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!
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0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Welcoming Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Henny B-F-R

January 04, 2013 6:05 PM
Henny sat watching the sorting, eagerly clapping for her brother when he went into Teppenpaw, and trying not to let her jaw hit the floor when he came bounding over to her table instead. She carefully schooled her face not to reveal her surprise over his own surprise at not being in Aladren with her. Charlie tended to bounce through life without really letting most of it touch him too much. He didn't dwell on things. He didn't, in the nicest possible way, really think about things very much. If he had had applied just an ounce of logic to what house he might be in, he surely would have concluded that it would not have been Aladren. Of course, if he had been capable of applying ounces of logic, then perhaps it might have been... She smiled to herself. She liked a good paradox.

She watched him head back to his actual table, feeling pleased with his sorting. She had thought he would be in Teppenpaw or Pecari and was pleased that it was the former. Although Charlie was an outgoing and enthusiastic person, it was not in the same way as most boys of his age, and was definitely very unlike the boisterous outgoingness that one tended to see in Pecari boys. She would have worried about him being bullied, or just failing to fit in with his room-mates had he gone there. But in Teppenpaw, she hoped, he would be safe. Even if his room-mates weren't very like him (and she suspected there was a high chance they wouldn't be) they were more likely to be tolerant of it. She wasn't worried by his disappointment either. Negative emotions with Charlie were like clouds scudding across the sun; the shadows they cast were very clear for everyone to see but, within minutes, they cleared, giving way again to sunshine.

Satisfied that he would be alright, she turned her attention to the headmistress. The upcoming year sounded exciting. She was intrigued by the idea of the challenges and very glad that they were not happening in her CATS year, so that she could properly enjoy them. She also had more than average reason to be cheerful. She'd been mostly signed off by her therapist over the summer. She could request appointments if she needed them and she would be seeing her in the holidays just to check how things were going but she no longer needed an appointment every week. She relished the thought of those weekend afternoons. A lot of them would be spent studying but it would also give her more time to see her brother, whom she was looking forward to having at school, or just to do things that she wanted to do. She tucked into dinner, selecting a hearty slice of lasagne and some potato wedges and peas and feeling happy about the year to come.
13 Henny B-F-R The start of a good year 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia Bauer

January 05, 2013 12:43 AM
Alicia walked back into the Cascade Hall with her head held high and a confident smile – the mildest expression she could force her face into after the overwhelming joy she’d felt when she saw the school building again – on her lips, her high heels clicking against the marble floor as she made her way through the other students and to the Aladren table, looking for some of her year to sit with. As much as she was itching to wheedle out of Cepheus what he thought about Theresa Carey, it was traditional for people to sit with their own Houses at this Feast, and since Thad was sure to get Quidditch captain after Arnold, Alicia was aiming to take the prefect’s badge for herself next year so they could remain equals throughout school. She had to make a show of her Aladrenness on major occasions, even more than her feelings compelled her to. If Cepheus or Gareth wanted to join the third year Aladrens, that was all right, but she couldn’t think of joining the third year Crotali tonight, so she made a mental note to make up the slight they’d probably never even notice to them sometime and put the matter aside.

Spotting Henny first, she snagged the seat across from her, assuming Thad and Evan would join them but deciding her roommate was pleasant enough company to spend dinner with if they did all get separated somehow. “Hi!” she said, a little more loudly and brightly than usual over the clamor of a hundred sets of friends reuniting. “Did you have a good trip out?”

They had lived together for three years, and in that time, Alicia had never figured out why it was she came closer to liking Henny more than she did any other girl in the school. It made, after all, no sense, but there it was, and she didn’t hold it against herself too much since Thad seemed to like her, too. Henny wasn’t one of her best friends, but nor was she quite on the second level that hosted Evan and Gareth and Ephanie; instead, she fell into the middle, half a step above the one and half a step below the other. Alicia didn’t care for half-steps, but she had come to accept that situation as it was.

