Headmaster Brockert

May 19, 2017 9:23 PM
The school year had not started out on a good note. First of all, there was the fact that some students had withdrawn, which could reflect poorly on Sonora as a whole. More importantly though, it meant some badges had had to be reassigned, including Head Boy and after actually interacting with John Umland, Mortimer wasn't sure he was a good option in the least as he was an impudent little twit and how he'd gotten more votes than Tobi Reinhardt-as after Aiden O'Neil withdrew, he'd had to give the badge to the person with the next most votes-the Headmaster had no idea. It was just a testimony to the failure of the system that allowed students to vote on who recieved the honor.

Not that it mattered as Mr. Reinhardt had also left school.

Then Professor Perrault had quit abruptly. This annoyed Mortimer to no end. With Professor Pye leaving and Coach Grase on what seemed to be neverending leave, they were already short staffed. In particular, Professor Carter was exceedingly overworked. Of course, she would have been less so had she not insisted on teaching Muggle Studies. Especially because, thanks to Professor Perrault's departure, the Intermediate class had overlapped with Beginner Charms. It didn't take a genius to figure out which one Mortimer thought was more important.

To top that off, the substitute Quidditch Coach had left Professor Carter to officiate the first Quidditch game!

Fortunately, they'd been able to scramble up a couple of substitute professors for the following term. Unfortunately, one of them was his nephew Cory's friend Neal whom Mortimer felt would possibly be a pain in his backside. Despite Neal being older than the other substitute, Daniel Nash, another Sonora graduate as well as some of the other staff members, Mortimer couldn't help but judge him by the company he kept and see him as an overgrown teenager. And Neal was going to be involved in shaping young minds, including Emerald, who was probably smarter and more mature than he was.

Once the students had filed in and sat down, Mortimer stood. "Welcome back everyone, I hope you have all had a good break." He still didn't really care if they did. "Before we begin the feast, I have one announcement to make. Please welcome our new professors, Professor Nash who will be covering Advanced Charms and Advanced Defense Against the Dark Arts and Professor Davison who will be covering Beginner and Intermediate Charms. I trust you will all treat them with the respect befitting their position." Blatant lie, that was. Like Mortimer trusted teenagers to be respectful . "Enjoy your meal." He sat and began his usual dinner of Returning Feast meal of steak and bourbon.

OOC-Permission granted to say Isis insisted on continuing to teach Muggle Studies.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Returning Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5

Cleo James

May 24, 2017 9:22 PM
Cleo stared around the Cascade Hall and realised, with a sigh, that it was in fact possible to be both incredibly impressed by somewhere and to simultaneously wish you were elsewhere. Their little flat, which sat above their shop, could have fitted into the room several times over, and it wasn’t awash with flashy magical decoration, but it was home and this was not. It had been so nice to be back over Christmas. For several days their tiny home had felt crowded and busy, what with the tree taking up one corner, and her grandparents coming to stay. The four of them had had a wonderful time exchanging presents, playing games and listening to the radio. On Christmas Day, they’d cooked up a feast with a glazed ham and vegetables from the allotment. All wonky and perfect in their utter imperfection, Cleo was proudly able to point out which ones she’d dug out of the ground herself in some cases. Even after her grandparents had gone home, and life had returned to normal, that had still felt like a treat after months away at Sonora.

Cleo took a seat, not minding which table it was at - apparently, the returning feast was not so strict. She inspected her nails whilst listening to the brief announcements. Grandma had bought her some nail varnishes for Christmas, and then helped her to paint her fingernails a shimmering shade of pink. The polish had chipped a little since but she was still pleased with how they looked. She was also excited to show Adrianna. She still wasn’t sure that she and her roommate were quite on the same wavelength but Adrianna seemed a very girly girl, and hopefully this could provide some common ground. Maybe they could paint each other’s nails - Cleo wasn’t sure she’d be very good at doing it by herself.

As the feast materialised, she took more careful note than she had before of the vegetables, knowing that many had been grown here at Sonora. She took a moment to appreciate their lack of uniformity, before helping herself to some pumpkin soup. Winter comfort food still felt like a good choice.

