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


Georgia Kirkly (and dad)

June 21, 2019 10:33 AM
Georgia made her way off stage, still positively beaming. She scanned the crowd just managing to catch her dad's eye before she had to find a seat for the remaining two acts - he was grinning broadly and still clapping. She wasn't sure how she was going to manage to sit through them, she was so excited to go find him and celebrate.

It felt like the perfect end to her time here. From the person who'd been too afraid to get up on stage because of how she looked and what others might think, to this. Even her seventh year had been made of more doubt than anything else, feeling like she was hurtling towards a crunch point about which world she was supposed to end up in. Only, like Kir had said, that didn’t seem to matter any more. The lines weren’t all black and white, and she would find where she fitted, and work out how to juggle the different bits of what made her who she was. The concert felt like the perfect reflection of that too - using her voice, a talent her father had always understood and which transversed her two worlds, alongside magic because (and she twirled her fingers in the chain of the necklace Zevalyn had given her) she was a witch. And neither of those were things people could take away from her.

When Crotalus and Pecari finally ended, she bounded over to her dad, finding he was ready and waiting with a big hug and a bunch of flowers for her.

"That was amazing!" he beamed, "I mean, I knew you could sing but wow."

"And the magic?" she asked, still slightly nervous after all this time. It made rational sense, once she had heard him say it, that it hadn't been her mother's magic but her dishonesty about it that had pulled them apart, but it was still hard to feel like he could be comfortable around it when it was at the centre of what had gone wrong with his life.

"The magic was so cool!" he beamed, "I didn't know you could do all that."

“I wasn’t actually doing most of it,” she admitted, “Most of the effects and stuff were set beforehand.”

“But you can do things like that?” he queried.

“Some of them. Yeah,” she nodded.

“It’s good to finally get to see that. I mean, I read your school reports and everything but it’s not quite the same. It was interesting.” He wasn't sure where it got her, or what the next chapter of her life looked like. He wasn't sure why his ex wife had been so keen to turn her back on this stuff, or how things fitted together when you did or didn’t do that. But none of that was stuff to bring up with Georgia right now. After all, it was a night for celebration, and after all it had been a school concert - it wasn't like non-magical kids spent those showing how great they'd got at computer skills and long division. “I’m really proud of what you’ve achieved here,” he told her.

"I don't know how I did on my exams," Georgia admitted. She had never been the most academically inclined anyway, and the concert had sort of taken over. It was the thing she had wanted to do well at, even though she recognised that wasn't the most sensible choice. Her dad had always believed she could do well, and go to a good school if she pulled her socks up and applied herself. Although Sonora had put a spanner in those works anyway. She really wanted him to be proud of her for the concert, but she didn’t want to feel like that confession was hanging over her.

“Let’s not worry about that now,” he shrugged. He didn’t understand her subjects or her grades much, but he did understand the concept that exam results were usually important. He definitely thought they were - he wanted her to be well set up, to be able to do what she wanted to do next with her life. But, he supposed, there was something he wanted more than that. “Are you happy?” he checked.

“Yes,” she grinned.

“Well, I don’t know what you plan to do next… Whether you’re going to keep shuttling between me and your mom, or get your own place. You know you can stay as long as you want with me, right?”

“Right,” Georgia nodded. She knew she was graduating, but between the concert and the exams, she hadn’t really processed that this was, in some ways, a never ending summer. That doing half the weeks at dad’s and half at mom’s didn’t work when she didn’t know how many weeks there were ahead.

“You don’t have to decide right now. I just thought I’d let you know. I’ve missed you these last seven years. And having a witch about the house looks like it could come in handy.”

“Yeah. I… I think I’d like that. Guess it depends what I do next,” she nodded.

“We can figure it out later,” her dad assured her. And that was the icing on the cake - because she was strong and capable, she could sing on stage and do magic, but even with all that on her side, it felt good to know that whichever world she ended up with her feet in, her dad still believed they were a ‘we’ and was coming along for the ride.

“Yeah,” she grinned, “We can.”
13 Georgia Kirkly (and dad) Just Own The Night 346 Georgia Kirkly (and dad) 0 5