Selina Skies

April 17, 2020 9:37 PM
The ball was always… an exciting one. Honestly, Selina had her doubts about whether upping the pressure on a bunch of hormonal teenagers was, strictly speaking, a ‘good idea.’ The weeks leading up to it certainly seemed like a storm of fuss and worry, with everyone distracted in class. She had also had a couple of students throw more than usual at her to deal with in the last couple of weeks. Mostly in a good way though. For given values of the term, where life circumstances couldn’t be said to be good but… Certainly some interesting things were set to happen this evening.

And then, when she stepped into the hall, she remembered why they did it. Besides ‘tradition.’ She looked at the set up - the flower arch at one end, with a hired photographer ready and waiting. The little tables around the edge, with their tablecloths and fancy seat covers. The buffet dinner at the back, and all of it surrounding the dance floor. And it was… special. It might have been a while since she had been sixteen - or any of the ages of the attendees - but she remembered that feeling and, at that age, how rare it had been. A lifetime of going to weddings could make you forget just how much fun it was when all this was laid out, and it was possibly the first time in your life you’d done something like it, and definitely the first it had been all about you. The students might have gone to weddings or fancy parties as guests. Perhaps a few of them had even had big celebrations for their seventeenths or other memorable occasions. But this felt different.

The main student body entered the room first, whilst the prefects, head students and their dates waited. She had checked that everyone was alright there, and that no one wanted exempting from the process.

“Welcome to the Midsummer Ball,” she announced, “We will be announcing the house cup winners part way through the night. Outside of that, you will be free to dance, to get photographs and to just generally enjoy yourselves. But first, let’s welcome your prefects and head students, along with their dates, to get the evening started,” she stated, offering a brief round of applause as the selected students took to the floor for the opening dance.

OOC - you may reply in any order and set your post at any point during the first half of the evening (i.e. you do not have to wait to see the prefects’ posts). You can god-mod stock figures like the photographer. Most of all, have fun!
Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies The Ball 26 1 5

Nathaniel Mordue

April 18, 2020 6:18 PM
It had been so long since Nathaniel had danced that for one fleeting moment, he had wondered if he would remember how. Last summer, after all, his attempts at reentering Society had just forced him into more and more contact with the medical system after he had nearly fainted in the middle of a party at which there hadn't even been dancing; his aunt and uncle had not seemed keen to drag him out to even more formal occasions after that, and he had not been keen to go, so their interests, for once, had neatly dovetailed. Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery had doubtless been unamused by the inevitable whispers (Nathaniel had not heard them himself, but he could imagine the tone of it all - that he had inherited poor health from his mother's family, that it was such a shame for Avery and Alexander, getting shut of one semi-invalid just to acquire another, and so on), but speculative whispers were generally better than ones about things that actually happened, so...it had been a long time.

Muscle memory, however, had not abandoned him altogether, and so he thought he had managed a tolerable first dance. He had acquired a partner almost at the last minute, with both parties fully aware of the convenience factor of the arrangement, though Nathaniel had put forth the effort to try to be charming and complimentary toward the Head Girl just the same. They were, after all, on friendly terms from work on the paper over the years, aside from both being from families where it was customary to be as polite and procedural as possible with anyone who was not actually an intimate or an enemy. There was no need to acknowledge something just because it was true. Just look at his dress robes. He rather disliked them - Aunt Avery's taste was as plain to him as if the dark blue robes had had her handwriting all over them; his mother, he was irrationally sure, would have selected different dress robes, had she been allowed - but he did not need to say so, and suspected, in fact, that he was not allowed to say so.

