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


Camden Miller

April 15, 2016 10:13 PM
Coming back to Sonora wasn't something Camden had been excited about. In fact, he was kind of miserable attending the magical school, but his parents had told him he had to. His first year at the school had been plagued with studying and catching up with all the magical stuff that he did not know. It had been hard, especially since the Pecari boy had trouble with the academical part of life. He struggled to even pay attention for more than 5 minutes in class. He had asked the staff for continual help because his grades had been pretty abysmal the first few months of the term. His parents had not been very happy about that, so that was why Camden had focused on studies and not making any friends. He. Was. Miserable.

However, despite his horrible first year as a Sonoran, his summer had been amazing. Camden had spent most of it at camp with his Muggle friends. They had played every Muggle sport they could and hiked and swam and did summer camp stuff. It had been so much fun. He wished he had friends to share his summer stories with. Camden could not share anything from the magical world with outside people. It had been kind of hard to maintain the secret.

Camden sighed in exasperation as his foot began moving under the table while the Headmaster (a dude that Camden did not like. He had a very evilish vibe) talked about stuff. Of course, the Pecari did not hear anything that was said. He just played with his fork not minding about the people around him. His existence was quite miserable at the moment. The brown haired Pecari boy mirroring the people that inhabited the Cascade Hall. He had no idea what was happening. He did not hear anything, he did not care about it.

Consequently, he did not realize someone had sat besides him. The boy had gone from daydreaming about his summer to getting excited about food suddenly appearing in front of him (He never got tired of that!) and rushed haphazardly towards the mashed potatoes in front of him. Camden accidentally knocked the gravy besides it with his elbow.

“Oh damn,” he cursed quite loudly as the gooey liquid clung itself to his sleeve. He growled in annoyance at himself, but quickly reached for a napkin to clean it. “Amazing way to start the year,” he grumbled sourly at no one in particular. Camden wanted to go back home now.
0 Camden Miller Can it be the Closing Feast now? 337 Camden Miller 0 5


Kyte Collindale

April 17, 2016 5:09 AM
Summer had started out great. Kyte had been enjoying the crazy whirlwind that was their family, and doing all the things they did which he missed out on at Sonora, like cooking over fires, sleeping in tents or under the stars and moving every couple of days - Merlin, it felt good to be in different places again, but with all the most familiar people. To him, those two things were the meaning of life. He’d enjoyed catching up properly with all his cousins too. They’d exchanged letters over the year at Sonora in some cases, but it wasn’t the same as seeing someone in person, and there were some cousins who just fell into that category of people who you got on great with when you saw them but didn’t really keep up with in between. He’d inherited a whole new wardrobe too, as things got passed down the family, and now had a new range of t-shirts that proudly claimed he had been at some festival or other - that in some cases he’d never even heard of - plus a few others, his favourite of which, which he was wearing back to Sonora, was a cool one with yellow cartoon monsters drawn all over a photo of a city and big yellow bubble letters saying ‘monster attack.’ Things had been good. But as the summer had gone on, there had started to be a sour note. He’d practised all he felt he could during his first year at Sonora but it was obvious he wasn’t coming on as well expected with his trick riding having been away from the family. He’d managed to get good at jumping into position and flying standing up (albeit in a slightly wobbly sort of a way), but mastering the tricks without someone to guide him had been tough, and he hadn’t really managed it.

His skills had come on amazingly over the summer, being free to practise all day with expert guidance, and when he was nailing tricks and joining in the last few shows of the season, it felt good - really good. But afterwards, when he had time to stop and think, he realised how much better he would be if he could do that kind of thing all the time. If he lived with his family, like he was supposed to, and worked on his flying all the time, he’d be amazing. Maybe, with school, he could still do enough to be ok. To be one of the warm up acts, and to scratch a living as part of the circus, but what if he had the potential to be the best, and school was taking that away from him? Raine had compounded this feeling one night, when he was lying awake worrying about the same thing, and she’d asked whether he thought they would be good enough. He always tried to put a brave face on, especially for Raine, who worried too much about everything, but he wasn’t a liar. And this, he didn’t know. He wasn’t sure, as the years went on, where exactly they’d fit in. Would they become more like townies the more time they spent at school? He couldn’t ever see himself being like that enough to fit into this world, or even particularly wanting to, but it felt like he was losing some of his old identity just by being here, by being denied the time with his family. It was like it was wearing away at him, at who he was supposed to be, but not building anything new in its place. At least, nothing he wanted anyway, and he felt in danger of falling through the gap that lay between those two worlds. He wondered whether this was what it was like to be Muggleborn. It had to be weird for them too, to go home and try to articulate all this crazy stuff to their families. To explain they’d won a sport their families had never heard of, or excelled in a subject that didn’t relate in any way to the world they knew… He knew how that felt, even though his family was magical.

