Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

January 04, 2013 5:45 PM
Kiva had given birth to her daughter, Harper Melissa Kijewski-Jareau, only days after the last day of school last term and spent much of her summer being a new mom and an old mom to the other four children in the house. Emery and Chloe were thrilled, well, initially thrilled anyway. Emery became cranky when the baby cried for too long and Chloe only held interest in her until she became bored and moved on. Knowing they were only ten, Kiva tried not to hold it against them. Ayita and Angel were harder to predict. Ayita seemed to spend as much time away from them as possible. Kiva wasn’t sure if that was a sixteen year old being a sixteen year old or something more. Kiva gave her the space she needed, but also had tried to make sure she knew that she was a part of the family. Angel clung to her more often than she remembered him doing in the past, but didn't seem to enjoy the baby all too much. Sometimes she would catch him watching Harper while she slept, but would immediately run off if the baby woke up. It was strange, but Kiva figured he had never seen a baby before. This was a learning experience for them all.

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 were back in school.

“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 your new Deputy Headmistress Pierce, who is also the Coach, and take a sip from the potion she will offer to you.” Kiva explained, nodded to Amelia to indicate who Coach Pierce was. “Once you have taken a sip of the potion, your skin will turn into the color of the house you will be spending the next seven years in. Once your house is indicated, please have a seat at your house table. Yellow is for Teppenpaw, 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 would like to have Sara Raines and David Wilkes 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 Nora Dobson, Lawrence Stratford, Paul Bennett, and Melanie Goodwill to join me 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 Ball. Normally, there is a theme to the ball, but we wanted to change things up a bit since last term, the event was low-key.” Kiva advised them, waiting for any moans that were bound to come.

“There will be three challenges held during the year. We are going to place you in various groups and in various levels. The Advanced Students will take lead, but the point of these challenges is to see how well you work together.” Kiva wasn’t sure if they would actually enjoy these challenges or their teammates, but it would keep them busy. “At the end of the year, the winners of these challenges will be given awards. The hosts of these challenges will provide you with more detail when we come closer to those. I’ll be posting the teams on your house boards and the main board in the hall within the next couple of days.” Now onto what she assumed would be the worst news. “Due to the challenges this year we decided to forego all Quidditch games.” Now she really waited for the hostility from the students. “Quidditch Captains will still have to uphold their responsibilities with signups, tryouts, and practices, but games will be postponed until next year.”

Kiva waited for any commotion over this news to die down. She knew for the graduating Captains it may have been hard to swallow. Once they had quieted, she continued, “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!
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Welcoming Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Charlie (and Henny) B-F-R

January 04, 2013 5:54 PM
“Just like she said...” Charlie breathed to himself as he entered the Cascade Hall. The fact though that Henny had told him all about the water flowing noiselessly down the walls didn't make him any less in awe, good as her powers of description were and accustomed to magic as he was. He'd been taken on various educational trips to historic houses when Henny had got to choose their days out, and he'd seen some pretty fancy spellwork but it was always in places that were clapped out. The spellwork was either not functioning any more or had been restored just for the sake of letting people look at it. This was more real, somehow. It wasn't sectioned off by velvet ropes. There weren't guides around trying to explain about how it worked and how they'd restored it. It just... was.

Charlie lined up with the other first years, the procedure safe and familiar as it happened just as his sister had told him it would. One he'd taken his turn with the goblet, he ran enthusiastically over to her.

“Henny! Henny! Look I'm.... I'm yellow,” he said, doubt and uncertainty creeping into his demeanour for the first time. “I'm not with you,” he said, sounding crestfallen. If it hadn't been for his tone, Henny might have laughed and said something like 'No, of course not,' but she could tell that Charlie was unpleasantly surprised by this turn of events, which to her had been perfectly expected.

“Did you think you would be?” she asked gently. He nodded sadly.

“We're siblings.”

“Well, yes. But siblings don't always go together. And we're not very similar. You'll like Teppenpaw – I'm sure you will.”

“I wanted to be with you,” Charlie said in a very small voice.

