Headmaster Brockert

May 29, 2015 7:32 AM
The summer had passed uneventfully for Mortimer, and quite frankly, he didn't mind that too much. Eventful did not necessarily mean good. It had been quiet and calm aside from a few annoying obligatory parties that were much more spread out than during the midterm break. Of course, as long as Mortimer maintained an air of standoffishness, people wouldn't bother him as much. It wasn't hard.

As the first years filed in, he stood and began to speak. "Welcome to Sonora for the new first years and welcome back for all older students. In just a minute,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." Really, Mortimer rarely varied this part of his speech. How many different ways could one repeat the same basic instructions? And who cared if he did say it the same way every year? He was pretty sure that it wasn't exactly something all that memorable and it didn't really matter if the older students were even listening.

Besides, for all he knew, Nathan had told the first years this particular information at Orientation, but just in case he hadn't, it was something that needed to be said for they did need to know how sorting worked.

Next came the announcements for Prefects and Head Students. This was surely of more interest to the older students. "Would Adam Spencer and Francesca Wolseithcrafte please come to the front of the room to recieve your Head Student badges? In addition, I would like to call up Theodore Wolseithcrafte, Duncan Brockert, Isaac Douglas, and Liliana Bannister to recieve their prefect badges." Mortimer was pleased to see this year's recipients were a respectable group. He didn't see anything inherently not so about Miss Wolseithcrafte and Miss Bannister playing Quidditch and it was nice to see a Brockert among them.

"We have a new class available for our intermediate students. You may now take Divinations with Professor Gellar." Mortimer gestured towards the woman. "Also, please welcome back Professor Pye who will be taking the DADA position full time." Sonora had not had a DADA professor for awhile and it was nice to have someone in the position. Of course, it would happen when they lost their potions professor."This year's Midsummer Event will be a Concert. Details will be announced later this year. We will now sing the school song." With that, sheet music appeared in front of students.

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.


When the song finished, the meal began and students were free to eat and speak as they liked.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5


Barnaby Pye

May 29, 2015 10:08 PM
The long summer away from Sonora proved to be exactly what Barnaby needed to remember his position on the idea of friends. Tarquin had reminded him of the fact when he very nearly bragged that he thought he and one of his roommate were growing close, after which he had been very embarrassed that a ten year old had shown him up. But Barnaby’s new return to his old attitude had not been the only thing that changed about the adolescent boy. Over the summer, Alfie had dragged Barnaby to an optometrist and as a result he was returning to Sonora with a brand new pair of round spectacles which, when he wore them, gave Barnaby a rather owlish look, perhaps more so than usual.

Upon arrival to his room, Barnaby unpacked a set of books from his trunk and settled onto his bed, drawing the curtains closed around him so that his roommates when they inevitably entered—if they came to the room before dinner, would realize that he didn’t want to be disturbed. Here he passed a lovely couple of hours until he happened to glance at his watch and see that if he didn’t leave just then for the Opening Feast he would be very late indeed. Barnaby bolted out of bed, the curtains swinging behind him as he dashed out of the room in a very un-Barnaby like manner. He didn’t even bother to save his place in his book or put the curtains back into order because being late was, above all other things, something Barnaby abhorred.

As Barnaby neared Cascade Hall, he heard the chatter of students die down and he quickened his pace slightly before taking a calming breath and walking into the room. The Headmaster had just begun his talk and Barnaby took a seat at the edge of the Aladren table so that he wouldn’t be disturbed by too many students wanting to talk and wouldn’t disturb too many students while trying to find a place. He eyed the new first years as they walked in, wondering which of them would be helpful additions to his class and which would be large nuisances and hinder his learning ability if he were forced to partner with them before scolding himself of worrying his poor heart with any of those details. He turned his attention forward, sitting with a straight back and looking very attentive as the Headmaster proceeded to hand out the prefect badges and Head students badges and then lead them in the school song, only letting his mind linger on the faces of the new students for a few seconds longer than he really should have, his fingers reaching up to push his new spectacles back into place as he sang.

The glasses, however, were not the only new thing that came to Sonora with Barnaby. There was a cold air about the twelve year old, an air which had previously not been there, as though the mirror from the children’s fairy tale The Snow Queen had been shattered and pieces of shard had entered not only both his eyes and his heart like poor little Kay, but also his sense of reasoning.