“Did you have a nice Christmas?” she smiled at the person next to her. Sonora people had been nice enough so far but she wasn’t sure she’d truly clicked with anyone. Her mission for the term was to find a best friend.
13 Cleo James We're going on a friend hunt 389 Cleo James 0 5

Amelia Layne

May 25, 2017 9:23 PM
Upon leaving the wagon in South Carolina, Amelia had maintained the attitude of a poised young person with some sense of dignity for approximately three seconds before squealing in delight and doing (he had complained jokingly) her level best to knock her brother down. She had been only slightly less enthusiastic about reuniting with Granddad and Grandmother, who had both exclaimed over how well she looked and laughed as they tried to keep up with the rate at which she’d answered questions. It was always funny to her how much she only realized she missed them when she got home, but it had, she thought, been worse this year than last year, just because last year Lionel had been here.

Her family was not, aside from occasional rumors of Aunt Helena (who Grandmother and Granddad had not mentioned much) and Alicia (who, to everyone’s surprise, had sent presents this year and then turned up at Aunt Emily’s on New Year’s, looking hugely uncomfortable in her own former home and prompting Lionel to speculate that she was getting a divorce), very interesting. Even Lionel was already steadily progressing toward being as boring as the rest due to accepting a job with Uncle Geoff, a job Amelia worried was responsible for Lionel not looking as well as he might have – he seemed tired and less happy than she remembered, and had definitely been more given to sarcasm than usual. On the holidays, though, this uninterestingness of her family seemed not to matter much at all, or even to be a desirable trait. The ordinariness of everything seemed comfortingly familiar, and the only way she thought the holiday really could have been better would have been if Mama had actually dropped in on Christmas again like she had last year. She had sent a postcard from, of all places, New York, there was that, but it wasn’t the same at all.

With or without Lionel’s company or a visit from Mama, though, coming back to Sonora was still easier than it had been last year – at least at first. The departures among the older students were not something that would have registered much on Amelia’s radar – maybe some mild surprise over John, who still sort of frightened her even now that she’d decided that she trusted his assurance that he wouldn’t hit her hard enough to cause any permanent damage, being Head Boy now, he was so different from Clark that Amelia could hardly believe the two had been best friends, much less John doing the same jobs Clark had done, but overall, the older students were people who minimally impacted her life. The teachers were another story, and after Professor Perrault had already left, Amelia was distressed to hear that Professor Pye was gone as well. Who was going to be Head of Aladren now? Admittedly, Amelia had never needed her Head of House, and suspected nobody in Aladren really went out of their way to find a shoulder to lean on very often (Amelia suspected her own occasional desire to do so was, in fact, the sort of thing many of her classmates would view as a character flaw; goodness knew she couldn’t imagine Uncle Geoff or Alicia seeking out friends for moral support), but still….

She was still a bit disturbed by this as the feast began, but she smiled at Cleo, who she recognized from classes – not an Aladren, she was pretty sure, but that was all right – when the younger girl asked if she had had a nice Christmas. “I did!” she said, helping herself to some of the first dish which came to eye. Amelia had no idea what it was and hoped it wasn’t something so bizarre and alien to what she knew as food that she spat it out before she thought in front of everyone. Fortunately, she thought the odds of this humiliation actually occurring were minimal. Even if it was strange, it was probably going to be tasty, and she thought she recognized shrimp in the mix of many things the thing appeared to be. Amelia liked shrimp. “I don’t think I even thought about how much I’d missed my brother until I got home, you know? He was here last year, so I didn’t think about it then. The only thing was that we don’t get any snow at home, and I know it happens here, so I was kind of sorry I had to miss that. But I’d rather see Lionel.” This was probably more information than Cleo really required, but Amelia was used to relations lamenting her tendency to ramble and hardly even noticed it unless someone commented on it anymore. “Did you, too? Have a – nice Christmas.” She had started to say good time at home, but of course she didn’t know who’d gone home and who’d stayed here, much less why each person had done that, so making assumptions really did have the potential to turn things awkward.
16 Amelia Layne Not the kind that ends with heads on walls, I hope? 360 Amelia Layne 0 5

Cleo

May 26, 2017 9:27 AM
Cleo nodded along politely to Amelia’s rhetorical ‘yknow,’ even though she actually had no idea what it would be like to have a sibling at school, and then to fail to miss them, seeing as she was an only child. She appreciated Amelia’s chattiness. Cleo could chit-chat but she wasn’t instantly forthcoming and it helped to have the other person get the ball rolling.

