Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

July 26, 2013 5:42 PM
The midterm had gone about in its usual chaotic way as a family of seven often did. The only real difference was that Harper was chattering up a storm now while running around and Ayita needed a heart to heart. Jeff and Kiva did the best they could with everyone, making sure they received most of what they had on their wish lists, or giving them gifts in other ways that they would appreciate. It was harder with the teenagers, but she hoped they enjoyed the time with the family.

Now though, it was back to work. Kiva watched the students as they filed in and made their way either to their respective tables or to their friends. She always enjoyed watching them in their elements. Everything was so genuine with them. Once everyone was settled though, Kiva stood and charmed her voice to speak over the crowd, “Good Evening everyone! I hope your Midterm was enjoyable. I am really happy to have you all back here.” She was sure that there would only be one or two people who were happy for the return but otherwise, everyone would have preferred to not have to go back to classes.

“So, before I let you all off to enjoy your food and chat with your friends, I wanted to discuss the end of Midsummer’s Fair.” Kiva called out to them, anticipating a few groans at the food being stalled. “Your participation in creating a booth is entirely voluntary, so I do hope we have some interest from you in creating them. Those of you who decide to have a booth at the fair, the school will provide all materials for your use, so you do not have to pay out of pocket for the supplies. If you have questions or concerns regarding this, please feel free to come and see me.” Kiva advised them. “I will be putting up a Booth Registry on the main board here in Cascade for you to register your booth. I will need to know what type of booth you will have, food, games, informational booth, craft booth, Group Fundraising booth, ectera.” Kiva listed as many categories of booths that she could remember off the top of her head. “The booths that are for Group Fundraising events should be the only booths that charge for services unless otherwise approved by myself. Otherwise, all booths are free.

“You will also be designing your own booth for the fair. So, when you register your booth, there will also be a box next to the sign up, submit your design in the box when you sign up. We will have a team to build the booth to your specifications or as close to them as possible. I know all of you aren’t artists or architects, so even basic information of what you are looking for will help us to create the look you want. The earlier you get this to us, the earlier your booth will be completed and the sooner you can have a look at it and critique it.” Kiva really wanted this to be about their wants since they were taking the time to volunteer for this event. The more the school was able to do for them and they could actual design something from scratch, the more excited they would likely be for the end result.

“The booths will run during certain allotted time slots so that we can try and have as little overlap as possible. However, booths will be running all day long. As much as I love enthusiasm and people who are willing to help out, please do not over extend yourself and sign up for all the booths because then you won’t actually have time to enjoy the Fair. And I want you all to enjoy the fair.” Kiva wanted to express that not everyone was exemplary enough to really do everything. It just wasn’t possible.

“Alright, I think that was all I had to tell you. So, enjoy the rest of your evening.” Kiva declared, setting them free.

OOC: Ayita and Kiva's conversation is currently being written, but it will be posted on wts to show permission was attained. Also, be on the look out for the booth registry, I'll post it within the week.
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Abigail Thornton

August 01, 2013 11:31 AM
Abigail knew that her oldest sister getting married was important to the family, and as much as it should have been important to her, it really wasn’t. She’d have much rather spent all of her time with the horses, or with Anders. But she had no choice but to go to the Wedding. At least Wendy would be there with her family, so it couldn’t be all bad, could it?

Abi couldn’t wait to show Wendy all the horses on the Manor grounds, and the library and everything, so she was glad at least her best friend would be coming! When Wendy and the others all joined them there, she stole her best friend and they went walking all over the grounds. Abi told her what each of the horses were named and things about them, plus any other animals as well. The Crotalus hoped that she didn’t bore her best friend, but she preferred the animals over her family any day. Especially wherever her brother Alexander and sister Ariel involved…

But, thankfully, now the Wedding was over and it was time to go back to school. Abi spent the Wagon ride in a corner, by herself, with a book about horses her grandparents had gotten her for Christmas. She couldn’t wait to show it to Jade and the others! She’d also had an idea for a fundraising thing for the Horse Club and couldn’t wait to talk to Jade about it.