She smiled at the headmistress’ greeting to the first years, contentment spreading through her again at the official end of the summer holidays. She had spent most of her summer as she always did, reading everything she could get her hands on and writing letters to Thad and a good few to Henny about most of it, and writing to Cepheus, too. Evan and Gareth and Ephanie and Andrina, though Alicia still hadn’t remotely forgiven her for her awards in the yearbook at midsummer, had all gotten, or should have gotten, a note last week expressing enthusiasm about coming back to school and seeing them soon. Those had been maintenance letters, upholding the structure of the hierarchy she had constructed; the earlier ones, to her closer friends, had just been to maintain her sanity during her two months of exile from life. It was pleasant to realize she had nine whole months before she had to face that again, and that even when she did, she would have the added consolation of knowing that she’d have a whole year at school with none of her siblings around until Isaac came; it turned the confident smile into a beaming one as the Sorting began, though it became a little confused when a small Teppenpaw ran over to Henny as soon as he was Sorted.

Henny didn’t seem as surprised as Alicia was, and handled the situation, sending the Teppenpaw off to his proper table, and things went smoothly enough except for the Headmistress’ announcement about Quidditch. Alicia knew Thad and the Crotalus boys would be disappointed, and was sorry for Aladren losing their main chance of the year to demonstrate their superiority to everyone else, but she was a little excited to hear about the challenges she would actually be able to participate in; she and her friends, if they were in a group together, would be able to take the whole school on without any Advanced students, she was sure of it. The only trouble would be if they were separated; she wouldn’t know what to do, whether or not she should sabotage whatever people she was with for her friends’ sakes or try to win anyway on her own so she didn’t risk losing their respect. She hoped she didn’t have to deal with it.

The real attraction of the year, though, was what would come after all the competitions. Alicia had been thinking about the ball for almost a whole year, now. This was going to be a year that tested a lot of relationships and assumptions, or so she very much suspected. If the little group of people she cared about made it through the event without any fights that put her in a position to have to choose between people, she thought she might have the basis for something she could count on for the rest of her life. The ratio of boys of a certain age to girls of the same seemed to her like a recipe for conflict, drama, and catfights.

She sang the school song as well as she knew how, which wasn’t a way which would win her any awards but which wasn’t too likely to make anyone stab themselves in the ears with a knitting needle rather than listen to it, and then took a piece of turkey and some mixed vegetables for her plate as Henny cut into the lasagna. “Sounds like we’re in for a fun year,” Alicia remarked before beginning to eat her food. “Have you looked for dress robes at all yet?” That had been a major part of her summer, but she wasn’t sure how Henny and her family would handle that. What was normal for her, she'd gathered over the past three years, really wasn’t for them.
16 Alicia Bauer I'll agree with that. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Henny B-F-R

January 05, 2013 2:19 PM
“Yes, thank you,” Henny smiled at Alicia, as she asked about her journey. “You? And thanks for the letters,” she smiled. She had kept up a steady stream of replies to Alicia, also writing to Thad, Waverly and Andri. She hadn't been sure whether Waverly – or her family and their neighbourhood – would be ok with owls, and had had fun going to the Muggle post office and purchasing stamps.

The headmistress' speech and Charlie's visit to their table halted the conversation a little but also provided them with more things to discuss.

“Indeed,” Henny nodded. “I can't wait to find out more about the challenges,” she added, refraining from mentioning that part of this desire came from not wanting to have unexpected magical creatures sprung on her at short notice. She made a mental note to ask out how far in advance they would find out about the challenges and how much detail would be provided. It might be a fairly strong test of her coping abilities if the answers were 'immediately before' and 'you'll just have to wait and see....'

“A bit,” she said, when Alicia asked about dress robes. “I mentioned this year's event would be a ball to Charlie,” she nodded vaguely to the Teppenpaw table, assuming Alicia intelligent enough to make the connection, “And he and Dad got very insistent that we went shopping. Although he said we can't decide until the spring/summer collections come out,” she shrugged, “So I don't know what the point was, except an excuse to go shopping. Which I don't mind. It'll be nice to dress up,” she added, aware that she may coming across as not particularly interested in the subject, whilst she gathered Alicia was somewhat more motivated by it. It wasn't that she was actively opposed to the idea, she just wasn't sure how interested she would be if left to her own devices. She was usually prettily attired but that was because two insistent fashionistas kept dragging her shopping. She liked that she looked nice and she appreciated the things she got. She just wondered whether she would have made the effort without their help. And their shopping trips and clothes-related conversations usually did go on a little long for her taste... “Did you get very far with your shopping?” she asked.
13 Henny B-F-R Good. It's usually easier that way. 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia

January 05, 2013 3:51 PM
Alicia smiled a bit more brightly when Henny actually thanked her for writing over the summer. She worried, sometimes, that her friends secretly thought she wrote too much and had either deduced that she would sooner cut her own throat than spend time with her family (which would not be good) or just started thinking she was a codependent loser (which would be even worse). To hear she hadn’t stepped over a fine line with one person, at least, was reassuring. “You, too,” she said. “And my ride was great, thanks,” she added. No matter how bumpy the ride was, a wagon heading away from her parents was a good wagon.

