Professor John Fawcett

September 02, 2012 7:27 PM
Between the higher classes there was, of course, some movement – second years becoming third years and joining the Intermediates, fifth years becoming sixth years and either dropping his class or joining the Advanced class, seventh years graduating from the school and not returning to this lab at all – but it was in the beginners’ class where John saw the most dramatic changes almost every year, due entirely to the influx of new first years that every September brought. The mix always included almost as many skill levels and degrees of affinity for his subject as it did personalities, and it was often anyone’s guess, in the first weeks, which would ultimately affect the quality of their first two years of Potions more.
 
More than he would have liked, though, came down to how well the first year group got along with itself, and to a lesser extent how well it meshed with the second years, which was something the staff had relatively little control over. Often it did not go badly, no more than one or two murderous rivalries or overly-intense friendships in any given age group, but John was feeling a little nervous about how this year was going to go. There were too many names with the same background for him to think that politics, at some point, weren’t going to interfere with the normal functioning of the classroom.
 
None of this, however, was on his face as he stood before the newly-formed Beginner’s class of the year. “Everyone,” he said once the bell had rung, “get in your seats now so we can begin, thank you…” Once the last few had done so, he smiled at the group. “Good afternoon, and welcome – or welcome back – to Potions. I am, for those who have not met me before, Professor Fawcett, your instructor.”
 
He lifted a packet off a stack of identical ones, and the others flew out, one landing in front of each student. “This is your syllabus until midterm. I may give smaller homework or in-class assignments which are not on your syllabus, but in general, what you see is what you can expect, so I hope you will all come to each class prepared.” In truth, he usually ended up off by a day or two every semester, rather than being able to rigidly follow the syllabus, but that was why he’d incorporated review days before midterm. That gave him some flexibility. “You will also find outlined your major essays – “ much milder for the first and second years than for the older groups, though the second year version of the document was a bit heavier than the first year one, too – “and projects, the grading scale, and the code of conduct for my class.”
 
Here he paused to give the class a stern look. “Pay particularly close attention to that,” he told them. “I will not have fighting in my classroom any more than I will have dangerous or reckless behavior in my classroom. You are all here to learn safely, and anyone who prevents someone else from doing so will be punished appropriately. I hope, though, not to have to.” He meant that; John disliked that aspect of his job more than any other. There were, though, times when it was simply the only way to maintain order. “So long as you try to the best of your ability to do what is asked of you, we can get along very well, accommodations may be made for students who need them, but I will not tolerate any of you being deliberately disruptive.”
 
His annual warning delivered, John relaxed. “Now, to more pleasant business. I assume most of you are eager to begin brewing, so you may now open your textbooks to page 13.” He picked up a piece of paper off his desk with one hand while pointing his wand at the board with the other so ‘Page 13’ appeared there, looking over the page to ensure that it was, in fact, the alternative he had come up with for Miss Yale, if she objected to the salamander scales, and any other students who wished to focus on vegan potioneering, as he had finally decided to include a note in the syllabus about how this would be permitted. He had come to almost enjoy these assignments; sometimes, particularly at the more advanced levels, they required a bit more charmswork or worked a bit more slowly, but it was still an interesting challenge. “Here you have a basic confidence draught.
 
“To make this, you will need freshly-chopped daisy roots, three drops of an infusion of lemon balm and lovage, two thoroughly dried leaves of yaupon, the shell of a single sopophorous bean, and a sprinkling of salamander scales. You will find how well you handle those affects the color of the final potion, which should ideally be about the same shade of red your new classmates in Crotalus turned during the Opening Feast, but which should never be any color close to pink or black.”
 
He looked at them over his glasses. “Do your best, and follow the directions carefully. I will call time ten minutes before the end of the period, and then you will bottle samples – make sure to carefully label yours, so I will know who it belongs to – and write me a few sentences – something you learned today, other than how to make this potion, or something you have questions about.” He had decided on this, after seeing it in a magazine for primary educators, as an alternative to calling out a lengthy roll, as the class could become restless during that time and he needed to be sure they had internalized the rules and routines of the class before putting that kind of downtime in their hands. Later, he would know them all by sight and check them off as they entered, but the first years prevented that for now. “You may talk as you work, if you are not disruptive and stay on-task. I will be walking around the room as you work to ensure you do not get too distracted, and to help with any problems you may run into in your brewing. You may begin.”
 
