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


Fae Sinclair

May 21, 2013 9:08 PM
Fae stretched her body when she was finally off of the wagon. The trip from Connecticut was always so long and rough, that she always felt as though her body was made out of rubber. It was hard though, knowing that this would be her final year at Sonora. Things would be drastically different after she graduated and she wasn’t sure how she felt about it. Although there wasn’t a date planned yet for her and Arnold’s wedding, it was going to happen within that year after they graduated. Her mother didn’t want it in the summer because she knew there would be so many other weddings happening that it would be too much to keep up with. Besides, Fae was pretty certain that Sara’s wedding would happen over summer and Fae didn’t want to step on her toes.

She was positive that Arnold wanted to wait as long as possible too. Whether she should be hurt by that thought or not, she had yet to decide.

Walking into the hall, Fae could understand the bit of nostalgia that people received when they knew the end was coming. She didn’t think she would really have that feeling because she had never felt as though Sonora was a home for her. It had just been a school. But now that she was standing in the hall for what would be her last Welcoming Feast, she felt the twinge in the pit of her stomach. Everything was going to be different from now on. This would be the last year she was free from the monotony of life. She could only hope that Arnold wanted to live away from the lives of their families and do their own thing. She’d even deal with him going into Quidditch professionally. She just didn’t want to lose who they were once they were forced into the ‘real’ world.

As Fae walked to the Crotalus table, her blue eyes scanned the Pecari table for her best friend, only to remember that she wasn’t there any longer. Sara had graduated last year. The thought that Fae would have to go through a full year without her best friend within the same building startled Fae. She had no idea what she was supposed to do now. Sara was someone with whom Fae relied on just as she did Arnold. What she couldn’t say to her betrothed, she said to her friend. What was she supposed to do now?

Feeling suddenly lost, Fae took a seat at her table. She still had Alice, of course, but Alice lacked the emotion that Sara often provided. It was going to be a difficult year. She knew that she was being selfish in her thoughts. Sara was probably equally in need of a friend, but she was older and wiser and far more put together than Fae ever could be. Maybe she could go find Arnold and ask for a hug?

She went through the motion of clapping for everyone as the Headmistress gave her speech (she did catch that both Henny and Alex made Prefects and planned on congratulating the two of them when she had the chance), but otherwise, Fae didn’t necessarily care to pay much attention. She did note the event though and also noted that there was no mention of it being mandatory. She felt good about that. As proud as she was about what she had accomplished last year, she knew she wouldn’t be able to do it this year what with the RATS happening.

Dinner was served and Fae reached for some of the salad. She smiled politely to the person beside her while she served herself. “Good Evening. How was your summer?”
6 Fae Sinclair A year of last goodbyes. 194 Fae Sinclair 0 5


Topher Calhoun

May 22, 2013 3:16 PM
Year Seven. The big one. It was hard to believe, as he climbed off the wagon, stiff and bruised-feeling as always, that it was really here. It was hard for Topher to get his head around the idea that by midnight at least, everyone in his year would be a legal adult and just biding their time here for a few more months before they did…whatever. Got a degree. Got a job. Got married. Whatever.
 
Still, there was a whole year to go before he had to worry too much about that, so he put it out of his mind as he walked the paths up to the school and through the magnificent foyer and into the Cascade Hall. Right now, there was the Feast, and then there would be putting a decent Quidditch team together for one last heroic effort at kicking Aladren where it hurt, who knew, maybe last year had thrown them off their game, it was worth a hope, and then there would be classes, and RATS, and a fair, and…well, really, any number of things could happen around all that, too. Drama was always a possibility, given the complicated love lives of everyone around him, but good and neutral things could happen, too. First, though, there was the Feast, which he was ready to sit down to after the ride from Illinois. He had no idea why, considering the level of activity involved, but long voyages did have a way of affecting the appetite, either bringing it out or completely shutting it down, and for him, at least tonight, it was the former.
 
The headmistress made her announcements, most of which didn’t really seem to apply that much to him – sure, it was great they had a new professor, new prefects, all that, but he was too far into his RATS now to consider taking up a new subject and he would be very surprised to meet the fifth year prefect who said much to a seventh year. He clapped for Derry and Reggie as they took their badges, though; they were good people, he was glad they’d won.
 
