Headmaster Brockert

August 03, 2014 2:09 AM
Last year, his first term as Headmaster, had been extremely difficult to say the least and it wasn't anything to do with day to day running of the school or even students making trouble. No, it was totally due to external circumstances and though Mortimer was ticked off at those imbeciles from the charms facility-story of his life, he found himself ticked off at imbeciles quite often-he had to admit that he was glad that the fault lied with them and people couldn't blame the school. Like he actually wanted to be trapped in a room with his colleagues for four months! Nobody wanted to be trapped with anyone that long! Especially someone like Mortimer who wasn't generally a fan of people.

He also was no optimist but there were few ways that this year could be worse than the last. Oh, he was sure he could imagine some if he tried, he had that sort of imagination. However, at the moment, Mortimer really didn't feel like it. He had to focus on the Opening Feast instead, even if he would prefer imagining the heads of those from the Charms facility on iron spikes. Honestly, giving the speeches was the least favorite part of his job. He wasn't at all shy or afraid, but he had to be reasonably pleasant and that was not something that came naturally to the man.

The Headmaster stood up to deliver the repetitive words. Honestly, it was basically the same speech every year. "Welcome to Sonora for the new first years and welcome back for all older students. In just a minute, you first years will be receiving a goblet distributed by Deputy Headmistress Skies, in order to sort you into your houses. You will turn the color representing your house which are blue for Aladren, yellow for Teppenpaw, red for Crotalus, and brown for Pecari. Afterwards, you may join your house table." He seriously didn't care if they did or not really, he wasn't about to keep track of something so petty as sitting in the wrong place.

"Now I would like to call James Carey and Melanie Lennox up in order to receive their Head Student badges." He couldn't say this didn't please him, a Carey and his aunt Caroline's granddaughter. Two families who were not only pure, but that rarely got badges going by school history. "In addition, I'd like to call up Francesca Wolseithcrafte, Julian Umland, Virginia Bellrose, and Adam Spencer up to receive their prefect badges at this time." This lot pleased him immensely, all purebloods with the exception of Miss Umland.

Once they'd sat back down, Mortimer had just a few more announcements. "I'd like to welcome our new COMC professor, Richard Tallec. Please make him feel welcome and show him the proper respect." He couldn't be more thrilled. Aside from Quidditch Coach-which hopefully Florence would continue with and if not her, Jera-they now had a full staff.

"This year's Midsummer Event will be the ball." Honestly why did he have to announce this when only the first years needed to know? Shouldn't most students have figured out the rotation by now?

Now was time for his least favorite part, the pointless and potentially degrading singing of the school song. As sheets of music appeared in front of the students and the potential public humiliation began,

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.


"One more thing," Mortimer added once the singing (finally) ended. He was tired of all these announcements and he was sure the students were as well. "First years please don't leave the Hall unti your Head of House calls for you." Finally he was done speaking and now the students could finally eat-as well as him.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5


Taylor Petterson

August 04, 2014 2:07 PM
Taylor waited in the line rather apprehensively. There was such a large crowd; why did there have to be so many people for such a private moment? Or did it only seem private to her? Everyone else seemed to view it as just another part part of Sonora, but to Taylor, it was much more. This goblet would decide who she spent the rest of her school career around, and it would tell her which aspects of her personality influenced her the most. How could they not see that as a big deal? She sighed through her nose. She reckoned by her third or fourth year she'd be the same. After the first time it probably did become just another part of the school, unless you had relatives coming through.

Oh god, she was next. Oh no. What if the color didn't change? How embarrassing would that be! She had a moment of blind panic as she stepped forward and took the goblet in her shaking hands. Willing herself to relax, she brought the goblet to her lips and watched down her round nose as the color turned blue.

Aladren. She scrambled to remember what Aladren was known for. She could remember that their colors were blue and black, and they were represented by a hawk. What were they known for though? Problem solving! Of course! They were supposed to be strong-willed and smart enough to find a way out of any scrap. That did sound like her.

