Headmaster Brockert

April 15, 2016 1:00 AM
Nothing, it seemed ever changed in Mortimer's life. His daughter-in-law, Amanda, Gene's wife, had just announced her pregnancy last week. At least, though, it wasn't Opal. In fact, after Amethyst's birth, Mortimer had had a talk with Zeke about not having any more kids, which had been awkward as can be.

However, since it was Gene and Amanda and it was their first, he supposed he could be happy about it, like most people were about having grandchildren-and really he shouldn't have been that surprised to constantly having grandchildren since he had five sons and they were more than old enough to do so. Besides, Amanda was overall less stupid than Opal. Not that that was saying much since Mortimer suspected there were actual opals that were smarter than his daughter-in-law of the same name.

And just as every other year, when 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."

Of course, this year there were relatives among them, a Brockert girl and another girl who was Clifford Brockert's great-great-granddaughter or something. That wasn't anything new either, they just weren't that closely related to him. Next year his own granddaughter would be here.

Come to think of it, maybe it was good for things to be the same. When things weren't that meant they were going wrong and it was a lot of bull crap that he had to deal with. Then again, things had started normally when the Charms facility had malfunctioned and when the Satori had shown up, so it really didn't matter. It was just painfully repetitive.

After the first years had been sorted and found their tables, it was-like every year-time to announce Head Student and prefect. Mortimer picked up the official ballot and while his face naturally did not betray his inner emotions, he internally did a double take. This was certainly something new and different. "Would Duncan Brockert and Serena Brockert please come up and get your Head Student badges. In addition I'd like to call up John Umland, Aiden O'Neil, Makenzie Newell, and Joella Curtis to recieve their prefect badges. Congratulations." He was rather surprised really, no Brockert had won Head Student in over twenty years. There were those two girls whose grandmothers had been Brockerts but they themselves had been a Dobson and a Lennox. He thought the last person whose last name had actually been Brockert to win was actually Duncan's father but he wasn't really sure. It was hard to keep who was related how straight. His niece Alessa was as far he knew, the only one who could. Mortimer would be shocked if Clifford himself knew.

Anyway, he had one more announcement as they sat down. "This year's Midsummer event will be the ball and this year there will be theme, to be announced later.Now we will sing the school song." Though I am not sure why we bother.

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 as well as a family victory.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5

Jozua Sparks

April 15, 2016 10:52 AM
Jozua enjoyed the tour Mr. Xavier gave them, but as his stomach began to tell him in hungry growls that the time of the Feast was approaching, he became increasingly distracted as he wondered which House he would be put into. Pecari was growing on him, thanks to Lily. She was the only person he knew and getting to know more people just sounded daunting.

But then Crotalus sounded calmer from what he'd read in the school literature, and of course Mom was hoping he'd end up in her old House (and frankly, with his hometown sharing the same name, there was a bit of *expectation* that he'd represent them by joining the House named for them). Jozua tried not to get set on it though, because that could lead to disappointment if he got sorted elsewhere. Then there was Teppenpaw. Well, that one at least was unlikely. Jozua didn't talk enough for them.

Finally, the tour wound up at the Cascade Hall, and for a moment all Jozua could do was stare at the great falls cascading down the walls. Well, there was no question how this room got its name.

The headmaster was talking but Jozua wasn't hearing it. Soon after, a goblet was handed to him and for a second he was confused, but there was really only one thing people did with goblets, so he took a sip of the potion inside of it. And then his skin began to turn ...

Yellow?

Wait, wasn't that Teppenpaw's color?

Dang it, he'd been supposed to go to Aladren! What was this?? He was from Aladren! He was supposed to go to Aladren!

So much for not being set on it. Apparently, he'd absorbed more of the expectations than he'd thought he had.

Baffled, disappointed, and stunned, Jozua made it it over to the Teppenpaw table and found a seat next to another yellow skinned student. What did he do wrong? Had he hated doing his homework too much? Was he not a good enough chess player? Was one adventure book a month not enough reading?

