Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

May 17, 2013 6:25 PM
The summer had come and gone in a blink of an eye. Kiva’s baby, Harper, had turned a year old over the summer and with her big day, was also the big day that Kiva would have to acknowledge that her baby boy (who was not so much a baby any longer and would murder her if he knew she still thought of him as such) was now eleven and old enough to attend Sonora. Since she was already at Sonora, the only difference would be seeing him and Chloe during the day instead of just in the evening for dinner, much like her older adopted children, Angel and Ayita. Still, it was going to be an adjustment to know her son and step daughter were that old now.

That also meant that this sorting was extra special to Kiva. Of course, she knew that they were worried about sharing a name with the Headmistress. Either people may treat them differently because of her or they would ignore them entirely because of her. Kiva never really saw any sort of change in the students behaviors towards Ayita and Angel, but they had already been established members of the school before changing their names when they joined the family. She supposed they would just have to wait and see.

Kiva watched as the returning students found friends and found seats, everyone chatting on to one another about their summers. She liked to watch them during these times because this is when they often seemed the most sincere. Soon though, the first years were being brought in by the Deputy Headmistress and most of the student body’s chatter died down knowing that the feast would begin soon. Kiva tried not to be obvious when searching out for her two children, but she smiled a little happily when she was able to find them standing beside each other. She knew she was being such a mother at the moment, but one couldn’t help it.

Charming herself to be heard, Kiva greeted them all “Good Evening, Everyone! For the returning students, I say welcome back and to our new students, welcome to Sonora Academy. For those who do not know me, I am Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau, but feel free to call me Professor K.” This was a standard greeting, but it was always necessary. She didn’t want to just jump right into things and be too overwhelming.

“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 Regina Parker and Derwent Pierce the Fourth to please come up here and accept your new Head Girl and Head Boy 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 Henrietta Boxton-Fox-Reynolds, Meghan Brownbriar, Alexandra Deveraux, and Waverly Canterbury 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.

“Before I announce the event this year, I’d first like to introduce everyone to our newest staff member, please give a warm applause to Professor Chambers. She is your new Muggle Studies Professor.” Kiva clapped politely before moving on. “This year’s Midsummer Event will be the Fair. Every Fair we’ve always done things a little bit differently than the last, but this year we wanted to bring it around again.” Kiva advised them, knowing they probably had no idea what she was talking about.

“That is to say, we’re having student run booths. We’ll have the Fair games and the carnival rides like normal, but we’d also like to have students to work together, whether it be with friends or on an idea that you find you have in common with someone, and create a booth for you to run throughout the evening. Obviously, the booths have to be school appropriate, but they can be of your talents or skills. Or they can feature your clubs. You can do food booths or games booths as well. Whatever you want, within reason.“ Kiva explained to them. “We’ll discuss this more as time goes on and if you have any questions, you can ask any professor or staff member.”

Kiva waited for any commotion over this news to die down. At least Quidditch was back on, so the students wouldn’t freak out on her again. “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 magnitude. “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, which should be up in a week's time. 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

Alicia Bauer

May 20, 2013 4:50 PM
The girl did not offer her name, so Alicia had no idea who she was talking to, but she was able to deduce three things about the girl right away: one was that she was at least from some degree of a magical family, the second was that she actually liked her parents, and the third was that her father was probably dead, or at least out of her life. This appeared to have warped her priorities.

“You can remember things without sharing their drink preferences, you know,” she couldn’t help but comment. Her father had terrible taste in drinks, which she was sure she would never replicate even as she was never, sadly, going to be able to forget about his existence. The drink she associated most with him was cheap instant coffee, for Merlin’s sake. Not even the good stuff, or even the halfway-decent stuff. Depending on how the dice fell, she might not always have as much money as she did right now, but she never expected to fall that far, and would do without first if somehow she ever did.

Of course, First Year Girl did take advice from her grandfather, so that could explain a lot. Alicia’s experience of grandfathers involved her father’s father, who was a Muggleborn, and her mother’s father, who was just a great example of what she wanted to be like, losing interest in her partners as soon as she married them and ending up raising her grandkids in a seven-room house, most of her kids not on speaking terms with her anymore. Yeah, right. She knew part of it was her own fault, for making them think she was less intelligent and capable than she was, but Alicia thought she did have some valid reasons for her failure to be impressed with the idea that older automatically meant wiser and worth listening to.