“We got a little bit of snow, though not actually on Christmas Day. More around New Year. I heard they get like… a real snow fall here. It’s still kinda weird to think that this is the middle of the desert.” Cleo tended to forget where they actually were, due to the strangely seasonal variation of the weather. Every time she had cause to remember, it surprised her.

“I did,” she smiled, in response to Amelia’s question. “I really missed my daddy during the first part of the year. And our shop, and the allotment. There wasn’t so much to do with the allotment - just a few winter vegetables to dig up, but it was nice to do that and just… be back for a while. I guess it gets easier, huh?” she added. Amelia, after all, hadn’t even really noticed her brother had gone this year, so presumably she was well settled at Sonora.
13 Cleo That would seem to lack longevity as a friendship 389 Cleo 0 5

Amelia

May 28, 2017 12:52 PM
Amelia nodded her agreement as Cleo remarked on how difficult it was to believe they were in the middle of the desert. “I know,” she said. “I just wish we could do something like...whatever’s going on here...at my house to keep out the heat in the summer.”

She caught herself short of rambling her way through her next thought, which was that, well, on the other hand, the magic did apparently have its downsides. As far as she knew, the thing that had happened in Lionel’s first year had never happened to the school before, but it had still been quite a thing. Lionel maintained that Alicia had gone about half-crazy before that year had ended, and Amelia hadn’t missed the fact that Sonora now took gardening seriously, seriously enough that Herbology had been routine vegetable-gathering before Halloween this year. Amelia had enjoyed that, but she had a really hard time imagining Alicia digging around in a garden at all, never mind enjoying it.

Amelia wasn’t entirely sure what an allotment was, but nodded along with that bit and decided to make an educated guess based on the mention of digging up winter vegetables. “I guess so,” she said when asked if it got easier, coming back and leaving the family. “I don’t think the time difference is as bad as it was last year, anyway. I nearly fell asleep in my soup at my first Feast.” And her second. And she had felt sort of cruddy this year, actually. The one she was at now was probably the least bad she’d felt at a Feast, but the nap she’d taken between arriving at school and coming down for the Feast could have had something to do with that, putting off the inevitable until in the morning. “Your family has a shop? That’s cool. What kind is it?”
16 Amelia Yeah, the Aurors would catch up with us sooner or later. 360 Amelia 0 5

Cleo

June 01, 2017 5:01 AM
“So, I guess you’re from somewhere with hot summers, reasonably far from here,” Cleo sleuthed, as Amelia mentioned both unbearable summer temperatures and a substantial time difference. She herself was only an hour out, so it wasn’t really super noticeable for her, and really wasn’t the problem in adjusting to life at Sonora. Still, Amelia was being friendly enough that it helped, even if she didn’t have direct cures or worldly wisdom on the subject of homesickness.

“It’s a general store,” Cleo smiled, glad that Amelia seemed impressed by the shop. Perhaps a general store was not about to live up to the glamorous vision in the other girl’s head, but Cleo couldn’t feel anything except love for their little shop. She’d spent her whole life stacking its shelves, sweeping its floors and greeting their regular customers. The shop was an extension of her home, but it was also an important place to other people - they were needed and relied on, and that made her feel proud of it, and like it was important, even if it was just a little to shop to anyone else. “We live in a pretty small town, so it just tries to supply most everyday things. What does your family do?” she asked.
13 Cleo Being on the run together could really bond people though 389 Cleo 0 5

Amelia

June 01, 2017 6:44 PM
“South Carolina,” confirmed Amelia. “Right on the coast. The East coast. My brain isn’t going to accept anything the clocks around here say for the next three days I bet. I hope John doesn’t feel like practicing before then, because I will not be up to dodging Bludgers.”