She looked at the tables, hoping to be able to find hers by the faces of the other students, but she found she couldn't. Her heart jumped into her throat. She didn't want to get into trouble for not sitting where she was supposed to, and she didn't want to look stupid in front of everyone first thing. How was she supposed to tell? She glanced down at her goblet and felt heat creep to her cheeks. The colors, duh. God, she felt ridiculous. She slunk over to her table and slumped down a bit, hoping no one had seen how hopeless she was.
0 Taylor Petterson Just Match the Colors 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 04, 2014 4:40 PM
The line of first years was long. It was also almost entirely composed of girls. John had no problem with girls – his mom had made very sure that John and his three brothers understood that girls were just as good and usually good at things as boys, and if Mom hadn’t succeeded in making the point, he thought the girls in his book club would have happily made up the difference – but in the moment it took him to spot another guy at all, he was a little unnerved by the thought of being the only person in the year who wasn’t one. Stupid, of course, there was no good reason for it to matter, but seeing just one other person he was pretty sure was male as he lined up with the other eleven-year-olds made him feel a little better.

As the Headmaster explained the Sorting ceremony, almost in the same words John’s sister had used to explain it to him the previous night, John tried not to fidget – he really wanted something to drink – and wondered, absently, why he was nervous enough to latch onto details like that. There was nothing to be nervous about, after all – he drank the potion, whatever happened, happened, and then he went and sat at a table. Easy. Not hard. Not a performance. The only person in the room who would bother to notice his Sorting was his sister, and he was neither aiming to impress Julian nor under the assumption he had any chance of ending up in her House. Teppenpaw sounded like a great House, but one he would fit in with like – well, no, maybe not a crow in a flock of canaries, he didn’t think it would end quite as badly as that might….

He had concluded that he’d come up with the analogy because of House colors (Julian had told him she was very sure he would be an Aladren, and from the brochures, he thought she was probably right; Pecari seemed a lot more reasonable than either Teppenpaw or Crotalus, but all things considered, he thought Aladren sounded like a far better match than any of the others) and was moving back and forth between trying to find a better analogy and trying to remember if canaries were native to America when, suddenly, an adult witch, presumably Deputy Headmistress Skies, was offering him a goblet. He blinked at it for a second, then took a sip, made a face at a taste not unlike cabbage, and looked at his hands.

Blue. He nodded, not really surprised, and made another face when he looked up and saw his sister smiling and shaking her head at the Teppenpaw table. He went to the Aladren table and sat down, nodding awkwardly at nearby people and watching the rest of the Sorting, his fingers drumming on the edge of his seat.

He wanted to get on with the feast – his mom had sent him and Julian some sandwiches to eat on the wagon, her fancy chicken salad, flavored with cranberries and honey and tiny pieces of almond, on wheat bread, but they had finished those a long time ago – but applauded when the new Head Boy and Girl were announced, both because he thought it was polite and because he thought the Boy was an Aladren, and almost forgot about food entirely when he heard his sister announced as a prefect. He jerked upright in his seat, nearly bouncing in it, and applauded much harder than he thought most of the other first years did until Julian made a face at him, if one which was clearly trying to hide another smile, on her way back to her seat, the shiny new badge glittering between her fingers.

Julian was a prefect. Maybe this place wasn’t quite as full of idiots as he had worried it might be. He was half-smiling, nervous energy turned in a minute into pride in his sister, as the school song sheets appeared and he sang along as well as he could, liking the verses, what they said. Having some Latin in there didn’t hurt, either. Afterward, the music disappeared, he reached for his pocket notebook to make a note about seeing if he could get a copy of the lyrics later, remembered that Julian had taken his notebook and his pens away from him somewhere in the air over what he thought might have been Utah, and then, finally, turned his attention to the food.

The amount was nearly overwhelming, but he dove in and came out with a pair of skewers holding medallions of steak and chicken cooked with mushrooms and bright slices of red bell pepper, a bowl of aromatic soup he thought was mostly composed of spiced lentils, a piece of a kind of round bread he didn’t think he had ever seen before and decided to try on a whim, a helping of a salad he dumped a generous amount of dressing and grated Parmesan cheese on, and a handful of apple slices and raisins. He looked around the table, seeking something to drink, and his eyes latched onto a teapot.

The liquor was pale, betraying it as a green tea, and there were large things he was pretty sure were chrysanthemums floating in it, which made it the kind of thing he avoided on principle, but it was the most appealing option in his vicinity and it was his first meal in a new place. Not the first meal he’d ever eaten in the United States, admittedly, since his dad had grown up in a border town and had relatives in the States and Canada, but the first in a while, and definitely the first this far south. He might as well make everything as novel as possible.