And why Teppenpaw? Mom said they were talkers! How was Jozua supposed to survive if everyone in his House wanted to talk to him?!

He tried to clamp down hard on the anxiety he could feel starting to rise. One person at a time. He'd just have to take it one person at a time. A stranger to an acquaintance. Acquaintance to friend. Rinse. Repeat. It would be better once there were no strangers left. He looked around at the vibrantly colored people. The year group wasn't that big, and the yellow ones were even fewer. He could get through this.

He managed to reason himself down and tune back into the Headmaster's speech just in time to hear about the ball.

A ball?! He groaned aloud. That was just what he needed! He hadn't even packed any fancy robes! At least it wasn't until after Christmas. He could being them back with him after midterm. And he had most of the year to figure out who the Maartens would approve of. With luck, Lily would get cleared and he could ask her. Then they could sneak off and hide in trees. He'd see what she thought of that idea later.

In the meantime, there was food (yay!) and a yellow person nearby to de-stranger-ize.

"So," he began awkwardly, "Were you expecting Teppenpaw?"

1 Jozua Sparks Wait, this is wrong, where's my blue? 348 Jozua Sparks 0 5


Georgia

April 17, 2016 1:07 AM
Things were going ok. Not great. Not bad. Just kind of… ok. They had their orientation thingy, and she thought she remembered most of the important details, and there were some bits she was sure she was going to forget, but she had maps and lists and stuff, so that was ok. She’d met the French girl, and she had been ok. She hadn’t been rude or anything, although Georgia hadn’t really felt like they were totally on the same wavelength. So, that had been ok.

Now they were in the school hall, ready for dinner (described as a ‘feast,’ and at this point dinner sounded good, and a feast sounded really impressive, if a little strange) but first they had to be lined up in front of everyone and sorted (which was kind of awkward and embarrassing). She took the sip of potion she had been offered and turned yellow. That was probably better than ok. She had read the descriptions of each house in the school brochure but she hadn't really thought any of them sounded like her. She did ok in school, and tried reasonably hard, but she certainly wasn't a high flier and outside of her designated homework would have rather spent her time watching movies. She wasn't really adventurous either. The other two houses had confused her, talking about respectability and diplomacy. Did people her age really use those kinds of words to describe themselves? She had been fairly sure she wasn't really as interesting as any of the house descriptions made people sound. They read a lot like the school brochures from her Dad's old school, the ones he had made her look at before they found out, and which talked about developing inquisitive and well-rounded citizens and sculpting future leaders. All in all, big school seemed to expect a lot more of you. If pushed, the best she might have been able to come up with was describing herself as nice. In big school brochure speak, she guessed 'believing in friendly co-operation' sounded most like being quite nice, so Teppenpaw made sense, in as much as it didn’t not make sense, the way all of the others did.

She took a seat at the table quickly, but was pleased when another new person sat next to her. The older students probably all had friends already, although from what they'd learnt this morning, she guessed she'd be working with them in some classes, so maybe she'd get to know some of them too. She noticed another yellow person – her room-mate, she supposed! - and waved to her to show she'd be welcome to come sit with them if she wanted.

The headmaster said a lot of stuff about people getting badges and there being a school dance (which, apparently here was referred to as a ball, which sounded a bit ridiculous to her), and then they were allowed to eat. Georgia's eyes widened as the plates around them magically filled up. She scanned them, looking for comfort and familiarity. There was mac n cheese but that had the vast potential to disappoint because it obviously wasn't going to taste just like her mom's – which, even though it came out of a packet, was still her mom’s because she always put bacon in everyone’s bowl, and tomatoes in her own and Georgia’s dad’s but not in Georgia’s cos she didn’t like them (they were fine in pizza sauce but the real kind were so slimy and gross) and drew a ketchup smiley face on top, and even the mac n cheese base tasted different when anyone else made it. She reached instead for pepperoni pizza, which it was pretty hard to mess up. As she did so, her neighbour asked her a question.