She nodded at the ambition toward Healing and refrained from pointing out that actually, pretty much everyone came to school because they had to learn to control their powers and could, here, both be out from under their parents’ feet and make some connections at the same time. At least there was ambition there, even if she thought it was totally misguided.


The question about what she wanted to do when she grew up pleased her less. One way or another, she had been asked that same question over and over again all summer: what do you want? And honestly, she wasn’t sure even now that she knew. She had come up with an answer, but it had frightened her, and she wasn’t sure if that meant it was wrong. Plus, she had only come up with it last night. Right now, though, she trotted out an acceptable lie. “I really want to do something to make a difference,” she said brightly. “I’m still kind of narrowing down how to do that.”

She turned her head, moving her hair over her shoulder. “You’re in luck, though, if you want to be a Healer,” she said, moving the conversation back to the other person. “Our Head of House is the Potions professor, and we have great sections in our library for Potions and Charms and Defense.” She smiled. “We also have a lot of student volunteers who usually help out in the library, and I’m one of those, I know pretty much everything there is to know about the place, so if you ever need help finding something, just look me up and I’ll help you out,” she promised, continuing her sales pitch for the House and library.
16 Alicia Bauer You probably won't regret it. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 20, 2013 8:49 PM
Ava had tried to watch the other girl’s reactions to her comments carefully, but hadn’t really been able to do anything from them. It didn’t matter though, because just watching the older girl speak was enough to inspire her. She really wanted to paint Alicia but wasn’t sure if asking someone she’d just met if she could paint them was creepy or not. She supposed she could wait to do so until later- she’d already managed to hold back asking one of the boys on the wagon ride over if she could paint him so adding Alicia to that list didn’t seem like it would be too hard.

“I know,” responded Ava to Alicia’s comment about being able to remember someone without having to share their drink preference. “I can, but drinking coffee reminds me of hanging out with him.”

“That’s cool though, that making a difference thing, that’s what my mom’s doing and I’ve seen the joy she gets out of it. I mean, she has to sacrifice a lot of things like spending time with Papa and I, but it makes her really happy and she gets to travel all over the world. She’s seen some amazing things. I suppose that’s also part of the reason that I want to be like her, I think it would be amazing to see the world. Does that make me selfish?”

Ava frowned in thought and took a bite of her dinner. Luckily the other girl saved her from having to say something else by telling her about the Head of House and the library.

“Really?” Ava felt her eyes go wide. “That’s so cool! I didn’t know that! Is he nice? Is the library lovely? I bet it is!” She sighed happily thinking about the pretty books she’d had to leave at home so that her luggage wasn’t too heavy and hoping that there were similar titles in the school’s library. “I’m Ava, by the way,” she offered a hand after quickly wiping it off from the inside of her robe’s sleeve that was much too long- she’d accidently bought a size too big and then forgotten to return it or ask her mom to hem it. “I’m sorry I forgot to introduce myself earlier, I’m just overwhelmed right now, it’s the first time I’ve been away from my grandfather and I really miss him. He's the one who got me into reading, he's a very well read man though I don't believe he'll have read a lot of the books in your library.”
10 Ava Fletcher I do hope I won't. 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5

Alicia Bauer

May 21, 2013 12:07 AM
“I can understand that,” Alicia acknowledged of the ceremonial, imitated-from-the-father consumption of straight poison which her young companion engaged in. “I climbed rock walls a lot this summer to remind me of my friends.”

A second later, she thought that she probably shouldn’t have said that since she had never gone public with what she and her friends had done and assumed they had been equally circumspect, but it was a sideways comment to a first year. It wasn’t going to mean much, and anyway, there was nothing wrong with exercising with one’s friends. They couldn’t prove she had been doing anything other than that, unless the others revealed what she’d said to them that first day, and they wouldn’t do that. She trusted them.

Alicia looked at the other girl in genuine puzzlement when she asked if wanting to see the world made her selfish. “I wouldn’t think so,” she said. The world was out there, with everything in it to see, everything to learn. What was wrong with wanting all of that? It was morally neutral in her opinion, since learning could be used however the person who did it pleased, but it even worked out very well as an outright moral positive if one stopped to save random people in the places one happened to be.