“Hey,” he said to a girl whose blue skin currently marked her out as both one of his Housemates and as one of the many girls in his year. “Pass me that teapot?” he asked, then remembered to add, “please?” to the end to be polite to new people. He tried, sometimes, even with people he knew because his mom liked it when he was nice, but it was easier to remember with new people he wasn't comfortable with.
16 John Umland That's one solution to the problem. 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 04, 2014 8:58 PM
She knew her eyebrows must have shot up into her wavy blonde bangs, but she hadn't expected anyone to speak to her. Her mind was off on one of the many trails in the woods behind her home. This one was her favoite by far. itwent several miles back to where the trees were so thick that daylight couldn't penetrate their canopy. She remembered walking and walking and walking, and all the while everything was growing darker until she could barely see at all. And then, like the light at the end of the tunnel, the trees thinned and entered into what she thought was a clearing. But once she broke through the more thickly wooded area, she found a creek. She decided to call the place "Leaky Point". There was one main creek that ran through those woods, and at the spot where she was, it branched off into a shallow stream. After about a hundred feet, the creek and stream ran back together, creating an island in the middle. That island was the most beautiful thing that summer. The stream was slow enough and shallow enough to watch the silver fish flit over the smooth rocks at the bottom, and the whole island reflected in that clear water. In its reflection, she could see the rainbow of wildflowers with their cloud of bees and butterflies and felt some unknown emotion stirring in her chest. That was the summer she fell in love with nature.

Shaking her head, she looked back at the boy slightly confused. "The teapot?" she asked with a slight shake in her voice. She got lost in her head all too often; one of these days it was going to get her in trouble. She reached over and grabbed the teapot before handing it to the blue boy beside her.

"I'm sorry. You must think me mad. I get lost in my own head sometimes," she admitted with a slight blush. "I'm probably not entirely sane, but I'm more together than some." She gave him a smile and held out her hand. "M'name's Taylor. Taylor Petterson." She was going to need a friend here.
0 Taylor Petterson One Solution for the Many Problems to Come 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 05, 2014 10:30 AM
The girl looked alarmed and sounded confused. John was pretty sure he wasn't that intimidating - he was told that he looked like he was glaring at people more often than he really was, though he was sure he wasn’t doing that now, and had observed that dark hair and oversized noses and ears like his were assigned to villains in his friend Rafe's video games more often than they showed up on heroes, but at the end of the day, he was still a scrawny eleven-year-old in secondhand clothes - and so concluded that he'd either surprised her or that he looked really weird while his face was blue. Either way, though, he couldn't do much about it now, so he was glad she didn't yell about either chance.

“Yeah,” said John when she asked for confirmation about what he wanted. “Big, uh, glass thing there, if it’s not much trouble….”

She handed it over and he poured himself a cup, then blinked when she said she might not be entirely sane. “We’re – “ he started, then decided that quoting Alice’s Adventures might not go over as well with a random person as it did at home, where it was expected. His mom was a Muggleborn named Alison who had started to really like Alice after she found out she was a witch and found the Wizarding World so unlike what she knew that she’d felt like she’d fallen down the rabbit hole. He thought Through the Looking-Glass might have been the first thing he had ever heard Mom read aloud, though the timing hadn’t been good; Julian, the one she’d been reading to, had been so unnerved by the thought of the Red King that she had been afraid to sleep for a while. People from magical families, though, didn't usually know Alice, and even most Muggles got it wrong, and he knew nothing about this girl.

“Well – that’s good,” he said instead. "I'm John. John Umland."

He tasted the tea. It tasted like grass and celery, which he didn't like and didn't think went well with his food, but his head began feeling better and his whole body steadier and less fidgety as soon as the caffeine hit his bloodstream and he resolved to ignore the taste, at least to the bottom of the cup, and hope there was something better for breakfast. This was all right for the night, but it wouldn’t get him through a normal day. His first day of being taught by people who weren’t his mother, or at least didn’t know her, was probably not going to seem very normal.