He was grateful to stop dancing, but that was another true thing that didn't need to be acknowledged. He looked at Ivy, however, before getting his hopes too far up about things. He was, after all, her servant for the night, or at least until such time as she chose to dismiss him. "I hope I didn't step on your feet too much," he said with a self-deprecating smile. "It's been quite a while since I've danced, so thank you for putting up with me." That, he thought even as he said it, was going too far, abdicating too much of what little dignity he had. He quickly added, "Would you like to dance more, or get refreshments?"
16 Nathaniel Mordue At your service, Miss Brockert. (Ivy) 1412 0 5

Ivy Brockert

April 20, 2020 3:34 PM
Ivy had spent the bulk of the year worried. Yes, she'd gottten Head Girl and felt extremely good about it. At least her classmates liked her even though the staff didn't. However, this was also the year of applying to college. Now, the seventh year knew that not all pureblood girls-or even boys-went to college but she wanted to. Even though she was a Teppenpaw, she had a massive Aladren streak and loved to learn too.

And as Ivy was an excellent student, she had chosen the highest institutes of magical learning to apply to, Dofmore being her top choice. After much fretting, Ivy had been accepted. Unfortunately, she was going there alone. Peyton and Vlad, obviously, would still be at Sonora and even after that, she doubted they'd try for Dormore. Peyton, admittedly, was a bit insecure and probably wouldn't consider top tier colleges. Plus, Connor was going to Pumine and Peyton probably would want to be with him.

Not only that, but it was a ball year, and as Head Girl, part of her duties included the opening dance. Earlier in the year, Ivy and Peyton had discussed what a terrible unfair tradition it was and that it should be done away with. Usually there was not a sufficient number of guys per girl and that was without taking into account the rules of pureblood society. Of course, Ivy would be fine with dancing with an "improper" guy for one dance if it came down to that or being humiliated.

Fortunately, Nathaniel Mordue had come to her rescue. They knew each other from the paper but Ivy had rather expected him to ask someone closer to his age, such as Caitlin Pierce. She smiled at him. "It's all right. You did perfectly fine. " Ivy considered his question. "I think I'd like some punch."
11 Ivy Brockert Why thank you, Mr. Mordue 394 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

April 21, 2020 3:06 PM
Nathaniel generally disliked his diagnoses and all the implications that went with them, but there were times when even he had to admit that his brain was probably not behaving properly. Thinking that a reassurance he had done 'perfectly fine' - after he had been self-deprecating about his own skills or lack thereof, even - meant he had probably actually done terribly felt like one of those things he should probably tell Dr. Greene about, though he knew he would not. He tried not to volunteer any information outside of what she asked about or which he admitted when she goaded him into losing his temper, and he could not see why his tendency toward paranoia - an old friend - was something she would be able to annoy him into talking about.

He smiled at Ivy again as she requested punch rather than another turn around the floor. "Of course," he said. "I'll go get us both a cup."

It was a relief to retreat to the refreshments table, where he was semi-anonymous in the throng. He hated having people look at him in particular; he had never been fond of it, always worrying that any attention directed toward him meant the person was curious about a member of the family which had not been interesting enough to hold his father's attention, but now that his mother had also fallen from social grace, he found the experience horrific, when it didn't make him angry instead. Tonight...he had known he was one of several prefects, that all the eyes weren't even on him no matter how much it felt like they were, so it had not been as bad as it could have been, but it had still been nerve-wracking, and he was glad to have a moment to recover his composure.

Procuring punch, he waded back through the throng to find Ivy again, careful not to spill either drink. Finding her, he proffered her cup with a slight bow.

"A toast," he said, lifting his own cup slightly. "To your last full day at Sonora. Cheers. Do you have plans for the outside world?"
16 Nathaniel Mordue You're quite welcome, Miss Brockert. 1412 0 5

Ivy Brockert

April 22, 2020 4:54 PM
Ivy stood waiting for Nathaniel to come back with the punch. It wasn't as if she didn't want to dance more at all, but she was sort of thirsty. When he arrived, she took her cup and said "Thank you." to him.

The younger Teppenpaw raised his glass to her and Ivy smiled. "Thank you, again, Mr. Mordue. Cheers." In all honesty, the seventh year couldn't believe this was her last night here. It felt like only yesterday that she had left for her first year at Sonora. Now she was going off to college and her little sister Lavender would be coming to school here. Ivy hoped it was just amazing for the younger girl. Better even than it had been for the Teppenpaw.

