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


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

May 30, 2015 12:07 AM
To Theodore, Francesca had always seemed grown up - she had that crucial two years on him that made her always older and smarter - but, as he entered the Cascade Hall for his fifth year, he was weighed down by the fact that she was becoming a grown up. It was nothing new for her to be moving ahead - they had always cycled in and out of synchronisation with each other - she would take a step, he would catch up, they would overlap, she would step ahead again. There had been small steps the last few years - she had left him in the intermediates, stepping up to advanced, she had come of age whilst he remained a child. But now, they were on the verge of something much bigger.

He had been unable to ignore it last year, when she had been nominated for head girl, and it had become more apparent over the summer, when she had invited Jay Carey to visit. Theodore had had other weeks where his sister’s company was still his own, but when Jay was there she disappeared off to spend time with him, just the two of them. As the Headmaster called them forward to receive their badges, he was undeniably delighted and proud of his own sister, but the badge pinned on her chest was an emblem to the fact that, at the end of this year, she would step out into the grown up world, and leave him here at Sonora.

He refrained from squeezing Francesca’s shoulder or any other display of solidarity and pride, as she already looked like she was only just winning the struggle not to burst into very public and embarrassing tears, and he knew she would not thank him for adding to that and, in all probability, tipping her over the edge, but his expression was a mixture of choked pride and wistfulness as he watched her collect her badge. He carefully arranged his features into an appropriate configuration for someone having honours bestowed on them by the school as they made their way onto the stage. However, on their way down, he found an elbow gently nudging his ribs, and turned to find Liliana making a face at him. He felt irritated with himself for having let his sentimentality show, and a little with Liliana for mocking him for it. He glared at her slightly before they parted ways for their own house tables.

Returning to his seat, he let the school song wash over him. Francesca leaving was sad (but happy, but good for her, but natural….) in its own right but also presented him with a particular problem. His sister had always been his closest friend in school. Theodore was not someone who sought the company of others often. He liked people, so long as they weren’t idiotic, well enough, but he also enjoyed peace and quiet. He found school and the constant forced interactions with others exhausting, generally preferring to spend his free time by himself. Francesca had been more than enough when he needed company, and as a result he had never made many friends. Once she was gone, who would he seek out, on the rare occasions he wanted someone to share things with?

It meant a new year’s resolution of being more sociable, he supposed. Of trying to build on what he already had, but he worried it was too late. They were fifth years. He was glad he had society to fall back on, which at least forced people to be polite and tolerant of him - even if he didn’t gain their friendship, perhaps that would be enough. With this in mind, he turned to the person next to him once they were free to interact.

“Good evening,” he smiled, “How was your summer?” The difference was perhaps imperceptible - after all, Theodore was never outright rude, so engaged in small talk whenever it was required of him, it just often left him feeling tired and irritable. It wasn’t his actions which had changed but the intentions behind them.

OOC - Liliana's actions were suggested by her author, and the way they were described was given her approval.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Too little, too late? 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5

Clark Dill

May 31, 2015 7:59 PM
Clark's summer had been a good one. He was fourteen now, so Dad was giving him a bit more freedom to do things on his own. Everywhere he went independently had to be within bike range or reachable by public transportation, of course, as he was too young to drive or apparate yet and broom flying had some serious draw-backs in the heavily muggle area where Clark lived, but he was a solid bike-rider and he could make it a few miles on his ten-speed and he had a metro pass that could get him as far as DC if he wanted to and told Dad where he was going.

Of course, he mostly went to the planetarium, the library, and a few museums, so it wasn't like Dad had anything to worry about. Well, except the time he'd lost track of when the last train home left relative to how long it took to walk back to the metro station from the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, and he'd needed to call in a ride home. But mostly, he'd done okay, and he'd been more careful after that about making sure he didn't get stuck on the wrong end of the tracks.

Dad seemed to have no idea that most of his muggle friends did not have his new level of freedom at only 14, but Clark didn't really see a need to educate him on the point. He'd gathered Dad's folks had been kind of neglectful and stuff and let him run all over Detroit at a younger age than that, but he knew Dad was granting Clark a privilege based on trust, not neglect. Dad trusted him to behave and be responsible, and Clark was going to do his darned best to prove himself worthy of it.