“The library is gorgeous,” she assured the new girl. “Or at least I think so, but I’m biased,” she laughed. “I spend a lot of my time there, and we Monitors helped design some of the displays,” she explained. “And Professor Fawcett is a great Head of House. He’s tough, though. He expects a lot from us.” She looked over the staff table. “Most of the staff does, actually. It’s a good school.”

She shook hands and smiled understandingly as Ava explained her initial failure to name herself. “It’s perfectly understandable,” she said. “Sonora can be a lot for a person to adjust to, especially if you haven’t been far from home before.” She, personally, used the word as a term of convenience, not feeling any particular emotional attachment to the place in California where she had mostly lived before Sonora or the place in Arizona where she had been born and visited a few weeks a year to see her father, but even she had cried on her first birthday away from home, two weeks after her Sorting. That was how she had met Cepheus; they had both been turning twelve in much less grand fashion than usual, and it had provided common ground. It was funny how things happened.

As for the grandfather not reading a lot of books in Sonora’s library, Alicia was intrigued. Was he a Muggle, then, or did he collect books in a specialty? Something they weren’t likely to teach at a school for under-seventeens? Interesting, but she probably didn't want to know. "But just make a few good friends and you'll forget all about being homesick in no time," she said. "In our House or in the others, there are some good people in the other three, too. Your roommates might be a good place to start, though."

Sometimes, she almost wished she had a little sister or something, someone she could give real advice to. She did have a little half-brother, but Isaac had had the same teacher as Alicia, so he didn't need her, and besides, they would never be friends. They understood each other, but as the thing they knew about each other was how much they'd let the other get away with before the well-supported false accusations started coming out, it didn't really endear them to each other. And if she ever had a child, well, she didn't plan to ever do that unless she was so firmly established that her baby wouldn't have to live the way she did. It was satisfying enough, but since she'd made her friends, she had been steadily growing to like pleasures which took forms other than professional satisfaction. Sometimes, it was nice to just enjoy something with someone else.

If she'd been giving Ava real advice, she would have told her to make a friend or two and subtly exclude at least one other girl - nothing overt, nothing that could draw comment or be proven, but there. Instead, though, she said what she was expected to say, what would ensure that everybody thought she was just the nicest person in the history of Sonora. If a person did good things long enough, did they default to good somehow, whether they had wanted to tear their hair out while being such a wonderful person or not? She hadn't read any in-depth philosophical treatments of the question, just asides, but maybe that could be a project for this year.

Or not. She had far too much to do already, after all. "They'll be like your family for the next seven years, so I hope you all get along," she continued. "Though the boys in Aladren make wonderful friends, too. My best friend is one of them."
16 Alicia Bauer Here's hoping. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 21, 2013 1:03 AM
Ava just looked at Alicia in astonishment after she mentioned rock climbing. “Really? You rock climb? That’s so cool! I’m afraid of heights so I’d never be able to do that- I like much lower to the ground activities…”

Ava nodded when the other girl said that wanted to help people because it would mean she could travel the world didn’t make her selfish. She was glad, sometimes, when Papa got exceedingly angry because his daughter-in-law had missed her once a month visit home, she’d find him sitting in his rocking chair on the porch muttering about good-for nothings who abandoned their adorable little children just to see the world. He’d only caught Ava staring at him then once or twice, but both times he smiled reassuringly to her and told her to come closer. “I’m sorry, Mermaid, (a pet name Papa had given her due to her love of the creatures) she could hear his voice in her head. “I don’t really hate your mom; I just wish that she would sort her priorities out a little more. She’s out there saving the children of the world meanwhile she’s missing her own child grow up.”

“It’s okay, I’m biased too,” replied Ava when Alicia mentioned the library being gorgeous. “I will always think that my Papa has the best collection of books there is but that’s only because I love him so much.” She followed Alicia’s gaze to the staff table when she mentioned Professor Fawcett. “That’s good that he pushes though, that’s what makes a good teacher, isn’t it? Someone who wants you to succeed but doesn’t want you to just skate by.”

