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


Cepheus Princeton

January 08, 2013 1:30 PM
The entire summer had been torture for the fourteen-year-old. He had been zoning in and out of conversations, hardly living life like he was supposed to; expected to, anyway. The summer months had been spent mostly indoors because he was too busy thinking about his relationships, his friendships and, of course, his attraction toward a certain Pecari.

He knew, and the men of his household had made sure to emphasise, that nothing could ever come from it. Cepheus was expected to marry another witch whom he didn't even like very much. It wasn't that she was ugly beyond belief or anything. He just didn't fancy the idea of getting married to someone who seemed so...complacent with where she was going. Theresa was different to Cepheus: proper, but held her ground and had pride in everything she did. He had thought of writing to Alicia or Gareth about her once or twice, but thought better of it. He knew they didn't have the best track record and he'd be mercilessly pitting them against each other if he told her. So he held back, but he was dying to tell someone.

The beginning of the welcoming feast was a blur. He watched his cousin be sorted into Pecari and didn't find himself surprised or disappointed in the slightest. It was fitting that Adam was in the same house as Rupert, though he found Adam to be much more controlled and respectable than his brother. Cepheus found his eyes glancing more than once towards a certain brunette during the feast, wondering if she still fancied him after he'd made a fool of himself at the bonfire. What an idiot he'd been that spring, and what a way to end the year.

Cepheus played with his food a little, thinking to himself, until a voice brought him out of his thoughts. "Sorry? I didn't catch that," he said, his mind finally coming back to the present.
40 Cepheus Princeton Brooding as usual. 216 Cepheus Princeton 0 5


Alexandra Devereux

January 08, 2013 10:27 PM
For Alex, the summer after her third year had passed the same way as the summer after her second year, and the summer after her first year before that: quietly, and without fuss. She had been reunited with her parents, who had made appropriate gestures of affection toward her and heard about her year before going back to their own concerns and leaving her to hers. She had visited cousins a few times, had them at her home in Louisiana one time, gone to lunch every Sunday with her maternal grandparents, and so on. It was all as familiar as the back of her hand, and she had gotten through it without a single difficulty.

Next summer, though, would be a little different; next summer, they would go to the Reunion. Everyone was already talking about it, but every time Alex heard it, she was surprised all over again. Going to the Reunion would mean it was five years since she’d met Theresa and Lucy, since the first Reunion she could really remember clearly, and it just didn’t seem like it had been that long to her. It was going to be a lot of commotion and expense and stress, she knew, but she hoped that it would have some redeeming features to it as well. She, after all, was most likely still too young to get involved in the adult problems; maybe she could have some fun there, or at least stay out of everyone’s way in the library at…whichever house they had it at, she wasn’t sure what they were going to do now that Great-Great-Grandfather was dead.

It was far enough in the future, though, not to stick in her mind for long as she watched the first years getting Sorted, watching with a quickly smothered smile as Lucille’s brother went into Pecari and wondering what the family was going to think of that, and then looked up, as surprised as anyone else, when, after the prefects were announced, they found out that the year was going to be more interesting than they had expected. She didn’t care much about Quidditch – really, she thought her family would be better off without it, since enough of them were on one team for it to cause Theresa, she knew, more stress than the game was probably worth – but the events caught her attention, since she would have to be involved in them. What were they going to be doing, anyway?

The feast came along and she made herself a plate and began to eat, glancing up uncertainly as she realized she was sitting with Cepheus. She had not asked Theresa, over the summer, about the yearbook since her cousin had been in a funny mood anyway, but she had to admit, she was curious. She’d known Theresa had a thing for him – it had been hard to miss – but never thought too much about him reciprocating.

He didn’t look like a man in happy love tonight, but that, she supposed, could have been because there was going to be no Quidditch. Boys – and some girls, she admitted, but mostly boys – did get too worked up about that game. “No appetite?” she asked after a minute.

He was distracted enough to require a repetition. “I said, no appetite?” she said again, gesturing to his played-with food on his plate. “The prairie elves are still cooking as well as they ever did, I promise,” she added, gesturing to her own plate, which was beginning to empty as she enjoyed her first meal of the new academic year.
0 Alexandra Devereux You could do better or worse things with your time 0 Alexandra Devereux 0 5


Cepheus

January 10, 2013 10:18 AM
It was Alex who disturbed him and Cepheus didn't mind the company. He didn't interact much with her or the other witches in his house and year because he had many friends in Aladren. How that had happened he wasn't quite sure since he hated the Aladren Quidditch team.