Still, it had been pretty awesome, being totally unsupervised like that, and if he had gone through his own pocket money much faster than he probably would have if his super-frugal Dad had been hovering nearby frowning every time he got into a register queue to buy a snack or a souvenir, he was okay with that. He'd been given a good chuck to work with this summer since he hadn't gone to a summer camp or gotten a fancy new computer this year.

He'd even had enough left over to get a decent broom when he went school shopping a few days ago. It wasn't a great broom, by any means, but it was good one and it was his alone and it was built in the last decade, so he counted it as an improvement.

Arriving at the school earlier than normal, Clark had opted to head right to the Cascade Hall as he had every year previously. He felt no need to risk spending a few extra hours with Oliver Ferguson if he didn't have to. He'd spent the time wandering about, eating snacks and chatting with his classmates and, well, whoever seemed like they wouldn't mind joining him in conversation. Soon enough, though, people began settling down in their
respective House tables, so Clark headed over to his.

He wasn't particular about who he sat near, only being careful to avoid Oliver as was his habit, and he found himself sitting next to Theodore Wolseithcrafte, who, while being of the class that preferred the company of those belonging to the same class, he at least seemed to be reasonably accepting of his Quidditch teammates most of the time.

So when the announcements and the song were over, Clark thought nothing of Theodore's willingness to chat. He also wondered if maybe he was some kind of good luck charm because it was the second year in a row he found himself saying, "Congratulations on making Prefect!" He wondered if he should mention Francesca's new badge, too, but decided he could offer his felicitations to her directly, at the Quidditch Try-Outs probably, if he didn't see her before that.

With that said, he continued in order to answer the question Theodore had posed to him. "My summer was great! Saw a bunch of museums, got my money's worth out of my season membership to the planetarium, and got ahead on my independent studies. Bought a new broom of my own, too, so hopefully that keeps me ahead of the other Seekers in our matches this year. How was yours?"
1 Clark Dill Not for me, but I might not be your first choice 277 Clark Dill 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

June 01, 2015 5:10 AM
Theodore had joined the Quidditch team in order to be social - in the rather unconventional sense that being on said team seemed to account for the token minimum amount of sociability other people felt was expected of him, and thus prevented him from further criticism, nagging or well intentioned idiocy by those who felt everyone needed to be constantly surrounded by others in order to experience happiness. However, it had had father unforeseen effects on his socialising, in that it gave him a reasonable excuse to entertain the company of people like John Umland and Clark Dill, and he had found that to be something he quite enjoyed. At least, it was with Umland, he had never really had many interactions with Clark, outside of awkwardly patting him on the back for a job well done out on the pitch, but this evening looked set to change that.

"Thank you," he acknowledged, when Clark congratulated him, "Guess the house honours will be split evenly this year, which is always nice. Can't see Pecari's going the same way." It was an occupational hazard, he supposed, of being part of his family that he couldn't help but speculate on which way the badges would go. He felt bad for Atlas, who wouldn't have made a bad prefect, but paled in comparison to Liliana when it came to passion for Quidditch. He was a little surprised at the staff.

“Mine was pleasant, thank you. We always spend some time in the Adirondacks, which is relaxing - good for hiking and swimming - but I enjoyed my fair share of museums and the like too during the weeks we spent in the city. I never pass a holiday without visiting the Ms - the Magical Metropolitan Museum in Chicago,” he clarified.

Clark was, so far, proving to be a pleasant person with whom to chit chat. They were only on the small talk basics of summer holidays, and already he had managed to bring up three subjects that interested Theodore greatly.