Amelia had noticed that she didn’t seem to get hit as often as she had last year, but she wasn’t sure if that was because her skills had increased or because John’s had…taken a leave of absence, at least. He didn’t seem quite as keen as last year, though that was probably to be expected – enough to have what she had gathered was a pretty extreme courseload, as he sometimes scheduled parts of the team for practice at different times because he couldn’t make the full team’s time work for his schedule, but then he’d unexpectedly become Head Boy as well. Amelia didn’t know exactly what she thought of this option, though. She liked getting hit less, but she wanted to become a better Seeker. A distracted captain who wasn’t at his best could not help her with that.

“My grandparents work for the transportation department,” said Amelia when asked about what her family did. “Granddad’s in something about Apparition regulations, and Grandmother’s in something about Portkeys. My uncle Geoff doesn’t live with us, but he’s in Potions and he gave my brother a job after Lionel left here last summer. Oh, and Mama’s an artist,” she added as an afterthought, remembering her mother at the last moment. Mama was really more often a waitress than anything, but art was what she actually liked doing. “So we do all sorts of things. I don’t know what I’m going to do yet. Do you think you’ll run your store one day? Uncle Geoff says I can have his potions stuff when he dies because I got into Aladren, but I don’t know if I want it and plus I think he was joking.”
16 Amelia Fair point. 360 Amelia 0 5

Cleo

June 01, 2017 9:38 PM
“Oh, that is far!” Cleo sympathised, when Amelia described where she was from. “I promise not to take offence if you start yawning. You must be exhausted.”

Amelia’s family sounded interesting, and very wizardy in what they did. Her own dad was a Muggleborn and had done his best to keep in touch with his roots. He used magic to help clean up the shop and night, and to make it extra secure, but he didn’t have a magical job. It was interesting to think about all the different things one could do with their life… She also noticed that Amelia had mentioned everyone except a father, and that there seemed to be an Uncle Geoff in his place. Whilst hoping nothing horrible had happened to Amelia’s actual father, it was sort of nice to meet someone else here who didn’t come from a perfect, nuclear family. No one had said anything snide to her about her lack of a mother so far, and she was perfectly used to being an odd one out - coming from a small town, there weren’t very many single parent families - but it was nice not to have to feel it sometimes.

“Maybe,” she answered, when Amelia asked if she’d run the shop when she grew up, “I mean, I see myself doing that when I think about the future, but maybe because that’s the only thing I’ve ever known, not cos I’ve really thought about what I want to do. But there’s only me and daddy, so if I didn’t, it would probably have to be sold, and that’s kind of sad to think about. Are you going to take up a career in Potions?”
13 Cleo In the days we sweat it out on the streets 389 Cleo 0 5

Amelia

June 01, 2017 10:25 PM
Amelia grinned gratefully at the promise of forgiveness if she started yawning at the table. “Thanks,” she said. “I took a nap before the Feast, so I might be okay, but…yeah, thanks,” she laughed.

She listened, nodding, as the other girl discussed her possible future. Even with as much variety as there was in her set of family occupations, Amelia still thought of a future being one of her older relatives, not adding more variety to it. If it was just her and Mama – or really, her and Uncle Geoff would be a better comparison – she could only imagine it would be even easier to imagine just following in someone else’s footsteps. Her brother seemed to be doing so, after all, and it wasn’t as though she could really follow in the footsteps of her cousins – well, Alicia and Rachel, anyway. Winston Pierce was (if her assumptions about his willingness to not kill her if she mentioned to people that their cousins were married to each other were accurate, anyway) extremely unlikely to marry her and she didn’t think she’d like Rachel’s job at all. Maybe she could be a mediwitch like Kate, she didn’t know if she’d like that or not.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I mean, it always looks kind of boring, what Uncle Geoff does. Potions class isn’t that bad, but I don’t know if I’d want to just sit and have to concentrate like that all the time forever, you know? Plus Lionel already is there, and Uncle Geoff could still have kids, plus Aunt Anne has a baby now – so I’m not the only one there is, anyway, so he shouldn’t be too disappointed if I don’t go into it.” Maybe. It wasn’t always easy to tell when Uncle Geoff was joking, but she did think he really did sort of favor her and Alicia over the other nieces and nephews for being Aladrens like himself, and while it wasn’t impossible that Thad and Alicia would see the sense in taking on Uncle Geoff’s business interests when he died, it didn’t seem too likely as they presumably would have plenty of their own by then. On the flip side, though, there were still Aunt Helena’s kids. Amelia didn’t even know them. There was nothing stopping one of them from being the equivalent of an Aladren, moving back to America, and taking over for Uncle Geoff someday.