Abi knew that Jade and Mira never got along, but she wasn’t Mira. She was herself and they did have their love of horses in common.

Walking into Cascade Hall with the others, she made her way to sit at Crotalus’ table, unsure if she cared if anyone sat near her or not. Part of her wanted Jade to, but the older girl wouldn’t want anything to do with the younger Crotalus by her own thoughts. If someone sits next to me, they sit next to me. she thought to herself, wondering if perhaps Wendy would risk it and come sit with her. She hadn’t really noticed who sat down there, because just as someone slipped into the seat, Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau started speaking.

Within the welcome she mentioned the Fair and Abi smiled at the thought for an idea for raising funds for the Horse Club. The Headmistress set them all free and Abi took that moment to see what food was there around her and who had actually sat next to her.

Spotting the bowl of creamed corn and another of mashed potatoes on the other side of her neighbor, she turned to them and asked, “Do you mind passing the corn and the mashed potatoes?”
0 Abigail Thornton Will you pass the corn and mashed potatoes? 242 Abigail Thornton 0 5


Henry Carey

August 04, 2013 6:19 PM
The first night back was always one of the worst. The Headmistress spoke to them all, a thing which made him uneasy, and the others were always louder even than usual, or maybe he was just so used to coming to meals very early or very late, when most of the people were gone, that it only seemed that way to him. Either way, Henry didn’t like the first nights after holidays.

With all that in mind, he ducked into a bathroom rather than going into the Hall right away, to let the crowd thin out a little before he walked through it. Henry could never decide whether he hated crowds worse than noise, if the two could even be separated, but he didn't like either of them. Avoiding them was a skill he had figured out quickly, in first year, that he needed to learn.

Finally, though, he had to go in, taking a seat and fixing his eyes on the grain of the wood of the table instead of on another person. You could tell, he thought, things about furniture by the grain of the wood. How valuable it was, what kind it was. That kind of thing. He didn’t know how to do it himself, but it could be done. His father had told him. That was how Father was: he told them things, taught them things, when he was around, because like most people, he didn’t know how to be quiet. If he was with someone, he felt he had to say something, and with the six of them – Henry would not count the new one until he began to talk; Peter could not learn, and so their father had nothing to say to him yet – he said what things were, or how to do things. Jay had never been much for it, but Henry and Theresa had learned about fishing and hunting that way, though Henry had never been much good; his only interest in the activities had been that they were ones he could engage in with other people without having to talk. He could talk at home whenever he wanted, without the words getting stuck the way they did sometimes here, but sometimes he still didn’t want to, without necessarily wanting to be alone.

Peter, the new brother, was all right for now, but Henry felt sorry for him, and for Cecilia, in a way. Henry felt as though he were always standing slightly apart from the other seven, looking at them rather than being really part of the group even when he was talking to someone, but Peter and Cecilia were too much younger to be even that close to their siblings and cousins. By the time they were old enough to do anything, everyone else would be gone, so if they were like him, though he was pretty sure Cecilia, at least, was not, then there would be nowhere they could talk well at all….

A moment of blessed quiet descended before the Headmistress began to talk about the end of the year, a subject Henry did not find very interesting, since the alternative to disinterest was most likely just frustration, which he had quite enough of, thank you, and then the food appeared and everyone started talking again. Henry had just gotten his silverware straight enough to suit him when Thornton asked if he minded giving her items she couldn't reach.