"And I'm pretty sure I'm sane," he added. "So, do you know much about this place?" he asked, figuring that since conversation had started, he might as well take advantage of it, especially with one of his Housemates. Not only did he need to at least be on speaking terms with them all, but since in theory all Aladrens had at least some traits in common, it was possible it wouldn't be that bad.
16 John Umland I do better looking at one problem at a time. 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 05, 2014 11:37 AM
Taylor looked around at Cascade Hall. How much did she know about this place? As she watched the water wash down the glass, she gave a slight smile. "Enough to know I belong, but not nearly as much as I'd like," she admitted, more to herself than him.

This was the next great adventure-- or was that what people said about dying? Either way, this was her next adventure and would be for the next seven years of her life. It was so much better here than at home. Barely a night in and she couldn't imagine how she had ever spent the rest of her life a Muggle. Things were so dull, so predictable back home. Already she had flown across the U.S. in a FLYING COVERED WAGON. Seriously, it flew. She had never seen a real covered wagon, let alone a flying one. She was sitting in a giant marble hall with a waterfall running down it. She was BLUE for crying out loud! When had things ever been so exciting at home? Sure there had been things that had made her, well, not really excited. More like jumpy and rushed. But never just thrilled. Unless it was out in the woods-- now that was a magic all it's own. And a thought for another time.

She turned back to the boy with a smile after what she was sure was a considerable pause. "I'm a Muggleborn, so all I know is what they tell me. I didn't mean to sound cryptic or anything." She sighed and finally began to eat, pulling multiple kinds of vegetables onto her plate. She was hungry, but she was trying to cut back on meat. It made her feel guilty when she was actually out among the animals. Although, she knew how little sense that made. Animals eat each other: she knew that was a fact of life, and it didn't bother her. So why should her own meat intake bother her? She gave a slught huff and shoved a forkful of something green into her mouth, refusing to analyze herself any longer.
0 Taylor Petterson That's a way to do it. 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 05, 2014 1:59 PM
John did not find Taylor Petterson’s answer helpful. Instead, it made him regard her suspiciously, the edge of his unusually good mood dimmed, for a minute she didn’t seem to notice before he shrugged and started eating his lentil soup, the earthiness and heaviness of which was cut, to his surprise, with what he was pretty sure was lemon.

He was reflecting on the flavors, trying to sort out which was which, when Taylor turned back to him. Another surprise came from hearing she was Muggleborn, which he guessed would teach him to jump to conclusions; what she’d said about knowing she belonged here had made him think of so-called purebloods, who he did not expect to get along well with at all. Julian said most of the American purebloods were actually pleasant enough people, the sort of prejudiced where they were so comfortable in their delusions of superiority that they didn’t feel the need to yell at people about them most of the time, but that didn’t really improve John’s opinion of that part of the school’s population. In fact, he thought they were almost worse than the other kind, because their willingness to get along meant they shouldn’t have been able to help making independent observations and realizing that their entire program was based on bad data. Since he was pretty sure it was impossible that all of them were too dim to use inductive reasoning, that meant they were deliberately ignoring or maybe even supporting the use of bad data instead of collecting good data and changing their opinions to match the conclusions it supported, and that was far worse than just lacking the functioning intelligence of a flobberworm. It made no sense.

Taylor Petterson, though, was not a so-called pureblood. Didn’t mean she wouldn’t do or say things that made him rant, but did make it less likely it would be about that issue. “I’m not,” he offered. “But I just know what my sister tells me.” His expression lightened. “She says the library here is awesome,” he added, figuring this would be of interest to someone enough like him to share a House, or at least this House. “And the Gardens – Julian doesn’t go out there enough to know for sure, but she’s heard there’s all kinds of magical creatures and plants, and just stuff that’s not native to where we’re from, out there….”

He looked up to the staff table, wondering which of the adults there was the one he needed to talk to. The new teacher was important, but since he was new to the campus, John thought he might do better to stick with his original plan of seeking out Julian’s head of House to find out what he could expect on the grounds in general. The possibilities, between the school’s location and history, seemed endless, and while that was exciting, he thought he would really get more accomplished if he knew what he could rule out to begin with instead of figuring it all out as he went along. The body of Things Already Known was, after all, there to be used as well as expanded.
16 John Umland Know a better one? 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 05, 2014 3:34 PM
It was good, this green stuff. Better than anything Taylor had had at home, but then again, she wasn't much of a cook, was she? She could make it edible but not tasty. Briefly she wondered if there was a spell she could learn to make her food taste better. Would that be Charms or Transfiguration? She shrugged to herself; now was not the time to worry about it. She doubted she'd be cooking for herself for quite sometime.

