Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

May 03, 2013 11:19 PM
The ball was finally upon them and the end of another school year. For some of the students, this would be their last hurrah with their friends before they officially graduated and moved on to another stage of their life. For others, this was the first real ball that they may have attended in their young life. For Kiva, she had been through so many of these that even if only every four years, it felt routine. At least this year had been different. Instead of the competitive sport of Quidditch, they had the challenges, equally competitive but in very different ways. Everyone could play and it wasn’t house specific. She felt this had been a good bonding experience for the students as it allowed them to mingle with those they may not have otherwise. She was certain that there were team disputes dealt with quietly between the members, but any experience, good or bad, made a person’s spirit stronger. Or so she was told. It was a learning experience at any rate.

Because of the amount of work the students put into the challenges and how well they had done, Kiva had put into the budget the ability to give everyone a small plaque. It was a token for them to have for a job well done and that the school appreciated their efforts. The team list would also be placed into the trophy room. The top five teams, however, would be getting something in addition to their plaques. But those announcements would come in a moment. For now, she wanted to enjoy the reaction to the students’ faces.

The hall was set much like that of a reception hall. Where the staff table usually was placed, was a stage instead with a band. They were only a cover band, but from their resume and references, they were worth it and since they did popular cover songs, she thought the students would enjoy them as well. A large dance floor was open in front of the stage for students (and staff if they so choose) to use. Surrounding the dance floor were medium sized round tables, large enough for small groups of friends and their dates to have easy conversations without having to shout across the tables, but small enough not to feel the need to fill each seat. The tables were decorated in Pecari colors, as were the other party decorations including the banner that hung above the stage declaring Pecari the House Cup winner, and flowers were the center pieces. It was all eloquently done by the Prairie Elves. They always did enjoy throwing a good bash for the students and making sure it was something they remembered.

Kiva waited patiently for the students to settle in with their friends or dates before standing and requesting for their attention. When she had them, Kiva gave them a smile. “Good Evening, everyone! It’s the end of the school year. The challenges are over, the examinations are over, and summer is right around the corner. What better way to end this exciting year than with a ball?” Well, she thought it was exciting, who knew what they felt. “As always, we have end of year announcements. First, I want us all to say farewell to our wonderful Librarian, Miss. Diaz. I know some of you have become rather fond of her and I hope she does know how much she will be missed. She’s done a lot for this school, including implementing the Library Monitor and Assistant program. Miss Diaz, I wish you luck in your next adventure.” Kiva commented, looking at DiAnna and giving her an applause. It would be difficult to find another Librarian who had the same initiative as DiAnna.

Kiva waited a moment for any applause or comments from the students to die down before she began her next announcement. “I would like for Mr. Derwent Pierce the Fourth and Miss. Regina Parker to come to the front.” It was obvious what this announcement was for. It was strange that during the choosing of the names for the ballot, it was the boys who had given the staff a hard time picking and one was left off because his vote was one less than another boy. This time, when their peers voted, it had been the girls who were neck and neck for votes. In the end, Regina had one by only one or two votes over Josephine. Kiva thought either girl would have been suitable for the title of head girl. “Everyone, please meet your new Head Boy and Girl.” Kiva stated once the two of them were up by her. She clapped for them before indicating they could sit down once more.

“Because this year had been a challenging year for everyone involved, we as a staff wanted to reward all of you for your hard work. Each of you will receive a plaque along with your yearbook. I hope you all know how proud we are of everything you were able to overcome and accomplish together as a team.” Kiva complimented them and genuinely meaning her words. Even those who hadn’t wanted to participate, still had and hadn’t let their team down. Much like meal times, a plaque and yearbook appeared on the table in front of each student. “But with every challenge, there is a winner. The top five teams will each earn a trophy, but the number one team will have their names engraved onto a trophy in the trophy room.” She wasn’t sure if anyone would understand the honor of that, but if they were ever to stumble upon the room and read the trophies of honored students of the past, they may then understand the significance. The size of the trophies given to the students varied based on the placement of their team, the winning team with the largest of them all.

“When I call your team, please come up to take your trophies and stand to the right of me. Please hold your applause until all the teams are announced.” Kiva advised them. “The team in fifth place is Team Fifteen! The team in fourth place is Team is Team Fourteen! Breaking into the top three is Team One in third place. Our second place winning team is Team Five. And our Challenge winning team that cleared each challenge with the highest of points is….” Kiva did a dramatic pause for the fun of it before continuing, “Team Four!” She applauded, “Let’s hear it for these teams and your classmates for a job well done!” Kiva waited for it to die down once again and for the winning teams to get their trophies before saying anything more. “The Team ranking list will be placed in the hall by the end of the evening in case you were curious to know how your team did during the challenge.” Once they had all received their trophies, they were free to return to their seats.

