Mortimer Brockert

May 08, 2020 10:29 PM
Another year was upon them. This year Mortimer's eldest grandson, Jasper would be joining the school's ranks. Once everyone seemed to be in attendance, Mortimer placed a Sonorus charm on himself and began to speak. "Welcome to Sonora for the new first years and welcome back for all older students. First years, you should have receieved a blank badge at the end of Orientation." At least they hadn't gotten it when they first got there, some were liable to lose it. "You will dunk the badge in the Sorting Potion and it will turn the color representing your house which are blue for Aladren, yellow for Teppenpaw, red for Crotalus, and brown for Pecari. Afterwards, you may join your house table." He watched his grandson with interest.

After the first years had been settled, Mortimer continued."Would Dorian Montoir and Peyton O'Malley please come up and get your Head Student badges." He continued. "In addition I'd like to call up Nessa McLeod, Katerina Vorontsov, Allegra Brockert and Evelyn Stones to receive their prefect badges. Congratulations." Mortimer was incredibly proud of Allegra but he was disappointed that Topaz had not won as well. He was not disappointed in the Aladren, of course, but in the staff. How could Miss McLeod have won? The girl was an annoying self-righteous, judgemental, hypocrite and his granddaughter was a model student. At least Ruby hadn't lost to someone who was terrible and completely undeserving in every way, even though the Teppenpaw was the better option. Mortimer supposed Miss O'Malley was the next best choice, as Miss Delachene had a questionable grip on reality and Miss Vorontsov was a Pecari.

He had misgivings about Miss Stones too. Everything he knew about her suggested poor judgement and mental instability, but then no Pecari was ever really had the responsibility for the position. And Mr. Montoir winning was bound to give him headaches from complaining members of society. Like it was his fault or something when the students picked and had since before he'd ever been Headmaster.

But, at least Allegra got it. And her friend Katerina. The latter of which was puzzling really, since what little he knew of Miss Fitzgerald was that she was a slightly more pleasant version of Miss McLeod and the latter had beaten Topaz who was perfect for the job. He certainly thought that the younger Miss Vorontsov was the better option but considering what terrible taste most people obviously had, he was surprised that they'd apparently agreed with him.

Still, as Allegra accepted her badge from him, he gave her look of pure pride. Mortimer felt this would be good for the Crotalus, she might not have her cousin's intellect, but she was a very kind and gentle soul, which meant she'd be there to listen to anyone's problems.

Once the new prefects and Head Students had returned to their tables, Mortimer continued, "Our Midsummer event this year will be a fair to raise money for several charities, chosen by students." Not his first choice either. He would have preferred something that students would find, well, fun. Fun made happy students, happy students made happy parents and happy parents made a happy Mortimer, because he didn't have to deal with them. However, he had not had any better ideas and instead, had simply suggested adding a "fun" component. "Those who wish to run a booth must have your charity approved by a member of staff" This was important given that some people had a very distinct problem with the concept of appropriate "and hold a planning meeting within the first five weeks of the term."

"Now we will sing the school song." Well, they would anyway. Mortimer did not sing . Lyric sheets were passed around and the song began.


Every day we strive
Learning to survive
Life’s hardships and to solve its mystery.
Learning to defend
Our honour and our friends,
Flying high to meet our destiny
We will stand and face those who want to harm us.
We won’t let the world transfigure, jinx or charm us
I won’t fight alone, as long as you are with me.
Sonora be my home, my tutor and my spirit
Vasita quoque floeat; Even the desert blooms.


That done, he dug into his steak and bourbon.

OOC-Views expressed in this post belong solely to Mortimer and do not reflect those of the author or any other character, except perhaps Topaz.
Subthreads:

Aladren

Teppenpaw

Crotalus

Pecari

Staff
11 Mortimer Brockert Opening Feast 6 1 5

Grayson Wright

May 11, 2020 7:28 PM
He was, Gray thought, becoming increasingly difficult to knock off-stride - a quality he had never observed in himself in his life, and which he had never expected to acquire. It was, however, becoming increasingly clear that Sonora was building up his resilience. A couple of years before, he had been moderately terrified by Anya Delachene's antics. Upon seeing more children among the current first years (one revealed to be Anya's brother) engage in more moderate versions of the same behavior, he had merely assured them that they would have plenty of time to explore the grounds and mansion later, if they would kindly come down now to continue the school tour.