Hearing the boy's tone change, she glanced back over at him, missing the first part of whatever he had said. But the next part made her sit up a bit straighter. Her green eyes grew wide as she listened to what he had to say about the Gardens. The Labyrinth Gardens, she had already heard rumors about them. Excitement flooded through her, causing her eyes to light up. There was the main part of the grounds she couldn't wait to get into. Magical creatures and plants she had never seen before? Heaven.

She wiped her mouth a bit self-consciously and looked the boy over. "Uhmm... When do you think we'll get the chance to explore in the Gardens?" She felt heat creep up her cheeks and the back of her collar as she realized her mistake. "Sorry," she tried to cover it up with a small cough. "I meant when will I get the chance?" She felt slightly mortified. What a slip of the tongue. Here she was in the cheapest robes with blue skin. She shook her head and dived back into her food with intense concentration.

He probably thought she was crazy and absolutely weird.
0 Taylor Petterson Maybe. Want to find out? 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 05, 2014 6:25 PM
John finished the cup of green tea as he looked over the staff table and absent-mindedly poured another, dripping some onto the table from the spout without noticing as he recognized some faces he had seen in Julian’s yearbooks. From what his sister said, he thought the teachers were usually nice enough, but distant – not at all what he was used to. Mom made sure they got through everything in the end, but things were adjusted or added all the time to accommodate what he was interested in. There was no reason why he shouldn’t still follow what he found interesting, but it was going to be different, working through it all basically on his own, whether he wanted to or not. He had known it was going to be that way, but….

He blinked, startled, when Taylor started talking again, and he realized he had wandered from the conversation for a moment. Then, for some reason, she turned red and seemed to focus on her plate.

“Er…whenever, I guess. After classes,” he added conscientiously, since not really having breaks during the day was one of the other big differences between being at school and learning at home. He thought he might miss being allowed to go think or make tea when he needed to as much as, if not more than, having his lessons tailored to him. “Unless the Care of Magical Creatures class is in the Gardens, but that’s not exploring, that’s being in a particular spot…unless Professor Whatsisface sends us exploring.” He might do that if he was a teacher, but he wasn’t a teacher. “I don’t know if he will or not. But between classes and curfew, I think people can go pretty much wherever they want. There’s a lot of stuff to do here. I'm going to go look around sometime, too.”

He wanted to, but he also had to. He had made plans to learn as much about the school as he could in the next three weeks and then report, hopefully after getting at least one experiment up off the ground once he saw what he had to work with, though he didn't know about that part. Forming questions and even hypotheses was easy, but designing and carrying out tests was going to be hard when he had only a limited number of spells at his disposal and even less equipment. He was looking at it as an adventure, but there was no doubt in his mind that it wasn't an adventure without a lot of challenge.
16 John Umland I'm listening. 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 06, 2014 11:53 AM
Taylor sighed with relief. He hadn't noticed her slip. That was good. She needed to slow down, to think before she spoke. She was always doing that, talking and thinking and getting ahead of herself. From there she would begin stammering and messing up her words. Speaking just always seemed to go downhill for her. Maybe that's why people called her the silent type. She tried to speak as little as possible, unless she was nervous. And then she couldn't quit talking. Thank goodness John was filling the silence. Otherwise Taylor would be trying to, and she knew how that would go. She grimaced and set her fork down with a bit more force than was necessary. She had to get over her speech issues, as well as her nerves.

She listened closely to the other first year, relishing his words. She could go to the Gardens whenever she wanted? After class of course, but that was still wonderful. It was probably like regular school. She would go to a class for a period or two, then get a short break in between each class. Once the school day was over, she could go do whatever she wished. That was kind of like home. She could do some of what she wished, as long as her mother permitted it. And her mother would usually allow her nature walks, as long as she stayed near the house. Which she didn't, but her mother didn't need to know that. But those walks were all her mother would allow that was beyond her line of sight. Taylor couldn't remember the last time she had gone to a friend’s house or a friend had come over. There had been no shortage of kids her age on her street, but her mother had forbidden her from speaking to them. The only friends she had were the ones that talked to her at school and went to Boy Scouts with her.