“That’s all the announcements that I have. We will have the Prefects and Head students lead off the night with a dance followed by dinner. Prefects and Heads, if you’ll please come to the dance floor.” Kiva nodded to the band and with that, the night began.

OOC: Here is a link to the here. I apologize for the different graphics and such. Also, be sure you are viewing it at 100% otherwise things won’t line up correctly.
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Midsummer's Ball 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5

David Wilkes

May 07, 2013 8:09 PM
All year, David had known, in an abstract way, that the Ball was coming, but the thought wasn’t one it had occurred to him to try to translate into actions after he picked up some dress robes during his school shopping back in the summer. There had been the challenges, he guessed, and there had definitely been RATS, and he hadn’t found the thought of the school dance comfortable whenever it did occur to him for a few seconds, so he had chosen to dwell on more pleasant topics when he had to dwell on things. That he had to not only attend the dance but, as Head Boy, actually dance at it hardly occurred to him at all, even though he had been told, before the day before the ball.

Now, on the evening itself, he knew he was in trouble. He had to ask a girl, but he knew there was a very good chance he’d get slapped for his trouble, just asking on the night of the event itself. He should have dealt with this ages ago, but he hadn’t, and now he was in trouble. He was just going to have to make the best of it and try to find a girl very very quickly after the headmistress' speech.

He applauded for the librarian and for the new Heads, feeling, to his surprise, a glimmer of nostalgia instead of pure relief as he looked upon his own successor. He thought Derry and Reggie would do pretty well together, probably better, or at least more comfortably, than he and Sara had; they had simply come from social groups and backgrounds far too diverse to really speak the same language. He could get along with pureblood guys well enough, if they weren’t holding his background against him – pureblood high society and what he had grown up with were really not that different, once some of the material comforts were subtracted and the labels were stripped off the underlying currents of bigotry – but the girls hardly seemed real to him, half the time. Fran was all right, mostly, and he was sure plenty of the others were perfectly lovely people once you got to know them, too, but he couldn’t shake the thought that most of them had escaped from the pens of Edith Wharton or Henry James and were trying very, very hard to blend in so no one captured them and sent them back.

He made a mental note to congratulate Derry and Reggie both later, using kind of knowing the latter as an excuse, just as the concert was reached on the list of things Kijewski had to talk about. It was a long list tonight, and he was kind of feeling sorry for her, but he couldn’t help sitting up a little straighter and paying attention to what was going on now. He thought they had done really well, but….

He applauded for the fifth, fourth, third, and second-place teams, feeling more tense with each moment, since each one meant that either something very weird had happened or else that the odds were rising that his team had actually won. And then, they did. Up front, he gave into the impulse to wave to the crowd and take a bow, figuring he’d never get the opportunity for that kind of thing again, congratulated the others quickly, and then took his trophy back to where his plaque and yearbook already were.

David felt a sort of warm pride he had almost forgotten about over the years. He was leaving school with awards. He would be able to hang them on his wall, just like in the old days. Maybe not right away, since Muggles might see them and be confused, but he had stuff now, and it wasn’t in an athletic context. His credentials were reestablished in terms his world understood. He had a trophy. It was all his. He liked it better than any of the Quidditch victories, to which he had really supplied very little. Parts of himself he hadn’t quite realized he missed seemed to have clicked back into place.

He decided it was a good thing he was leaving and didn’t have long to think about this even in the context of the moment, because otherwise, he thought he might be at risk of becoming quite sentimental. Unfortunately, the thing that distracted him was the thing that meant he was in trouble, but he guessed no man could have everything. They would try until the cows came home – the quest for immortality here, genetic engineering at home, capitalism on all sides, he guessed – but no one could have everything. So he went over to the first girl he saw who was age-appropriate and not occupied and said, “Hi, want to dance this one with me?”