OOC: Welcome to Potions! In order to get House points, all posting rules (good spelling and grammar, a minimum of two hundred words, realism for your character's level, and no controlling of other people's characters especially) must be followed, and the more creative and detailed your posts are, the better. Also, Fawcett will notice and intervene before any potions go badly enough wrong to do anyone serious harm, though minor accidents are allowed. Tag Fawcett if you need him, and have fun!
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0 Professor John Fawcett Lesson I for Beginners (1st and 2nd years) 19 Professor John Fawcett 1 5


Alan Raines, Teppenpaw

September 03, 2012 9:25 PM
Because his sister had always spoken highly of the man, Alan thought he could reasonably expect a certain amount of things of Professor Fawcett. He didn’t think he could get into details without going wrong somewhere, but he didn’t think it was going too far to anticipate someone who knew his subject, was not ridiculously or at least not ridiculously openly opposed to the politics of his family, ran an orderly classroom, and most likely had decent manners if you had to talk to him directly. If any of those characteristics were completely missing, Alan didn’t think that Sara would like him, because that was what they had been taught to expect and respect in a tutor or teacher.
 
With that thought in mind, he stopped in the boys’ bathroom before class to make sure his clothes and person were neat, arrived to class early even in spite of that, got a seat where he was sure he would be able to see the board clearly unless a very unlikely giant decided to wander in and obscure his vision, and had his ingredient set, his textbook, and his quill set up in front of him before the professor called the class to order, sitting up straight and trying to look attentive for his first real class. Later, maybe, he could be a little lazy, but he had to make a good impression first. If he didn’t, he suspected Sara would write their parents – all because she was genuinely concerned, of course.
 
Sometimes his sister nearly made him sick, because it was like she never did or thought anything she wasn’t supposed to, never even thought about doing anything she hadn’t been told to, or at least had approved before she thought of doing it. He had no idea how she had gotten into Pecari. Maybe she could only show those colors in a time of adversity such as they had never known, but Alan thought it was more likely that she had just been in a strange mood when she drank the Sorting Potion or something like that, if not that the potion itself had been defective that year.
 
She wasn’t here right now, of course, but Alan couldn’t shake the sense that she was somehow aware of what he did anyway, and would just Know if he did something unbecoming, and he didn’t want to make a bad impression anyway just for his own benefit, so he went to all those pains and was glad when he heard Professor Fawcett’s welcoming speech and looked over the thick syllabus he received. The syllabus was one of the things Sara had specifically mentioned to him, so he knew it was a very important document to keep up with if he wanted to get by in the class, since asking for another one, though possible, would be embarrassing. He didn’t want to look like a disorganized first year who didn’t know how to keep up with things for his own benefit as much as for his family’s, too. He raised his eyebrows when he saw the note about vegan potions, wondering what that meant, but he decided that was something to look up later instead of asking about during the class, since it didn’t sound like it was something he had to know about on the first day.
 
He didn’t actually take any notes, since everything was covered in either the syllabus or the book, but he felt proud of himself for having prepared to do so as he put his parchment away and set up his cauldron to work on the potion. He smiled genially at the person next to him as he did so, feeling buoyed by how nothing surprising had happened and how that meant that he was most likely going to continue to move easily through his first days of school. “This doesn’t sound too bad so far, does it?” he asked, making a gesture which could be interpreted as specifically being toward his book and cauldron or could sum up the class, what they had seen of it so far, in general.
0 Alan Raines, Teppenpaw Off to a good start 0 Alan Raines, Teppenpaw 0 5

Amity Brockert, Aladren

September 04, 2012 2:59 AM
She would never admit it to her mother, but Amity was rather interested in Potions. It wasn't the most feminine subject in the world, but if she continued to like it after CATS-and there was a definite possibility that she wouldn't, as that seemed to be the case with so many different things that the Aladren had been forced to do-it wasn't unheard of.

The one worry that Amity had about this class was that there would be a lot of homework. Arabella thought there was too much, but then, the Pecari thought any homework was too much. She was already complaining about weekly essays in Charms. Not that Amity entirely blamed her. That would cut into the leisure time that the first year sought so desperately. Less homework meant more of it.

On the other hand, more homework gave her an excuse not to practice any of the skills her mother wanted her to practice. The thing to do, Amity thought, was to tell her mother that she had more homework than she really had so she wouldn't be on the Aladren's case about the extracurricular activities that Amity was now refusing to do. Meanwhile, she would be doing whatever it was she wanted to do.