“Um... I guess?” she answered, “I mean, it was a bit hard to know what to expect. I'm not really sure any of it sounds a lot like me. Or like anyone really. How about you?” she asked.
13 Georgia Sorry, I don't have any 346 Georgia 0 5

Jozua

April 17, 2016 9:41 PM
Jozua nodded as the other girl confirmed she hadn't been convinced Teppenpaw sounded like her either. Then he smiled a little when she continued that it didn't really sound like anybody. He guessed she meant the school literature for that part, which he kind of recalled sounded somewhat hoity toity, though he couldn't remember the exact wording for Teppenpaw as he'd dismissed that house when Mom said they were chatty.

He shook his head when she turned his question back on him. "My mother was an Aladren," he explained. "I was hoping to follow her." Admittedly, he hadn't known he was hoping that until it didn't happen, but he figured it was true enough. "And I'm from the Town of Aladren," he continued, sharing the full depth of his disappointment, "so there was some expectation there, too."

He shrugged, trying to push past it and make the most of his unexpected placement. "Well, I guess Teppenpaw should be a good House, right? People here are supposed to be nice, right?" He realized belatedly that he'd skipped an important step and gave the girl a small seated bow, "I'm Jozua, by the way. Jozua Sparks."
1 Jozua That's all right; I can do without 348 Jozua 0 5


Georgia

April 21, 2016 10:02 AM
“Oh,” Georgia nodded, as the boy explained his mother was an Aladren. Technically, he might have just the same amount of magical blood as her, but even if he did, he still had a connection with this school. And it sounded like his mother had at least talked about it with him, in a vaguely positive way. She wasn’t really sure what made her assume that… maybe something about his tone, or maybe because it was just normal to assume most people weren’t all closed up about magic like her mom. And then he said about his town expecting it too…

“Your whole town is magical? And…. like… related to the school somehow?” she asked. She had been on her guard about revealing her ignorance of the magical world to anybody, after what her mom had said but she couldn’t help her curiosity getting the better of her. Plus, as the boy observed, they were in the nice house. Georgia wasn’t sure anyone racist could be described as nice. Though, had she adhered more to the letter of the literature, she might have realised that someone could be diplomatic by being secretly racist but knowing when not to mention it.

“Right, nice house sounds good to me,” she agreed.

“I’m Georgia,” she returned, when he introduced himself as - she assumed - Joshua. “Georgia Kirkly,” she added, again wondering whether the inclusion of surname was something that indicated one of Those Sorts of families or was just part of the greater wordiness expected of them now that they were all adventures, diplomats and all the rest of it.

13 Georgia Yellow is the new blue 346 Georgia 0 5

Jozua

April 21, 2016 11:13 AM
Jozua nodded when incredulity was expressed that he came from a magical town. Between the need to clarify her assumption and his good experience with Lily earlier, Jozua explained, "When they founded the school, they named the four Houses after existing magical towns at the time, probably as some kind of recruitment ploy, I'd guess, to get people to send their kids to an untried school. It must have worked. Sonora is still here, and it outlasted three of those four towns. Aladren is the only one left." He shrugged in commentary about the vagaries of time.

After she introduced herself as Georgia Kirkly, he nodded politely. "Nice to meet you," he returned as he'd been taught, though he wasn't sure if he was supposed to call her Georgia or Miss Kirkly, so he left out her name entirely. At one of Those Events, he would have certainly gone for the more formal form, but this was just school, and he'd be living in close quarters to her for seven years, almost like family, so he wasn't sure if the formal rules applied or not. Best to avoid going either way until he had a better idea of what everyone else was doing.

He took a moment to begin filling his plate, opting for less messy options than the grease pie Georgia had gone for. The potatoes and roast beef looked excellent, in his opinion.