“You suit Teppenpaw and I'm sure you'll like it,” she reiterated. “How about we have a breakfast date tomorrow? We can write home and tell Dad and Father about your house. Dad always says nice things about Teppenpaw, I'm sure he'll be pleased.”

Charlie seemed to brighten a little at this idea. With the plan made, he gave his sister a hug and made his way to his own table, still not quite his usual chirpy self, whilst the last few people got sorted. The news in the headmistress' speech made him perk up a bit. Henny had talked about the end of term events and he'd even been to the concert the year before last as an audience member but it sounded like he'd got to school just in time. A ball would be great fun, after all, there were dresses or dress-robes and make-up to be thought about. He glanced around, appreciating the female to male ratio. It would be practically impossible for him not to make at least one or two female friends whom he could help with these things. And not only was there the ball at the end of next term but they would get to do things all through the year too! He clapped for the heads and prefects, vaguely recognising them from the yearbook Henny had brought home. Even if he hadn't, he would have been happy for them anyway – it was nice seeing people get something that made them happy. Charlie sang along enthusiastically and not at all badly to the school song. Upon finding out about it, he had insisted on Henny teaching him the tune so that he would be able to join in. He beamed about at the end of it. It was hard to keep feeling down after a good sing song.

“Wow!” he exclaimed, when a table full of delicious looking food appeared before him. “Wow, this looks great, doesn't it?” he said, turning to the person next to him, “I mean, my sister said it would be great and everything but it's even greater when you actually see it!”
13 Charlie (and Henny) B-F-R Excited and a bit surprised 211 Charlie (and Henny) B-F-R 0 5

Julian Umland

January 04, 2013 8:40 PM
The small girl near the back of the crowd of first years looked almost doll-like at first glance, dressed in sparklingly clean dark green robes with a matching ribbon in carefully curled dark brown hair and looking all around the Cascade Hall with eyes gone wide in her round face. The impression of neatness lasted only about five seconds, though, before, staring at the waterfalls and not watching exactly where she was going, she stumbled over the hem of the hem robes and nearly fell. Her face turned bright red, and she focused her eyes on the back of the student in front of her after that, hoping that no one had noticed.

This was, Julian thought as she did that, typical, but she tried to pretend she didn’t think it. Things weren’t really that bad, and it was her fault for not paying better attention. She had known her robes were a little long for her from the start, since Mom thought she was about due to grow another inch or two by winter break. Besides, they mostly covered up her shoes, which she didn’t like at all, and so she would have been glad of them if she had not let herself stop paying attention. And now she had something else to pay attention to anyway, as did everyone else, so no one but her was even wasting time thinking about her stumbling as she’d entered the magnificent Cascade Hall for the first time.

Folding her hands at her waist to keep them from shaking, she listened to the Headmistress explain how they would be Sorted, not sure whether she felt more excited or scared. She did not have a lot of history at this school, no large group of relatives who’d attended Sonora before her expecting her to be in one House or another, but she wasn’t sure that really made it any better. If her whole family had come to Sonora before her, she might have had a clear idea of where she was likely to go, and more than school marketing literature to give her an idea of what going into the Houses meant.

Nervously, as the Deputy Headmistress approached her, she put her hand in her pocket and gripped the beads there for a moment to calm herself down, and as she began to feel steady again, it became her turn to take a sip of the potion. After offering Coach Pierce a tentative smile, she did so, her lips turning inward as the bubbly stuff went over her tongue and down her throat. She put her hand up to her chest for a moment as it went down – she always hated taking potions – and then flinched when she saw that it had turned bright yellow.

Yellow, she thought, going blank for a moment before she remembered what she had read that meant, what Professor K had just told them that meant. Yellow meant Teppenpaw; she was a Teppenpaw. She had thought that Mom might like Aladren, but there was nothing wrong with Teppenpaw, either. She was glad, she decided as she scurried over toward that table, to be a Teppenpaw.