"I don't doubt you," replied Cepheus, straightening his posture a bit to stretch the muscles in his back. "After three years you'd think it'd get old." He smirked at her and then stretched. "How was your summer? Go anywhere interesting?" He liked talking with the girls in his house; many of them were pure-bloods like him, which was nearly a necessity to gain his interest nowadays, respectable and easy to converse with. He had gotten better at being able to tell who the mudbloods were and found it easier to surround himself with the right sort.

He was paying attention to his conversation with Alex, but he glanced over at Megan, wondering what she'd thought after seeing the yearbook award he and Theresa shared. He didn't loathe her in particular, but what she represented to him. She was part of the reason why he couldn't pursue any relationships with other girls he fancied. And there were loads of pretty girls in his year. There was Theresa, of course, and Alicia, and he had caught himself looking more than once at Alex, Eris, the new transfer, and Henny. The muggle-born was cute too, but she was completely off-limits because of her blood and strange personality. Girls were suddenly attractive to Cepheus who had never really fancied anyone before. Until now.

Cepheus's eyes travelled back to Theresa before looking back at Alex, his wandering eyes not hindering his hearing. His glances from Megan to Theresa had been less than a minute and it wasn't obvious enough that Alex would have noticed. At least he hoped. He didn't want to be too obvious and get caught in his affections. He was certain his best mates were going to ask him about it when they got the chance, but he didn't want to share too much. He wasn't sure what they would even say about it.
0 Cepheus Probably better things 0 Cepheus 0 5


Alex

January 10, 2013 8:54 PM
“No,” Alex said of Sonora’s food, “but I’m sure it tastes a little better at the Opening Feast because we’ve been at home for two months without it.” The food at home was good, too, but different, and not too similar to a feast; her father was a frugal wizard who didn’t believe in living too high a life, so when they weren’t hosting an event, he and Alex, anyway, if not her mother, tended to wear old robes around the house and eat very simply. He calculated all their expenses, she thought, down to the knut, and because of that, she was going to have a fairly impressive inheritance.

Her summer warranted only a shrug. “No,” she said. “I hardly left home, to tell you the truth. I went for a week to North Carolina with Theresa – “ she couldn’t help but watch him closely, wondering how he might react to the name – “to visit our cousin, but that was all. I read and gardened and listened to my mother fuss about clothes.”

When Alex was young, her mother had, she knew, hoped that one day she would grow into her face and joints and end up, if not a great beauty, since neither of her parents had many features to give a great beauty, at least a decent-looking girl, but Victoria seemed to have given up her hopes of it now. At fourteen, she was still too tall, too bony and angular, and looked too much like her father in the face, with the same narrow brown eyes, big nose, and sharp chin that weren’t too bad on a man but weren’t much good at all for a girl. Her looks bothered Alex herself almost not at all, but her mother still seemed to hold out some dim hope that a color and cut of robes somewhere could make her look a little better at least. It was alternatively frustrating and amusing, but more than anything just something Alex knew had an inevitable beginning and end, which had to come sometime, if she just bore it patiently now.

“What about you?” she asked, since she assumed most people did have more interesting holidays than she did. If nothing else, they generally had siblings, which at least gave them someone to fight with and then to complain to their friends about at school more often than she had anyone.
0 Alex That beats the alternative 0 Alex 0 5


Cepheus

January 13, 2013 9:25 AM
Cepheus didn't think the food here beat the food he had at home, but that was his own opinion. The house-elves at the manor were very skilled. They had been cooking for the Princetons for years just like their ancestors before them. It wasn't that he really missed food at home, however; there were just too many things on his mind that he didn't want to share.

Getting a bit of insight into Theresa's life before talking to her did make Cepheus look up. He had been aware that Alex and Theresa were related, but he hadn't known how. He still didn't know how, but Theresa did seem to be related to quite a few people here at Sonora, a couple being the Quidditch Careys, as he had come to calling them, that he so loathed. Fussing about clothing also sounded like Theresa, but he didn't want to give away his affections too soon. If he couldn't tell his best mates, he wasn't going to tell anyone, much less Thersa herself.

