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 First of all, there was the fact that some students had withdrawn, which could reflect poorly on Sonora as a whole.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


Kyte Collindale

May 28, 2017 10:27 AM
It was lucky that fourth year didn’t really count. Kyte had formed this opinion pretty early on in the term - he was over the step up and difficulty that came with transitioning to intermediates, but he didn’t have major exams to sit. The fact it was a doss year was pretty well timed for a number of reasons. First off, he had discovered several new things to do with him time that weren’t conducive to getting a lot done. Over the summer, his cousins had been impressed with his stories of attempting to transfigure hallucinogenic slugs, and had introduced him to their best available substitutes. Mostly, this involved smoking. He had had some good, lazy summer days, stretched out fields, thinking about… stuff. He wasn’t sure now, but he was pretty sure it had been deep stuff. His cousins had even fixed him up with a bit to bring back to school, which he’d eked out during the first term, leaning out the window of the Pecari dorm. On top of this, there were girls to think about. Girls were hot. He thought some guys probably were too, although no one really at Sonora - he just hadn’t ruled them out, as an idea. There were definitely loads of hot girls though. It wasn’t like he had acted on this, and tried to get with any of them, but just thinking about girls could be pretty fun, and fairly time-consuming, and it was very easy to put off things like Transfiguration homework in favour of either of these activities.

The first term had passed in a sort of pleasant mild fuzziness, but Christmas had been a bit of a wake up call. The family was in down time for the winter, but already putting together the summer tour, and for the first time since starting Sonora, their mum had thrown out real concern about his and Raine’s performance. She’d always fretted, they all had, about how being away from the family and having their time taken up with useless essays would impact on them learning their circus skills, but it had really hit crunch point over Christmas. She had their parts planned out for the summer show, but they were way, way off target if they wanted to achieve them and move up the bill, rather than repeating last year’s performances. She and the rest of the family had thrown as much advice as they could at them over the holidays, and they’d worked hard, but it was working hard to work out what they would have to do over the coming months, how they could guide themselves through it alone at Sonora. Their family had talked them through the next five or six steps for each of their acts, making them memorise techniques, and trying to troubleshoot the problems they didn’t have yet - ‘if you find you’re losing balance on the backwards flying, it probably means you’re over-doing the turns, it’s a common issue.’ It was a lot to take in, and it was going to mean a heck of a lot of practise. Probably more than there was really time for, if you took school work into consideration. Luckily, Kyte had a simple solution to this.

“Hey,” he grinned, taking a seat by Ben at the opening feast. “How was your Christmas?” Kyte wasn’t really much of a letter writing person. He’d scribble occasional letters over the summer when it was much longer between seeing his friends, but the short Christmas break wasn’t really enough to motivate him to pick up a quill.

“I have a favour to ask,” he began, once they’d caught up a bit about the break, “Can I copy your homework this term? I’ll change it, and make it bad enough that it looks like mine,” he promised. Given that they studied together a lot of the time, and Ben was the much brighter student by far, this new suggestion probably didn’t really mean much of a shift in the division of labour, just the fact that it wouldn’t be happening in real time made it a bit more apparent, “but I really need to do loads extra circus stuff if I want to be properly in the summer tour with my family. Like, my mum said multiple hours a day. I’ll pay you back. Circus tickets, lessons, whatever.” None of these was exactly a new offer - Kyte had been hooking Ben and his other friends up with show tickets since first year, and was always willing to teach, or to share anything else he had going. He’d even offered to share what his cousins had given him with Ben, but it apparently wasn’t his bag. Even though he had nothing really new to bring to the deal, hopefully the fact that he had always been a kind and generous friend was enough to make this a fair trade.
13 Kyte Collindale Needing a favour (tag Ben) 335 Kyte Collindale 0 5


Ben

May 31, 2017 1:27 PM
Ben had a great midterm. He'd gone skiing with his aunt and uncle and that was always a good time. And Christmas was loads of fun with the new baby to make it interesting. Cole was six months old and creeping already, so he had to be watched constantly to make sure he wasn't gnawing on presents or pulling ornaments off the tree. And of course, Ben loved the presents that came with the holiday. He'd gotten a good haul of Red Sox clothing and sporting equipment.