Julian didn’t know who the Head Boy and Girl or any of the prefects were, but she applauded politely for them, and just set her features into bland attentiveness as, after that, Professor K began talking about things she wasn’t sure she understood, figuring from what she did get out of the speech about balls and activities that someone would tell her where to go when it was time if she didn’t work it out on her own first. The news about Quidditch was a little disappointing – she enjoyed watching it even though her family made its living from Quodpot, and had been looking forward to a number of games she could go to for free, hopefully with her new friends she hadn’t made yet – but she was distracted by the charm of the school song, and then by the huge amount of food that appeared on the table in front of her. It was easy to wait until Professor K sat down to even think of starting to serve herself, but that was due to amazement over how so much could just appear all at once. It was magic, she knew, but so much at once was even more impressive than her mother's ability to put a Silencing Charm on all five of them at once when she wanted to.

The boy beside her said aloud what she was thinking, and Julian smiled at him. “It’s really awesome,” she agreed. “Oh, it smells good, too! I don’t even know where to start.” She hesitated, wondering if she should hinder him from diving into the feast a few seconds longer, and then offered her hand. “I’m Julian,” she said, not even thinking of how her name was not usually a girl’s at that moment. “It’s nice to meet you.”
16 Julian Umland Likewise. 254 Julian Umland 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

January 05, 2013 1:56 PM
Charlie surveyed the food as his new housemate verbalised her appreciation for it. Or at least he'd assumed they were a 'her.' His attention snapped back to them slightly abruptly when they said their name was Julian. They definitely looked like a girl. Which presented a few possibilities. They could be a girl with a boy's name – what he had assumed to be a boy's name, he corrected himself. If Julian was a girl and called Julian then that proved that it wasn't just a boy's name. Or they could be a very, VERY girly looking boy. Or possibly a boy who had chosen to live as a girl but not yet changed their name. Besides being mildly curious as to which of these was correct, it didn't really matter. None of the options made much difference. With adoptive gay parents, Charlie knew that people came in all kinds of genders and sexualities, much as they came in all sizes and colours. But you didn't let that bother you. People were just people. Julian was Julian. He could get to know them now. Whether or not they showed up in his room later would answer his other question, if their conversation didn't.

“Nice to meet you,” he said, feeling a little bad for having been surprised by Julian's revelation and hoping they didn't think he had stared rudely or anything. He didn't think he had particularly. They had just caught his attention – he had shaken their hand promptly (typically a male greeting, he thought – though also typically a grown up one, so who knew what that meant) and he had been looking at them more normally since. Julian was definitely pretty, whatever they were. “I'm Charlie.

“Hmmm, where to start...” he mused, returning to their other topic of conversation. “That looks tasty,” he nodded to a dish a paella. It was bright and colourful and the smell wafting off it was amazing, “Plus it's always good to co-ordinate one's accessories. Or dinner, right?” he grinned, inspecting one of his yellow hands. “Would you like some too?” he asked, as he reached for the spoon.
13 Charlie B-F-R Unduly surprised but still excited 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian U.

January 06, 2013 12:23 PM
Julian noticed her new classmate’s moment of surprise and winced a little, though she was impressed by how he didn’t say anything about it. Usually, people said something about her name, though she thought it helped a lot here that she wasn’t standing in the middle of the group of her four brothers, none of whom had names which had gone out of fashion for boys before the invention of the printing press. All things considered, she thought Charlie was doing really well with it.

She glanced shyly toward the other new Teppenpaw girls, wondering if they would be as decent about it. The other girls were the thing at Sonora she was most nervous about, not just because of her name, but because of everything, especially the part where they were going to live together and share a room. Her brothers shared, but since she was the only girl in the family, she never had, and she was worried that she might not be very good at it, or that one of the others might not, or that they all might not be, and that everything there would be terrible. She had been worrying about that since, she thought, a few days after she got her acceptance letter.