“It was summer, I guess,” he said when Fae, going for salad as was pretty normal for her, asked the standard feast question. They didn’t talk as much as they had once, but the feast was a time for tradition. “Kind of weird to think it was the last one. Spent a lot of time in Dad’s office, you know, seeing if I liked it well enough to consider it as a career. How was yours?”
 
Pretty boring, he was sure, at least by his standards, but, well, his had been pretty boring by his standards, too. Nothing wrong with boring, sometimes. Boring meant that while nothing was going spectacularly right in the world, at the same time, nothing was going spectacularly wrong, at least by whatever criteria you used to measure that kind of thing. Merlin knew he knew that could be kind of a subjective thing, especially after the past few years.  
0 Topher Calhoun Here's to making the best of it 192 Topher Calhoun 0 5


Fae

May 26, 2013 2:51 PM
Fae couldn’t very well blame Topher for that answer. Most summers tended to just fade out. Fae had no idea what other people did during their summers, especially ones that didn’t follow the Pureblood standard summers of social events and tea parties. Fae had become more accustomed to all the social parties and events that she had to go to now that she was older (it would only get worse now that she was an adult and would be married not long after she graduated), but she didn’t necessarily enjoyed it. Her sister loved those sort of things and it seemed like her husband equally enjoyed the attention, but Fae not to have to deal with it. She was certain that Arnold held the same thoughts as she did too.

“Office work? What exactly does that mean you might end up doing?” Fae didn’t think office work sounded all that entertaining for anyone. Her family was in the banking business, so her dad and now her brother worked in offices and traveled often to Europe to work with the Goblins. She could remember the look on her father’s face whenever he had returned from the office or from his trips. He always looked for tired. He put on a smile for his family, but she could tell he didn’t really enjoy his work. She hoped her brother didn’t fall into that feeling too.

“My summer was the same as usual. Parties, weddings, more parties.” Fae commented, not sounded enthusiastic about it at all. “I feel like this is what the rest of my life will entail. Sounds like it should be fun, but it’s really exhausting. I do not know why people enjoy them.” Fae stated as she filled her goblet with water. Maybe since this was her last year here, she ought to take in more opportunity to eat the delicious food. But she was afraid that she’ll gain weight and people would notice, so she kept to her salad.

“So far, everything seems a little numb to me with this being our last year. I mean, I know the RATS are coming up and everything, but it hasn’t really hit me yet that we won’t be coming back.” Fae admitted. “Actually, the only thing that has hit me is that Sara isn’t here this year. It’ll be very strange not having her to keep everything in perspective. At least this year will be back to somewhat normal with Quidditch. Are you nervous about being the Captain?”
6 Fae I'll join you in that toast 0 Fae 0 5


Topher

June 12, 2013 6:49 PM
“If I do the same thing as Dad? Tons of paperwork interrupted only by the occasional foot reattachment,” Topher said matter-of-factly, then grinned. “Exciting life my old man leads, huh? I don’t know that that’s exactly what I want to do for the next sixty or seventy years, but hey, if worst comes to worst, it pays the bills, right?”
 
Not that bills, he reflected, were a subject Fae had likely ever heard much about or could relate to even if she knew of them in the abstract. He could be jumping to conclusions – when he had first gotten over being furious about her presence in his country enough to observe anything specific about Caroline, he had been surprised to notice that his sister actually knew how to handle money, that she didn’t honestly believe personal property appeared out of a clear blue sky just because she wanted it – but it was not the least probable thing he had ever thought of. Fae had been born rich, raised rich, both of her parents were the same thing from what he’d gathered, and Merlin knew Arnold Carey did not seem to be hurting for funds. Nor was he likely to; he would probably, with his record, get onto some kind of Quidditch team, and while it might be mildly embarrassing for both the Careys and Sinclairs to have someone working to entertain common people in the family, he doubted they’d be too good to take the money that went with that. She wouldn’t have to worry about anything for the rest of her life, probably. Not that he held it against her; it wasn’t her idea, wasn’t his idea. It was just how things were.
 
