and the exams – not to mention being a prefect and doing his best to subtly campaign for the Assistant Captain’s spot that was going to open up at the end of the year – he expected to be pretty out of it by the time he got back to Chicago for summer break. He doubted he’d even have the energy to care what Russell was doing with his sister over the summer, at least for the first month or so, though right now the thought made him feel faintly ill and so he just refused to have it in his head right now. He refused.
 
Thoughts involving the possibility of talking about Russell and Caroline in the same sentence aside, he had had a pretty good holiday, he thought, and didn’t really think he was going to have that bad a time at school this term – it was just better to be pessimistic, so he wouldn’t be as disappointed if he was wrong. The one exception he was permitting himself involved his mother’s promises of homemade sweets during exam week; that one good thing, he was sure, was going to happen.
 
Just got to get that far, he thought, calculating the weeks until exams and the camp-out.
 
The former weren’t things he was anxious about; the sooner they came, the better, he thought, because then he wouldn’t have to think about them anymore. The bonfire was going to be more fun, he was sure, but it couldn’t be more welcome, at least for him. This time, Topher thought he might be deviating from the standard opinion pretty drastically, but he didn’t think he was wrong anyway. It made sense to him.
 
So did food. When the food appeared, he began serving himself at once, then looked at his full plate for a moment before he began to eat. “One thing I can say for this place,” he remarked to a neighbor, “they do feed us well. No offense to my grandma, she does make better meatloaf, but there’s not much better than Sonora’s spaghetti.” He had never really liked the spaghetti at home, but here, it was much less oily, and the tomato sauce didn’t taste as though it had been canned quite as long.
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Hope Brockert

October 29, 2012 4:21 AM
Now that Hope was fifteen, midterm was just a jumble of parties, both family and otherwise. She had even considered having one of her own, given that girls like Eliza Bennett and even Sophie were having them. Not that she looked down on either but in the Pecari's case, it hadn't really seemed like her sort of thing. Furthermore, Hope was a Brockert and it was her duty to hold events. There hadn't been time for it over midterm, but maybe she could work something into the summer. Perhaps for her birthday in August. It would be her Sweet Sixteen after all.

The one thing about it was that bugged her was that she really couldn't invite Russell. It had been seen as sort of a faux pas for Eliza to invite anyone who wasn't in their social class. Then again, Chelsea had invited Holly Greer to things and Holly was muggleborn-and Hope's sister cared more about these things than the Teppenpaw did. Besides, it would be more fun if the other fifth year was there.

It wasn't as if he weren't a pureblood, the Laynes actually had longer bloodlines than some wealthier families, like the Bennetts. Nor was it as if Russell were even poor-in fact, from what Hope understood he was from a 'better' branch of Laynes than the one the Layne that had been in Adam's class had been from, they just weren't as prominent as the Brockerts, which according to Great Grandfather, made Russell 'not good enough', or so Hope assumed. Still, it wouldn't be right not to invite the person she considered her closest friend.

Of course, the Teppenpaw could not share a tent with him at the bonfire. That would just be inappropriate and scandalous even if allowed. That meant she would have to find other arrangements. Hope supposed she could ask Sophie. The two were sort of friends and the sixth year couldn't share with Ryan anymore than she could with Russell. She didn't know who else though. Maybe Reggie and Maddie though they end up sharing with Josephine Owen. Addison would probably share with her sisters.

The welcome back speech finished, Hope turned to her meal, choosing a bowl of tomato soup, she was sort of in the mood for it and Sonora's food was amazing. She nodded when Topher Calhoun spoke to her about the spaghetti. "The elves here are very talented." The Teppenpaw had never had a meal cooked by humans in her entire life, but she knew that not everyone had house elves. "I'm sure they're meatloaf is much better than my grandmother's." Hope joked. She doubted either of her grandmothers had made a meatloaf in their entire life. "So, how was your break?" She asked. She knew Topher was friends with Russell and that they were from the same place, but she'd never really spoken to the Crotalus before.
11 Hope Brockert Same 186 Hope Brockert 0 5


Topher

October 29, 2012 9:15 AM
Topher was a little surprised to find himself talking to Hope Brockert instead of Alice or Fae or Phoenix, but he wasn’t really bothered by it. The four of them, by virtue of being an unusually small Crotalus class, got thrown together often enough for anyone’s liking, after all, sitting together only seemed to be an unspoken rule at the Welcoming Feast in the fall, and for some reason he thought Fae had been avoiding him anyway.
 