Not that she was entirely sure what that was. She'd been doing structured activities for so long that she wasn't sure what others did in their free time. A lot of them took up hobbies...that were basically the things Amity was regularly forced to do. Arabella fenced and possibly plotted against Carrie, the latter of which the Aladren understood and the former of which she had taken too. That was where the third year had gotten the idea of taking it up in the first place and Amity supposed she would actually continue to do it if and only if Arabella needed a sparring partner.

That would please Mother and while the first year wasn't crazy about that idea she did care about her older cousin. She was closer to the Pecari than she was to any of her other ones, being that Arabella was closest to her in age, aside from Carrie, whom they'd all decided didn't count. Amity supposed there was the same age difference between her and Tristan but he was a boy so despite neither being the girliest of girls, she had more in common with the third year. Besides, Tristan was a bit spoiled.

Professor Fawcett began the lecture with the typical rules and expectations portion and a syllabus. Amity briefly wondered if the 'no fighting' part had come about due to Carrie's row with another girl last term. Something about the other girl throwing bugs. Which was definitely not proper behavior but that was expected in non-purebloods. Plus, the Aladren wouldn't have minded throwing bugs at her cousin herself if had been at all appropriate.

So, they were going to brew a confidence draught. That could be interesting. Amity didn't feel she personally needed it. If she had more confidence than she already did, she'd become downright arrogant, more like Carrie, who seemed to be at the maximum level of it. Ryan could have used it though, maybe he'd finally ask Sophie out then. She liked her cousin the way he was just fine, but having confidence might have made things easier for him.

The boy next to her spoke, Amity thought it was Alan Raines. "Not bad at all." The Aladren replied. Was it proper to admit that she was interested in the subject? Potions was full of things that most girls would consider icky but Amity wasn't all that bothered by them. After all, they drank them, so what was so bad about touching them? One could always wash their hands afterwards.

"I'm Amity Brockert, of the Colorado Brockerts." She introduced herself, just in case he didn't remember her name from the role call in Flying. She wasn't one hundred percent on his either so that was entirely possible. "Would you like to work together?" It was best to meet as many people as possible, make the proper connections and even better, actual friends. With friends, one could drop the formalities, and have real discussions, something more interesting than just polite small talk.

11 Amity Brockert, Aladren Sounds promising. 233 Amity Brockert, Aladren 0 5


Alan

September 04, 2012 2:49 PM
Amity Brockert, Colorado Brockerts. Alan added that to his growing list of names. So far, it seemed that a surprising number of them belonged to exactly the kind of people he and Isabel had been sent to school to meet – in fact, he was pretty sure Isabel had also met this girl; he thought he had seen them talking during the first flying lesson – but he guessed that could just be a coincidence. There were, after all, going to be a certain number of society and non-society people in any year, or so he had heard. It was just who had children at what time.
 
Though, there had been a lot of familiar last names on the flying lesson roll call. He didn’t know them personally because he had never attended many parties or anything, but he had heard them – heard at least one of them far more times than he’d ever really wanted to, since it belonged to Sara’s boyfriend as well as a girl in his class. That girl, he’d made sure to look at and remember, because she would either be a great ally against the collective stupidity of their older siblings or be his worst nightmare, but she was very unlikely to ever plan to marry him. Alan, remembering how his mother and sister had talked about boys in school with the latter for as long as he could remember, appreciated that in a person; the conversations he remembered from the era Before Preston had him worried that every girl from a good family in the school might seriously already be thinking that way.
 
“It’s a pleasure to meet you,” Alan said, pausing in the laying out of his ingredients to bow to her. “I am Alan Raines, of the Illinois Raines’.”
 
He succeeded in saying “Raines’” without tripping over the ‘s’es at the end, a feat which always made him happy when he managed it. Sometimes he didn’t. He was convinced that whoever had made up their last name had done so before the standard introduction came into use, because otherwise, they never would have picked a name that ended in ‘s.’ It was just too difficult to say.
 