Right now, though, she was talking to Charlie, who wasn’t making a big deal out of her name and didn’t react if he had special vision that let him know her robes were secondhand, either, so she chose to focus on that. “Yes, thank you,” she said when he suggested a dish. “The asparagus looks lovely, too,” she added, taking some of that for her plate while he had the first spoon, since she did enjoy it very much when it was prepared well. Her dad's dad made the best asparagus dishes in the world, or so she firmly believed. “Would you like some of it, too?”
16 Julian U. I'm mostly just excited. 254 Julian U. 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

January 06, 2013 1:02 PM
“Say when...” Charlie directed Julian, heaping paella onto their plate until they told him to stop. “I'm not sure...” he said, when they offered him some asparagus, not entirely sure he would have been able to put that name to it if they hadn't provided it. He knew of it and had seen it around, in shops, but he was fairly sure it wasn't something he'd eaten before. But he wasn't really fussy and school, and life in general, was about new experiences. “Can I just have one bit to try, please?” he asked, “I haven't had it before.

“Did you have to come far? We live in San Francisco, so it's definitely not as bad as it could be. I reckon the kids from New York must have pretty tough backsides to stand riding all the way from there,” he grinned.

He took a couple of mouthfuls of paella as Julian answered. Amongst the soft, spicy rice and delicate fish was a sudden salty taste. An olive. He thought it might be a bit rude to spit it out in front of Julian, so he swallowed. He didn't hate olives and thus could eat them if table manners dictated that he really ought to but he didn't love them either. He was definitely of the opinion that his dinner would be better with out them and resolved to take future mouthfuls a bit more carefully.

“You like olives?” he asked. “If you do, you can have mine,” he explained, nudging one out from its hiding place and over to the edge of his plate.
13 Charlie B-F-R New experiences of the culinary variety 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian

January 06, 2013 2:32 PM
“When,” Julian said after Charlie put what she thought was enough of a helping of the paella on her plate. “That’s enough, thank you,” she smiled, thinking the dish did smell nice, but that she didn’t want too much of any one thing right now so she could try more of the options, unless she just found something so delicious that she couldn’t help herself. She did like food a lot, both helping her parents prepare it and eating it.

“Sure,” she said when Charlie asked just to try a little of the asparagus, dishing him out only a small amount. “I’m only going to try a little of it, too, at least right now – I love it when we have it at home, but I don’t know if they do it righ – the way we do here,” she corrected herself, since – as long as everything was sanitary and at the right temperatures, anyway – there wasn’t really ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ with food, just what suited the different tastes of different people.

She added a little of it to her plate as Charlie asked about the wagon ride, and laughed at the mental image which occurred to her of New Yorkers with wooden backsides. “You’re probably right,” she said, then took a bite of her paella, tasting shrimp and she thought a little saffron. “I took a wagon from Helena, in Montana,” she went on once she’d swallowed it. “So I think New York would still be worse than my ride, but yours was probably better than mine. I think we went through the beginning of a storm one time, it was awfully bumpy.”

Charlie offered her his olives. “I like black ones,” she replied, looking to see about his. “I’m not crazy about the green ones, but I can eat them, too.”

She decided to venture a personal question. “You said ‘we’ came from San Francisco,” she said, trying a bite of the asparagus and being relieved to find the taste of it agreeable. It wasn’t as good as her dad’s, much less Grandpa’s, but it was good anyway. “Do you have family here?” She was already missing hers, and hoped John would decide to come here with her when he was old enough, when she started her fifth year. “Or friends? Or just a lot of people on the same wagon?” She knew there were lots of wizards in California, so it occurred to her at the last minute that he could have just meant that by 'we'.
16 Julian They can be amazing adventures. 254 Julian 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

January 06, 2013 2:59 PM
Charlie grinned when Julian actually said 'when'. He guessed it was a common, corny joke but they always did it in his family too. He speared the asparagus on his fork, giving it a little sniff just to try to get an indication of what he was about to get before shoving it in his mouth unhesitatingly. He chewed, his eyes moving upwards as if consulting his brain to see whether it had a result to give him on the experience yet.

“It doesn't taste like a vegetable,” he mused. “I mean, I know vegetables taste different to each other but they all have a general... vegetabliness. They taste like green things. This doesn't. It's quite nice though,” he nodded, adding a piece or two more to his plate. He wasn't sure it was something he could shovel down at the same rate as peas or carrots but it was definitely something he could eat a little bit more of. “They seem to be just black ones,” he added, in reference to the olives.

“My Father's from Montana!” he grinned, when Julian announced that was where they were from. “He went to school in Canada though cos it seemed easier than coming all the way over here. Which bit are you from?