“Pass the potatoes,” he said in an indifferent tone once they were allowed to eat.
10 Barnaby Pye Something old, something new 298 Barnaby Pye 0 5

Emilia-Louise Scott

May 31, 2015 3:39 PM
As Emilia-Louise Scott stepped into Cascade Hall for the first time amongst her yearmates she thought that perhaps the new orientation idea for her year group's first day had been a good thing after all. Met with a sea of unfamiliar (and many much older) faces she felt mildly unnerved but refused to let it show. What was there to be nervous about anyway?

Cascade Hall was very grandly decorated and Emmy-Lou tried her best not to gape too much but... there was water running down the walls! When the goblet reached her she took an eager sip and watched as her skin turned blue. Aladren. She smiled. There may have been a part of Emmy-Lou that felt mild concern at the thought of joining the 'clever house' and that she might not be of quite the same high intellectual level as her housemates. Yet now was not the time to worry about such things and more than anything she felt quite proud to think that her Aladren qualities overpowered those relating to any other house. She knew that Rob would be proud of her and found herself wondering if Grandad Fintoc would too, and perhaps even her own father... although she didn't care much for Broderick Scott and his opinions of her, of course.

As she made her way towards the table of her new house, Emmy-Lou looked out for Chuck and Joella over at the Pecari table. She spotted her stepbrother who gave her a thumbs up to which she grinned. Perhaps it would be better for her if she wasn't in his house as it forced her to be more independent, not that she thought she wasn't already.

Headmaster Brockert seemed neither friendly nor enthusiastic and only really said the necessities before the school song was sung and everyone was free to eat and talk. As Emmy-Lou began serving herself some chicken she looked her to talk to the boy across the table from her. He got there first, however, and she was rather taken aback by his manner.

"Pass the potatoes."

Just because Emmy-Lou didn't agree with the more extreme rules of etiquette which she believed many pureblood society members took far too seriously, it did not mean she saw no value in basic courtesy and manners. She was rather horrified by the way the Aladren boy addressed her. Was it that he thought she was beneath him because of her blood status or her age? In truth she didn't really care for the reason; the fact remained that he had been rude. She sincerely hoped that all Aladrens were not like him because she definitely couldn't envisage herself fitting in if this was the case.

"Excuse me?" She almost gave him the chance to redeem himself, thinking that maybe she had simply misheard. But she knew she hadn't and so went on to call him out on his rudeness. "Might I remind you that I am not your House Elf and you should make use of your manners if you want anything from me." It wasn't the kind of friendly way in which she had wanted to introduce herself to her housemates but she thought she had worded her response carefully enough that offence could not be taken, or she hoped so at least. Of course, she didn’t really know whether he had a House Elf at home but his cold posture seemed to suggest that he was exactly ‘that kind’.
8 Emilia-Louise Scott Definitely something new. 313 Emilia-Louise Scott 0 5


Barnaby Pye

May 31, 2015 7:05 PM
The chubby blonde girl who had sat down beside him seemed to take great offense to Barnaby’s manner of speaking and he just turned vaguely amused eyes to her, one eyebrow raised slightly. He reached past the girl whose skin was bright blue, indicating herself as a first year, and served himself some potatoes. “You know,” he said pointedly. “If you didn’t want to pass the potatoes you could have just ignored me. I would have gotten them myself eventually.”

Barnaby was pretty used to taking care of himself—after all, once Alfie and Father’d had their big fight he’d been pretty much on his own (he didn’t really count either of his parents are real parents) other than the house elf and the nursemaid both of whom rather gave him the creeps and both of whom he had learned to avoid whenever possible. Of the adults in his life, his tutor was really the only one that he ever really felt he could depend on, and now that roll had been replaced by various professors who really didn’t measure up to his beloved Mr. Callihan.

“I take it from your skin you’re a first year?” The way he phrased it was really more of a comment than a question, and Barnaby wondered just how excitable this new girl was. Since she’d already appeared rather perturbed at how he’d asked for potatoes he wondered just how long it would take for him to get her to never speak to him again.