“Museums, extra studies and a new broomstick…” he mused, “I think I’d like to hear about all of those Which would you like to tell me more about first?” Out of the possibilities, the broomstick interested him least but Quidditch was their common ground, and if Clark was excited about his purchase, or needed handling and maintenance tips, he wasn’t going to begrudge a quick discussion of the matter. The subject of broomsticks could even evolve into an interesting one, amongst the right kinds of minds, and in Aladren there was a higher chance than average of finding such things. The odds only improved when the person’s other choice of subjects was museums and extra studies.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte It's good to be surprised now and then 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5

Clark Dill

June 01, 2015 12:06 PM
Clark nodded in agreement that it did seem more equitable when the badges were spread among several people rather than one person collecting all of them. He assumed Theodore knew better than he did who was getting the Assistant Quidditch Captain badge as his sister was the presumed new Captain.

"Cool," he approved of Theodore's yearly pilgrimage to the Magical Metropolitan Museum of Chicago. He'd never been there himself, as Chicago was a little out of range of his normal stomping grounds and he'd never visited the city, but it was on his List of Places to Go Someday, along with the Field Museum in the same city. "I'd like to see that one eventually."

Theodore seemed genuinely interested in his summer excursions, not just politely curious, so, since they'd already started talking museums a bit, Clark keep to that topic. "I live in Greenbelt, Maryland, near the Goddard Space Flight Center, where my dad works. It's a muggle place that studies Astronomy," he added, assuming Theodore had probably never heard of it and explaining it the best way he knew how so a pureblood would understand what went on there. "They've got some exhibits open to the public, too, so I spent some time going through those, since one of my independent studies is Astronomy, and there's the Patuxent Research Refuge - which is a nearby wildlife preserve, so I got some nature time and fresh air, too - but mostly I had to take the train down to DC to get to the bigger museums. I went to most of the ones run by the Smithsonian - both the muggle and magical ones - and some other places in the Capitol, too. We're right on the end of the Metro's Green Line, so DC is pretty easy to get to. Baltimore is more complicated to reach since we don't have a direct rail line there, but that's not too far either, and I made it up there a couple times, too, for the Maryland Science Center and the Aquarium. It was a full summer," he concluded, nodding in pleased satisfaction.

It occurred to him suddenly to wonder, "Besides Sonora's wagons, I assume wizards must have some other kind of public transportation at those stations we get picked up at. I used the muggle systems since that's what my dad knows how to use - he's muggleborn with a muggle job so his idea of magical transport is broom riding, which we can't really do much around us because of all the muggles, and apperation, which works great when he's with me, but I'm not old enough to do by myself. But are there, um, I don't know, public portkeys or something?"
1 Clark Dill I think so, too 277 Clark Dill 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

June 05, 2015 8:21 AM
“Muggles are interested in astronomy too?” he queried. He supposed it wasn’t totally surprising. Whilst knowing the locations of stars was foundation knowledge for certain aspects of Divination, that wasn’t their only use. Their other uses tended to be more practical - things like navigation, along with the pure joy of knowledge for knowledge’s sake. It was an ancient art too. Perhaps it was just a universal human tendency to look up and to want to label and understand. “And what is space flight?” he added. Whilst Clark had told him what the institution studied, that didn’t necessarily make its name make sense to him.

He just about followed Clark’s explanation of his summer journeys - it was impossible to walk through Chicago and not experience at least some evidence of Muggle technologies. Clark had taken two different types of train to get around, one of which quite possibly was smaller and underground.

“Portkeys, not so much,” he answered Clark’s question, “I mean, you get them but usually only for special events or long distances. Most travel around the city you would do by Floo - the fireplace network?” he half asked. Clark might have been…. well, a Muggleborn Muggleborn, raised as a Muggle? Whatever that made one. Muggle-influenced? But he was also a voraciously curious Aladren, and had been surrounded by an excellent wizarding library for three years. Just because he hadn’t connected the dots and selected the right kind of transport didn’t mean he had no familiarity with the concept, and Theodore didn’t want to patronise him. “I believe some cities also capitalise on Muggle infrastructure. Trains stop for no reason and the Muggles are told they are being held at a signalling failure by leaves or something but really it’s a cloaked stop with wizards getting on or off. Or some stations have additional exits that only wizards can see.”
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte When one has hiccups, for example 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5