"Food looks good," he remarked aloud, mostly for something to say because it didn't look like Georgia was going to be as accommodating as Lily in carrying the conversation for him. Probably his own fault for being the one to initiate conversation. "Do you see any gravy?"
1 Jozua Not sure my mom would agree 348 Jozua 0 5


Georgia

April 24, 2016 3:09 AM
“It’s a shame there’s only one left,” Georgia said, after Jozua explained the history of the school house names, “I wonder what happened to Teppenpaw,” she added sadly, hoping the town hadn’t met some terrible fate. “I’m from a town called Beavercreek in Ohio, which is about as exciting as it sounds,” she said, her tone implying that this was definitely ‘not very.’

“Nice to meet you too. So… what’s an all magic town like?” she pushed. Not having been met with sneers for her surprise and interest so far, she waded in a little deeper. “And what happens there if someone marries a nor- a Muggle? Are they allowed in, or does that person have to leave?” she asked, a little knot of unpleasantness forming in her stomach at the thought of the former. How could anyone think that was wrong? It was like banning mixed race marriage, and that had been outlawed in…. Um…. well, it was a really long time ago. She hoped.

“Yeah, the pizza’s pretty tasty,” she smiled, as he complimented the food. She scanned around for gravy at his request, wondering why it wasn’t near the things it would go with. “Oh, here,” she smiled, locating it next to some salmon. She wrinkled her nose at the thought of that combination as she passed it to him
13 Georgia Well, moms aren't always right 346 Georgia 0 5

Jozua

April 24, 2016 10:38 PM
Jozua shook his head, not able to tell her what happened to the town of Teppenpaw. His knowledge started and ended at the fact that it once existed and but no longer did, and he wondered why he had never wondered what had happened to his own town's contemporaries before. It seemed like if you were the only one left of a group, you ought to know why the others no longer existed, for your own self-preservation if not for any other reason. He made a mental note to ask Mom later. In the unlikely event that she didn't know, she'd probably be curious enough herself to look it up for her own gratification and then she could let him know her discoveries.

(It occurred to Jozua that this unwillingness to do his own research might be why his skin was currently yellow and not blue.)

He smiled a little as Georgia joked about her town of Beavercreek, Ohio, which, admittedly, sounded like the setting for one of those kids books that as only interesting because the kids in it had good imaginations.

"It's pretty neat," he answered, unsure exactly how to explain what all magic towns were like as he had never lived in one that wasn't. He'd visited enough other places though that he had a noticed a few superficial differences at least. "Mostly it just means people ride brooms like they ride bikes anywhere else, and people aren't afraid to carry around pygmy puffs or other magical pets out in the open. And our roads are smaller because we don't really use many vehicles other than brooms. Magic isn't hidden at all, it's just . . . there." He waved around at the waterfalls around them, "This is way bigger scale than anything we've got at home, though."

He shrugged uncertainly as she asked about muggles in the town. "Well, there aren't really any living there, I don't think, not that I've met or heard of anyway. It would be kind of hard for them, I'd guess. Some do visit. We've got muggleborns and stuff, so their moms and dads can come visit if they want to, but I haven't really heard of anyone marrying a muggle and having the muggle spouse move to Aladren." In truth, there was an underlying suggestion in the way he spoke of them that 'muggleborns and stuff' were people he did not have much more than cursory interactions with, though there was no indication he though poorly of such people. He just hadn't had much opportunity to get to know them very well. "Usually if that happens, the person moves out, but they're not banned or anything. They can come visit any family they've got still there. It's just . . . Aladren is all magical." He shrugged, struggling to explain the problem of having a non-magical person live there on a more permanent basis. "There's no muggle jobs, you know? And it's kind of assumed people have magic so, um, they'd have trouble getting around. Like, we have two-story plazas and the only way to get to the shops on the upper level is to fly or otherwise magic yourself there. There's no stairs. And muggles can't even use brooms, never mind wands. I guess the magic wife or husband could side-along them up there, but they couldn't just run out and do their errands by themselves, which would probably get super-frustrating really quick. So mixed marriages generally live elsewhere, usually in more muggle areas so the non-magic one can live independently. Does that make sense?"