Now at the Returning Feast, he was decked out in his new ball cap (the old one had been held together by spell-o-tape and chewing gum at the end, so even he'd been able to admit it was ready to be retired, though he has still felt a pang about leaving it home when he left for Sonora) and a red jersey with the number 13 on it.

He sat at the Pecari table, eager for the food to arrive. It had been a long trek from New England and he'd run out of snacks somewhere around Pennsylvania. He was famished.

"Hey," he greeted Kyte as his roommate sat nearby. Kyte had begun to concern Ben this year. He was beginning to suspect Kyte might be that proverbial 'bad crowd' his elementary school DARE program had been trying to warn him about. Ben had dutifully "Just Said No" as he'd been instructed by his muggle teachers and his mom (who was a doctor and had scared the bejesus out of him as she told him in unrelenting detail what drugs did to a person's brain and body) and declared he 'had to go practice Quidditch now' whenever it looked like the other Pecari was going to light up, but the whole situation made him kind of uneasy and nervous. He was badly torn between telling Professor Carter for Kyte's own well being and not tattling and getting his friend in trouble.

So far he'd kept mum, suspecting that Kyte would not forgive him if he told and worried that it might be an offense that could lead to expulsion. Getting Kyte expelled was the last thing he wanted. He wanted his friend to stay healthy, not get sent away permanently.

But it had led to him spending more time with Tess and less time with Kyte over the last few months, tipping the balance over to give Tess the current title of Ben's Best Friend, so the rift was already starting even without tattling, as the common interests grew between him and Tess and shrank between him and Kyte.

He didn't think Kyte held it against him. Not wanting to talk about the main problem, Ben had fallen easily into the joke that 'Tess is prettier than you' and he was half sure Kyte thought they were dating. Actually, Ben was half sure himself that he was dating Tess, but they hadn't clearly worked out that detail yet, so it wasn't official or anything.

He was, in fact, staring in a besotted fashion at Tess, seated conveniently within line of sight of Ben's position, when Kyte spoke up after the Headmaster's comments.

"Christmas was good," Ben answered easily, smiling. "Got a good haul. My baby cousin doubled in size, I think, and Four took me skiing! Yours?"

Kyte answered then asked for a favor. Ben tried not to let his expression look too dismayed. Doing their homework together was one of their remaining comfortable rituals.

"Well, what if I read the assignments out loud to you while you practice?" he suggested. Kyte would probably tune him out as he concentrated on his tricks, Ben had no illusions about that, but at least he'd feel less like he was condoning blatant cheating. "Then I can truthfully tell anyone who asks that we did study together."


OOC: Ben's suppositions on Kyte's beliefs regarding Ben's dating status are entirely of Ben's invention and do not necessarily reflect Kyte's actual opinions on the matter.
1 Ben A counter proposal 339 Ben 0 5


Kyte

June 01, 2017 7:32 AM
“New hat, new shirt?” Kyte guessed, as Ben mentioned a good haul of presents, “Very nice,” he complimented. He still neither fully understood the rules of baseball, nor why these people mattered so very much to Ben, but he had always dutifully noticed the relevant and important things, such as additions to Ben’s collection of merchandise (so long as it was glaringly obvious, like now, as quite a lot of it looked more or less the same to him) and knew to look happy when the team had won and sad when they had lost.