Clark Dill

June 05, 2015 12:15 PM
"Of course," Clark confirmed, frankly a bit startled by the idea that muggles wouldn't study Astronomy. Maybe it was the bias of being raised by a NASA employee and viewing it as a hard science for most of his life, but he'd had the opposite reaction and been surprised when he'd found out it was a course of study for wizards. Of course, he probably shouldn't have been. He knew Dad couldn't have entirely forfeited his magical education any more than he could have given up muggle science. A shared field between the two worlds was really the most obvious place Dad would want to focus. That it also offered him a chance to watch for aliens on company time was (possibly) just a bonus (though, with Dad, it could be his main reason; you could never quite be sure with him).

"Muggles study it with more math than wizards do, I think," he expounded on the topic for Theodore, "Dad's muggle degree is actually for Astrophysics, which is the science of figuring out how and why things move in space as they do, more or less. And some of the things moving out there are made by muggles, that's where Space Flight comes in. The muggles launch rockets with telescopes and cameras and probes and robots and sometimes even people into space to study the cosmos up close and more directly than we can from Earth's surface. They even have a manned space station orbiting the Earth where the crew actually lives for months at a time!" Clark's voice became more excited and his gestures grew more expansive as he really got into the subject. "Have you ever seen high definition pictures of distant galaxies taken from a massive telescope not hindered by Earth's atmosphere? It's incredible! And there are pictures taken from the surface of Mars, and I even held a moon rock once!"

Eventually, though, the conversation moved on as it is wont to do. When Theodore explained that portkeys were generally reserved for long distances or special events, Clark nodded in understanding and filed that away as trivia that was potentially useful but probably not often applicable to him. And he had heard of the floo network, of course, just as he had heard of portkeys, but they both remained a moderately mysterious mode of travel he had never personally encountered. He did, however, kind of remember some train stops for 'refueling' that had seemed to him like people were getting on and off there though nobody else in his train car had seemed to notice, and he made a note to get off there next time, just to see what wizarding landmark was hidden away between Greenbelt and DC.

"Oh, really?" he asked with interest, in regards to the floo, "That's public? I always assumed it just ran between people's houses, and since we don't have a fireplace in our apartment, we couldn't use it. I think I saw signs for the floo at the Smithsonian Museum of Magical America, but where would I take it to? Would the train stations have a floo room if wizards are using those? Are there local floo maps posted somewhere and how do you find them? Does it cost anything? Do you need to bring your own powder? Sorry, that was a lot of questions." Theodore was an Aladren too, though, so Clark figured he'd be understanding and helpful rather than annoyed, but he figured it wouldn't hurt to at least acknowledge he was being more inquisitive than was generally considered conversationally appropriate.

"Dad doesn't know and he's usually my only source for practical advice on traveling around in the magical world."
1 Clark Dill Or when you're expecting something to go wrong and it doesn' 277 Clark Dill 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

June 05, 2015 11:39 PM
Clark’s explanation of what Muggles did with astronomy was rather lengthy. It was clearly a subject he felt passionate about, and Theodore could see why. The list of Muggle achievements in the field was undeniably impressive. It surprised him. He didn’t think of Muggles and what their lives must be like much at all but when he did, he had supposed them to be lumbering along behind, desperately trying to compensate for life without magic - he knew of things like ‘electricity’ - a life which, in his mind, would be impossibly difficult. He had never imagined them to have overcome these difficulties so fully that they had time, and ability, to stretch themselves into areas that wizards hadn’t. It occurred to him that Clark may be pulling his leg but he had come up with that awfully quickly if so. And how would it benefit him - with whom could he snigger behind Theodore’s back? There were few enough people, and he and Clark were on the Quidditch team together, so surely it would be shooting himself in the foot a little. Unless it was only for his private gratification of having got one over on the Purebloods but he didn’t think Clark was vengeful in that way. He hoped not. He certainly felt he had done nothing to warrant that attitude from him - it wasn’t his fault that he was privileged, after all.