Not that it had been bad exactly. Ivy was Head Girl, she'd done well in her studies but there were certainly parts she would have wanted to be different. The part where she hadn't gotten prefect, for starters. She also wished she'd had more friends but it couldn't have been helped the way her class was set up. Still, perhaps Ivy could have put more effort into being friends with Eden or Cleo.

She hoped that Lavender had it better. That her sister would make the super close female friend that she wanted. Lavender had basically grown up with a bunch of boys, primarily Gabriel and their cousin Ryan's twin sons Wally and Stanley and Lavender was not at all a tomboy.

Ivy also worried that her mom would be super upset about Lavender going off to school. She hoped her mom would be okay.

"I'm going off to Dofmore." Ivy told Nathaniel, certain he had heard of the elite magical college. "I plan to go into journalism, at least until I get married and have children." Her own mother had done similar. Originally, the seventh year had had no intention of working, the way most pureblood girls didn't but she had really enjoyed working on the school paper. As it was though, Ivy had yet to meet someone she truly wanted to marry so she might as well go to college and plan to work in journalism. Of course, her father had made his misgivings clear. The fact that the Teppenpaw had plans for a career wasn't an issue but he seemed to think that she was ill-suited for the one she'd chosen. His exact words were that Ivy was too ethical to be a journalist. She knew it was supposed to be a compliment, being ethical was generally a good thing but it sure didn't seem like Dad thought much of journalists in general.

Of course, it could all end up a moot point, as Ivy was probably going to at the very least find a husband before the end of college, though babies would likely wait awhile longer.
11 Ivy Brockert Cheers 394 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

April 23, 2020 12:38 PM
"Really? Congratulations," said Nathaniel upon hearing that Ivy had gotten into school. He was a bit surprised, really - he had not had the impression that many of the Brockert girls did such things. Of course, as their family was rather more expansive than his own, he supposed there would be significant variation between sets. Ivy, for instance, was neither a gemstone nor a vowel; he had no idea where this put her in relation to those parties, though he knew he ought to. History and Genealogy - in what seemed a cruel irony, given how very fractured his family had become - had never been one of the areas he had excelled in before school.

"Of course," he said politely when she said she would study journalism until she got married and had children. He was not sure what the purpose of doing anything at all if one was just going to give it up was, especially since she was unlikely to remain single for long (he thought she might have been one of those Uncle Alexander and Aunt Avery had been talking about possibly shoving Simon in the vague direction of at parties, though Nathaniel had been too quickly distracted by the subject changing to marrying off Sylvia to recall for sure, as he had been obliged to rapidly stop his accidental eavesdropping then, when it had occurred to him upon hearing Sylvia discussed like a parcel of goods that the tasks of partially avenging his mother and removing Sylvia from the marriage market, albeit by putting her in mourning for people she was naive enough to still seem to hold in some regard, could be very conveniently combined...).

Of course, perhaps Ivy merely enjoyed journalism and wanted to pass the time doing something she enjoyed. Nathaniel had been asked why he took photographs before - there were, after all, many social inferiors of his who could do that job for him, as witness the wretch near the flower arch - and his answer had boiled down to that - that he enjoyed passing the time that way. Or had. He did tend to forget about the possibility of someone just enjoying something these days; he had done that only rarely for a very long time now, even since the worst of his illness had begun to subside.

"In the meantime, however, I'm sure you'll do an excellent job," he said with another smile. "Any idea which papers you might want to work for?" He expected the reply to involve some society rag (a genre he had had a particular dislike for since Kir McLeod, of all people, had told him about the formal 'loss' of his mother), but perhaps she would surprise him, and it was a way to keep the conversation going and focused on her.
16 Nathaniel Mordue To your health. 1412 0 5

Ivy Brockert

April 24, 2020 3:14 PM
"Thank you." Ivy replied. Getting into Dofmore was no small feat and the Teppenpaw should be proud of her accomplishment. She had worked incredibly hard to get in. She had gotten pretty much near perfect grades and put a lot of effort into the paper. Plus, she was Head Girl, which didn't hurt.