“Don’t mind if we do,” he said when Miss Brockert suggested that they work together. “We can split the ingredients down the middle, that way neither of us uses too much of one thing during the first lesson.” He assumed she could write home for refills as easily as he could, but it would be better to make what they had last, he thought. That way, if it came up during a lesson, they wouldn't be waiting for a refill to arrive in the mail and have to go begging for enough to complete a potion with. "I can do the chopping, if you like," he offered, since Isabel had proven strangely reluctant to chop things in their few experiments after they'd gotten their hands on their school supplies and she was his main source about how girls behaved.
0 Alan Hopefully it is as good as it sounds 0 Alan 0 5

Amity

September 07, 2012 3:45 PM
"Pleasure to meet you, Mr. Raines." Amity responded. It seemed near impossible to meet the wrong people in this year group and she was glad that she'd remembered Alan's name correctly. Knowing who was who was a good idea when Amity was dealing with so many that she was supposed to meet.

Fortunately, doing so wasn't a thing that she especially minded. It was something that the Aladren was trained to do and was accustomed to. The many lessons that she'd had were not usually taken privately. Of course, Amity had been supposed to also consider those children to be competition, in some cases. That idea, however, had never really took and therefore, she found herself being inadvertently better liked because she was not viewed as a threat.

Mother, naturally, failed to notice this as she wanted Amity to be the best at everything. She wanted her daughters to make acquaintances and connections but she still wanted them to remain superior to others because apparently, just being a Brockert in a western state wasn't enough for the woman. Mother not only wanted Amity to be prefect and Head Girl, but ranked first in grades and make the best possible marriage too. Not to mention join every extracurricular the school had aside from Quidditch.

None of which was happening. She supposed that prefect and Head Girl were possible-though Amity was more likely to get the latter if people liked her whether than viewed her as a threat-but she wasn't going near even the clubs that weren't the sort wielded by Beaters. That would cut into her preciously sought free time. Even the book club was something that Amity didn't care to do. She would prefer to read on her own terms.

"Splitting them does seem like the most reasonable option." The Aladren could see no issue with Mr. Raines doing the chopping either. If that was what he wanted to do, that was fine with her. "All right." Amity agreed. "So, how are you enjoying Sonora so far?" Small talk could get so repetitive but it wouldn't be proper to just go right into more interesting topics. One had to get their organically or so she'd always been taught.
11 Amity That would be ideal. 233 Amity 0 5


Alan Raines

September 14, 2012 8:38 PM
Miss Brockert didn’t object to splitting the ingredients or to him doing the chopping, so Alan found the correct knife to get to work on the daisy roots with. He tried to make the pieces as fine and uniform as possible, remembering his theory lessons and just liking for things to be exact when he could make them that way. Alan liked to do things right; his parents had always demanded that, of him and his sister and themselves, and he supposed he had just gotten into the habit of granting it to them.
 
He smiled at the predictable question. Had she had a special tutor for a few weeks before school, too, just for the niceties of meeting people at school? Alan had been given a list of questions he might use to get to know people and then been made to memorize it; Sara had taken the time to add her suggestions and annotations afterward, though he was still not sure whether or not to accept those. His sister was a social success, of course, everyone knew that, he would not be surprised at this point if people who were not even related to them or who did not even know them were instructed to look up to Sara Raines as a role model, but she was also a girl, so what worked so very well for her might not for him. Everyone knew that guys and girls were different, and a guy who acted too much like a girl would be lucky to get more than a hair more respect than a girl who acted like a boy would.
 
“I’m liking it very well so far,” he said, truthfully enough. The worst thing that had happened so far was his sister making him wear a tie to their flying lessons, and he had taken it off before anyone had seen him, so there was no harm done there. “Now that the Sorting’s over, I don’t think I have anything to worry about all year,” he added lightly, since he wasn’t that interested in how his House team did. For one thing, Quidditch wasn’t really his thing, and for another, Sara had told them that her friend Fae’s fiancé was the Aladren Seeker and had only once, in four years, failed to win his team a match, and that Crotalus was always in the final against them anyway, so Teppenpaw was doomed even if Fae did use her feminine wiles to try to distract Mr. Carey from practicing as much as he would have.
 
That, he thought, was what made it such a ridiculous thing to be obsessed with. It didn’t matter how good you were, or your team was; all that was necessary, most of the time, for a complete upset was for one member of the opposite team to be just a little bit better, or luckier, than one of yours, and that was all. Years and years could go by before that changed, so why get so attached to one team and start rivalries with another? The players weren’t going to stay consistent for very long, so what was the point?
 