There wasn't much to say about his holiday, it mostly being Cepheus wallowing in his misery. "Nothing interesting, really. I stayed home most of the summer as well. I did visit my cousins in London once. One of them, Adam, is here now and my aunt wanted me to come and give him a pep talk or something of the sort." He glanced over at his cousin now. He seemed to be doing well, but Cepheus hadn't been too worried. He hadn't really cared, either.

"Other than that, it was dull." The family reunion would be next year if it went on schedule, but Father was trying to convince Grandfather to make the reunion every five years instead of two. Cepheus really hoped it went through. He couldn't stand many of his relatives even if he was older now and supposedly more mature. Cepheus had grown substantially over the summer, however. But it had come at a price: he was now 182 cm tall, but he was all arms and legs. He bet he was still eight stone as he had been for most of his adolescent life up to now. He hated being scrawny as he was, but hopefully getting back into Quidditch would help. If there were any Quidditch practises this year.

"Looking forward to classes at all? I wonder what the challenges are going to be about," said Cepheus as he picked up an orange. He didn't fancy getting his fingers all sticky and dirty, so he put it down and picked up an apple instead. Maybe eating some fruit would help his appetite, but he didn't count on it. He bit into the apple, finding it juicier than he had expected.
0 Cepheus What could be worse? 0 Cepheus 0 5


Alex

January 14, 2013 10:23 AM
“Congratulations,” Alex said, her tone deliberately neutral, when Cepheus said he had a cousin here now. She would have thought the chief charm of going to what, for him, was an international school would have been to have some time away from being surrounded by a crowd of relatives, but she supposed that if she’d taken that option, or any of them had, that the family would have just sent others along as soon as possible to keep an eye on them. It was expected that they would keep each other on the straight and narrow that way, and let the family know if someone deviated and refused to get back on just from their encouragement during the year; Alex herself didn’t carry tales, playing dull when her mother asked questions so that she imagined the Careys at large thought she was either stupid or at the very least not a social creature as well as unattractive, but she had never asked any of the others what they did.
 
She didn’t really hold it against them. If she had children, she’d use them the same way. The world was built on intelligence networks, and they, after all, were both a free one, which was never to be sneezed at, and the people who were just kids now but would be on their way to influencing things probably while their parents and grandparents were still alive. Knowing about them wasn’t as important as knowing about some people, but it was important, regardless of the expertise with several hexes she would display if she ever found someone reporting back on her.
 
“Better classes and challenges than dresses,” Alex said of the year to come, sentiments which were not exactly subversive, by family standards, but which approached being so. Most Carey girls would rather hex someone to win a game than host a tea party, but they weren’t supposed to admit it; what could not be eliminated could at least be denied. “As for the second, they’ll probably either be too easy or too hard, but tonight I’m going to hope for the best.”
 
She, too, examined the fruit, settling on a pear. “What’s your take on it?” she asked, since for all she knew he knew something she didn’t, or might just be better at guessing at how the teachers would think when creating a massive, all-inclusive tournament for their seven years of students.
0 Alex Running around cursing people? 0 Alex 0 5


Cepheus

January 14, 2013 11:50 AM
Cepheus shrugged off Alex's congratulations. It wasn't really something he cared too much about, nor was it notable because Adam was not technically considered a true Princeton. He was only connected through his mum and Grandfather regarded that connection highly, though it was only because the Spencers had loads of money but not much prestige. The only way his daughter and son-in-law was going to receive any attention was through her connection to the Princetons.

Cepheus thought all that was silly; if he had daughters, he wouldn't try to share his power with them if they decided to marry wealthy nobodys. With all respect, he didn't have much respect for Adam's father, and he wasn't sure if his own father did either. Corvus had been a bit upset at his sister's wedding, or so Mum had said to Cepheus privately. But Ceph knew better than to say all this outloud. He kept his opinions to himself. Most of the time.

Fussing about clothes all day long was not something Cepheus was very interested about, and he was glad to find that Alex didn't seem very interested in that either. Cepheus liked looking sharp, certainly, but he couldn't go on and on fussing about it. Classes and challenges were definitely more interesting. "I agree, although I would be very concerned if my mother started talking to me about dresses." He grinned teasingly and took another bite of his apple as he pondered his take on everything that was currently going on here. He would have to get used to answering questions like a diplomat. When he was the patriarch of the family, the press would be asking him questions and Cepheus would have to learn how to answer both vaguely and directly.

