DH Skies

May 27, 2019 12:55 AM
The Teppenpaws had had an awful lot of explosions. The Pecaris had been flying about all over the place. Even the Aladrens had thrown some spells about. But no one had got hurt and nothing had ended up on fire, and odd criteria as those were to have for a successful concert, this being a magic school, it wasn't something to take for granted. Selina was also pleased with the quality of the performances. They had all met the brief, and put on something suitable. Personally, she ranked most of it a good few points above 'nobody died' on the scale of success.

As was typical with the concert, the students would be returning home with their families that evening, but there was time before that to socialise

After the last act, parents and students were asked to stand to the side whilst the chairs rearranged themselves into small groups around tables. There was a larger table at the back of the hall providing refreshments, and plenty of open space around this, for people to move about, or chat standing up if they preferred.

OOC - all concert threads will remain open for the rest of the term, so you can post parent arrivals/interactions, performances or student/family interactions as you wish.
Subthreads:
13 DH Skies Post concert socialisation 26 DH Skies 1 5


The Mordues

June 03, 2019 4:03 PM
Nathaniel carefully focused on his hand. He could not put too much pressure on the fork, could not grip it too tightly. If he did that, it would show anxiety, and he could not do that. Uncle Alexander had said there was no real problem, so therefore, there was not. Regardless of what the knot in his stomach said to the contrary. His stomach was also telling him that everyone was looking at his family, that everyone saw that he and Jeremy were outliers without proper family, and he knew they were not really that interesting. At least not with the past so far in the past.

A headache, Uncle Alexander had said. Mother had wanted to come tonight, to see Sonora and be reunited with him and Jeremy a few hours sooner, but she had had a headache and had to stay in bed at the last moment.

He didn't know what to think about that. For one thing, he knew that sometimes his mother really did have terrible headaches, and that these could come on unexpectedly (usually they just came on when something stressful was going on, or was about to happen, or had just happened, but headaches hitting her out of the blue for no obvious reason was not unknown). On the other hand, however, Nathaniel was always careful to ask Uncle Alexander how Mama was, at least once a month, and lately, the reports had been good. Uncle Alexander had said Mama was looking healthier and more cheerful than she had in years. Nathaniel had dared to hope that she was really getting better. But now she was not here, and he was right back to worrying about her.

Maybe, he thought, they just looked like any other family, to those who didn't know. Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery made a handsome, very proper couple, and some families had four children. Perhaps everyone would simply think they were all one family, or think Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery were his parents, or...something. Admittedly, Simon and Sylvia looked more like Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery for obvious reasons, but he and Jeremy definitely looked related to the other Mordues. Perhaps nobody thought anything untoward about his family at all.

"Your House certainly made an impressive display, Nathaniel," said Uncle Alexander, quite as though nothing was untoward at all. "And those photographs - I saw your cousins and your brother among them. Did you take those?"

"Some of them," said Nathaniel, surprised by how steady his voice was. "It's harder to convince Jeremy to sit for me than it is with Sylvia," he added, with a smile for his brother and his cousin. "And I could only get Simon to sit with her, for a formal," he added, still amused by how pompous Simon had looked in that photo.
16 The Mordues Everything is perfectly fine here. 0 The Mordues 0 5

Jeremy Mordue

June 04, 2019 6:15 AM
Mother hadn't come. Because of a headache. It was the same old excuse that she trotted out whenever she just didn't feel like bothering with being their parent. She was stressed, she was tired, she had a headache. The first two were just being a grown up and the last one easily curable with a potion.

He didn't care. Obviously. Only a baby would care about something like that, and it wasn't as if he or Nathaniel had been in the concert because it was lame. Though other people's parents had shown up, even when they weren't in it. Basically, everyone. Even the stupid Muggles who weren't supposed to know how to get here. Which meant he had to be jealous of people like that. Or he would have had to, if he had cared, which he didn't. He just thought that mother might care just a bit about not making them look worse than Mudbloods, even if she didn't care that much about them as people. Or rather him. He bet if Nathaniel had been in the show, she would have got over her headache somehow.

Keeping up appearances was why he had not said anything much in reaction to the news. Nathaniel had of course scored brownie points by being all worried about dearest mother. She. Was. Fine. Headaches weren't a big deal. But somehow, she was the poor suffering invalid, Nathaniel was the good, duitful son, and he would be the one who was a bad person if he said what they were all thinking which was that this whole thing stank worse than a heap of hippogriff dung.

They had all started chatting, settled down to snacks, and all he kept thinking was she didn't come. Everyone was pretending it was normal, and he supposed it was, because it wasn't like it was the first time mother had decided not to bother with him, and had dropped him with Aunt Avery and Uncle Alexander instead. It was practically a habit. And it would have been embarrassing having her there because almost everyone else had a mother and a father, and they didn't want to look like they weren't a normal family. Except they weren't. They weren't normal because dad had left them, and now, on top of that, they had a mother who didn't even care about seeing them, even though he was pretty sure that that was the definition of what mothers were meant to do and-

"May I be excused? I need the bathroom," he requested mechanically.