Ava thought Alicia seemed to be a nice girl, she was certainly holding a conversation with her and that was something she had not had a lot of from the other children back home so when Alicia told her to make a few friends she puckered her forehead in worry. Back home she’d only really had a few friends and even they weren’t what she really counted as friends, more like people who would sit with her at lunch regularly because they were the type of people who didn’t like seeing others left out. Most of the kids she’d gone to school with had stayed away from her because she was always chattering about mermaids and the sea. They didn’t like that she thought she knew more than they did- which she did, she just knew it, and they thought it was weird that she didn’t live with both her parents. “You’re just an old lady,” was a frequent taunt that she’d heard because the neighbor girl, Lucy had told everyone at school that Ava lived with her grandfather. “How’s it feel to be a grandma, Ava, huh?”

It was a creative taunt, Ava gave it that, but she thought it was kind of stupid because it wasn’t really very insulting. She’d heard them insult the girl, Sarah, who’d sat in the back corner of the classroom for about a week before and those were really mean things that they’d said. She’d wanted to reach out to her but by the time she was finally able to get a chance, she found out that Lucy had been taken out and homeschooled due to the merciless teasing.

“That sounds nice,” Ava smoothed out her forehead as best she could and smiled again. “I think I’ll try there,” she added, in reference to the boys in Aladren, she’d gone to an all-girls school before this anyway, so she didn’t really know if boys were as mean as girls were but thought that they certainly weren’t nearly as volatile- a word she’d learned from her grandfather. She’d seen the boys in the neighboring school yard all playing together happily.
10 Ava Fletcher My fingers are crossed. 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5

Alicia Bauer

May 21, 2013 12:51 PM
Alicia supposed clambering around on sheer surfaces many feet above the ground was not exactly the kind of activity one expected from a not-exactly-sturdy girl of average height whose clothing shrieked “feminine” at the top of its lungs. She didn’t think it was substantially more physically demanding or dangerous than the gymnastics routines she had learned before Sonora, though. For her mother, that had been a socially acceptable way to allow her two older daughters to burn off energy; for Alicia, it was part of achieving the ideal, a sound mind in a sound body. Even if she could have been the smartest person in the room – which she usually wasn’t, though she didn't think she was often near the bottom, either – it wouldn’t have done her much good if she’d been stuck in a body which was sickly and slow and more unappealing to look at than it had to be. She disliked the one she had badly enough anyway, and what could be done for it, she had done, because whatever else it was, it was also the only container for her brain, which she almost liked, that she was going to get. “Just indoor walls,” she said. “My mother would not be amused if I took that interest outdoors.”

Really, if Momma had her way, Alicia’s only physical activity would be none-too-serious ballet, and maybe a much less strenuous version of swimming than Alicia preferred. She worried about her getting hurt – a concern she never seemed to have voiced about Kate, even though Alicia’s second sister had played Quidditch her whole seven years at Sonora. At school or her father’s, though, she could do pretty much whatever she wanted without being coddled, and generally did.

Well, at school, anyway. She had royally screwed up at her father’s this summer, and wouldn’t make that mistake again. Not more than she could help, anyway. She could not spend a whole summer idle again just to make her parents more comfortable, she had started using her summers really productively far later than she should have as it was.

She nodded approvingly at Ava’s opinions on good teachers. “Exactly,” she said. “Though pushing yourself a little harder than they do, if you can, never hurts.”

Really, she didn’t think the staff pushed them hard enough, but she recognized that they were probably doing the best they could with the numbers they had to deal with. She liked them well enough, thought they generally dealt pretty fairly with her, with appropriate recognition of her skills, at least the academic ones. Last year, she had considered pushing the headmistress’ kids down the stairs and trying to push some of the groundskeeper’s more fragile-looking relatives into nervous breakdowns, but had realized this would be suicidally stupid quickly enough – such a direct attack could all too easily be traced back to her, the only thing worse that she could’ve done would have been throwing a fit and trying to get her mother and stepfather to get someone fired, which she would never be dumb enough to even contemplate seriously – and everything had worked out as well as could be expected in the end anyway, so she didn’t really hold any hard feelings about things. Angry was her default state, but she lost interest in specific targets pretty quickly unless they seriously damaged her or one of her friends, and very few people had that kind of power. The staff probably did, but had not exercised it yet, so Alicia could get over little insults they probably didn’t even know they had offered pretty easily and acknowledge that, by and large, she had pretty good teachers.