“My sister's here. She's over in Aladren. And my Dad came here too so I kind of heard a lot about it before I came – oh, he and Father aren't the same person,” he added, suddenly remembering he was talking to a new person and had just mentioned two male parents and two different schools within a sentence or so of each other. It tended to confuse new people unless it was at least somewhat explained. “I think I asked them about a million questions. But there's still so much I feel like I don't know, and even the things she told me about are even better when you see them, like the Hall and the food, so it's still really exciting. Did you know much about it before you came here?”
13 Charlie B-F-R I'm enjoying this one 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian

January 06, 2013 4:26 PM
“My family makes it better,” Julian said as Charlie decided he could eat asparagus. “This isn’t bad, though, I agree.” She ate a few more bites of hers before taking another bite of the paella. “I think the food here is going to be good – unless they just made it special tonight for the feast.”

For a moment, her expression clouded over a little as she thought about that, wondering if the food would be no good at all tomorrow because it had been good tonight and if, if that was so, if it would settle down into a medium place after that and how that would be, but then she shrugged and decided to just hope for the best. That, her mother liked to say, was often all one really could do. At the very least, she had food she could enjoy a lot tonight, and that was something to be grateful for. She tucked back in, the cloudy look passing as quickly as it had descended.

“Thank you,” she said, accepting the black olives from him.

Her first reaction to hearing that his family and hers had at least a wider-scope place in common was surprise, but it was quickly followed by wanting to giggle as he said something else about his father. “It’s sort of – northwesterly,” she said of Helena, waving a hand in an attempt to sum up where it was, able to picture the map but not to show him the picture in her head. “It’s funny, though, because I’m not from there. My dad was born there, just closer to the border, but we live in Calgary now, and that’s over in, er, Canada.” That coincidence amused her a lot, though she wasn’t sure if Charlie would find it funny, too, or not.

She didn’t actually catch him mentioning that his dad had come to Sonora after saying that his father had gone to school in Canada until he pointed out that they weren’t the same person, and Julian looked at him curiously for a second, but didn’t say anything. Maybe his father had died and his mother had remarried when he was little, or…who knew, really. She didn’t come from the most traditional family, either, so she knew these things could get complicated.

“I didn’t,” she said when he asked if she’d known much about Sonora before she started here. “Mom and Dad both went to school in Canada, too, and Stephen’s in his last year there, too – that’s my oldest brother,” she added, realizing that just ‘Stephen’ wouldn’t mean anything to Charlie without some context. “Aunt Mallory and Grandpa Umland came here, but they didn’t say much. What kinds of things did your dad and sister tell you?” She was eager to learn as much as she could about the school; it was, after all, where she’d probably spend most of the next seven years of her life. It would be sort of like a second home to her, so she needed to know it well.
16 Julian Let's give no thought to tomorrow, then. 254 Julian 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

January 06, 2013 6:39 PM
“I don't think so,” Charlie reassured his new friend when they worried about the food. “I think there's more choice for tonight but Henny – that's my sister, it's short for Henrietta but no one calls her that – she said the food's pretty nice, and our parents can cook ok, so it's not like she's thinking that having come from a home of burnt fries and spaghetti o's. I reckon they'll feed us OK,” he grinned. “And before that, there's still tonight's dessert to be excited about... I don't think I could have a favourite dessert.... Do you have one? Or a favourite food?

“That's funny,” he exclaimed, when they told him about how their family was kind of opposite to how things were for his Father. “Hey, maybe they were in school together? Which one was it and how old are they? My Father's.... forty-something,” he said. He'd never really been great at keeping track of his parents' ages – it was just old and grown up age. He was fairly sure he'd heard grown ups saying they preferred not to count anyway. But they'd definitely had a 40th birthday party for his dad. But definitely not a 50th. That was really ancient. His eyes scanned the staff table – he'd looked at the staff pictures in Henny's yearbook and seen that some of the staff looked pretty wrinkly. The Potions Professor had to be about a hundred. “And he told me about school a bit too cos he worked here before he left to be with us,” he added, the dots connecting in his head. “He was the librarian. But you should totally ask your parents if they remember him. His name's Tarquin Reynolds. He was in the house that likes reading and stuff. I forget what its name was.