Things would be different here. She looked the blue boy beside her over and promised things would be. She would try to make some sort of friends, friends that she would actually hear from during the summers... through owls, she supposed. She broke out in a smile at the thought. What would her poor mother do with her fear of birds? A small giggle escaped her and she hid behind her goblet. Thinggs could get interesting.

Once she had gotten hersel fback under control, she turned to the boy once again. "What do you think your favorite class here will be?"

Her mind shot through all of the first year classes she had heard of: Charms, Transfiguartion, Potions, and Defense Against the Dark Arts. She didn't like the sound of that last one, Dark Arts, but it made sense.. In a world with more power, it only made sense that someone would want to use to for bad things. She had also heard Care of Magical Creatures mentioned by Headmaster Brockert, but she wasn't sure if it was a class first years were able to take.
0 Taylor Petterson Apparently you're not. 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 06, 2014 4:04 PM
John noticed Taylor grimacing as he spoke and wondered what was wrong with her. Normally, he’d just assume she really wanted him to shut up, but he hadn’t been talking that long. That left her being sick, not liking the food, not liking what he’d said specifically even if he had yet to annoy her in general….

Then, though, she started smiling and giggling, leaving him utterly confused. He guessed he shouldn’t be surprised, since he had a hard time figuring out what people he knew well were thinking and feeling if they didn’t just tell him and it was stupid to assume he would do any better with a total stranger, but he disliked the social convention which said he couldn’t just ask what in the world her deal was so she could tell him and then they could communicate better once he wasn’t confused and at least a little suspicious, as he was used to assuming that people who laughed at him thought he was the crazy one.

Which he was not. One of the adults who’d volunteered with his Beaver Scout troop had suggested that Mom have him ‘tested’ for something when he was six or seven, and Mom had not been amused. At all. Tone of voice was not a thing John picked up on well (he could usually tell someone was implying or suggesting something, but almost always guessed wrong when he tried to figure out what the something was, though he had gotten much better at noticing when it was a warning that one of the Glorious Representatives of the Values of the Canadian Everyman was about to try to hit him or steal his things) but even then, he had known Mom was Not Amused At All by another adult presuming to talk to her that way about him. Other people had wondered it since then – Charini, a girl in his book club back home, had just asked him if he had ADHD about a month after they met – but he thought Mom was smarter than all of them, and if she said there was nothing wrong with him, then there was nothing wrong with him until she said otherwise.

“Uh…” he said when Taylor did look at him again, but not because of her behavior. It was because she had just asked him a really hard question.

“All of them,” he said finally, with a brief smile. “Well – if they’re, you know, if I like how they teach them. Care of Magical Creatures sounds cool, but wizards kind of missed the scientific revolution, so I don’t know if we’ll get to do anything really interesting or not…. Transfiguration should be good anyway, though, and our Charms book looks fun, and…yeah, I just want to learn everything,” he said, more cheerily than he’d said anything before. “In and out of class, even if classes are good. What about you?” he asked.
16 John Umland ...What did I miss? 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 07, 2014 10:17 PM
Taylor grinned. What classes wouldn't she like? The excited glint returned to her eyes as she shrugged. "I think Defense Against the Dark Arts sounds great. Everyone should know how to defend themselves. I just hope we have a good teacher. There's more than Dark Arts that we need protection from."

She tried not to let her expression darken as she thought of the scars decorating her body. Of course, most of those had been unhappy accidents, but a few had been from scraps with other children. She recalled a particularly nasty fight with a particularly nasty boy who had lived a couple streets over. It hadn't been a long fight, but she remembered how the blood had flowed from both of them. She'd been lucky; her face hadn't scarred. The other child... hadn't been so lucky. His chin still had a thick, ropey line across it. Her victory reminders were deep flecks across her shins where he had pushed her hard against the gravel. It had taken her mom two hours with the tweezers to get all of the little rocks out.