She did not know why the advice to make friends warranted a frown, but nodded when her advice was accepted, at least in part. “Most of the boys who are Sorted into Aladren are both very good company and gentlemen,” she assured Ava. Being a proper gentleman did not, after all, necessarily involve having much of a brain. Neither did being a proper lady. If she had been in most other years, Alicia suspected she might well have cracked like an egg by now, driven crazy by the lack of decent conversation, but in one of the totally random chances of life she had had no control over, Fortuna had chosen to smile on her anyway. “Though most people here really are really nice in general, and we have people from all over the country and parts of the world, so there’s almost always someone who shares some of your interests.”

Or at least was willing to look into them, anyway. No one could know everything, but everyone knew something. That was the beauty of their House in particular – most of them didn’t have particularly boring interests, so interacting with others meant a good chance of finding out about something interesting, something one might like to look into further and come to know about. Alicia was not generally a fan of institutional loyalty, but as far as involuntary groups went, Aladren wasn't half-bad. “What are some of yours?” she asked.
16 Alicia Bauer You could try adding your toes, too. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 21, 2013 2:42 PM
Sitting there in Cascade Hall this far away from her Papa had made Ava feel a little out of place as it was, but now that Alicia had started talking to her she didn’t feel as out of place anymore, however there was this feeling of inferiority towards the older girl. Ava wanted to be someone as confident and knowledgeable as her, someone who didn’t mind talking to a first year instead of the multitudes of friends Alicia probably had.

When Alicia said her mother wouldn’t approve of her taking her rock climbing outdoors, Ava was still just as impressed as before. Rock climbing- whether indoors or outdoors was still a high up activity, one that Ava was sure she’d never be able to do. “Well it doesn’t really matter, does it? I mean as long as you like doing it, you should do it. If it makes you feel happy at least.”
Ava worried that Alicia was going to ask after her frown and as she did not particularly want to talk about That School, as she so often referred to it in her mind, it made her happy when Alicia did not ask and instead commented on the boys in Aladren and the rest of the students who came to Sonora.

She nodded. People from all over the country and the world? That sounded really amazing! And at last she’d be able to have a funny story to exchange with her mother when she wrote- if she wrote, a voice in the back of her head told her tauntingly put she pushed that thought to the back of her mind, she didn’t want to think about that now. Not after Alicia had made her feel so secure and welcome, at least.

“I like painting a lot, art is one of my favorite things to do. I mean, I know I’m not the best, I’m only 11. My Papa says they’re really great, but he’s my grandfather so I think he’s supposed to say that. But I also love reading fairytales and about places far away. I like pretty things. And music, but only the right kind.”

Ava nodded again twisting her braid and refraining to mention the topic that got her teased all through her time at That School. Her other topics of interest had separated her from the other girls too, but that had been on her, she knew it. She just didn’t like the books and art and music the other girls did and so didn’t feel like bonding over that was worth it. She knew that it was probably different at a school where half the kids grew up around magic and all of them would for the rest of their lives, but talking about mermaids to anyone outside of her family still distressed her and she didn’t want Alicia’s pity. “You like rock climbing, books, and being pushed,” she noted. “What else?”
10 Ava Fletcher Re: You could try adding your toes, too. 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5

Alicia Bauer

May 21, 2013 6:19 PM
Part of Alicia was tempted to take the conversation about rock climbing and turn it into an abstract discussion of the morality of pleasure-seeking, but she restrained herself. For one thing, she wasn’t really in the mood for morality anyway, and for another, it wouldn’t fit with the part she was playing. She was the kind, cheerful, confident older girl, the one who would make Ava feel welcome and look out for her, not someone who would make her feel like her brain was melting before she even had time to get her balance back after the wagon ride.

“Right,” she said instead with a smile.

She wondered if she was supposed to know what the right kind of music was. Music had never been much of an interest of hers; in her room, where she had the choice, she usually didn’t have any, preferring to read her books in silence, and downstairs, it was just background noise. Her sisters listened to music, but the rooms were, thankfully, far enough apart and well-insulated enough that she didn’t have to hear whatever they thought was cool this week. Hadn’t, anyway; Rachel no longer lived there, and Alicia couldn’t imagine Kate staying much longer, so it wasn’t something she foresaw unexpectedly becoming a problem.