He could only hope this sounded like an appealing offer and not a plea. And also not like a total jerk’s offer, under the circumstances. It was the kind of thing that worked well in the movies and stuff, but he was very much aware of the difference between those and the real world. A guy who acted like a guy in the movies was, he thought, more likely to get kicked very hard than to be danced with.
16 David Wilkes Making an offer to anyone age-appropriate. 169 David Wilkes 0 5


Arista Thornton

May 10, 2013 1:52 PM
Arista was in shock. The RATs were over and she was almost positive that she’d done pretty well on them and now it was time for the ball. Her last hoorah, this was it. Oh… My…Goodness… she thought. Merlin’s Beard… This is it… she looked at herself in the mirror in the Graduation present that Aunt Charlotte had sent for her. It was a flowy gown in a pretty shade of royal purple with gold trimmings. Along with the dress, Aunt Charlotte had sent her a note in an envelope which also held a small gold locket shaped like a heart. There were not pictures inside it, not just yet, but the note said she should use it for a picture of herself and the person she marries. Then Aunt Charlotte went on to tell her that the locket actually belonged to her great-great grandmother originally and never before had the locket held pictures. Why is Aunt Charlotte giving this to me? Not to her own daughter? she thought, vowing to ask her when they all got to London.

Ris felt very pretty in her ball gown and locket and actually felt like a princess for the first time ever. Sure, she was the oldest and everything she ended up with was new to begin with, but with this many younger siblings she’d never had anything this pretty before in her life! Her makeup and hair was done, and she had a smile on her face that could have lit up a whole third world country.

She walked into the Hall, and looked at it all decked out in Pecari colors. Rista sighed, knowing full well that meant that she hadn’t won a blast ended thing this year. I look pretty. I look pretty. she repeated to herself over and over again. Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau smiled at them and told them all the announcements including their leaving Librarian and the entering Head Boy and Girl. When applause was appropriate, she did so and when the Challenges were spoke about, Ris sighed, knowing Team 12 hadn’t won anything. The yearbook and their plaques appeared in front of them and as the rest of the announcements were spoken, she wondered where she’d be at in there this year…

When Analea’s team, Team One was called for third place and cheering would happen, she cheered for her sister who she knew was uncomfortable. When Prefects and Head students were called to lead off the night, she was fully expecting just to watch all of them dance, sitting in her seat, and was pleasantly surprised to hear someone ask her to dance this one with him.

Slightly shocked, she looked up to see David Wilkes asking her to dance. “Oh… Sure.” she said with a grin on her face. Does he like me? Does he think I’m pretty? Or did he just need a dance partner? she wondered, but didn’t really care. I HAVE A DANCE PARTNER! she finished with a grin as she stood up. “Shall we?” she asked him.
0 Arista Thornton Accepting the offer 0 Arista Thornton 0 5

David Wilkes

May 10, 2013 2:58 PM
In a class as small as his, David was sure adults expected that everyone already knew everyone else extremely well. Logically, this made sense. Practically, however, it didn’t really work out like that, and he knew it wasn’t just that he had somewhat less than stellar social skills, because his sister Annabeth had confirmed for him that even in her AP group of nine, there had been definite factions and people who spent virtually no one-on-one time together, despite the united front presented to the rest of their high school. Sub-groups were a fact of life.

Because of this, David tried not to feel vaguely bad about not really knowing Arista Thornton as anything other than “someone with a lot of siblings” and “one of the more persistent Teppenpaw Quidditch players.” Given his religion and the team he played for, he could even construct those observations as compliments. It was a little artificial, given that he had never thought of either thing in those terms before, so it didn’t work as far as making him feel a bit less like a jerk, but it was a valid point, he thought.

“Absolutely,” he replied to her inquiry, grinning in relief himself. Then, “Is this a bad time to mention I basically have no idea how to dance?”

He was not sure how she would take that. Obviously, Arista was from some kind of magical family, but she played Quidditch, so on the basis of what he knew, she probably wasn’t from the particularly uptight kind of family. This did not, however, mean that she would not expect him to know waltzing and stuff, though these were not skills which were generally expected of someone in his position back home. His sisters had both taken dance lessons, Annabeth a frankly ridiculous amount and eventually to the point of competitive clogging, but his parents had tried in vain to get him to play baseball at the same time before giving up and letting him spend his summers at science camps instead, building robots and electric cars and making chemical mixtures turn weird colors and mastering the beginning of the more advanced parts of using a computer and, last summer, looking down at half-frozen specimens of drosophila melanogaster like a sadistic minor deity through microscopes to learn to tell the males from the females. Dancing had just never entered his mind, and if it had entered his parents' minds, it had almost certainly been connected with the devout hope that it never entered his.

Now, though, was not then, and the music was starting, so he was going to do what he did not really do best but certainly had plenty of practice with: he was going to make it up and hope for the best.
16 David Wilkes I am most obliged. 169 David Wilkes 0 5