“Are you having a nice time?” he asked curiously, since she was both a girl and in Aladren, which meant she was quite a bit different than he was and might be having a completely different experience of school even if she also had a tolerable roommate and had spent months looking forward to the day when she could use magic as often as she wanted, with her own wand. Isabel had thought he was crazy when he talked about some things he was looking forward to, so he thought other people's experience of the actual event might seem unfathomable to him, too.
0 Alan Raines Let's keep going 237 Alan Raines 0 5

Amity

September 18, 2012 11:16 PM
Amity returned Alan's smile. Maybe he too noticed how repetitive all these introductory conversations got. She quite frankly craved a real one, on something far more interesting than small talk. It was getting a bit dull, but Amity wasn't sure how to make things more interesting without being improper. She didn't really care what her mother thought but she did not want to reflect poorly on her family as a whole or be a pariah.

Honestly, it seemed like there were an awful lot of expectations placed on those in pureblood society and the Aladren wasn't always that crazy about it. Sometimes it was awfully boring and she didn't get to see how really interesting people could be. All these mundane conversations didn't allow Amity to really get to know someone.

Which was something that the first year would have liked. She would have liked to make some friends that she wasn't supposed to be viewing as competition. As far as Amity was concerned that whole mindset just drove people apart. All it did was create enemies and conceit. That was no atmosphere to make valuable connections in, though hopefully nobody would make something huge, like a blood feud over something as trivial as a dance competition or something. Not only that, but it took the fun out of things when you were too worried about doing well or someone yelling at you if you didn't.

Of course, the Aladren typically didn't care enough to try that hard. The best she'd ever done on anything was a bronze metal on the beam in a gymnastics competition. Because others had fallen off and Amity had been sorry that her success had been built on the mistakes of others. Especially when winning a metal hadn't mattered to her. Besides, Mother hadn't even let her enjoy it. She'd just told Amity that she needed to aim for the gold and of course, that she was sloppy and lazy and others had simply been sloppier-and then sent her off to study Latin.

"Oh, yes." Amity replied. "I'm so happy to be finally attending Sonora. I've looked forward to it my whole life." Okay, so her reasons for feeling that way were probably different from others. Of course, she was thrilled to be learning magic but she was also happy not to be forced to learn anything else anymore either. Who needed to know how to paint or play the violin or whatnot if they never had any real passion for it in the first place?

Magic on the other hand was something Amity couldn't live without. Muggles had to work too hard because they didn't have it. They spent hours doing things that a wizard could do with an easy spell. Of course, the first year had house elves for most unpleasant chores anyway. Still,life without magic sounded unbearable.

"Were you worried about going into a particular house?" She saw an opportunity to talk about something potentially more interesting and she was going to take it. Personally, Amity hadn't really wanted Crotalus or Pecari, though she would have dealt with it. The latter was thought to be improper and Carrie was in the former, though so was Ryan and Arabella was in Pecari. Still, it would have been a strike against Amity had she gotten in there, whether or not Alan's relative was in the house and an example of a perfect pureblood lady.
11 Amity All right 233 Amity 0 5


Alan

October 01, 2012 9:59 PM
“Doesn’t everyone,” said Alan when Amity confirmed that she had been looking forward to coming to school all her life. “I think our parents were about two hours from forbidding me and my cousin from talking about school any more when we got on the wagon. Neither of us had thought about anything else for six months.” He was exaggerating slightly – things hadn’t gotten really bad until he had turned eleven, back in March – but not by much. Most of their family had enjoyed school an awful lot even though none of them were really known for their academic prowess, and he and Isabel had grown up with that in their ears all the time. Going to school was a huge deal in the Raines family; it was where you made your real friends, and those were what would carry you through life.
 
He smiled when asked about his House, though the expression was not a very deep one. Alan had yet to really sort out how he felt about going into Teppenpaw, and what he thought people might think of him, based on Sara’s and Catherine’s comments for the most part, because he had. He kept, then, trying to find a line between risking disloyalty – or worse, offense, since he had no idea who had what relatives in which Houses – and flat-out lying. He wasn’t sure how he was doing so far, but it was all he could do, so he did it.
 