"It'll definitely be interesting," he finally decided. "A good break from the monotony of school life. I'm really going to miss Quidditch though. I don't know how else I'm going to keep all my muscle." He didn't think it would be proper to talk about gaining weight and muscle with a lady, but he and Alex were on informal terms anyway. It wasn't like there was any visible muscle on his skinny frame anyway. For all Alex knew, he could be making a sarcastic joke. "The challenges have me intrigued. I suppose I'm looking forward to it. But poor first years." He smirked. "I'm sure they expected a relatively normal school when they came here. They won't know what hit them."
0 Cepheus Debatable. 0 Cepheus 0 5


Alex

January 15, 2013 8:52 PM
Alex didn’t trouble to stop herself from laughing when Cepheus said he’d be concerned if his mother talked to him about dresses. She did not have a loud or very high-pitched laugh anyway – it was more of a noise from her chest and nose than her throat – and the remark was funny. Besides, she thought she was in no danger whatsoever of ever marrying him, so she didn’t worry as much about things as she might have.
 
Not that she worried too much about impressing boys anyway. She knew she was too plain and too contrary to ever win anyone over with her charms, so if someone did marry her, it would be because they wanted all her father’s money someday and a connection to the Louisiana Careys in the meantime, not because of her immaculate manners or shining personality. For her, anyway, there was a great freedom in knowing that and accepting it; she felt almost sorry, sometimes, for pretty girls like Theresa and Lissy, and naïve ones like Lucille, who did still think about those things all the time. She had to stay within the limits of propriety, of course, but she wasn’t worried about achieving absolute perfection, at least not most of the time, and that was much more comfortable than the appearance of what the others seemed to go through.
 
“I’d say that would be a problem, yes,” she agreed dryly. “Though a ‘nice empire waistline in lavender’ – “ her voice rose for a moment in imitation of her mother’s before dropping back into its usual register – “might look better on you than it would on me.” If Cepheus grew his hair down to his shoulders and let someone curl it, and put on enough makeup, he might pass for a plain girl, she thought. He did better as a pretty boy, but it was, now that she thought about him and a dress in the same sentence, not an impossibility, if the world and everyone in it happened to go completely mad sometime.
 
She didn’t see what muscle Cepheus was talking about that he was afraid to lose from the lack of Quidditch, but knew – it was an unavoidable thing when you were close cousins with Theresa who was close cousins with Arnold whose life very nearly seemed to revolve around the sport – that Seekers were hardly weaklings in spite of usually being small men or women. “If worst comes to worst, there’s always MARS,” she suggested.
 
She laughed again about the poor, unfortunate first years. “Poor them,” she agreed. “I guess they’ll just have to adjust their expectations. Welcome to Sonora, first years.” The school usually wasn’t as unexpected as that, but it did have the potential to be an interesting place no matter what the staff had them doing any given year. Really, she thought, in the end it was all down to who happened to be born between two Septembers that made one school experience and not another more than special activities.
0 Alex Hopefully not too much 0 Alex 0 5


Cepheus

January 17, 2013 1:33 PM
Cepheus really enjoyed making people laugh only when he was attempting to be funny. Alex's reaction made him want to smile, but he supressed it as best he could. Girls like Georgina, who put on such an act to show off in front of wizards, put him off a bit. Their effort to suppress their laughter made him laugh at them, and their dull faces made Cepheus feel uncomfortable. He liked girls more natural, although he was starting to feel himself put on more of a front in front of really pretty girls himself. Unless they were his friend, anyway, like Alicia and Alex.

Alex's blatant laugh at his comment made him chuckle in return at her rebuttal. "Do you think so?" he asked in faux interest, putting his hands around his skinny waist, not having any idea of what an empire waistline might be. He had quite an embarassing amount of knowledge concerning dress robes, but he didn't completely understand all of the different cuts or ties or waistlines for witches.

The MARS room was a good idea. Ceph hadn't thought about occupying that room for practises. Perhaps if he could get enough people, they could get full practises done and he would hardly miss the matches. That was a lie, though. He would always miss the competition Quidditch matches provided. He didn't know if the room had Qudditch materials already, but he could always look into it tomorrow after classes.

"Welcome first years," he repeated, chuckling a little to himself. He wondered what their parents would think, sending their child to a seemingly prestigious institution that had them do obstacle courses and challenges for a fun learning experience. Knowing many conservative pure-blood families, those conservatives would dislike the unconventional teaching method very much. He didn't think the Spencers were like that, but he didn't know the family very well. He knew his family didn't mind Sonora's teaching methods and he didn't think the Spencers would either.