“No,” he said, pushing them in her direction, sliding them over instead of picking them up. He didn’t like picking up full dishes; too much opportunity for mess. Halfway along, he began to feel that the two weren’t coordinating well, so he switched to only moving one. "Welcome back," he added, since she was in his year and it was customary to acknowledge people who had that in common with him. Really, he had no idea if it was a good thing that she'd come back to Sonora or not, no matter whose good was considered, but even he knew some words were completely divorced from what they were supposed to mean.
0 Henry Carey Sure 239 Henry Carey 0 5


Abi

August 05, 2013 7:16 PM
There was something about creamed corn and mashed potatoes that was sort of like a comfort food for the Crotalus girl. She wasn’t sure exactly why, but she did guess that it was because of the fact that they were warm and comforting. Abigail decided that perhaps she should owl her mother or Aunt Charlotte about why, but thought that she’d end up forgetting to do so anyway. It’s not really that important… she thought to herself as she asked the boy next to her to pass the bowls to her.

Henry slid them over to her one by one and she smiled to him. “Thank you. Did you want some too?” She asked him as she put some of each on her plate. “I can serve you some if you’d like, now that they’re closer to me…” Abi wasn’t generally talkative, not even to her sisters or cousins. Even Wendy she was rarely talkative to, and she was her best friend!

When Henry welcomed her back, she turned back to him and smiled with a nod. “Thank you, you too! Did you have a good Midterm?” she asked. Sure, he was in her year, but she really hadn’t gotten much chance to talk to him. She did know, that he didn’t get along too well with her roommate, McKinley. Abi knew that McKinley wasn’t easy to get along with and at first all she wanted to do was put snakes and bugs and other gross things in her bed for her to find. She didn’t do anything of the sort, but oh did she want to!

Maybe it’s time to get to know other people… Even when I become an Animal Healer or whatever, I’ll need to know how to talk to people too… she thought, as she waited for Henry to answer her question.
0 Abi Thank you! 0 Abi 0 5


Henry

August 07, 2013 12:53 AM
Henry considered the dishes he had just moved. “No,” he said, then, a beat late, “thank you.”

Perhaps potatoes would have been all right – he did not like corn – but the idea of being served food by someone else was not appealing. At home, it was every man for himself after he was old enough to manipulate a spoon. The last time Henry had been served food instead of having to get his own off a big table, he had been at Uncle Anthony and Aunt Lorraine’s, and also being given about fifteen different kinds of potion, so he hadn’t been really in focus enough to think much about it. Or anything, really. That had been pleasant. Now, though, he was not on a lot of drugs, so the idea made him feel vaguely insulted, though he realized she most likely did not intend to do so.

Still. Being helped meant there was something wrong with you. He knew this; he’d heard more than one person in the family wonder what was wrong with his parents, that they always needed people to clean up their messes. Was there a best at serving mashed potatoes? He guessed so. It was not the same as being not good in the ways his parents were not, but it happened.

He mirrored her nod when she asked about his holiday. “Yes,” he said. It had not been bad. He had spent most of his time reading; the others left him alone even when he was in the room with them, most of the time, so he at least knew more theory than he had before. Eventually, he had been assured again and again, so long as he practiced all the time while he was at school, too, this would translate into better wandwork. No more wild swings between being unable to make anything happen and having things blow up, no more Melting Potted Plant Incidents, passed CATS, not being ‘poor Henry’ when people thought he couldn’t hear anymore….

Poor Henry. Good old Arnold. Silly Theresa. Brandon! Diana, dear. Eccentric Arthur. Only Jay and Anthony are just them.

He began to move green beans onto his plate. Squash casserole. Meatloaf. Plain, filling food. Where did they get beans and squash at this time of year, he wondered? Mother froze them with magic at home, in the ice room in the cellar, so they could have it in winter, but this tasted fresher than that did when it was heated up. Perhaps Mother was merely not very good at freezing and thawing. He wondered if there were enough things to make a tomato sandwich. “Did you?” he remembered to ask back, repeating her question. This Thornton was not, so far, too difficult to talk to, giving him things he could easily give pressed-out responses to and repeat the questions without having to think of any himself, but he was not optimistic about this state of affairs lasting if she continued the conversation. It never lasted long.
0 Henry You're welcome 0 Henry 0 5