He ducked out of the hall but veered away from the bathrooms and towards the gardens instead, because in the bathrooms anyone could walk in and he could feel something ridiculous welling up inside him. His eyes were prickling and - and he. did. not. care. He didn't care that she hadn't come, he just didn't. He was just angry. Being angry wasn't a very gentlemanly emotion but it was at least suitably manly. Boys didn't cry but they did sometimes get angry. He kicked the hedge. It was soft and yielding. It took his kick and sprang back, he kicked it a few more times. He hit it too. That was less forgiving. It scratched when he hit. And that was why his eyes were prickling with tears, because he kept hitting the hedge and the scratches hurt and not because of anything stupid like feelings or his mother. He was about to hit it again, when there was a voice behind him.

(OOC - Open to a reply from the family or from outside it)
13 Jeremy Mordue I blame the hedge 1443 Jeremy Mordue 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

June 13, 2019 6:21 PM
Something was wrong.

This was, on the whole, nothing new, but right now something specific and not part of everyday was wrong. Either Jeremy was ill or Jeremy was hiding, because he had been gone from the table too long. Were Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery glancing at each other? Simon and Sylvia? He tried to avoid everyone's eyes, at least until it became impossible to sit still anymore.

"Excuse me for a moment," he said to his uncle, making himself meet Uncle Alexander's eyes for most of a normal beat as he stood up and carefully pushed his chair under the table before stepping away and out of the Hall.

He did check the bathroom just for the sake of it, but did not find Jeremy. Therefore, his brother was either lurking somewhere in the school, or was outside. Nathaniel knew he did not have time to search the school or the means to search Crotalus, but....

He looked around for a portrait who looked alert and not too busy with whatever was going on in the confines of a given frame. Luckily, a magnificently mustachioed gentleman in a dark suit and ridiculously tall hat walked through a door in the back of his painted room and seemed to notice a curious expression in the world beyond it.

"Can I help you, young man?" he asked mildly.

"Yes, thank you," said Nathaniel, relieved. It was very strange to feel relief, annoyance, and concern all at the same time. "Have you seen a boy who looks a lot like me anywhere? A first year?"

He knew this was a long shot, and that he might have to ask around more, as this fellow had been out of his portrait. However, it turned out he was in luck: the gentleman nodded. "I believe I did," he said. "Just before I went to ask if it would be convenient for me to visit Miss Simpson's portrait on Saturday - you do know Miss Violet Simpson, on the second floor? - " Nathaniel tried not to writhe with impatience - "but her family portrait was empty, nobody at all home - but yes, just before I went out, I saw a boy just as you say. He went outside."

"Thank you," said Nathaniel again, with a shallow bow; it was best not to be rude to portraits. This was the only thought which let him restrain himself long enough to accept the painting's nod of acknowledgment before he too headed for the Gardens as quickly as he could without actually running indoors.

Outdoors, he lengthened his stride as far as it would go, as he could not be seen running outside either on such a very public occasion. "Jeremy?" he called, looking both ways. "Jer - what are you doing?!" he exclaimed, finding his brother and staring aghast at the spectacle of Jeremy trying to beat up a hedge, trying not to worry again about the possibility that madness ran in their blood and that either of them could succumb to it at any time.
16 Nathaniel Mordue That doesn't seem helpful. 1412 Nathaniel Mordue 0 5

Jeremy Mordue

June 14, 2019 7:32 AM
Great. It had to be Nathaniel. Nathaniel, who was perfect and did everything right, was now going to point out to Jeremy how he was failing again. How he should just learn to behave and not let this show. Well, he had done that, hadn’t he? He hadn’t done anything in public - it was Nathaniel’s fault that this was now being witnessed because this had been perfectly private until he’d come along to stick his nose in.

Rationally, perhaps, Jeremy should have been glad it was his brother who had happened upon him, rather than anyone worse. Of the list of people who it would have been worse to be found in this state by was… well, approximately everybody. Simon and Sylvia mattered more than Nathaniel, and the thought of any of his roommates catching him in this state would have been appalling. Even teachers would be pretty bad right now, because though they might ordinarily be nice and weren’t allowed to tell his peers he’d been crying, they would probably be pretty annoyed about the hedge. But rationality wasn’t really playing a very big part in things right now, and Jeremy hadn’t wanted to be seen by anyone, and so Nathaniel being there was still a problem.

