Headmaster Brockert

November 06, 2015 5:23 PM
Ugh. Opal was pregnant again . Really, Mortimer had thought all that his son and daughter-in-law were trying to was get a boy and they had gotten one. Why in Merlin's name did they need another child? The woman was a moron and not cut out in the least to have so many kids so close together. He didn't mind having grandchildren generally speaking but no, just no. Not them. Not her.

Of course, his face remained stoic. He never ever showed the slightest hint of emotion, especially in such a public place. Last thing one wanted was to give teenagers ammunition. Just because none of them had been responsible for last year's incidents, didn't mean that Mortimer trusted them in the least. Besides, he wasn't upset, just a tad annoyed. And he was sure he always seemed a tad annoyed. Because he usually was.

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."

Much like two years ago with Owen, Mortimer took a slight interest in the Sortings this year, with his niece Angelique coming in. Two years from now his oldest grandchild, Emerald would be here and though he would only admit it to himself-because Mortimer never admitted how he felt when he did feel something-he was looking forward to it. He hoped Emerald would be an Aladren, like he had been. She was quiet and bookish and did not seem to have inherited her mother's total lack of intellect.

Anyway, he noted Angelique's sorting and though he didn't smile-that wasn't an expression that Mortimer's face naturally made and when he tried, he looked like an animal about to eat it's prey and besides, it kind of hurt a little to do so-he was pleased with it. Angelique might have been silly and spoiled, but at least she managed to get a perfectly respectable house.

Once the first years had found their new houses, Mortimer said. "Would Arnold Manger and Ji-Eun Park please come up and get your Head Student badges. In addition I'd like to call up Clark Dill, Jake Manger, Chaslyn Brockert, and Lionel Layne to recieve their prefect badges. Congratualtions."

After they had sat back down, Mortimer announced. "This year's Midsummer event will be the bonfire. Now we will sing the school song." Which none of you will ever remember, he silently added as sheets appeared in front of the assembled mass.

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.


With that, food appeared, students were free to converse, and he was free to enjoy his meal.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5

John Umland

November 13, 2015 11:36 AM
The students had been told to go to the Cascade Hall or to their common rooms, and technically, John had not disobeyed. His first stop after leaving the Gardens had been the Cascade Hall, where he had eaten a blueberry scone with lemon curd, wondered for a moment if the other Houses’ scones were matched to their colors or if the laundry goblins recognized the unquestionable superiority of Aladren to the other Houses and had acknowledged it in their fruit selection for all four tables, and then refilled his travel cup with tea before going toward his dormitory. When he got to the library, he’d said hello to Ms. Nicchi, started walking in the general direction of his common room, and then sort of...wandered off-track as he made sure everything was still where it had been last year. In the end, he'd settled into a seat in the Charms section and spent the afternoon working on the giant list of questions he’d formed over the summer that his family’s home library, however impressive for their house and income size it might be, hadn’t been able to give him good answers to.

It had been a pleasant way to spend an afternoon, but ended in him cursing fluently in his head as he hurriedly took his second seat of the day at the Aladren table, just this side of on time for the Feast and hoping devoutly that the Shrinking Charm he’d used on the travel cup to make it fit comfortably in his pocket would hold. The beginning of the Feast was usually about as interesting as watching paint dry, but this was no usual year. This year, he not only found the issuing of the badges extremely interesting, he also had to watch the Sorting. Only the complete loss of walking skills would have prevented him from watching the Sorting, and even then he thought he would have tried to convince the medic to loan him a gurney for a few minutes.

No such efforts were necessary, though. Just an awareness of what was going on around him when he was reading. That was easier conceptualized than realized, but he was seated and more or less breathing normally when the first years were led in.

John looked for and quickly found one first year in particular, a boy with dark blond hair who could have hardly looked less like John if he had tried even though they had both inherited all their mtDNA and who knew how many predispositions to things they would rather not have from the same source. Joe looked like he’d gotten through Orientation without any major physical or psychological damage, which was a good start, though John did notice him biting his lip when Professor Skies started administering the Sorting potion. It was a second later that John realized he was biting his, too, and made himself stop doing it. He had talked about how they were going to restore the Aladren Quidditch team to its former glory over the summer, but he honestly did not know where his little brother was going to spend the next seven years. Nor, if he was to be really honest, did he really know where he even wanted Joe to spend the next seven years.

There was no doubt in his mind that Joe could handle Aladren. He was smart enough to keep up and tough enough to survive doing so with his mental health more or less intact. Add in his social skills and Joe was someone who the House would no doubt help on his way to greatness if he joined its ranks. The same, however, could have been said of their sister, who John was certain would have been as completely and utterly miserable there as John thought he would have been anywhere else. Joe wasn’t as bad as either of them, but John still felt a lot safer saying that Aladren could make his brother successful than he did asserting that it would make Joe particularly happy.

The goblet was in his brother’s hand. Joe made a bit of a face, presumably at the smell of the potion (John remembered unwelcome associations to cabbage in the taste, but didn’t remember the scent now), drank, and almost anti-climactically turned bright yellow.

Teppenpaw it was, then. John very deliberately smiled, trying not to be too disappointed. At least Julian would be happy when she found out.