“The more time we have to prepare, the better,” she agreed about the challenges. “I’m sure we could win it all anyway, but some time to do research and practice ahead of time would be fantastic, it would make everything so much easier.”

Henny was one of the people she hoped would end up in her group, though not strictly because Alicia was afraid of the possibility of falling out with her over who won and who didn’t. She also thought that Henny would be a valuable asset for her team. She was a smart girl, a talented witch; Alicia thought she was probably a little better with a wand, but she did respect Henny’s abilities in the classroom, too. If it came down to a wrench, she thought she would take Henny in a group over Evan, who wasn’t unintelligent but so eccentric that she didn’t really see him as reliable, especially in a cutthroat competition against the rest of the school. She might, she suspected, have to be a big provider of motivation for some of the group, but everyone needed skill and the ability to focus if they were going to win.

The nod to the Teppenpaw table confirmed her suspicion that the first year was Henny’s brother, so she nodded in response and listened as it turned out that Henny’s brother was also very interested in her clothes for the occasion, which she thought was weird but dismissed as weird people doing weird things. Besides, families existed to be irritating and in the way; it was their function in life, and they were very dedicated to fulfilling it. She had gotten the impression that Henny, like Thad, liked hers well enough, but she seemed to lack enthusiasm about this. Understandable enough; men really had no business messing around with clothes.

"I would have gotten further if my mother had stayed out of it," she said, trying not to roll her eyes. "She insisted on my sisters getting all involved, too, since she doesn't think Rachel and I spend enough time together anymore." This was very much contrary to Alicia's thoughts, since Rachel was officially her favorite sibling for the year after having only been home for a few days while Alicia was on her third year's midterm break, but she hadn't argued. She wasn't allowed to argue. She never was. "Still, I'm pleased with our general direction, the main argument right now is over blue or green."

She didn't know about talking boys with Henny, but she did know it wasn't a good idea at the table where some of said boys were, so she moved the subject. "So, your brother's here now. Were you surprised where he was Sorted?" She was curious to know; in sixth year, her brother would come here, too, and she had no idea what to expect as far as Isaac, or her cousin Lionel the year after him, went when it came to Sorting. She'd spent a long time, on several occasions, arguing with herself about whether the three of them were at all alike and had yet to make up her mind about it.
16 Alicia Arguing takes up too much time. 210 Alicia 0 5


Henny B-F-R

January 05, 2013 5:42 PM
Aladrens. It seemed more like the kind of thing geared towards letting everyone have a go. She didn't think who won really mattered.

“I guess we'll just have to see what happens next,” she smiled. “Maybe there will be some where you can research and some where you have to think on your feet so that they're testing different things.

“No, not really,” she said, when Alicia asked about Charlie's house, “Although he was, bless him. He'd just sort of assumed we'd be together because of being siblings. If he'd used an ounce of logic, he might have figured out he wasn't very Aladren like. But then, if he'd been able to do that, maybe he would fit in here,” she smiled, trying out her paradox on her room mate. “I thought he would end up in Pecari or Teppenpaw, and I'm glad it's Teppenpaw. He's outgoing but he isn't boisterous. I'd worry the typical Pecari boys would eat him alive.” Half the typical Pecari girls might too but she stopped just short of saying that. It would take Alicia a nanosecond of time with him to deduce that Charlie was as camp as a row of pink tents but Henny didn't need to make that reputation precede him. She'd already mentioned the shopping, which was probably more than enough. Not that he would care if people knew what he was like and not that she saw anything wrong with it. It was just that other people did. They could be cruel. She didn't want people whispering behind Charlie's back before he'd even got to his first class. Or at least, if that was not preventable, she did not want to be the cause of it.