“Couldn’t say,” he said, since the kind of parties she was describing were, from all he’d ever heard about them, boring as hell and he didn’t think too highly of weddings, either. The wedding part itself might be all right, but why did they have to have such long receptions afterward? That was the exceptionally boring part, and he was convinced that even those who appeared to enjoy gossiping about the gifts were liars. Who cared what sort of gifts they got? If he ever got married – bizarre as the thought was now – he wasn’t going to put up with it. An hour, tops. That was it. Give ‘em some cake and then tell ‘em to leave. That was all that seemed necessary.
 
Sara Raines, to Topher, had been more of a symbol of something than a person, but he knew she had been Fae’s friend. Was still, he guessed – it wasn’t like graduating from school meant you ceased to exist. Unless she had unexpectedly died, but the odds of an eighteen-year-old girl with anything money could buy just falling over dead over the summer seemed pretty slim to him. He shrugged when she asked about his feelings on being captain. “Not really,” he said. “I mean, it’s cool and all, but my primary focus is still on busting your boyfriend’s head open.” He took a bite of pasta. “Joking, joking,” he lied. “Though if you wanted to have a huge fight with him the night before the games, you’d be doing a great service to your House. How’s all that going for you guys? Got a house – a living house –  picked out and all?”
0 Topher I thought it was a pretty good one 0 Topher 0 5


Fae

June 15, 2013 8:04 PM
Fae tried not to make any sort of face when Topher commented on the career choice that his father had made. It did not sound like a good life choice at all, but what did she know? She never really asked her father what he did on a day to day basis, but she doubt that he would have told her anyway. His relationship in the financial world had its highs and lows and she sometimes heard him discussing with her mother about the goblins, but he always stopped when he knew she was in the room. Her parents felt that adult things remained adult things. Now that she was an adult, she was going to be the one to have to hear those troubles. She wasn’t really sure if she was ready for that… or knew exactly it was that would be troubling Arnold in the future.

She smiled at him, “I don’t think my father has an exciting job either.” She commented. “He works in finance. From what I gather, it’s a lot of meetings and dealing directly with the goblins. If the market crashes, the world is in chaos, and my father spends his days without sleep trying to help put it back together.” She made it sound nicer than it was, but she remembered the last time this happened and how haggard her father had looked after months of trying to repair the damages. Her father was a hardworking man, she respected that of him. It was something she had taken for granted for a long time, but now that she knew her brother was in the same business and had seen the stress on his face over the summer, she finally understood that everything they maintained was from the difficult work her father had done on his own for years. She hoped that Elle was a good wife to her brother and took good care of him.

Well, his response to her summer was clear that he couldn’t care any less about it. Not that she could blame him. She didn’t even care about it. She wished she could go back to life before Sonora when she thought the adult world was wonderful and exciting, instead of being an adult and living in it and knowing that it wasn’t. Maybe she should have a talk with Arnold about that sort of thing. She would rather they lived quietly and only went to parties where it was absolutely necessary… like Christmas. She was pretty sure he would be okay with that. She could throw one small gathering, because it was her job to throw at least one and still maintain some status in the world, but that would be all.

At his quip at Arnold, Fae laughed. Quidditch would always be the one thing that would give her anxiety. Arnold seemed set in the game, so she couldn’t very well tell him not to do what he loved doing, so she would just suck it up and deal with it. Of course, her laugh stalled when he asked about their relationship. “A house?” She looked at him like he was crazy, but then realized he probably wasn’t. She had no idea what their parents were planning, but she knew that Jaiden had a home prior to his marriage and Victor’s parents had a home for them prior to their marriage. “I… don’t think so. We aren’t even getting married for at least another year, so having a house now would be pointless.” Fae said in all seriousness. “Anyway, I try not to think about it too much. I think even mentioning it to Arnold freaks him out… I wonder if I should be insulted by that sort of reaction.” Fae said, more to herself than anything. Arnold seemed to have issues with their future. “You know, maybe you should just mention that before the game, I’m sure that’ll get some sort of reaction from him. Although, that could just make him angry enough to want to win more.”
6 Fae You thought correctly. 0 Fae 0 5