She liked John's cheery voice and the way he seemed open in his answer. It made her feel a bit more relaxed. He seemed like a good guy; she was glad her short Walk of Shame ended beside him. She gave him a real smile, one full of teeth as she added, "But I'm really looking forward to Care of Magical Creatures. I really like animals and nature." She was a bit hesitant to mention the next part, but when was the last time she had really talked to someone who would listen? "I--I didn't have a lot of friends back home, so I spent a lot of time in the woods, and while I'm a fast learner at most anything, I prefer more natural courses."

0 Taylor Petterson I don't know. What were we talking about again? 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 08, 2014 12:03 PM
John looked sideways at Taylor when she said there were things other than the Dark Arts that needed defending against, not sure how to respond to that or whether or not he should be a total, if possibly useful, hypocrite and remind her of the Statute of Secrecy and Reasonable Restriction of Underage Sorcery and the demands in those documents that the two of them not use magic outside of school to defend themselves from basically anything short of attempted murder, but he brightened again at the mention of Care of Magical Creatures.

“I’m looking forward to that one too,” he said. “My sister used to write me letters about it – it’s how I got into birding.” He looked around the table, remembering that Julian’s partner in crime from that significant day in his life was somewhere at this very table if he was still at Sonora at all, but remembered he was having a conversation with someone before he got too distracted by the search. “They have dodos here! Intact living specimens! There’s not a mock turtle unless you count fire-crabs, but Julian’s class covered the dodo – er, diricawl, that’s it’s real name – and there are gryphons, even if, uh, we won’t get to cover those….”

Which was too bad, but he did see the point. Paul said the school had good PR people and good luck, but there was really no way to spin a student being eaten by what the student was studying into something that looked even remotely okay, at least not at this level. Nobody cared that much if specialists got eaten, that was just the job, but they thought differently about kids in school. “Yeah, I’m looking forward to that one. I’m from a city – I was in the Scouts there to get out some, but that’s non-magical, so I really haven’t gotten to see many magical creatures up close but some owls and a few boggarts that got in the house.” He remembered she was Muggleborn. “Those are…creatures we’ll probably learn about in DADA instead of CoMC,” he explained. “I’ve always wanted to figure out how one works….”

Mom didn’t think that hitting a boggart with a dictionary and trying to dissect it was the appropriate response to one of the shapeshifters getting into the house, and he had always been too scared and surprised when they jumped out at him to think not to yell and attract her attention before he had time to give either step of his prospective experiment a whirl. There had been grindylows, certainly put there but no one had ever found who did it, in a pond once, too, but Mom hadn’t let him anywhere near there because another kid, a Muggle, had almost been drowned before experts came in to remove the water demons. Other than that, though, his corner of Calgary was decidedly lacking in magical creatures, Dark or otherwise – at least as far as he knew. His parents were involved with Muggleborn and Squib support organizations on the provincial level, as were his older brothers, as much as they could around university, anyway, and his dad was a Quodpot announcer and so worked in the magical world, but it occurred to John that he really had not had much contact with wizards outside his family since he was a little kid. His mom worked part-time at a Muggle library, all the friends he had, all met through that library, were Muggles, and if any of the other people at church or in other charities and causes his mom got involved with were magical, they hadn’t told him about it.

Maybe he’d investigate over the holidays, if he had time. It was worth a note. “It’s all kind of connected,” he explained. “My mom says everything is, but it’s easier to see with magic than some things.” He realized his soup was going cold and scraped up a big spoonful so he could finish it faster, then slid a mushroom off one of the skewers and ate that. “But it’s all how they teach it. Julian doesn’t talk about the teachers much, and nobody’s ever taught me but Mom, so I don’t know what’s normal. Did you go to school before you knew you were a witch?” She'd said she didn't have many friends, but that didn't mean she hadn't been to school. He knew a lot more people than he would call his friends and he had been homeschooled from age five until yesterday.
16 John Umland Multitasking, I think. 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 11, 2014 7:54 AM
Taylor smiled at how animated John seemed to get over the Care of Magical Creatures class. It was nice seeing someone else interested in something she liked. The students she had rode in with had simply overlooked her beyond what they wanted to say. It seemed no one wanted to listen to her unless they had common interests, and she didn't blame them. She was boring otherwise.