He took a sip of his water, because that was a lot of talking for him, but it wasn't personal so he didn't feel like he was oversharing. He was just explaining facts, which was way easier to do.

"Thanks," he said as she found and passed him the gravy. He drizzled some generously over his potatoes and meat then asked curiously, "So is Beavertown - no, Beavercreek, I'm sorry - all muggle, or does it have hidden wizard areas?" Obviously, it wasn't all magical, or she wouldn't be so interested in his town, so there were only two other options.
1 Jozua Don't follow. 348 Jozua 0 5


Georgia

May 01, 2016 5:46 AM

Georgia listened curiously as Jozua explained about his town. She knew it was just one town and not the whole of the wizarding world but it made her feel a bit weird. She could understand there not being any Muggle jobs in a place like that, and picturing everyone riding brooms instead of bikes made sense, but the thing about the stairs bugged her. That was just weird, to the extent that she wondered whether Jozua was having her on. Sonora had stairs. It wasn’t like wizards couldn’t use stairs, and she wasn’t sure what the point of leaving them out was, except maybe some weird thing that was close to showing off, but which that wasn’t quite the word for…

“Um, yeah… I guess,” she replied, as he asked whether it made sense. There was a difference between making sense and her liking the idea of something (after all, everyone said maths made sense…), and she couldn’t articulate what exactly bothered her about it. She’d been told about the whole ‘magic is a secret’ thing, so it made sense that wizards needed special places to be wizardy in. But something about it still rubbed her the wrong way.

“Uh, I guess it’s mostly Muggle,” she said, when he asked about her town. “I mean, it’s not all Muggle, cos there’s at least me and my mom there, but I don’t know anything about any wizarding parts of town,” she stopped short of trying to explain how her mom wasn’t really into the whole magic thing because she didn’t know how to tell that to a bunch of magical people, and it felt kind of personal, especially as it could lead to the part about how Georgia and her dad hadn’t known, and about how her dad wasn’t really best pleased about it, and she didn’t want to talk to anyone about that. “We had to go out of town to do my shopping though,” she reflected.
13 Georgia They're just not. 346 Georgia 0 5

Jozua

May 02, 2016 10:20 PM
Jozua nodded, making the assumption that needing to go out of town to do school shopping meant there was not a significant wizarding presence in her town. He knew there were more towns like that in the US than there were ones like his own but it still kind of boggled his mind a little since he generally had no reason to go into such towns and it just seemed completely foreign. Like . . . the game shops there wouldn't have wizarding chess sets to prod at and tease, and that just seemed like a sad waste of a game shop.

He settled down into eating but after a few bites, he realized it was probably his turn to talk again, but she hadn't asked him any questions so he didn't know what to say. This was one of the reasons he hated conversing with strangers. At least it was one on one. He could handle one on one most of the time. The nerves only really kicked in when there was a group to talk to. With single people who were not like Lily and willing to carry a part of his conversational load, there were just awkward silences sometimes. Like now.

He mentally cast about for a topic that might prove interesting to talk about, growing slightly more anxious as each second passed, making the silence more and more noticeable. Finally, he came up with a subject and blurted out in a rush, as if talking faster might make up for the delay in his side of the conversation, "So what House was your mom in then? Did she come here?"

If he and Georgia were any indication, he seemed to have landed in a yeargroup that did not live up to the stereotype of chatterboxes that his mom had described for Teppenpaw House. While he couldn't help but think that was a relief, it also made this part of the getting-to-know people process more difficult than he had expected it would be.
1 Jozua I mentioned mine was an Aladren, right? 348 Jozua 0 5