“I guess this is going to sound…really Aladren-y,” said Amelia, almost apologetically, “but it’s just – there’s so much in the world, I don’t even know how to pick something!” She thought for a moment. “Or maybe it’s Pecari-y. I don’t know. Lionel was in Pecari, though, and he’s really laid back. Have you had anyone else come here for school before?”
16 Amelia Sprung from cages out on highway nine. 360 Amelia 0 5

Cleo

June 02, 2017 4:06 AM
It seemed like Amelia had a fairly extensive family, and there were plenty of potential apprentices to take up her Uncle Geoff’s profession if she declined. Cleo often wondered what it was like to be part of a big family, although in the same idle way that she wondered what it would be like to go to Peru, or to have been born a mermaid. She was curious about these things because they had not happened to her, not because she desperately wanted them to. Her family unit of two did her just fine.

“I’m not sure it’s house-specific. I’m a Crotalus, and I don’t know either. I feel like I’m only just starting to see all the things I could be - I definitely wouldn’t want to choose right now.

“Not as far as I know,” she replied, when Amelia asked about family. “My dad is a Muggleborn only child, so that really limits the options there. I don’t really know much about my mum’s side of the family,” she shrugged. That was putting it mildly, given that she didn’t even know basic biographical information about her own mother. “She and my dad weren’t together when I was born,” she explained, because people usually asked, as they seemed to find it incomprehensible that she didn’t know her own mother, “And she couldn’t look after me,” this was what her dad had always told her because the truth, that her mother hadn’t wanted to, seemed too harsh. “So, she left me with my daddy, but he’s never really said much about her. I have to really push. It seems like you had a lot of relatives go here?” she added, wondering whether she’d find out what had happened to Amelia’s unmentioned father.
13 Cleo So, you wanna be Bruce or Wendy? 389 Cleo 0 5

Amelia

June 02, 2017 1:35 PM
Amelia smiled happily as Cleo said she, though a Crotalus, was also aware of the enormity of the number of things one could do in life. She didn’t really wish the feeling of the world being overwhelmingly huge sometimes on anyone else, or in fact for herself either, but it was nice to know she wasn’t the only one who felt that way.

It was a little harder for her to relate to not having a truckload of relatives who’d preceded her to the school and built up a thousand expectations for her to live up to, but she tried to imagine it. It helped, of course, that she knew something about not knowing about one side of the family – she rarely thought of it, as it just wasn’t relevant to her day-to-day life and she felt she had perfectly adequate father figures in Granddad and Uncle Geoff, but she knew nothing about who her father was or had been.

“I think pretty much all of Mama’s family has – well, except Mama, anyway. She’s a Squib.” Amelia saw no particular shame in this, and besides, a confidence deserved something in return even if Cleo also saw no particular shame in her family situation. “Granddad and Grandmother and Uncle Geoff were so happy when me and Lionel got our letters – we live with Granddad and Grandmother, you see. Mama…I guess was like your mama, she couldn’t take care of us.” This did make Amelia slightly uncomfortable. “She was really young when Lionel was born,” she added, not sure if she was really trying to defending her mother or herself with that. “But that’s all right. The way we were born, Lionel was just in time to inherit Uncle Geoff’s room when he moved out, and then I got the one that used to be Mama’s and Aunt Helena’s.”

This made a reasonable defense of her situation in her head. “Did your daddy come here, or go somewhere else?” she asked, remembering that Cleo had not noted this detail while talking mostly about her mother.
16 Amelia No idea, I just Googled your title yesterday. 360 Amelia 0 5