“That all sounds really interesting,” she said. “I don’t know much about music or art, but I spent a lot of this summer working with fables, stories from mythology. There’s a lot to be learned from stories.”

She smiled when some of her own interests were recited back to her. “You paid attention,” she observed, sounding pleased. “Well, I like languages, I’ll read – almost anything, really, and I’m working on becoming a better writer. Though that one’s kind of practical, too,” she admitted. “I’m taking my CATS exams at the end of this year, and while it’s the content that counts, being able to present it well can’t hurt anything,” she said, aiming for a touch of self-deprecation. “I like to stay busy, too, I spend a lot of time in activities – the library, my friend Henny, she just became prefect, she’s had a book club, and I’ve worked as a tutor.” Well, had volunteered for it, anyway. It would do for now. There was no formal organization to check her claims against, not yet, anyway, and it made the list longer.
16 Alicia Bauer That should be enough, though. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 22, 2013 1:54 AM
“Thanks,” said Ava when Alicia told her that her interests sounded well, interesting. “You don’t have to know much about music or art to appreciate it though, just so long as you’re not listening to that pop-y crap on the radio. Those songs are too repetitive; they don’t have enough complexities in them. But fables and mythology sounds really cool too! What kind of work?” Ava wondered if it was something fun, fables and mythology was a very interesting topic, there were so many versions and all fables and mythology had to originate from something- perhaps ever something cool. She thought it would be amazing if some of the myths from popular mythology were based on a real event..

Ava beamed back, proud at having done something right. “Yes, I did, my Papa always says it’s impolite to only half listen to a person when they are talking about something especially when it’s something important or has to do with themselves.”

“What kind of writing?” Ava asked when the other girl mentioned working on her writing. Ava had never thought to actually create her own story; instead she drew scenes out of the books or from her imagination and thought up stories. But she was afraid that if she tried to write them down then she would fail miserably. She nodded at the mention of the CATS exams. She didn’t know what they were really but she got enough to know that they seemed to be very hard tests.

“A book club? Really? That sounds super fun!” Ava sighed, wondering what kinds of books were discussed in it, she’d remembered that her teacher in second grade had noticed her love of books and tried to get her to join the mother-daughter book club but Ava had politely declined knowing both that the other girls wouldn’t have liked it but also that her mother would never have been able to make the meetings. What made Ava wish she was a part of it though was that the other girls would talk about it on the playground sometimes and Ava would overhear and want to correct them that no, in fact Mary and Colin were cousins, and therefore it would be incest if they got together so Dickon was obviously the better match, were they stupid?

When Alicia mentioned working as a tutor she grew even larger in Ava’s eyes, not only was this girl welcoming and confident and loved books as she did but she obviously was smart enough- and willing enough to help others with their schoolwork. Alicia seemed to be the exact kind of girl that her mother or Papa would like, so Ava felt proud in talking to her.

“So you must be really smart then,” Ava replied. “And really good at a lot of subjects. What’s the hardest do you think?”
10 Ava Fletcher "Enough is enough," that's a song by Barbara Streisand 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5

Alicia Bauer

May 22, 2013 12:42 PM
She wasn’t sure, but Alicia was pretty sure “pop-y crap on the radio” would constitute an adequate description of what her sisters generally listened to on the radio. As insults to any of their tastes (except perhaps Rachel’s taste in accessories; Alicia coveted some of her eldest sister’s hats) were, as far as she was concerned, more likely than not to be statements of fact, though, she took no offense. “Classical composition courses,” she said of her work with fables. “Based off ancient Greek models, though everything I did was in English, of course.”

Sometimes, just sometimes, she felt a little inferior for focusing on Latin rather than Greek. The sources were older, and the differences in alphabet meant there was more to learn even in the earliest stages, and having a working knowledge would have pretty much solidified her credentials as a Very Educated Person. Fate had had it, though, that her uncle’s best friend had focused on fairly Western-standard Roman-style spell creation, with the attendant language classes and minor, so Latin it had been and still was for her, and it had been good to her. She didn’t talk about that particular skill set much, since she was pretty sure there were probably limits even in Aladren, but it really had been the first thing she had ever purely enjoyed. Back then, she hadn’t really known any better, so it had been something she alone knew, something which made her better than the others; she hadn’t thought there could be anything better than it then. Now, she knew there was always something better than whatever one happened to be doing, at least practically speaking, but what could she say, she was sentimental.