Normally Kyte could brush things off easily - he wasn’t one to get drawn into big and complex feelings. Life was usually fun, and you just lived each moment enjoying the ones that were good and riding out the ones that were bad, knowing they’d be over soon. But, as he got off the wagon at Sonora, he had a heavy heart. He wasn’t sure he could break the upcoming term into anything smaller. It seemed like one long bad moment that was going to last until Christmas. And then there were the Christmas shows…. Normally one of the high points of the year, but what were they going to mean for him and Raine now? Sure, they’d always been bit parts, or in the back row, but they were meant to be moving forward. Were the going to get stuck there? Christmas certainly wasn’t the bright, shiny beacon of hope and light that it had felt like last year, where just the thought of seeing his family again and being in the ring had kept him going.

Instead of going to his room to unpack (boring, and he was used to living out of a suitcase anyway), he had headed straight for the gardens. Picking an area well away from the first years, he cast a spongify - one of the only useful things he had learnt last year, and a spell which he now excelled at across large targets - on a patch of ground. Climbing onto his broom, he practised a few jumps-to-standing, which was now more of a warm up, along with getting into a crouch for ducking through hoops and other obstacles, and hanging sloth style, then moving whilst in all these positions. This was about as far as he’d got over summer, and whilst it felt pretty simple when walking it through at Sonora, it looked pretty good when you were ducking obstacles at the last second and there were fire torches and music playing, and everyone was clapping along to the beat. He tried not to lose himself in the memories - he wanted more than that. He had to master the next steps, which were to be able to make different shapes, and to be able to jump and re-land. At least the gymnastics were things he and Raine could focus on together, as they would be useful for both of them, her main ambition being to be an aerialist - or maybe it was fairer to say, at least he had Raine to nag him, as all that balance and control stuff had never really excited him, and whilst he knew it would look cool once he could do it on a broom, he would probably be pretty ill-disciplined about practising the non-broom parts, like flexibility, without his sister’s influence. Kyte had always been one for the whizzes and bangs, not the subtle stuff - it was why his club catches and other juggling tricks were excellent but he remained frustratedly intrigued by anyone who could contact juggle (upon meeting them, he would take it up for all of five minutes before the lack of obvious and cool results made him quit again in favour of learning a quick but satisfying new pass).

Kyte was a little bruised and rather dusty when he showed up for the feast, but had a big smile on his face, having got a good practise session in. He knew it would be easier with his family’s help but he felt the renewed enthusiasm of making resolutions and throwing yourself hard into them. He hadn’t bothered to scrub up for the feast, not really seeing the significance, and preferring to use every scrap of time he could on his flying. He stowed his broom under the table, sitting down next to one of his room-mates. His brushed his brown fringe out of his eyes, where it stayed for all of two seconds before falling back (he’d had an obligatory tidy up cut over the summer but his hair remained floppy and longish, the longest parts nearly brushing his shoulders), and dusted a couple of dirt patches off his monster attack t-shirt and patchwork trousers, more for love of the clothes than any desire to look presentable.

He let the headmaster’s speech flow happily in one ear and then out the other. He just about listened, but it was more a case of screening it for anything that might really matter to him than actually paying proper attention. He didn’t know the prefects or head students and didn’t really see himself being selected for those roles in future, and he wasn’t really interested in participating in anything describing itself as a ball. The fire last year had been fun. He liked fires, and had enthusiastically tried to teach anyone who was willing a few of his favourite songs to sing around them (including some that he had picked up from his more exuberant uncles, which had made Professor Skies tut at him and tell him not to sing those ones). But this sounded less fun. Dancing was all well and good. If you wanted to dance, you could do that round a fire too. Barn dances could be fun as well. But anything that described itself as a ball sounded stuffy and more like it would serve the interests of the students who were into dressing up and dating. He wondered briefly whether balls usually had entertainment and whether he and Raine could volunteer to provide it, but that thought quickly left his head, because that was for some time that was pretty far away, and right now there was food.