He would have thought Hope would be with the other Teppenpaws, since he perceived them as far more of a unit than he did himself and his fellow Crotali or even the Aladren boys, but he wasn’t sufficiently interested in Teppenpaw politics to think about it more than a moment. Probably she was just over here to ogle at Phoenix or something, as seemed increasingly common for girls their age, but it really wasn’t his business.
 
He laughed politely when she said she was sure Sonora’s cooking was better than her grandmothers’, assuming that this was a joke because Brockerts didn’t cook. In Crotalus, he thought people like him either learned to not mind the affluence of others or else they went crazy, because it was inevitable that rich people were going to be around. Thinking of oneself as a respectable member of society didn’t necessarily translate to ‘pureblood, monied,’ but often enough it did.
 
“Pretty good, thanks,” he said of his holidays. “Nothing too interesting except that one morning Dad accidentally blew up the kettle, but Christmas isn’t supposed to be interesting, is it?”
 
At least, it wasn’t in his opinion. The holidays had their own shape and set of routines, and he liked that about them. Christmases where he was from were all but interchangeable, between spending time with his mom’s family and the one visit to Dad’s, who seemed to have never quite adjusted their second son being a wizard but who were nice enough about it anyway, and all the neighborhood festivities. This year, he had heard more about the CATS than he would have liked, that was time he would have normally used on Quidditch, itself a tense topic with Crotalus, Pecari, and Aladren all represented in the neighborhood at the moment, but overall, it had been a nice, normal holiday.
 
“How was yours?” he asked, politely returning the question, pretty sure that any details she offered would be completely foreign to his own experience but okay with that. Maybe her type had certain advantages over his, when it came to power and privilege and all that stuff, but Merlin knew they were not a happy group, at least from what he had seen and put together about them. He existed because of their system of marriage, Caroline seemed to prefer spending time with her relatives in Illinois to seeing her father for even the brief time that she had off school, and those were just the few he knew somewhat, or something about them, anyway, personally. Those he knew or observed here seemed a little happier, but he wouldn't be at all surprised to learn it was a facade and they were as messed up as the Gardiners behind closed doors.
0 Topher Are you enjoying doing so? 0 Topher 0 5


Hope

November 06, 2012 12:08 PM
"Not really." Hope admitted. She didn't actually celebrate Christmas, but she knew what Topher meant. Holidays were nice, but not especially interesting. Maybe if you hated your family, but that would be more stressful than anything. Her own family life had always been quite happy and drama free. In fact, other than Autumn's and Marshall's respective issues and Harmony's illness, everything in her life was that way. Hope felt she'd been very fortunate.

And beyond being really concerned about them-Harmony was quite sick at the moment-the fifth year didn't really let it get her down. She tended to believe that everything would turn out okay, at least with Autumn, but nothing really bad would happen to anyone else that she cared about either. Her cousin would continue to eat, Harmony would pull through again and Preston Stratford wouldn't smother Russell in his sleep. It wasn't as if Hope didn't realize there were bad things in the world-Nora seemed to enjoy pointing them out-it was just that she felt distanced from them.

She shrugged. "It was...like it always is now. I went to Fae Sinclair's sister's wedding." The Teppenpaw had attended other parties too, but she didn't think Topher would really be able to relate or be interested. Boys attended but they didn't seem all that into that sort of thing and the other fifth year wasn't from the same sort of family that she was.

Sometimes, Hope did wish she had female friends that she could talk about girly things with. Her sisters were all out of the house and Sonora, Nora didn't seem that interested in them and Sophie, who was probably her closest female friend, didn't seem all that girly either. Her roommates couldn't really relate to her lifestyle either. Sometimes, Hope didn't really feel part of the unit that was the other Teppenpaw fifth years. Probably because she was from a different background and hadn't sat with them at the Opening Feast their first year.

Since they'd agreed that holidays tended not to be that interesting, Hope looked for another topic. "So, are you looking forward to the bonfire?" She asked. "It sounds like it might be fun." She sort of liked that there wasn't going to be anything but a relaxing evening of smores and hanging around.
11 Hope Can't complain. 186 Hope 0 5


Topher

November 07, 2012 2:04 PM
Fae’s sister’s wedding. Topher grimaced slightly, without noticing he was doing it, at that thought – not because he hadn’t been invited, as that was the last thing he would have ever expected to be despite having always been on perfectly good terms with Fae herself, but because he remembered her being upset about her sister getting engaged in the first place at one of the Opening Feasts and how this had led to her asking him about sisters.
 