“I wasn’t worried about it,” he said. ‘Worry,’ to him, was what you did if you thought you might not get a letter, and he hadn’t done that, either. Talking about Houses and wondering which one he might get into had just been fun, at least to him. “But I thought I might go into Pecari, since my sister is there.” It never occurred to him that this could be seen as a bad thing, if someone didn’t know who Sara was; he’d had his sister’s perfections drilled into him too many times. If Sara was involved in something, it was, by definition, something it was acceptable to be involved in, even if it was also mind-numbingly stupid or even, when thought about for a few seconds, mind-bendingly illogical.
 
“What about you?” he asked. “Did you expect Aladren?” Alan wouldn’t have minded being Sorted there, of course, there were a great many proper people in that House and its traits were ones he thought were valuable, but he had the strangest feeling that if he had been placed there somehow, he wouldn’t have exactly fitted in with everyone else. Crotalus seemed like it would have been a better fit, even, and he didn’t think that would have been ideal, either. One of the things he had noticed as he and Isabel talked over the Houses was that he didn’t feel like he quite fit both the parameters and the reputation of any of them, though he hadn’t mentioned that thought to his cousin. It didn’t matter much, after all.
0 Alan Where next? 0 Alan 0 5

Amity

October 04, 2012 4:42 PM
"I suppose so." Amity replied. "My cousins have either already been to Sonora or are too young so I didn't really have anyone to share the excitement with, though I did ask them some things of course. I take it that Isabel is your cousin?" That was not hard to deduce from what Alan had just said though it was entirely possible that they were distantly related like Hope and Evan were for her and he had another cousin in their year with a different last name. Amity was hardly an expert on the genealogy of others, she hadn't had the time or inclination to be so. "I met her in Flying."

Fortunately, her experience in the class had been a lot more like Arabella's than Ryan's or Carrie's. Isabel, Effie and whichever of the Pierce twins that she'd been talking to seemed like people that she could be friends with, she'd not completely failed at even getting her broom up and she hadn't created a scene and ended up being hexed by Coach Pierce. It had been a major success.

Speaking of relatives, Amity was admittedly curious about how exactly Alan was related to the famous Sara Raines, who seemed to be held up as an example of the perfect pureblood lady, the one girls like the Aladren were supposed to emulate even though she didn't think the sixth year was probably involved in half the things Amity had been. Still, she didn't really want to ask Alan about her. Even though she wasn't all that bothered by being compared to Chaslyn unfavorably, beyond being slightly embarrassed due to the fact that her sister was younger than her, she figured it was hard to be compared to someone considered so perfect and Alan might not want to think about it or have her brought up, the way Amity would not want to have Carrie brought up and only did so herself when she felt a moral obligation to warn the other person. She probably should have warned Effie and Isabel come to think of it, but it had seemed more necessary and on topic to warn the latter about Abigail Thornton and her creepy sisters instead.

Amity considered Alan's question. "Well, I guess not." She could be nice but she wasn't always, she was proper but not always rule driven and while she could certainly be bold, she wasn't what one would call adventurous. Going on an adventure was too much work."Aladren probably does fit the best, but not perfectly." Aladrens were supposed to be scholastically driven and she wasn't really driven at all. She was certainly strong willed though, Mother was always complaining about that.

"How's Teppenpaw?" Amity asked. "That was my father's House." Only someone that nice would be willing to put up with her mother so knowing that Father was Sorted there explained an awful lot. "My aunt was the Head last year but she left to have a baby. Do you have any family here besides Isabel and the Miss Raines that's the Pecari prefect." She had permission to use Isabel's name but not Sara's. Which reminded her. "Oh, you may call me Amity, by the way."
11 Amity To an excellent finish? 233 Amity 0 5


Alan

October 05, 2012 9:03 PM
Alan nodded. “Yes,” he agreed about Isabel being his cousin. “Our fathers are first cousins, and live in the same area, so we’ve always seen a lot of each other.”
 
More than either of them had ever seen of their older sisters, anyway. Catherine was fifteen  years older than them, she’d been married and had kids for as long as Alan could remember, and though Sara wasn’t that much older than him, she had been traveling to Europe every summer since he was born and in school for the past five years, so they had never been close. He thought Isabel and her niece were probably closer than he and Sara were, though there were no bad feelings between him and his sister – not really. He thought it would have been worse if they were brothers or sisters, rather than brother and sister, and she had still been everyone’s darling, but as it was, they only had a problem when she thought that him coming to school meant she should boss him around the time all the time.
 