He didn’t pay much attention to the rest of the Sorting, but tuned back in once all the first years were seated so he could hear who the prefects were. One reason he had made up his mind not to be too disappointed if Joe didn’t join him was because he had a horrible feeling that life in Aladren was about to become a lot less pleasant, at least for him and his closest friend and ally within said House, but he refused to accept Ferguson’s badge as a done deal. The headmaster was…himself, probably five kinds of related to the guy and probably inclined toward him even if he wasn't, but the rest of the staff was surprisingly decent, so – Ha!

John applauded enthusiastically for his friend and for once appreciated his own tendency toward not sleeping well for the first few days at school. If there was trouble next door, John would either be awake or be easily woken and could help Clark dispose of the body without any fuss, or at least with moving dorms if Ferguson became truly intolerable. For now, though, John was hungry and only one song away from the food. He sang that song, trying not to over-think the lyrics or what people nearby might think of his singing voice too much, and then helped himself to some of the paella. The feasts were when he had the best chances of finding food he actually liked, and the dish did at least smell properly seasoned and smoked….

He tasted it and it was good. He smiled and had another bite, then reached for a pitcher of juice. He took hold of the handle just before realizing he had narrowly won a race to it. “Evening,” he said to the other student, his tone unusually upbeat for a comment that wasn’t about one of his current interests, as he poured himself a glass and then offered the pitcher to the other person.
16 John Umland Off to an okay start. 285 John Umland 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

November 21, 2015 2:11 AM
Had it been up to him, there was every possibility that he would have skipped the feast in favour of more fun activities. However, Liliana had been glancing at her watch in a way that he at first thought was designed to tease him, and force him to persuade her to stay, but which he had eventually realised was serious. Given that this was a no feelings affair, he knew it wasn't right to feel snubbed and had done his best not to show it, but even if it wasn't that per se, he felt... perhaps a little let down, a little... doubting of certain skills, if Liliana was still able to keep half an eye on the time whilst she was with him. Now that he was thinking with other parts of his body again, he did find that most of it was on her side. His brain was arguing how poor it would have looked for him, as prefect, to miss the feast, and his stomach was very much in favour of attending too.

He had had a choice between a refreshing shower and being punctual, and had opted for the latter. Being late was so uncharacteristic that it may not even have been physically possible for him, even if there wasn't the added concern that other people would notice the break in his usual habits. He had regained his senses with a quick burst of cold water to the face, and then headed to the Cascade Hall, glad that he hadn't actually worn swimming attire to the MARS rooms, in spite of it being his excuse for meeting Liliana there.

A gradual feeling of calmness and normality washed back in as he watched the sorting, listened to the speech and applauded the badges, glad that it was Clark. Oliver was the right sort but he wasn't a good or worthy person. Clark was. It was odd how things like that could happen, in spite of upbringing.

He was glad of this decision to rush to the feast, as Liliana seemed to have gone down the other path. Had they both been late, it would have looked appallingly suspicious. He did his best to look suitably disapproving, partly for the sake of appearances, and partly in the hopes that it would annoy her if she noticed. She, of course, managed to one up him as usual. He had deliberately sat with his back to Pecari so that he wouldn't have to look at her during the feast, but as she entered she went and sat right in his eye-line at the Teppenpaw table. It was like her wearing orange to the Aladren-Teppalus game – an act borne out of genuine friendship, that was nothing whatsoever to do with him, but which Theodore – either due to egotism or lack of knowledge of Liliana's friendships – took to be a deliberate provocation.

He tried to focus on the food, though did a little too good a job of tuning out his surroundings, as he nearly knocked John's hand, which already had the juice he'd been reaching for.

“Good evening,” he returned, helping himself to the juice after John had finished. “Pleasant summer?” he asked. He hadn't always been sure what sort of topics one could broach with a person like John, but it did seem that the lower classes didn't have to spend their summer in miserable servitude, and generally seemed to afford a holiday or at least have pleasant memories to share.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Just about 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5

John

December 02, 2015 7:27 PM
John nodded when asked about his summer. “Quite pleasant, yes,” he said.

A lot of it had been pleasant. Just the question brought up disconnected but agreeable images: hanging out with (and that one time blowing stuff up with) his old friends, going to church every morning, getting his first summer job, not getting fired from said job, and just…being at home, both his house and his whole neighborhood. Then there were the specific, larger incidents: his mother’s birthday party, his first visit to the university library, spotting a rarity while working on his great-grandfather’s roses in the mountains…

There had been other things, of course. Quarreling with Paul and Julian, for instance. Worrying about the state of his immortal soul and why morality had suddenly become...fuzzy, the first time he was ever in a bit of trouble. Those, however, were not topics he thought were Theodore-appropriate, and he doubted Theodore would find anything of interest in anecdotes from his mother's birthday party, so he declined to mention most of his thoughts.

“I got a lot of work done this summer,” he elaborated instead, assuming Theodore would understand considering time spent gathering and analyzing data ‘pleasant’. “I got access to a better library than usual, plus Mom talked her manager at our usual library into paying me to shelve books since I’m there all the time anyway, so I got some new – “ well, new to him, anyway – “books, and some new equipment – I brought most of it along, might be useful when science club starts back up. I’ll do it if Clark doesn’t have time now. How onerous are prefect duties, anyway?” This last question was added on abruptly, but was a subject of some interest to him since he felt safe assuming that he was exactly a year away from having them.
16 John It could all go downhill at any moment, though. 285 John 0 5