Alicia's shopping experiences sounded pretty different to hers. Natural enthusiasm, hampered by family, as opposed to... well, unknown natural inclination and all progress possibly being dependent on enthusiastic family. She smiled and nodded politely, not taking Alicia's gripes about her family at any more than face value. People were frequently irritated by their families and rolled their eyes over them. They didn't really mean it.

\r\n\r\nHer roommate's competitiveness over the challenges surprised her a little. She knew Alicia worked hard, and she had occasionally felt like there was more going on beneath the surface than simply thinking over classwork. It came of girls like Alicia not playing Quidditch... it was hard to tell how ruthlessly competitive they were. Henny was also surprised by her roommate's confidence that they would win – especially as it had not been established who 'they' were yet. Of course, Aladren had a good reputation for academics, and the Quidditch team was fairly prolific. It was a good house. But these challenges sounded like they were mixed house, mixed ability, so everyone would have a few Aladrens. It seemed more like the kind of thing geared towards letting everyone have a go. She didn't think who won really mattered.

\r\n\r\n“I guess we'll just have to see what happens next,” she smiled. “Maybe there will be some where you can research and some where you have to think on your feet so that they're testing different things.

\r\n\r\n“No, not really,” she said, when Alicia asked about Charlie's house, “Although he was, bless him. He'd just sort of assumed we'd be together because of being siblings. If he'd used an ounce of logic, he might have figured out he wasn't very Aladren like. But then, if he'd been able to do that, maybe he would fit in here,” she smiled, trying out her paradox on her room mate. “I thought he would end up in Pecari or Teppenpaw, and I'm glad it's Teppenpaw. He's outgoing but he isn't boisterous. I'd worry the typical Pecari boys would eat him alive.” Half the typical Pecari girls might too but she stopped just short of saying that. It would take Alicia a nanosecond of time with him to deduce that Charlie was as camp as a row of pink tents but Henny didn't need to make that reputation precede him. She'd already mentioned the shopping, which was probably more than enough. Not that he would care if people knew what he was like and not that she saw anything wrong with it. It was just that other people did. They could be cruel. She didn't want people whispering behind Charlie's back before he'd even got to his first class. Or at least, if that was not preventable, she did not want to be the cause of it.
13 Henny B-F-R And here I just thought you were a naturally chirpy person 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia

January 06, 2013 12:53 PM
Alicia’s eyes sparkled with anticipation when Henny suggested there might be a mix of challenges, some they could prepare for, some they could not. “That would be fun,” she said. Challenges they knew about ahead of time would be easier to win, since she doubted there were a dozen people in the school besides who would really work to prepare and then have people around them who’d do the same, but she thought she could enjoy a challenge where she had to think on her feet purely on its own merits – as long, of course, as she and hers won it.

That thought subdued her a little; she sometimes did wish she could do more things just for their own sakes, and not because she was trying to achieve something by it. The only thing like that she could think of off the top of her head was reading adolescent fiction at home, and she barely had time even there, since she still had so many useful books to read. There was so much to learn in the world; even if she hadn’t needed to do it for other reasons, she thought she might have still spend her holidays reading until she gave herself headaches, then writing lists over and over again, trying to cram as much of the world’s knowledge into her head as she possibly could, as fast as she possibly could, while she had the time.

She couldn’t have it all. She knew that. As hard as she was trying, she would never be able to read all of the books just in the Sonora library, and wouldn’t have been able to even if she’d been a friendless recluse with nothing else to do and had been one for all the years she’d been here. But she wanted it all anyway, and couldn’t stop herself from trying as hard as she could to get it.

Alicia laughed when Henny explained her brother’s conundrum in a paradox. “Got to love that,” she remarked, pouring herself a glass of cold water and only just holding herself back from gulping it all down at once. “Oh, that’s good,” she said of it, then listened as Henny talked about how she’d known it would be Teppenpaw or Pecari, but hoped for Teppenpaw.