She smiled politely over the continued praise of Papa. Perhaps he was like her stepfather, Jeremy, one who had taught Ava how to manage in the world. Or perhaps he had just taught her manners. Hard to say, really. “Good advice,” she complimented him as well.

“My focus was on improving my academic writing,” she answered. “Making and defending an argument, word choice, that kind of thing.” She had also spent a lot of time perfecting the art of writing polite notes of acceptance, thanks, and refusal, but did not see this as a skill to boast of. “We write a lot here – Professor Fawcett’s known for his essays, but we have as much in Charms with Professor Olivers, and Professor Skies, the Transfiguration teacher, keeps up as well. You should adjust quickly, though.”

Honestly, Alicia was frankly surprised, all things considered, that the book club had never erupted into vicious political battles, something she could only attribute to the fairly complicated networks of friendships and acquaintanceships among them all, but she smiled and nodded anyway. “It is,” she assured Ava. Maybe giving Henny a new girl here was not enough to make up for how she was going to spend so much of the rest of the year promoting herself at her friend’s expense, but it made her feel a little better about it. “Students from all years are welcome, we tend to decide what books we’re reading democratically, so there’s always some variety.”

She laughed and thought of something to make herself blush when Ava started complimenting her presumptive skills. “I do my best,” she said. “What a person finds to be the toughest subject is usually a personal thing – a lot of people say Transfiguration, but there’s plenty of people who find Charms a lot harder. Strengths and weaknesses can run in families, so if you know of any, that might be a good place to start. Though keeping an open mind is probably best. My mother can barely brew a sleeping draught, and her brother's a Potions master.”
16 Alicia Bauer I did not know that. Learn something new every day! 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 22, 2013 2:33 PM
When Alicia mentioned working on classics based off of Greek models, the first thing Ava could think of were the stories of the god who threw thunderbolts, his exceedingly jealous wife, and all the rest of his siblings. “Oh, so do you like Greek mythology then?” Questioned Ava. She wanted to know what Alicia thought about Hades. Ever since the popularization of Hercules in that ridiculous movie, Hades had become somewhat of a bad guy which Ava didn’t like. Hades was merely the god off the underworld- a place where all mortal souls went after they died, good or bad. Hera was the bad guy in the situation. Well, Hera and the centaur who eventually got Hercules to be in so much pain he begged to be killed.

Academic writing did not sound fun at all and when Alicia started talking about all the subjects that required essays Ava only just stopped herself from making a face. Do so would have been childish and she didn’t want to appear that way to Alicia, not after all the great things Alicia had told her that made Ava think Alicia herself was great. “That’s sounds like a lot of essays,” Ava sounded worried. “I’ve never been a strong writer. It’s something that I need to work on badly.”

“Oh, that’s sounds really lovely. If I wanted to join, when should I do that?” Perhaps here was the chance she’d been waiting for to be a part of a book club with people who read books and then had sensible opinions on them. People who understood the implications of the writer properly and didn’t automatically go into who would marry who at the end of the story when they were all grown up. She knew she herself sometimes did that, as un-cliché as she hoped she was, she still dreamed of finding a white knight to fall madly in love with her and sweep her off her feet.

Ava nodded. “Okay, well my mother isn’t home very often so I don’t know exactly what it is she’s good at- whatever she needs to be to be a Healer, I suppose.” Ava shrugged. “I know it’s silly to want to do something when you don’t even know what it is you have to do to actually do it, but I know that Healers help cure the sick and I know that’s something I want to do.”
10 Ava Fletcher That's the motto- I know I do. 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5

Alicia Bauer

May 23, 2013 7:05 PM
“Well enough,” Alicia said, thinking of mythology. Frankly, she had really always found it a little depressing – that the gods of a society should, by her standards anyway, be such a sorry lot. Had she lived in Rome and been obliged to be some measure of religious, she thought she might have worked toward deification just to improve the general quality of the group a little. She had figured out early on in life, though, that some things should not be said out loud and was pretty sure that was one which at best only worked in certain kinds of company, so she didn’t mention it. “What I know of it, anyway. My focus has been in the at least quasi-historical accounts, and I haven’t read much in the original.”