If there were maybe two things Kyte had missed about Sonora, it was his friends and the food. He felt bad thinking it, because there was nothing wrong with his mom’s cooking in the slightest (and over the summer, he had been delighted to rediscover all his forgotten home cooked favourites, and to re-learn just how good a fish tasted when you’d caught it yourself just a few hours before) but the diversity and the amount of food at Sonora was dazzling, especially at the feast. He was on a mission to load his plate with variety - it was the spice of life, after all - equally tempted by curries, and roast chicken and some barbecue looking skewery things, However, his mission was cut short by Camden knocking over the gravy. Kyte drew his wand, siphoning up the liquid that was on the table and pouring it back into the gravy boat.

“I knock a lot of stuff over too, so my mom thought it’d be a good idea to teach me that one. But I don’t know whether it’d work on your sleeve,” he explained, with a kind smile before he realised his slip up. The trace and the concept of underage magic were never things his family had taken particularly seriously - there were enough of them in one place at any one time that there was no hope of anyone actually knowing who’d done the magic (though the ministry managed to hit them a surprising number of times in its “random” and “fair” spot checks, at which point the grown ups took charge of all the wands and the kids pretended to be clueless), and their way of teaching had always been to give out the knowledge that was useful as the need came up (a much more sensible way of doing things, in Kyte’s opinion). Kyte made messes, therefore he knew how to clean them. He thought of back-pedaling and saying he meant his mom had shown him the spell but he thought that might just draw more attention to what he’d said and also sound really unconvincing.

“So, did you have a good summer?” he hurried on, hoping a change of tack might help what he’d said go unnoticed. “And does it feel weird to be back?” he queried, his earlier thoughts about whether the Muggleborns had the same issues he did coming back into his mind. Kyte had never been one to censor many of his thoughts, or avoid blunt questions, and he was curious to know this, so therefore the logical thing to do seemed to be to just ask.
13 Kyte Collindale If I had my way, yes 335 Kyte Collindale 0 5


Camden

April 19, 2016 12:20 PM
The Pecari nodded to Kyte in thanks for cleaning up his mess - though he had to admit that it was kind of suspicious the way he had done it, especially since they were second years AND he had mentioned his mother teaching him that spell. Underage magic was supposed to be forbidden - and hastily used a napkin to try to clean his sleeve. Camden had not been so successful, but he just gave up. There wasn't much he could do at this point. It was a good thing his mother did not have to do his laundry at Sonora since she would have flipped over at his clumsiness. The truth was that Camden even missed that right now. Sonora was a maze of strangers to the brown-eyed boy. A maze that was starting to slowly close on him. To be honest, it was the first time something like this happened to him, and Camden was a bit scared.

A feeble smile escaped his lips as he settled more carefully with a plate full of food - some fried chicken, mashed potatoes and some spaghetti - and looked at his roommate trying to come up with the best possible answer to his questions. Camden decided that going with the truth was the more reasonable option in this scenario.

“It's hard to be back,” he said looking at Kyte. “It's not easy balancing the two worlds,” he finished before shoving a forkful of spaghetti into his mouth filling his body with the warmth and taste from home. In a seconds, the warm embrace of the woods behind his house, his mother offering him mid afternoon snacks after being outside for hours soared through his veins providing him some kind of comfort. A bigger smile brightened the boy´s face, just to be erased a few seconds later as the reality came crashing down. He was really having a bad time at Sonora, probably because of his lack of friends. “Being magic is something people back home don't understand. I can't really talk about it with anyone,” he said before he silently started staring at the food in his plate. He looked up at Kyte for a few seconds, and tried to assess the other boy. Maybe they could be friends?