“Christmas was pretty good, apart from the whole ‘you aren’t where you should be,’ thing. That was kind of a downer. We got a good solid block of instruction and practice in though,” Kyte probably worked harder over Christmas than he did when he was at school, but it was doing what he loved, and so he didn’t feel hard done by. He missed good quality practice when he was at school. Then it felt like work - fitting it into his schedule, working through it with only help from Raine, who didn’t know any better than him. At home, it was just a way of life. “And, y’know, presents, food, stuff like that. My mom got me Jellyhands Jenga. Maybe we can play later,” he grinned. The game induced a slight shake in the players’ hands for every block successfully removed. Playing stupid games seemed like a nice area of common ground for Pecaris, one he hoped Ben wasn’t about to outgrow. He knew that Ben didn’t want to join him in his new found recreations but didn’t really get that it had pushed him out. He and Ben had always had different interests, and it had never stopped them being friends before. Plus smoking was so normal in his life - even his parents did it from time to time - that he couldn’t imagine it being something that would freak someone out, rather than just something they didn’t happen to have in common. He’d noticed that Ben wasn’t spending so much time with him this term, although he had taken at face value the assertion that it was because he was either making out with Tess or wanted to. He was happy for him, and only a little jealous, but it made sense. Ben had that wholesome American boy thing going on, that seemed to gel with what the population of Sonora liked. Kyte didn’t think he himself was massively unattractive but he suspected his appeal was higher amongst the kind of girls who had tattoos and facial piercings (or would, when they were old enough to be allowed) and who hung out at festivals. He was broadly fine with this being his demographic, it was just a shame there weren’t more of them at Sonora. In spite of these differences, and because Kyte was generally a loyal person, he still would have called Ben his best friend, and would have been hurt and surprised to know that the feeling was no longer mutual.

“You’d be happy doing that?” he asked. “I mean… I’ll be practising. It’s not the most sociable thing. Like… I can’t promise I’d exactly be giving your lectures much attention,” he admitted. He was pretty sure that Ben already knew this, given that he’d had plenty of chances to see what Kyte’s attention and retention rates were when he really was trying his hardest. Ben also knew what he could be like when he was focussed on a trick. The times Ben had come with him made it a lot less like proper training, as he goofed off and tried to help Ben learn a few tricks of his own, but even then he thought there were moments where he got into the zone and Ben got left hanging a bit - not confident to do too much by himself, but no longer in receipt of Kyte’s attention as he focussed on his own trick. It seemed like the arrangement was to soothe Ben’s conscious as much as anything else, something that made Kyte feel a little bad for putting it in need of soothing in the first place, but he wanted to check he wasn’t drawing Ben in on the false pretence that this would be really any kind of quality time. “And I will pay you back,” he reiterated.

OOC - Kyte's pretty good at taking things at face value, sometimes to his detriment.
13 Kyte Negotiations 335 Kyte 0 5


Ben

June 02, 2017 10:37 AM
"Yep," Ben agreed, grinning and adjusting his ballcap as it got mentioned, "still getting used to this one," he admitted. It would get softer and more comfortable with use, though, and the fact that it was not in immediate danger of disintegration more than made up for its unfamiliar newness. "The jenga sounds cool."

Kyte then reiterated what Ben already knew - that reading the chapter aloud would, by no means, mean that Kyte was actually listening to it. "I'm cool with that," he confirmed. "But my mom's a doctor and my uncle is a teacher, so I feel like at least one of them would yell at me if I just let you copy my homework without at least making an effort to help you learn the stuff. And Hamlet would frown so bad..." he added with a shudder.

"Did I ever tell you about Hamlet?" he asked suddenly, unsure if he had or not. Ben wasn't close to him like the Derries had been, so he usually forgot about the guy unless ghosts were the specific topic of conversation. "He mostly lives up in New Hampshire with that branch," he frowned slightly, eyes drifting toward the Crotalus table where Winston sat, then shook his head and laughed, "well, as much as a ghost lives anywhere, that is. But he's fond of Dad and Four, so he comes to visit sometimes. As he's dead, he's not bound by the rules forbidding contact to disowned people, I guess. And I think his haunt is attached to the bloodline, so he's not stuck to the mountain or anything like that. Anyway, he was a super strict tutor and he'd make such a face if he heard of anyone in his family cheating..."
1 Ben I think we've reached a deal 339 Ben 0 5