It really had nothing to do with any particular malice or ill-will, and was more of a social experiment, really. Besides, Barnaby had already decided he didn’t want any friends.—Tarquin had set him straight on that over the summer. What he needed was an accomplice, someone who sat by him during meal times and study periods, but someone who didn’t talk to him unless absolute necessary, someone who didn’t mind some intellectual banter about suppositions every now and then, but also someone who preferred peace and quiet to mindless chattering and small talk.

This new girl was definitely not the sort he needed as she was so…what was the word…, or at least too much so for Barnaby, and he’d ruled his two roommates out already—Spencer was the enjoyable chatty sort and Donovan was just…weird. Besides, Barnaby had his own suspicions about that particular roommate, and he couldn’t very well express these suppositions to the very subject of said suppositions since that would just be counter-productive. The whole fun of supposing was the actually not knowing of the right answer while one was supposing.
10 Barnaby Pye New and a bit alarming? 298 Barnaby Pye 0 5

Emilia-Louise Scott

June 02, 2015 7:38 AM
Emmy-Lou was quite astonished when the rude boy reached across to the potatoes himself. This was really not how she had expected the students at Sonora to behave. And she was not the kind of girl to let someone talk to her in the manner that she was currently being spoken to. “Of course I could have ignored you,” she agreed as placidly as she could. “But what would come of that? You can’t go around being rude to people all the time, you know? You’ll never have many friends if you act that way.” There was no telling whether the boy did, in fact, have many friends or not but Emmy-Lou found it difficult to believe that anyone could actually enjoy this Aladren’s cold company and no one seemed to be talking to him besides herself.

“You don’t say,” came Emmy-Lou’s sarcastic response to the older student’s comment or question (she wasn’t sure which) on her skin being blue meaning she first year which rather stated the obvious. She instantly regretted saying it, knowing full well that wrongs didn’t make a right and that her maternal grandmother would be most displeased if she could hear her now. Yet she wasn’t so regretful of her mild rudeness, which was only a small price for the boy to pay after his own discourtesy after all, that she showed any signs of being sorry for it. Because, quite frankly, she wasn’t sorry at all.

“And what year are you in?” Emmy-Lou asked, thinking that her present company could not be that much older than herself, especially since he was still under the immature impression that he had no need to be polite towards others, particularly those who were complete strangers to him.

Her assumption was that he must be second year, although the new Aladren very much hoped that he was actually third year. This being because she would rather not have to share her classes with such an intolerable character. Although she was aware that one should not judge another so soon, it was hard to believe that this boy had a secretly kind heart underneath his indifferent exterior which Emmy-Lou thought she might quickly come to despise.
8 Emilia-Louise Scott Yes, but nothing I can't cope with. 313 Emilia-Louise Scott 0 5


Barnaby

June 03, 2015 8:51 PM
Little did the blue girl know that Barnaby didn't want any friends. However, he could tell that he had gotten under her skin when she finally let go of the prim exterior and snapped back. The tiny show of fire both pleased and annoyed him but he grinned nevertheless. "Second," he said in a bored drawl. "So we'll probably be seeing a lot of each other over the coming year, won't that be fun?"

He really didn't know what it was about him that made the first year think he wanted to actually talk to her, he didn't think he was a particularly approachable sort of person, and besides that, there were loads of Aladrens who liked to talk, he was sure of it.

But the first year's question about his year answered, Barnaby found himself growing tired of the little game that Tarquin had taught him. He wanted more, something else. Something that he couldn’t really quite put a finger on. He felt as though at some point in time he knew what it was but each time he tried to reach for it, it disappeared into the foggy mist that was last year’s memories.

Instead of continuing to talk to her, he returned to his food, carefully eating around the peas that had been floating in the sauce that the chicken had been accompanied with, and taking his time to eat every last bit of everything else including the savoury skin that held all the seasonings. “If you can’t tell,” he said rather absentmindedly and not at all in his normal voice. “The food here is pretty great. Never gets old, you know.”

There was something about this chicken that made him feel weirdly nostalgic. He wasn’t really sure why that was. His parents’ house elf didn’t even make chicken quite the same. And each time he tried to recall the lonely dinners he had spent with the creepy thing all he could remember were the quiet nights he and Tarquin had tagged along to their father’s business meetings and hidden in the darkened corridors whispering conjectures on what the adults could have been talking about.
10 Barnaby That makes one of us. 298 Barnaby 0 5

Emmy-Lou

June 04, 2015 2:56 PM
Emmy-Lou most certainly wasn’t happy about this boy being in her classes for the whole year but she had already suspected this would be the case. “Oh yes, isn’t that something to look forward to,” her voice dripped with sarcasm but she was only vaguely aware of how rude some might say she was now being, but even so she was sure the second year was equally as sarcastic about the idea of the two of them seeing a lot of each other being fun as she was.