“They can be…much sometimes, can’t they?” she remarked of the Pecaris, glancing toward their table. Her lashes lowered slightly, hiding some of the unfriendly expression in her eyes as they landed there for a second. “I’d almost like my brother to be one, but that’s just because that would put all four of us in different Houses; if I had to guess, I’d call him a Crotalus.” It was probably Crotalus or Aladren, anyway, and she thought they would murder each other sometime if they had to live together, so she was hoping for Crotalus. She and Isaac had their understandings, but he liked to lord it over her that he was the boy and a pureblood too much. She smiled. "I'm glad your brother's Sorting went well. Are you glad he's here, or do you think he'll annoy you to death this year?"
16 Alicia You are astonishingly perceptive. 210 Alicia 0 5


Henny B-F-R

January 06, 2013 1:30 PM
Henny smiled, pleasantly unsurprised by Alicia appreciating her comments on Charlie's sorting.

“Yes,” she nodded, at Alicia's assessment of the Pecaris. “It really will be interesting having all the houses mixed together. I mean, I don't want to be disparaging about anyone, and certainly not just based on their house - I've never found it to be a problem in class but... in bigger groups, mixed ages... Well, it'll be a people-watcher's dream, put it that way.” She tried to imagine some of the more Quidditch obsessed, rough and tough Pecaris having to work collaboratively with some of the equally obsessed Aladrens, source of all Pecari's woes. And then she abruptly stopped trying to as she didn't like scenes which ended up with people going to see the medic. “I wonder whether they're working out teams or drawing them randomly. You'd think the former would be sensible, to make them balanced and avoid teams imploding but teachers do tend to have this crazy idea that if you force people to do something together then that will make them all just get along. Although, with no Quidditch, putting sworn rivals into different teams could end just as badly... Between that and all the pent up Quidditch energy, I'm beginning to think we may see actual bloodshed before this year's out.

“A bit of both, probably,” she laughed, at Alicia's question about Charlie, “We're pretty different but we're pretty close too. Weird how that can work but it does. I guess with everything that happened maybe it makes sense - we were each other's only family for a while. I found it really strange when I had to come here and be without him.” Whilst she'd never sat Alicia down and told her her life history from start to finish, she'd answered anything she'd been asked and, as was happening now, details sometimes occurred naturally in conversation. “I reckon we'll be moving enough with different crowds that he won't get to the point where I've had enough.” That point definitely existed. Usually, Charlie's perpetual good mood simply lifted her own spirits. It was hard to feel down around him However, when she was tired, really worried about something, had a lot to do or had just been dealing with Charlie all day, it could get a bit much. At that point, she usually passed Charlie back to their dad. He seemed about as boundlessly energetic. Hopefully other people, friends of Charlie's own, would step in to soak up any excess chirpiness that she was unable to deal with.

“When does your brother join us?” she asked.
13 Henny B-F-R They didn't put in Aladren just cos blue suits me 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia

January 06, 2013 3:36 PM
Alicia smiled deeply, amused, when Henny disclaimed a desire to disparage anyone. In her experience, that always meant disparagement was exactly what someone was aiming for with their comments, but she let it go, not least because she had absolutely no problem with anyone disparaging the Pecaris in just about any way they pleased. She approved of their energy, but their priorities were often skewed and some of them could be rude, crude, or both, which she had no patience for.

The idea that they would be on such mixed teams as Henny suggested, though, wasn’t one which had occurred to her before, and she didn’t like it now that it had. Surely they wouldn’t be that stupid…but then, these were adults they were dealing with, as Henny had pointed out. Oh, that could be even worse than being just separated from her friends. There might be bloodshed all right, but it might not have anything to do with Quidditch rivalries. She might be the one who caused it, if they stuck her with a bunch of idiots, or ruffians, or other people who generally just had no good reason to exist…Or worse, a bunch of other girls….

Alicia only just kept from making a face at the thought. Henny was all right, but in general, Alicia did not like other girls. That was all right, too, though, because she was pretty sure they didn’t like her, either. Working with a bunch of them would be nearly as bad as working with Kate or something.

“I would not be surprised,” she said. “A lot of adults do have a problem with being logical enough to walk and chew gum at the same time. I hope I never am one.” She sighed, a little theatrically, and took a bite of her turkey before deciding to add some shrimp and a piece of what she thought was flounder to her plate. It was turning into a strange mix, but she didn’t mind that right now. She was only planning to eat one thing at a time anyway. “We’ll just have to hope for the best.”