“They told me... I dunno. Just I grew up with it being mentioned. Well, from when we went to live with Father and Dad, I mean, but I don't remember much before that anyway. So effectively, I grew up hearing about it. So I guess I knew what the houses were like. And Henny's been sending letters for the last few years, though they mostly tend to be about classes but also the end of term events – like this year's a ball but they have four that rotate. There's the ball, it was a bonfire last year, the year before was a concert which I got to go see but they didn't have it in the school, so I'd never seen it. And something else. I don't remember. And she brought a yearbook home last year, so I've been flicking through that. I mean, I wasn't all crazy and stalkerish - I haven't memorised everyone's name and house but it was kind of cool just to get a look at people. And Henny told me all about the sorting and I got her to teach me the song so that I could sing it. I don't think people mind if first years don't – or older kids by the looks of it – but I wanted to join in. I like singing.” For someone who found it hard to know what he'd really known he found that he could say a surprising amount. “But never mind what I did know about... What things are you most excited about finding out about?”
13 Charlie B-F-R I'm an optimist, so I forecast a fine tomorrow 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian U.

January 13, 2013 12:29 PM
Julian wondered why anyone would want to be called Henny when they had a pretty name like Henrietta, but she knew enough people asked why anyone would ever call a girl ‘Julian’ – a name she actually liked; the idea of going by 'Bridget,' her much more traditionally feminine second name, had never really occurred to her, and she had resisted all attempts anyone had ever made to call her ‘Julie’ on a regular basis – to also know that she had no right to talk about that. Instead, then, she nodded and smiled as Charlie said he thought they would still be well-fed after tonight.
 
“My mother’s mother makes a wonderful chocolate-raisin cake,” she said, deciding, after a moment’s reflection, that it was a good answer to both the questions about her favorite dessert and her favorite food in general. She preferred sweets to savories generally, though she had no objection to the foods eaten for actual meals before they got to the sweet parts, either. One of her short-term ambitions when she was littler had been to be a famous chef someday, though right now, she was back to not knowing what she wanted to do when she grew up. “She makes one for Dad on his birthday, and one for Christmas, and that’s it, but I can taste it right now.” She closed her eyes for a second, doing just that.
 
“There’s one in every school, isn’t there?” Julian laughed when Charlie said his father had been in the house that liked reading at his school. “Mom was in hers, too, but Dad wasn’t. She says that’s why she’s a medievalist and he’s a Quodpot announcer.” Technically, her mother had never really worked in the field she’d studied, staying home instead to raise five children, but she still identified with it. “But she’s just joking,” she felt obliged to add. “Hers was Arrandore House, at the Deloy School, it’s in British Columbia. My oldest brother’s there now, but he’s in Zelona’s.” Stephen hadn’t been very happy there, either, for the past six years, which was part of why Julian was here now instead of there. “Mom and Dad – I know Mom just turned forty-two. Their names are Chris and Alison.”
 
She blinked, startled and confused, when Charlie mentioned living with Father and Dad, then flushed as one possible interpretation occurred to her, which she decided, as he had not commented on her name, not to say anything about, especially since Charlie was still talking away about what he’d heard about the school from them and his sister and the yearbook. She nodded when he said he liked singing, since she did, too.
 
“Looking around the building,” she admitted when Charlie asked what she was most looking forward to learning about Sonora. “I’ve always dreamed about getting to go out and explore whatever school I went to…is that strange? I just want to know all about it, where everything is, what, where all the little places in it are. What about you?”
16 Julian U. I'm not an optimist, but I'll make an exception this time. 254 Julian U. 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

January 14, 2013 11:51 AM
“Ooh, that sounds amazing. My parents are fine at cooking but they’re not very good at baking. Apparently though there’s a baking club here, run by a girl whose mum runs a bakery, so I’m really excited about joining. I’d love to be able to make all kinds of fancy cakes and cookies!” Charlie grinned, “There’s also a book club which my sister runs,” he added, rather matter of factly and out of the feeling of loyalty that told him he should give equal airtime to advertising his sister’s club even if it wasn’t nearly so delicious sounding.