But of course, there were always the more conventional families to think about who hated any change in traditional teaching styles. Or change in any aspect of life, really. He supposed that's why pure-blood traditions lasted so long as opposed to Muggles who seemed to be changing all the time. Not that he really knew any Muggle traditions, but that was besides the point.

"Yes, welcome indeed," repeated Cepheus with another bite into his apple. Chatting with Alex was certainly getting his mind off of things and he decided he was completely glad to be back at school after all. There was a sort of freedom here that he had gotten used to. It would be difficult to go back home after graduation and live with his family for the rest of his life. At least then he would be working at the hospital. "Do you have any new relatives coming in?" He didn't doubt it knowing how much her family was spread out in the States. It was much like the Princetons in Western Europe.
0 Cepheus I go back and forth. 0 Cepheus 0 5


Alex

January 17, 2013 11:23 PM
“Simply smashing,” she said when Cepheus played along with the dress comment, in, though her fellow Crotalus couldn’t have known it, an almost perfect imitation of her father. Many people who knew him, even some of those who knew him fairly well, would have sworn that Charles Devereux had no sense of humor, but Alex knew better, since Father was both a little less guarded around her when he forgot she was her mother’s daughter, too, and she shared the same sensibilities. Her mother found them both incomprehensible, but since that was the least of the problems her immediate family had, Alex wasn’t worried about it.

“They’ll make it somehow,” she said, though Cepheus didn’t seem much more sincerely worried about the first years than she was. Alex supposed he and his cousin weren’t close, or else the Princetons were like the Careys in more ways than one. Not only did she have tons of cousins she was hardly expected to feel anything for even if she did have to help them if they needed it, but she expected them to be able to take care of themselves most of the time, too. Especially the boys, and the family wasn’t putting forward a girl this year. The girls in her family were often usually tougher than the boys, but the boys were expected to act tougher in public, and the challenges were just the kind of thing they were expected to do that in.

It was, she thought, highly likely to drive Theresa crazy by the end of the year. It wasn’t really Terry’s fault she had been raised in a group of six boys, but it wasn’t really anyone else’s, either, unless you felt like blaming her parents, and Alex had never decided why she thought Donnie and Gigi had so many kids. There were a number of theories she found plausible, and it wasn’t like she could just ask.

“Just a distant cousin,” she said, tilting her head toward the Pecari table and a particularly scrawny blond-haired boy. He could have been Cepheus’ brother. “Lucille’s brother. He’s the North Carolina heir.” Technically, he was the North Carolina head, but since he had never acted in the position a day in his life because of his age and the chances of him ever becoming the head in fact as well as technicality seemed pretty slim, it was easier all around to just call him the heir. "Our honored cousin Malcolm. I'm kind of surprised he's in Pecari, I thought he'd be one of us." She gestured up and down the Crotalus table to show what she meant by 'us.' "Which House did your cousin get?"
0 Alex As long as you're not cursing me, I guess 0 Alex 0 5


Cepheus

January 24, 2013 1:41 PM
Cepheus didn't care much about the first years as he had the year before. This year he had loads of his own problems to get through before trying his best to study for his C.A.T.S. and be as much of a role-model student as possible to become a Prefect. He was glad all this drama in his own head was happening this year rather than the next. He certainly hoped it would stay that way.

When Alex gestured towards the Pecari table, he looked over to see the wizard she was indicating. He reminded him much of himself at that age; blonde and scrawny. And if Malcolm was the heir to the North Carolina Careys, then he had much expected of him. Cepheus remembered himself as a naive first year then, thinking that all he had to do was follow in his father's footsteps; he hadn't known how difficult it was going to be then. His eyes glanced over at the other students and he found both Adam and Rupert. He had expected Adam to sit next to Rup, but Cepheus was glad Adam seemed to be meeting the others in his year.

He turned back to Alex and tilted his head toward the Pecari table as well. "He's a Pecari as well. They'll be room-mates, then. I didn't really know what to expect for Adam, but Pecari should fit him, I think." Cepheus knew his cousin could take care of himself, and if Adam ever needed help Rupert would be more willing to help him than Ceph would. "For the challenges, do you think they'll put us in teams?" he asked. It had to be so; individual challenges would be much too time-consuming and chaotic in Ceph's opinion.
0 Cepheus Always look on the bright side. 0 Cepheus 0 5