She listened to Henny explaining more about her brother, wondering in the back of her mind if being orphaned for a while would have made her like her sisters any better. She tried to imagine it, but there were a number of problems with the idea, so she switched to her friends instead. She could imagine them as the only people she had in the world literally as well as figuratively, and understand the idea of then perhaps becoming so attached to them that she’d put up with just about anything, and willingly. Certainly she knew it would feel strange to go half a year, at the very least, without seeing them; she wasn’t sure she could even stand to do it.

“That’s good,” she said of the thought that different crowds would keep the Boxton-Fox-Reynolds siblings from getting on each other’s nerves too much. Siblings were one of those things, to her, which went down most easily in small doses, and she really did think even people who liked theirs only liked so much of them at one time. Merlin knew Kate and Rachel didn’t always get along, and her parents and their siblings were sometimes no better, especially on her mother’s side, that family was incredibly messed up even by her standards….

“When we’re in sixth year,” she said about her own brother. A glint of mischief and anticipation reentered her brown eyes as a thought she hadn’t had before occurred to her. “And I’ll turn seventeen two weeks after he starts, so when we have to go home for midterm, I’ll be able to do magic all around the house. Oh, I’m going to drive him absolutely crazy!” Her smile was at least a little satisfied as she thought about that. Isaac hated for her to have anything he couldn’t, and since the two of them would surely be the only kids still in the house by then, Rachel having better things to do and Kate obviously pining to run away and be poor and hopefully, as far as Alicia was concerned, never heard from again among the Bauers as soon as she got a chance, she would really be able to rub it in as much as she wanted.

She realized, though, that her company was not intimately familiar with the details of her family life, as it had to be and Alicia was frankly glad it was, and bit her bottom lip after a second of grimly pleasurable reflection, putting on an obviously faked look of contrition. “That’s not nice of me, is it? But believe me, he’s done more than enough irritating over the years to deserve having to watch me Summon things a few dozen times.”
16 Alicia Blue suits a lot of people, after all. 210 Alicia 0 5


Henny B-F-R

January 06, 2013 6:14 PM
Henny giggled, a little nervously, at Alicia's comment. She didn't really want to seem disrespectful to her Professors. Most of them were very intelligent and had her admiration. She possibly thought some of them even had a healthy dose of cynicism regarding children. But adults, even intelligent ones, could be ridiculously naïve when it came to interactions between children. If someone's bullying you, just come and tell a teacher was a prime example. She wondered whether such crisis talks had ever achieved anything positive. She supposed they had to be seen to be doing something, in spite of the fact that nothing they did could really be effective. Luckily, in her closest experience of it – she and Charlie had both received a fair amount of unkind comments about their adoptive parents, and Charlie about his general demeanour - she had been above what was said to her and she thought their Dad's advice to Charlie to just ignore what people said to him had been effective. Bad vibes slid off that boy like water off a duck's back anyway. The phrase sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me had never found a more appropriate personification. She wasn't even convinced about the sticks and stones. He seemed to bounce so much that she could readily believe he was made of rubber...

“Siblings are like that,” she shrugged when Alicia remonstrated herself for her wish to tease her brother, both referencing Alicia's own comment and the fact that her brother was an irritation. “I can see Charlie wheedling for favours more than being annoyed once I'm of age,” she mused. He wasn't really a bad or demanding kid but having one more 'adult' who could do things would just naturally result in said adult being asked if they were nearest.

“So, what did you get up to with the last part of your summer? Anything the correspondence didn't keep me up to date on?” she asked.
13 Henny B-F-R In the sense of the colour... 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia

January 07, 2013 12:41 AM
Imagining Isaac wheedling for favors was like imagining herself liking him: she couldn’t quite do it. He liked – in the way of weaselly, inferior creatures through all of time and space – to try orders too much for that, at least with her. Either of them would wheedle with the adults, but between themselves, he recognized that she was better than him really and reveled in how society gave him a better position than hers anyway. Still, she had to derive some pleasure from Henny’s generalization; sometimes, she did worry that everyone else’s family really was like those from the stupidest level of the ever-stupid category of novels her mother enjoyed, where at least one side of the family was utterly perfect and the other came around to being so by the end of the book.

“Isaac’s definitely going to be annoyed with me,” she confirmed. “Unless he undergoes a massive change of character, anyway.” She laughed. “The poor boy looks like a starving man in front of a roast chicken every time our sisters take their wands out already.”