“That was where my Father went!” he beamed enthusiastically, “That was probably his house too, if it’s the reading-y one. I forget what it was called but that sounds kind of familiar. Dad was a Pecari when he was here though. It’s funny how such different people can be happy together, isn’t it?” he pondered, inadvertently answering Julian’s unansked question. He tended to talk about his family without really worrying about whether it revealed how unconventional they were – after all, it wasn’t something he really considered it necessary to hide or feel uncomfortable about. “Nice though,” he added, smiling.

“How come you and your brother aren’t in the same school?” he asked. He didn’t really stop to consider whether that was an overly personal thing to ask, given that there was probably a good, possibly slightly unpleasant reason for the situation. Charlie tended to wear his heart on his sleeve, which meant he was very open about the few problems he had and hadn’t fully grasped that not everyone felt the same way about thier feelings, although he had learnt to make specific exceptions. Father, for example, did not tend to talk a lot about things that upset him. Not to Charlie anyway. He had decided that that was just how Father was though, rather than it being the case that Father was one of a particular type of people, more of whom he may encounter in life.

“That doesn’t sound strange at all and I couldn’t have put it better. That’s what I want to do too! Even when someone tells you what a building looks like, it’s not the same as seeing it. It’s not like my family had described like... every single route between places in ridiculous detail – no one does that and it’d be super boring to listen to but actually doing it, and seeing all the little details like all the pictures and stuff and working out how it all links up is going to be really exciting.”
13 Charlie B-F-R Hurrah! Always look on the brightside of life 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian U.

January 14, 2013 1:30 PM
Julian thought both clubs sounded interesting. “Wow,” she said, smiling. “Those sound fun. It sounds like there’s a lot to do here.”

That was, in her mind, a definite plus to the school, even if it was a little scary to contemplate at the same time. Dealing with people and getting involved with activities made her nervous, but she still wanted to do it. She knew that while she would be uncomfortable at first, she would, if the people turned out to be nice enough and didn’t go out of their way to keep her uncomfortable, end up enjoying herself, especially in the two areas Charlie mentioned. Books and food were pretty much the foundations on which her house was built. The idea of tons of them not being around at pretty much all times and open for her to interact with was a little strange.

Dad and Father being happy together seemed to confirm what she had thought, which made Julian a little uncomfortable. This was one of the things her family sometimes argued about around the dinner table, and though she knew everyone’s arguments – her mother’s, her father’s, her older brothers’, her priest’s, still others on the news, since her parents didn’t believe in just knowing about one side – she had never really decided what she thought was right, except that she agreed with her mother that she ought to be nice, as far as possible, to everyone unless they were assaulting things she did really believe in, and even then that she ought to try to be polite even while she disagreed. Charlie was being perfectly nice to her, and they were not talking about Issues right now, just about a similarity in their family histories, so she just said, “yes, it is,” and let the conversation move on.

“My dad says he doesn’t believe in coincidences, but I think I have to believe in coincidences now,” she said. “What were the chances we’d have families from the same school and then come to the same other school and be in the same House?”

She shrugged a little when asked about the school situation. “Well, Stephen didn’t like it very much there,” she said. “And some of Dad’s family had come here – Mom’s Muggleborn, so she didn’t really get a choice, but he did, and his sister came here instead – so we decided to give it a try. Stephen’s going to leave at the end of this year, and my first little brother, John, he won’t come to any school until we’re fifth years, so it wasn’t really about being with them.”

She was glad to hear that she wasn’t too strange, at least in Charlie’s opinion, so if she was, at least she had some company. “We’ll have to go exploring sometime,” she declared. “Maybe this weekend would be good? Maybe some of the others – “ she gestured vaguely toward the other Teppenpaw first years – “would want to come, too, do you think we should ask them later?” She liked making plans, having a feeling of having a plan, even if it wasn't something hugely important.
16 Julian U. Sometimes the light at the end of the tunnel is a fire. 254 Julian U. 0 5