She had read stories in English and simpler versions in Latin, though the latter had been more intended to give her grammar and translation practice than anything and she had only gotten a general idea of controversial subjects and areas. This year, she had twenty-five texts to read in translation and an even more ambitious program planned out for herself, though she honestly didn’t know if she would be able to do it; her academic classes here weren’t likely to get harder, but she was still stuck in them until after around five every day, and then had to do homework for those, each assignment three times over, and keep up her language work, and keep up her social and extracurricular loads, and then still squeeze in other necessities: food, exercise, a few hours of sleep. She considered it one of the great failures of magic that it was considered medically inadvisable to try to find a way to stay awake from now until summer and then just catch it all up during her last-ever round of visits to her father then. There was just no time for sleep, but she had to make time anyway. It irritated her.

She noted Ava’s tone as she assessed herself as a writer. “I’m sure you’ll be fine,” she said. “But if you need any help, just look for me in the common room or the library.” Assuming it was open, anyway. But she wasn’t going to think that way. It would be, one way or another; people had to study, and besides, Thad would have a stroke if it wasn’t. Something as insignificant as the universe was not allowed to give her friend a stroke.

“I’m sure Henny will make an announcement sometime soon,” she said of the book club, though she didn’t know for sure. Henny might not have the time this year. In that case, Alicia was not sure if she should try to host something herself or just let that one go. She guessed she’d see. “In a week or so. It should make it to the common room notice board – Professor Fawcett will show you that later tonight.”

She thought wistfully of how much better she would like her mother if Emily Douglas was seldom at home when she was. Objectively, Alicia knew her mother was admirable, someone who had come from not much, fallen to almost nothing, and then risen to a fairly livable position, bringing her daughters with her, as far as they were willing to go, anyway, but those traits were not ones her mother showed off around her. Instead of the cool-headed ambition Alicia could have respected, she got underestimation and an excess of demonstrative fake affection, both of which she found contemptible. “It’s an admirable goal,” she assured Ava of Healing. “But I think Healers have to be good at pretty much everything, at least magically speaking, so it’s also a lofty goal. It’ll take a lot of hard work to get there.” She smiled. "Luckily for you, you're definitely in the best House for that kind of thing," she added. "And unless they've completely redecorated the common room, I think there are some books on career planning and things on..." She paused, going over her memory for a moment. "It might be the shelf closest to the bulletin board, but don't quote me on that, but it should definitely have more in it about Healing than I know."
16 Alicia Bauer I try my best. 210 Alicia Bauer 0 5


Ava Fletcher

May 30, 2013 4:23 PM
Ava nodded, not really sure how to continue the conversation on myths as she herself read mainly the fantasy stories or what Alicia might call the original. She liked the flourishes and details, it all seemed magical to her, an aspect of fiction literature that she had always enjoyed, it's ability to just sweep her away from wherever she was if she let her imagination take over. It was why she enjoyed her grandfather's collection so much. He had the factual books like histories and biographies that she knew the older people in her town liked to read, but he also had a pretty good range of fairy-tales and fantasy stories like Peter Pan and The Secret Garden . She just loved stories that had an element of fairy-like magic to them and The Secret Garden was among her favorites.

When Alicia offered to help her if she needed on her writing, Ava smiled. "Thanks, if I need help I'll try and find you and I promise I won't ask you on everything, just if I'm particularly stuck." She'd never really asked a fellow student for help before, mainly because she'd been afraid they'd make fun of her, and besides, it was her assignment, she'd want to do it on her own. It just wouldn't be the same if she wrote the essay all by herself than if she wrote the essay but had someone suggesting things all the while. She didn't really know what Alicia meant by help only that when the other girls at school asked for help from Anne, the only girl in the class who, in Ava's mind, had a brain other than her, Anne ended up doing most of the work and Ava had always sworn never to make someone else her personal version of Anne. She was better than that she she knew it.

Ava nodded again, feeling very repetitive but she was so overwhelmed that she couldn't help it. "Alright, when I get to the common room later then I'll look at it, it shouldn't be too hard to find, right?" If it was hard then Ava would either have to just suck it up or try her luck in the library where she was sure things had an organised fashion. She knew she was going to go there as soon as possible anyway as she desperately wanted to find a new book to read before bed time.
10 Ava Fletcher Your best is always good. 258 Ava Fletcher 0 5