The older boy returned to his food for a while so Emmy-Lou did the same. She was mildly surprised when he spoke again. “Yes, it is,” she agreed, even more surprised that he was suddenly being quite civil. “My step brother did go on a lot about just how good the food is at Sonora in his letters last year but I guess I can forgive him now that I know exactly what he means.”

Whenever Emmy-Lou stayed with the Fintocs she always found that ate much larger portions than she was used to and were very into their food. They didn’t, however, have a great deal of diversity in the type of foods they ate, as Emmy did at home in California. She assumed this was part of the reason that Chuck was so unbelievably enthusiastic about the Sonora meals when he always ate well at home anyway. Yet even Emmy-Lou had never been exposed to so many different food types, probably provided to cater for the culturally diverse student body that she was sure existed at Sonora. She was aware that there were several students from countries all around the word, these foreign kids usually purebloods because their families wanted to extend connections, but because she was new to the school she couldn’t quite tell the proportion of foreign students to American. But seeing as they should all be purebloods, she didn’t think there could be that many.

Purebloods always seemed to be considering connections rather than friends, Emmy-Lou thought. Perhaps that was why the Aladren boy in front of her, who she assumed but had not confirmed was a pureblood himself, was so disinterested in engaging in polite conversation with her. And also was likely the reason he was even at Sonora Academy, considering that his British accent suggested he lived abroad. Even the Fintocs cared about connections. Making friends with the ‘right sort’ was really what Chuck was meant to be doing at the school anyway but Emmy-Lou had quickly learnt that he would still be Granddad Fintoc’s favourite even if he didn’t succeed in this. The eleven year old had, over the years of being part of Chuck’s family, become just as bitter about this fact as all of her step brother’s younger cousins. Emmy-Lou highly suspected that Joel and Doug, the only two of Chuck’s cousins who were older than him, were the only ones who didn’t have some sort of secret jealousy regarding the favouritism that the family patriarch was so bad at hiding.
8 Emmy-Lou Maybe I should feel bad now. 313 Emmy-Lou 0 5


Barnaby

June 04, 2015 6:43 PM
Perhaps he and the first year had more in common than he had originally thought—the distrust of a relative was something Barnaby was more than familiar with and actually the reason he was even at the American school in the first place. He wanted to scoff at the ridiculous idea that an eleven year old be used as a spy on a perfectly grown man capable of making his own decisions. Since last fall, Barnaby hadn’t really heard anything from his older half-brother, thinking that he likely had fallen off the face of the planet as he usually did when he got in a strop.

“I’m glad you’re enjoying yourself then,” he said not meanly and returned to his dinner. The more than civil turn the conversation had taken was doing something funny to him. The idea of having a pleasant conversation was one he had grown accustomed to by the end of his first year, but one that he had grown an aversion to over the course of the summer he’d spent reading and plotting with Tarquin (for a ten year old, Tarquin did an awful lot of plotting).

Once his chicken was finished, he moved on to the rice, moving the white starch around in the chicken’s gravy in order to give it flavor and proceeded to use his spoon to scoop up as much rice as he could until only a few grains were left drowning in the pea speckled sauce. “If you’ll excuse me,” he said once he was done eating, wiping his fingers off on his napkin and placing it on the table. “I have to go and unpack, I didn’t get a chance to earlier, you see.”

Though he was loath to leave before he was able to eat dessert, Barnaby couldn’t spend another moment in the company of such an innocently inquisitive person. Granted, she hadn’t really asked him in personal questions per se, but she did have the unnerving ability to make Barnaby second-guess himself and that was not a feeling he really enjoyed. “See you around,” he managed a slight smile as he got up from the table and began to leave.

OOC: Feel free to start up a conversation in the time that Barnaby is eating his chicken and rice before he excuses himself. I’d be more than happy to reply, I’m not trying to end the thread here unless you want to too haha :)
10 Barnaby Not necessary, we have meat here in the building. 298 Barnaby 0 5