Camden tried to shrug the sadness away by changing the subject, “I had a very good summer. I spent most of it in at a Summer Camp,” he smiled. “Do you know what a summer camp is?” Kyte probably knew, but Camden wanted to ask before continuing. He didn't want to confuse his potential friend.
0 Camden I am glad someone agrees with me! 0 Camden 0 5


Kyte

April 21, 2016 10:47 AM
“I know what you mean,” Kyte nodded, as Camden confirmed his theory about it being tough for the Muggleborns to get people back home to understand. “I mean, my famiy’s magical but they’re not like this,” he explained, gesturing vaguely at the hall with his fork. “We do things differently, and the more time I spend here, the less I know about that. Like the circus stuff… I don’t get nearly enough chances to practise, and it’s like… will I be able to do this, like, for real, later on?” He had been open throughout his first year about his family’s business - in fact, proud more than open, as Raine was the one who got edgy about what others might think about it - so the mention of the circus would be no news to Camden.

“But I did hear that Muggle schools are even worse than this. Like, cos you don’t have any magic to practise, they just make you do the writing down parts all day,” Kyte grimaced, as if writing things down all day might possibly considered a fate worse than death. “So maybe you were lucky to get out of that, not that here’s much better,” he added, stabbing a potato particularly violently. The extra classes with Professor Skies were still a sore point for him. Why couldn’t you write like you talked? If textbooks were written like that, they’d be a damn sight easier to understand, and probably seem more friendly-like too. Showing how smart you were seemed to mean making sure other people didn’t understand, and where Kyte had grown up, that was considered taking airs and graces at best, and being a bit of a bully at worst - it wasn’t good manners to talk in a way that left other people out, if you could just say it plain and simple and include everyone.

“Sure do,” he nodded, when Camden asked about summer camps, “A few of my cousins have made a fair bit of money that way. And they give you bed and food usually too. Summer camps are pretty good living, so long as you can balance them out with the festivals you want to work, or the shows. Summer’s when almost all the good stuff goes on. What things did you do?”
13 Kyte Wanna run away and join the circus? 335 Kyte 0 5


Camden

April 26, 2016 5:49 PM
Camden genuinely laughed for the first time in a few days. The boy had let the sadness take over his body like a deadly, silent illness, but hearing Kyte explain Muggle school to him was just plain hilarious. Kyte seemed genuinely concerned about the writing of everything, and Camden found it hilarious just how normal, simple things for him could cause such distress in magical folks. The boy let the laughter lighten him up for a minute or so before looking back at Kyte with gratitude reflected all over his face. The brown-haired boy felt better. Laughing had been like a big, warm hug from someone he loved. His mother was right, laughing was the cure for most of life's woes.

“You know, writing it's the least of their concern,” he stated ominously. “What you have to watch out for is mathematics, algebra, calculus, geometry and trigonometry,” he finished solemnly. Camden knew all about those horrible, nefarious topics since his mother was a high school math teacher back at home. She always had helped Camden with the subjects he had trouble with - all of them -, and had made sure he passed them all. The boy, on the other hand, had never really taken interest in school because it was boring. No, Camden preferred the thrill of adventure! He was lucky to live in a place where adventures were a very common occurrence.

Camden smiled a little more brightly feeling at easy with Kyte even when he was stabbing a potato with a particular viciousness. The boy took a bite of his mashed potatoes before continuing with the conversation with his roommate. The next part of it was what Camden had wanted to get into. Summer camp had been amazing, and he wished they had something similar for him at Sonora. Maybe it wouldn't suck so much.

It didn't matter how nonchalantly Kyte mentioned about his particular living style, Camden was always caught of guard, which was probably visible by the small awkward shift from his body position. The boy had never met someone so interesting and peculiar. Kyte wasn't bad or anything, just very different from what Camden knew and was used to. It would a lie if he said he wasn't curious.

The boy swallowed his food, “Oh we did do many things!” he exclaimed a little more excited than was normal, but the smile had returned to his face. “The camp was in the woods, so we had activities like swimming in the lake, hiking, bonfires with s´mores, we also competed against a rival camp in the end of the summer marathon.” As Camden mentioned the various activities he had been part of the same sensation of being there took over his body. “I even won a couple of events,” he announced proudly.
0 Camden hmm sounds like a lot of work 0 Camden 0 5