“Nothing,” he replied thickly. He kept his back turned to his brother, kept his words to a minimum, but even that one word shook far too obviously for his liking. He aimed another kick at the hedge, figuring it didn’t matter now that Nathaniel had seen anyway and because the other option was bursting into tears and he wanted to do that even less. “Just go away!” he snapped.
13 Jeremy Mordue You're not helpful! 1443 Jeremy Mordue 0 5

Nathaniel

June 14, 2019 1:44 PM
As soon as he asked the question, Nathaniel knew it was the wrong one. It was quite obvious what Jeremy was doing; the actual question was why he was doing it.

Did it wrong. Not good enough. Not good enough. Not good enough -

Nathaniel forced himself to swallow, to take even breaths. His throat was tight, his heart jerking sporadically and painfully in his chest. He looked at his hands, and was relieved to see that they looked steady, even though they didn’t feel it. Good. He could not think about being inadequate now. His family needed him.

“I can’t do that,” he pointed out reasonably. “Jeremy....” What was he supposed to do? What were the right words? “What’s wrong?” he asked. “Why are you - doing this? Can...can I help?”

This offer was made hesitantly. He didn’t know what to do to help. He and Jeremy had never been close, not really - Nathaniel supposed be wished he had a brother proper rather than just something else to worry about, but he never knew what to say or do to fix that. With Sylvia he could let his guard down, but Sylvia had parents to take care of her - she didn’t need Nathaniel to always be strong, or a perfect example, because while she knew he would take care of her if she needed that, there were other people who could do that too. Jeremy and Mama just had him, so he didn’t want them to doubt him in the slightest. He had always felt like he was looking after Jeremy, but...obviously he had failed, and now here he was risking Jeremy saying ‘yes’ and leaving it to Nathaniel to figure out what to do with that, when he had already clearly failed somewhere, and -

Not good enough. Not good enough. Not good enough -

“Because kicking the hedge isn’t going to help. You’re just going to hurt yourself and...” he rambled, reverting to offering Jeremy concrete points where he could improve. “And not fix anything.”
16 Nathaniel Fair. Let me try again. 1412 Nathaniel 0 5

Jeremy Mordue

June 15, 2019 11:35 PM
He couldn’t leave. He wanted to help. He was worried that Jeremy was going to hurt himself. And Jeremy’s solution didn’t fix anything. Right. That was the real problem. Not that Jeremy was going to get hurt but that he was embarrassing Nathaniel. Again, this was entirely Nathaniel’s fault for being there. Jeremy hadn’t asked him to come and witness him getting into a fight with a hedge. He was sick of Nathaniel trailing him around, finding reasons to be upset with him. He did fine when Nathaniel wasn’t there. It was like he kept trying to butt in to all the worst possible moments just so that he could be a jerk.

“Oh, I’m sorry,” he snapped, “Am I supposed to be fixing things now? I thought that was your self-appointed job,” he crossed his arms firmly over his chest, managing to turn and face Nathaniel, his tears back in check now that he had something he could funnel his anger into instead. Because how could Nathaniel tell him to fix things? What was he supposed to do? It was laughable that Nathaniel thought he himself stood a chance, but Jeremy was not about to be recruited to his hopeless crusade.

“Have you got a plan for getting father back? Or maybe you know how to make mother pull herself together and give a damn? If you do, Nathaniel, that’d be really, really great. I’m all ears. What’s the brilliant solution?”
13 Jeremy Mordue Keep digging 1443 Jeremy Mordue 0 5

Nathaniel

June 16, 2019 4:37 PM
Nathaniel realized pretty much instantly that he had clearly not helped yet. He did not think that noticing this was any great measure of perceptiveness on his part, however. Anyone could have seen that.

His determination to be patient with his brother flickered and momentarily vanished from his mind as Jeremy continued his rant, however. Nathaniel flushed, hard red patches appearing on his cheeks.

"Don't talk about Mother like that," snapped Nathaniel. "And as for Father, if we never see him again, it'll be too soon!"

He wasn't supposed to have said that. Jeremy had been so little when Dad left. Jeremy hadn't understood. And they had never told him, because - well - how did one tell him about it? Nathaniel felt that finding out what a worthless individual his father was had nearly ruined his life. Even now, he still worried about somehow turning into Father. He did not want that burden to fall on Jeremy too - even if it might do Jeremy good to understand just exactly how important it was to be strong, to always control themselves. Maybe they could tell him when he was a little older, but now...Nathaniel took as quick a breath as he could, struggling to regain control.

"I'm sorry - but you're wrong about Mama. She loves us, Jeremy. She does her best. She can't help it that she's not well. I wish she was here too, but - she can't help it," he said, repeating what he had to repeat to himself to keep everything running smoothly inside his head. "We just have to - take things the way they are. We just have to be good now."
16 Nathaniel I'm trying my best. 1412 Nathaniel 0 5