“Gosh,” was all he could come up with. “You’ll have to show me those pictures,” he added, just to give himself some sense of security against being treated as a fool.

He gave nothing more than a slight tilt of his head in response to Clark’s apology - one that acknowledged that, whilst what he had said was factually true, it was not a problem.

“There are public and private elements to it. I read a comparison that said it was similar to Muggle telephones - most private homes have them, as do public institutions. The public institutions make their information widely available whereas private homes do not. I mean, it’s not a great analogy because I believe with telephones it works by having the unique access code for each machine, whereas floo places are protected by charms. For example, you could reasonably guess at what words you would need to access my floo place but it doesn’t mean you could just stroll in. Similarly, museums and the like put restrictions on their floo’s hours of operation. Whereas, from what I understand of telephones, as soon as you have the access code, you can bother the person whensoever you like - even the middle of the night,” he said, sounding slightly scandalised. “There are some in secure public locations - sometimes connected to Muggle transportation, sometimes just in little offices down little alleyways that Muggles feel no point in exploring.

“Most places that have a public floo will have information on the local area. For example, the office you mentioned in the Smithsonian will be able to tell you where you can connect to. I believe different places operate different policies - some you have to pay for access, some it’s just pay per pinch. Mostly, you buy the powder at the floo stop for public buildings because they want to make it worth their while having it - or, in the case of government buildings, they want to be able to track who’s going in and out. I think it can be very variable depending on district and institution, and I’m sure most attendants would be friendly if you needed help. Wizards in service roles are given training on dealing with Muggleborns with patience and sensitivity - and most of them are Muggleborn or at least sign up for it because they want to deal with them in some capacity or another,” he added, not really realising that his tone was treading into the territory of being slightly patronising or suggesting that Muggleborns were a problem that needed some sort of special handling, and how that might sound to Clark.

“Was there anything else?” he asked, happy to be helpful.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Or when you're made to examine your underlying prejudices 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5

Clark Dill

June 07, 2015 9:29 PM
"Definitely," Clark promised, making a note to bring one of his muggle astronomy text books along to the next Quidditch practice. They weren't high def pictures for the most part, but some of them had decent quality prints that were probably better than most of what Theodore had seen before, and he had a poster sized glossy print out of the Crab Nebula that he'd gotten directly from NASA and always kept over his bed, so if he ever bumped into Theodore in the boys' stairway, he would call him in to take a look at that, too.

Theodore, as Clark had kind of expected and certainly hoped for, gladly answered all of his floo questions and even requested more if Clark had any. Clark wasn't quite sure he entirely approved of the way Theodore spoke of 'dealing with' Muggleborns - as his dad was unarguably one of that category and who the heck knew what Clark himself was supposed to be classified as when he didn't know a thing about who his mom was except that Dad was 'pretty sure' she was human (and that wasn't even going into the fact that his biological father wasn't even from this planet because nobody was supposed to know that and he was just counting Dad as his dad) - but attributed it to cultural differences and didn't call him out on it. What could he say that wouldn't make it even more awkward anyway? He didn't think Theodore actually meant anything bad by it. In his experience, Theodore wasn't one of those purebloods who went out of their way to make muggleborns and mixed bloods feel inferior (which, unfortunately, could not be said for Oliver Ferguson, which made Clark's living arrangements at Sonora less than pleasant most of the time).

Still, it was little off-hand comments like those that definitely make Clark feel like John Umland was really his only actual peer on the Quidditch team.

"No, I think that's enough information to get me started so I can figure the rest out on my own," he denied further need to delve into the subject of the floo network. "But if I have any more after trying it out next summer, I'll let you know. Thanks."

"So are you taking any independent studies?" he asked curiously. Independent studies were, by definition, independent, so it wasn't really widely know what everyone else was looking into in their spare time, and he figured the best way to revive that part of their earlier discussion was to ask about Theodore's interests before expanding further on his own. He'd already mentioned Astronomy was one of the ones he was taking, anyway, so he wasn't entirely making Theodore answer his own question first.
1 Clark Dill Or when the snitch appears right in front of you 277 Clark Dill 0 5