When he mentioned the boggart, she realized she had heard the name before. It was a creature, she knew that much. But it did something. She racked her brains for a moment before remembering. A shapeshifter. But not just any shapeshifter- one that conformed to its opponet's worst fear. She wasn't even sure what her worst fear was. Probably her father, but she didn't want to think about that. She didn't want to see a boggart turn into him.

So she was greatful for the turn of conversation when John mentioned the way his parents taught. She had to smile as she nodded. That was how she saw the world too. Everything was all part of one big web. Well, not web, but something sort of like it. John's mother was smart, and Taylor bet she could like her. Anyone who could see how all of life is interconnected was good in her book.

She gave him a subtle once-over before taking a sip from her goblet. Of course he had been homeschooled. It suited him. Some people it just did. Taykor, however, needed public school and time away from her mother. And she wouldn't care to tell him that, since he was asking.

"Yeah, I went to school before finding out. I even got to go to middle school for a little while. My mom would have homeschooled me if she could have, but she had to have a job and I don't think I could have survived her 24/7. But it was nice. I wasn't really close to anyone, but very few people really singled me out, ya know?" She remembered the only people who had given her a hard time: the posh sort of girls who thought she was too much of a boy and the boys who had been raised to believe girls should strictly like dolls. But she had been a good student, nice, polite, and the teachers had liked her- along with a few students. It was just that she kept people at an arm's length most of the time. But not now. She was away from home. She could have friends here, and it would be okay.

"Hey John?" she started, trying to organize her thoughts a bit, "When we get a chance..." Why was this so awkward? She swallowed. "Would you want to explore the Gardens with me?" Typically exploring was better done alone, but the other first year seemed to know more about the grounds and would probably teach her some things while they were in there. but that was if he said yes. She didn't normally ask people to do things with her, so she wasn't really sure what answer to expect. But she knew which one she hoped for.
0 Taylor Petterson Apologies for my tardiness. 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 11, 2014 7:11 PM
“That’s good,” said John when Taylor said she hadn’t been singled out much in her old school. In his experience, being singled out by pretty much anyone except Mom was bad. Kids functioned in packs and even other adults could be unfriendly. One of the CBE facilitators, teachers in charge of evaluating whether or not he had made enough educational progress at the end of each term for the system to let Mom keep teaching him, had once insisted that Mom had faked all his work until Mom had finally had to Confund her just to make her go away.

Mom had been more flustered when she realized he’d seen that, explaining repeatedly that magic was not the right way to handle conflicts with the ‘non-magical population’ until all other options had been exhausted, than she had been when the woman was questioning her academic integrity. He hadn’t known what to think for a long time. It was just strange to think of Mom taking a shortcut, of doing anything there was a chance was the really wrong thing to do; Mom insisted all the time that she was only human, that she made mistakes just like everybody else, but John didn’t like to believe her.

“But my mom has a job, too. Part-time, anyway. She puts us in clubs, and the older ones stay with us sometimes – there’s five in my family,” he added by way of explanation. “That’s how we saw other people, but, you know, it’s hard when you’re all witches and wizards and you have to keep it secret from everybody….”

So much so that he hadn’t succeeded. His friend Joanie had figured it out, and if anyone ever figured out that she had figured it out and she couldn’t produce a magical relative real fast, they were both going to be in serious trouble. Luckily, though, he didn’t think anyone would ever suspect her of figuring it out. Muggles weren’t supposed to be capable of it (he sometimes wondered if Joanie wasn’t really some kind of Squib and just didn’t know it) and he thought most wizards who didn’t live in cities, close to them, were complacent about that. He just hoped they stayed that way.

John blinked when Taylor asked if he would like to explore together. “Sure,” he said. “Yeah. Want to go this weekend?” That would give them time to get settled, do some basic starter research. "Classes run kind of late into the evening, so I'm guessing we'll have a lot of homework until then," he added, since that was also a factor.
16 John Umland Pardon granted. 285 John Umland 0 5


Taylor Petterson

August 18, 2014 9:49 AM
I am so sorry about the length in between my replies. I've been grounded and school's just started back. I promise I will try to find time soon.
0 Taylor Petterson OOC 0 Taylor Petterson 0 5

John Umland

August 18, 2014 10:53 AM
No worries! RL gets us all sometimes.
16 John Umland Re: OOC 285 John Umland 0 5