He didn’t know why, even now that he had intellectually accepted that she was not Evil Incarnate, Caroline as a subject still bothered him so much. He even thought of her – just because it was useful shorthand, he assured himself, but he did do it – as his sister half the time, even if he didn’t feel any particular affection for or sense of obligation to her, but the idea of referring to her as that was still one that made him irrationally angry. He was really sure that he did not envy her her screwed up family, or think that the money was enough to make the prospect of having it more desirable; his contempt for That Dude They Both Looked A Lot Like was great enough that he didn’t want anything said Dude had to offer. This was, after all, America; if he wanted money, he could go make some someday, after school….
 
He really just wished, he guessed (and felt almost ashamed of himself for even thinking it) that his mother was less honest, and had never told him about any of it. Ignorance really would have been bliss. It was a little late for that, though.
 
“Guess that was fun,” he said of the Sinclair wedding. “Sounds better than listening to my second cousins arguing about weddings, anyway,” he added lightly. Ava Proctor and Ivy Fitzgerald were identical twins, but telling them apart had never been difficult, since Ava considered the way Ivy did her hair a symbol of submission to the patriarchy and therefore a direct affront to the principles her sister cherished. Topher could have happily passed up dealing with them at all, but they were his mother’s first cousins, and it was one of the Traditions, listening to Ava and Ivy arguing. They got along on Christmas and fought over New Year’s, same thing every year.
 
He nodded when Hope suggested that the bonfire could be fun. “I don’t have to do anything, and CATS will be over,” he said, ticking off those two points on his fingers. “What’s not to love?”
 
Except all the drama he was sure was going to result as people tried to sort themselves out into tents, anyway. Topher was hoping to avoid the worst drama, probably pairing up with Phoenix and then seeing who else was unattached, maybe they’d put Quidditch aside and take Derry in or something, but he knew, he was really sure, that for a lot of people in this school, things were going to get crazy and interesting. At least a few people were going to find out how they ranked with their friends, and he could just imagine how the fallout might have gone if the event had been a little earlier in the year.
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Hope

November 14, 2012 11:46 AM
Hope nodded. "I suppose it was. I mean, I'm always going to these things so after awhile they all sort of blend together. Haven't heard any real arguments though." Unless you counted Chelsea running of and eloping with Julian rather than him marrying Fallon. "Did you have to go to a wedding for one of them?" She asked. Maybe they were arguing about bridesmaids dresses or something else that had to be exceedingly boring for a teenage boy.

Of course, when it came to her own wedding, Hope was certain it would go off without incident. Of course her current wedding fantasies involved someone who her great grandfather wouldn't approve of. Which was unfair, as it wasn't as if Hope liked a Muggle. Still, there would be nothing silly like the groom running off with her cousin or someone standing up and announcing that the groom was gay, the way Nina had done at their cousin Oliver's wedding back the Pecari alumna was seven.

Hope nodded in agreement. "It doesn't get much better than that." She kind of liked that this year would be a stress free fun event. Not that she had had a hard time with last year's. Being part of the zombie film had been a lot of fun. Still, after CATS, they would need to unwind a bit. And it was good for Autumn too, who had to be stressing about RATS. Hope couldn't imagine if her cousin had to follow up her exams by worrying about finding a date for a ball or contributing to some sort of performance or something. The Crotalus felt stressed out enough anyway and Hope worried about her having too much placed on her. What if she stopped eating again.

That didn't mean that the fifth year was all that worried herself. She wasn't prefect, so she wouldn't have to have a date or risk humiliation by having to find the nearest boy to dance with her like Nina had. Not that she didn't hope to have a date, her eyes lingering briefly over to Russell. Even if he just wanted to be friends, even if nothing else ever happened, for one night it would be magical . Not like the everyday magic that was born and bred into them, but a special sort of fairytale magic. A pureblood 'prince' had nothing on her friend. He was a nice guy and had truly deserved to get prefect.

However, she didn't have to worry about that until next year. This year she just had to worry about tentmates. She'd ask Sophie of course, and honestly, she couldn't think of anyone that she really didn't want to share with. So she doubted there would be much drama involved in this either. "I'm glad we have this bonfire where we don't have to do anything extra the same year as CATS." Hope added.

OOC-Sorry for the wait.
11 Hope Indeed 186 Hope 0 5