However, Ivy was also not naive enough not to realize that being a Brockert was probably a part of why she'd gotten in, no matter how much she might want to believe it was completely on her own merits. Schools wanted donations from people like her family and also, didn't want to be blacklisted. Ivy doubted that they could ruin Dofmore as an institution-though if anyone could, it would be her family-but they could certainly ruin the lives of people in the admissions department who denied her.

Fortunately for both herself and said hypothetical admissions officer, that was a moot point.

"Thank you." Ivy said again. She had said that an awful lot in the last few minutes, but Nathaniel was complimenting her so what else was she going to say? Not saying thank you when you were complimented was rude and certainly, the seventh year couldn't be rude, especially not to someone who was another pureblood of a certain status and one who had done her a tremendous favor by dancing with her. Nathaniel could have just as easily decided to dance with Caitlin Pierce or picked a non-prefect like her distant cousins Topaz and Allegra. And then Ivy would have been out of luck.

Which brought her back to what she and Peyton had talked about earlier in the year, about the whole prefects and Head Students doing the opening dance thing being sort of...unfair. Yes, prefects and Head Students were entrusted with duties that others weren't, that was part of the job but this really shouldn't be one of them. Usually it was hard for everyone to have a date because most of the time there were more girls than boys. Her cousin Gabriel's class only had three boys. And sometimes, like with the fifth years and with Serena's and Chaslyn's classes, it was the other way around. And yes, there were boys like Dorian Montoir who wanted to dance with other boys but not everyone was comfortable dancing with those of the same gender. Or was interested in doing so in the first place.

"Honestly? Not really. I mean, I'd like to write for a fairly decently sized paper and do real news." Her father had said that because she was "too ethical" she was going to be writing puff pieces. "Not like, society gossip. I've never truly approved of gossip in general."
11 Ivy Brockert And yours 394 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

April 26, 2020 8:58 AM
When Ivy remarked that she wanted to do 'real news' rather than society gossip, Nathaniel's expression changed very slightly, and his next smile was fractionally warmer and more natural than the polite variety he had been mustering up over and over and over again all evening. It was a subtle change, perhaps not even noticeable, but present.

"Nor I," he said.

Then, of course, his old friend tapped on his shoulder, so to speak. Reminded him that he was being an idiot. Of course anyone reasonably polite would pretend not to be terribly interested in gossip in front of someone whose entire life had, more or less, been ruined by it. It would have been passive-aggressive at best to do otherwise, and Ivy had no real reason to be passive-aggressive toward him. He had just done her a favor (admittedly, a rather self-serving one - but the Head Girl sitting out the dance would have made rather more of an impression than one of the Teppenpaw prefects doing so, especially when one of the other Teppenpaw prefects was doing such a marvellous job of drawing negative attention to himself), after all, and they were...broadly from the same part of the country, anyway (he could never remember which Brockerts lived where, and suspected they just referred to themselves as 'western' because the majority of them couldn't remember where the others were either). He was functionally nobody now, but the little sideshow he'd put on on the wagon platform last year meant that it was generally correct to pretend that this wasn't the case. Plus, he rather suspected that Sylvia would make any girl who pointed out his...social deficits...to him wish she'd never been born, by the time Sylvia was done with her....

He could never decide if he found a level of comfort in that, or if it was just another humiliation - that he needed to be looked after by a girl. He tried not to think about it much. Besides, it wasn't just 'a girl,' it was Sylvia. That did make a difference, he told himself.

"I suppose they are related sometimes, though," he mused. "If gossip changes the disposal of a fortune, or causes someone to resign an office. I'm not sure there's any real avoiding it, though I approve of everyone trying their best."
16 Nathaniel Mordue Thank you, it could do with improvement. 1412 0 5

Ivy Brockert

April 27, 2020 6:51 PM
Ivy could understand why Nathaniel might not be a fan of gossip. There had been rumors about his family that the older Teppenpaw had politely ignored. The fact that people got hurt was exactly why she didn't like gossip. Even if gossip turned out to be true , she still felt it was wrong.