Abi

August 10, 2013 11:32 PM
Abigail wasn’t really one for being very talkative, in fact, she spoke to animals more than people on a normal basis. This wasn’t a worry to her family, they all knew of her love for animals and her desire to be with them more than humans. But people at school by now (as it was her third year) were probably curious as to why they barely had spoken to her. A part of her figured they chalked it up to her being one of those ‘weird Thornton girls’ that she’d overheard people say about her sisters. Sure, Abi loved each of them for who they are, but the Crotalus girl wouldn’t call any of them her friends… If Abi had to be with a family member, she’d choose Clara over all because of her horses. But nobody would ever make her choose and she knew it.

As she put some of each dish she’d asked Henry for into her plate, she offered to serve him some too, if he wanted. She had been trying to be nice and all as it was now closer to her. He said no, then a beat later said thank you. She wondered if it was because he didn’t like potatoes and corn, but then wondered why anyone wouldn’t like them. They were calming and something she looked forward to, but didn’t say anything of it. “Oh alright. Well, if there’s something I can pass you, just let me know then, okay?” she said as she shrugged it off, not thinking anything of any of it. He’d passed her what she wanted and that was good. If he didn’t want to eat any of it, who was she to make him? He could eat whatever it was he wanted. She wasn’t his mother after all and had no authority over him, nor did she want any. She was her own person and so was he, right?

She asked about his holiday and with his answer he asked her about hers. “It was different, but it was a midterm just the same. Wedding, family stuff, you know. Did you do anything fun?” she asked. She wasn’t one to just talk, she’d rather be the listener in most cases. She waited to see if he’d have anything to say or add to what she’d said.
0 Abi Do you need anything? 0 Abi 0 5


Henry

August 11, 2013 1:16 AM
“I will. Thank you,” Henry said, remembering to add the second part quicker this time, even though she had not actually rendered him a service yet. This, he remembered from lessons, was polite, to regard it as a service that people said they were willing to render him a service, even though he was also always supposed to assume that they were lying and that he should not actually ask for their aid, whether it was something he could honorably need help with or not. When he had first learned that, the complicatedness had almost been amusing, in a way, like a mystery; now, he thought it was sort of stupid, but even the only one of their etiquette teachers he or any of his siblings had liked had admitted that what was polite was not always what made actual sense.

Life isn’t polite, but we have to be. Except when we aren’t. No consistency.

He wondered if there was any chamomile tea. He liked that; it was calming, even if not as much as the things in the bottles in Mother’s special drawer, and something about the taste of it reminded him of when Mother did the laundry, how their cotton shirts smelled when they came off the clothesline she put them on because she had too much to do to stand there and use her wand on every piece of clothing worn in a family of nine. A bit of lemon, starch, the sun in them. Like that. And Aunt Lorraine said it was good for him. He didn’t see anything that looked promising near him, though, so he resigned himself to water.

She spoke in oxymorons about her holidays – if something was different from usual, then by definition, it was not the same midterm. The day the Incident had happened, that had started out like any other time when they were all left at Grandmother and Grandfather’s and exiled immediately to the garden, because Grandmother hated having children in her house and only tolerated it because it would look bad for a grandmother to never see her grandchildren except at formal dinners, but it had not ultimately just been another visit. Normal visits didn’t end with Father – or so Henry had heard; he would have given his last galleon to have seen it himself, but he had still been out of it then – taking a swing at Grandfather.

“No,” he said honestly when asked if he had done anything fun over midterm. “But I liked it, except when the baby was noisy.” He poked his green beans with his fork. “He was born in the fall,” he offered, since he interpreted her previous remarks as indicating that a low level of detail was appropriate. “Another brother. Three brothers, three sisters now.”

He did not know if this one was actually just another one or if Mother and Father were trying to preemptively replace him. He had not asked. He did not want to know. It didn’t matter if it was – nothing he could do about it, nothing Peter could, either - but he didn't want to know.
0 Henry Therapy? 0 Henry 0 5