Luckily, Sara was taking a lot of Advanced classes, so they didn’t run into each other very often. Once him being around was normal and neither of them felt a little awkward about it anymore, Alan thought they’d get along as well as they always had, which was to say they were polite when they were together but didn’t really ever do the same thing.
 
“I’d be surprised if anyone is a perfect match,” he commented when she said she didn’t fit into Aladren perfectly. He was very sure that he wasn’t a perfect Teppenpaw, anyway – or at least not a typical one. He was far more ambitious than Sara had made his Housemates out to be. “It’s fine so far,” he said about Teppenpaw. “I’m still taking it all in.” He then listened to Amity talk about her Teppenpaw relatives, wondering if there was any way to look them – and other Teppenpaw alumni – up. That would help him get a better picture of the House than anything, he thought, though it was an honor to be in the same House as the Head Girl anyway.
 
“Not that I know of,” he said when asked about relatives. “The Miss Raines in Pecari is my older sister. One of my distant cousins was Head Boy last year, but I don’t know him very well.” Just enough to know that he didn’t want to know Raines any better, anyway. “Most of my family has been in Crotalus – my father was, and Isabel’s father and sister, too. I think one of her aunts was a Pecari, though.” He didn’t think there were any Teppenpaws in the family, though he hadn’t learned the Houses of the whole family before coming to school. He wondered now if he should have, for conversations like this; if he could bluff until Christmas, maybe he would learn them all then and not have to worry about that coming up again. "You may use my first name as well."
0 Alan That's my plan, anyway 0 Alan 0 5

Amity

October 08, 2012 3:02 AM
"I haven't really spent much time with my father's cousins' children. They're mostly older than me and don't live anywhere close." Only Valerie and Melanie Lennox were around her age, but they lived in Missouri while Amity lived in Seattle, though Ryan had become friends with the fourth year after Charles Lennox had asked Uncle Seth to watch out for his elder daughter and Uncle Seth did one of the things he did best and delegated the task to Ryan upon her being sorted into Crotalus. Now Amity's cousin seemed to see Valerie as something of a little sister figure, probably because his actual sister was so terrible. Plus, it seemed to help his self-esteem just slightly to have someone he could sort of take care of.

The Aladren added. "I have my own first cousins here though. One is only a year older than me but we're not close." That was a diplomatic way to put it. They disliked each other immensely. "My other cousin Arabella is a third year and we get along better. And I think Ryan is in Miss Raines' class." He really hadn't ever said much about Sara though, other than she was a very proper lady. Amity didn't think they knew each other that well and the Crotalus seemed a little intimidated by her, but then he often was by people. Helping Valerie had not improved Ryan's self image that much.

She nodded at his comment that nobody fit a house perfectly. "I suppose the definitions are a bit narrow and there are way more than four types of people in the world. Of course, there are House stereotypes and those affect what people think too." Amity felt rather lucky to be subject to Aladren's. People would assume she was smart and that wasn't the worst thing to be considered. She didn't really see anything wrong with having people think that she was kind and friendly either, but people also seemed to not respect Teppenpaw's much. Plus, there was such a thing as being too nice, like Aunt Lilac. When you were too nice, creepy irritating people constantly bugged you and you didn't have it in you to tell them to go away.

Pecari and Crotalus had terrible ones though. People assumed the former were these loud obnoxious Quidditch freaks and that was not Arabella. Nor was it Alan's sister or Ryan's friend Sophie, beyond that the latter did play Quidditch. Crotalus' was even worse. People always assumed that they were...like Carrie and the second year actually being in that house didn't really help it's image. Of course, that would have been true if she'd been sorted into Aladren or Pecari as well, but neither of those Houses had that awful unfair reputation. Arabella and Sophie were closer to their House's than Ryan was to that . Effie and Isabel were also perfectly nice girls.

"I have a lot of other family here." Amity went on. "People in every year group, I don't know all that many of them very well either." She didn't think any of her relatives had been Head student in about twenty years. It was a little depressing actually. She didn't really care much about the badge herself, the effort was probably not worth it, but she wasn't exactly sure how well it reflected on them either. Amity was just glad her family was indisputably powerful and prominent on this half of the country. Badges shouldn't matter and certain people needed to learn that. "I have a sister too, she's only seven though. Almost eight. Any other relatives you expect to come to school?"

11 Amity It's a good one. 233 Amity 0 5