Personally, the seventh year was quite lucky. The last time the Brockerts had anything resembling a big scandal was when Aunt Pearl and Uncle Jeffrey got divorced before Ivy was even born. Then Uncle Jeffrey married her mom's sister, Aunt Jamie, which made Jeffrey still her uncle. Of course, the very short period where he wouldn't have been was before she was born.

Anyway, the Brockerts tended to well, keep the paparazzi away with bribery and threats and near impeccable behavior. And the last scandal they'd had....well nobody blamed Uncle Jeffrey. Dad was the biggest proponent of Aunt Pearl being a terrible person but the rest of Ivy's aunts and uncles concurred.

And Ryan...Aunt Pearl's son...just plain did not like to think about her. Ivy felt so bad for him. Of course, Amity had it worse. Ryan didn't have to see his mother-he had a restraining order that he kept renewing- but Aunt Jillian was still around. It made holidays a bit tense, especially when she'd say things meant to hurt Amity and Amity's husband Phillip replied to her with open hostility. Ivy was glad she had parents who were loving and kind and did not push her too hard.

Of course, she pushed herself hard instead. Ivy had done her best to be a near perfect student and impress her teachers-though apparently she had failed at the latter since she wasn't prefect. On the other hand, at least her classmates liked her so that was something. Of course, the Teppenpaw could thank her brother for that. Hopefully, he too would get the honor along with Peyton. They would make wonderful Head Students.

She was really going to miss her brother and cousin next year. Ivy was going to be at Dofmore all by herself and would probably remain as such, Peyton would likely follow Connor to Pumine or go to culinary school if she went to college and well, schools like Dofmore wouldn't be a place Vlad would fit in. The Teppenpaw was kind of scared of the lonliness she was going to feel. Her heart ached just thinking about it.

Ivy nodded. "That's true. And it's like...I want to expose the bad people but I don't want to ruin people either. But if they're doing something bad...I mean, do they deserve it?"She sighed. "Maybe I'll report on things like magical development. Like of new charms or potions or something."

11 Ivy Brockert I am sorry to hear that. 394 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

April 29, 2020 12:16 PM
Nathaniel frowned slightly, momentarily engaged by the idea she was presenting instead of merely reacting to one of his least favorite topics. Did bad people deserve to be ruined?

"I suppose it depends on exactly what they did, and maybe why," he said slowly. "And what the consequences of exposing them would be." Because there was always a price to pay for everything. Nathaniel knew this as well as he knew his own name. There was no way to punish the wicked without harming others who didn't deserve it, without setting off potentially catastrophic chains of events. That was why it was best to handle everything quietly, among themselves, at home, without paying too much attention to the niceties which mostly existed just to keep the Muggleborns in check anyway, and which allowed so much extra trouble to happen...and now he was back to his own sorry excuse for a life.

"If exposing someone for something will hurt more people than it helps, then I suppose you could ask the question," he concluded, deciding against actually mentioning the families who would suffer as a result of someone's misdeeds getting a public airing. It was true no matter what, after all - the Newells could have told her as much as that - but unless she was utterly oblivious to the world around her, which he didn't think she was, it would inevitably make her think about his family and the things his parents had done.

He smiled again, though, when she said she might just stick to reporting on magical developments. "That's definitely safer," he said. "And generally less ethically complicated, I imagine. Most of the time." He would not say all of the time, because anything could go wrong, and it was his firm belief that anything which lasted long enough eventually would go wrong. A good strategy might hide the fact it had gone wrong from the world, but even saving face wouldn't actually erase the fact that something had gone wrong. It was part of the inevitable slide they all took toward Death, he supposed. Everything started to decay even while you were still alive, at one pace or another.
16 Nathaniel Mordue I appreciate that. 1412 0 5