Too much like her, and yet not enough, she thought. She knew that Isaac was not doing what she’d done and trying to rectify the situation by teaching himself; he didn’t have the wit or the will for that. He wanted things, sure, but he’d had too many assurances in life to really want them, to want them so much he dreamed of smashing the order just to get them. Maybe he would improve with another few years of age, but Alicia was not sanguine about his chances. He had the money guaranteed to him, and enough of the blood, and so he wasn’t afraid.

“Just more reading,” she said of the end of her summer. “I swear, if I don’t get Os on the CATS, I’m…giving up on life. I do not even know how many books I read this summer, I lost count.” She pressed her fingers into her temples for a second, then looked up again. “And we went to a few more social things, but they were all pretty boring. What about you? Do anything very interesting in the last days of the break?”
16 Alicia Yes, not everyone's good enough for the House. 210 Alicia 0 5


Henny B-F-R

January 14, 2013 12:13 PM
Henny giggled a little at Alicia’s analogy regarding her brother – it was a very good one and she could just picture the scene, apart from not really knowing what Alicia’s brother looked like. She tried to recall whether he’d come to cheer on his sister at the concert as Charlie had done but nothing specific came to mind, and so she just pictured a boy version of her room mate.

“Not much different to what I wrote to you about. Studying and so forth. Packing. We went out for dinner on our last night.” There was also the fact that she had been mostly signed off by her therapist but leaving her room mate to interpret her lack of weekly absences was as close as she was getting to discussing that. She wasn’t even sure Alicia knew she went anywhere. Her room mate was very perceptive but it was only a couple of hours a week and it wasn’t like they were ordinarily glued to each other’s sides.

“I had to post off some assignments for my correspondence course by the end of the last week, so that kept me quite busy but they were fun. I wish Sonora did literature though...” she sighed. She had mentioned the course in her letters to Alicia, and possibly bemoaned the lack of teaching on it at the school too. Her passion had always been wizarding literature. She had thought she would be content with reading for her own amusement and discussing things with any similarly inclined friends – and so few schools offered the subject anyway – so it hadn’t seemed an issue to send her to Sonora. However, she was becoming more and more certain that it was what she wanted to study at University, and so had begun a course by post. A formal qualification was not necessary for most of the University programmes but it would be good to prove that she was passionate about the subject, as well as giving her a bit of a head start in those studies.
13 Henny B-F-R I'm glad you understood that's what I was referencing 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5

Alicia

January 14, 2013 2:13 PM
Henny’s correspondence course was something Alicia had found interesting, and she had spent bits of time during her summer looking around for similar things she might do over this summer, though she hadn’t told her roommate about it because she had had no desire to look like a copycat. Her desire, after all, didn’t extend from a desire to do whatever Henny did, though she had to admit she had no liking for anyone knowing something she didn’t; it was because she realized that by taking a correspondence course – or better yet, something she spent time at some kind of campus for over the summer – she would have a perfectly valid excuse for spending even less time than usual with her relatives while she was home.

“It is too bad,” she agreed. “We could have had some great times with that. Have you found out how you did yet? And are there any more courses you could keep working on while we’re here?”

Truthfully, she sort of hoped there were not, since if Henny took on an extra class then Alicia would have to at least attempt it, too, and that would be a lot of work on top of the lot of work she was already doing all the time, but she said it anyway. There was always part of her, whatever the logical part of her mind told her about biting off more than she could chew, that couldn’t resist the thought of one more challenge; she recognized it, she knew it was a little off, but she couldn’t quite get past it anyway. She knew, too, in the end, that she would meet the challenge, and what was a little extra sleep deprivation beside that?

As she listened for the answer, she glanced up the table and spotted Thad talking to a first year, and the corners of her mouth lifted for a moment into a fond smile as she looked back at Henny. He really was good at playing that part with the firsties; he’d done it last year, too, around talking to her. If she lost the prefect’s badge to anyone, she would rather it was him, though she didn’t plan on putting up with any whining from him if she did get the badge anyway. He was already sure to get Quidditch captain; he could spare her one victory until they got to the first and only two-person prize of their education.
16 Alicia I am the Grand Mistress of comprehension. 210 Alicia 0 5