Whether this was good or bad, he had no idea. He had always noticed that he dealt with actual explosions in a rather calm, almost detached way, but situations which looked likely to explode were another thing altogether. Neither Anya nor her followers had actually died, happily, but it felt vaguely wrong to have been quite so stoic about the possibility this time around....

Ah, well. They were wizards. Magic was a dangerous business, as everyone said, as everyone who knew any knew. There were very few physical knocks they could take, short of jumping off the belltower, that he thought the medic would find impossible to patch up, and they would no doubt get far more interesting injuries here and there before they left school - and that was only accidents in their actual classes, or when doing legitimate spell practice. If they annoyed anyone enough to provoke light dueling outside of class, or played with potions in the dormitories, then even more atypical conditions might wander into the hospital wing. It was the nature of the world.

He helped get the first years into a reasonably line-shaped line and through the badge-dunkings, and once that was done, headed for his place at the staff table as unobtrusively as possible, Vanishing the stupid hat before he sat down with a nod to his neighbor. Then he fixed his features into an expression of bland attentiveness for the Headmaster’s speech.

It was, he thought as the school song rang out at the end, going to be a challenging year. For one thing, they were inviting the students to nail their political colors to the masts, if they wished, and while some would do unoffensive things like the school’s general scholarship fund or some society for ensuring the preservation of historic sites or the like, others would enthusiastically cause controversy – prominent among them probably the newest Aladren prefect, he thought, with a glance toward Ness. Injuries from dueling in the corridors might increase this year, assuming Ness was still alive in the morning – he had never known what to think about that time Mary had told him she thought Topaz Brockert might have tried to poison someone. Topaz generally seemed to behave herself, and having morbid interests was nothing to judge someone on as a whole, but Gray just vaguely felt as though there were something…off…about the girl. Whether it was just discomfort with her hobbies or some small body language thing he couldn’t even pinpoint, he had no idea, but….

Well, he did rather wish he could have avoided having any relative of any other staff member in his House, but no such luck. It was the way of the world. At least, he thought, he was unlikely to find himself responsible for any of the small children running around these days for any length of time. He had no intrinsic objection to children, and in fact made a point of greeting Nathan and Isis’ little girl in her own right whenever he happened to cross paths with her, but he did not really want to be entirely responsible for one for more than a few minutes. It was quite enough being responsible for the Aladrens more or less all the time and everyone else when they were in his classroom – which reminded him, he also needed to check in with Ellie after classes tomorrow….

Yes, it seemed like it was most likely going to be an extra-challenging year. He was glad that the rough draft of the Charlotte Ayleward sequel had gone surprisingly quickly for him, and also that he had several years of old lesson plans neatly filed away for occasions when he couldn’t pull anything new out of thin air in time.

For now, though, there was a Feast. It was time to celebrate the beginning of the year, and to try not to think too much about what could go wrong. He lifted his goblet of juice slightly to a colleague with a smile. “Here’s to the new year,” he said.
16 Grayson Wright This ought to be one for the books. 113 0 5

Killian Row

May 12, 2020 2:02 PM
So far, Killian had blurred the lines of colleague-friend with Marsh and the lines of what-kind-of-counselor-is-a-guidance-counselor with Ellie. But really . . . that was sort of great. He got to hang out with a cool guy with a great twinsie beard thing going on and he got to (hopefully) help a student out even before the term had really begun. It was also exhausting and Killian was famished and not particularly interested in what the Headmaster had to say and just really wanted some food, dang it. He did memorize the new students' Houses though, as that would be helpful to know. Odds were that they wouldn't come talk to him for a bit, but Mara Morales - Aladren, second year, entrepreneur - had proven that it wasn't a sure fire thing to bet on.

There was another reason that he watched the sortings though and that was to find the girl with a bow in her hair who was his niece even though that was weird. She got Aladren though. He knew that he would be proud - or whatever this warm feeling in his chest somewhere between his heart and terror was - no matter what House she'd gotten, and it would have quickly been followed up with "well of course, because she's so ____" but it did feel nice to see her get Aladren. Brainy one, that. She certainly didn't get that from her father.

When the meal began and Killian took a moment to shovel literally whatever was closest onto his plate - except mushrooms because that was disgusting - and then grinned at Gray when the man turned to him. He lifted his own glass, realized he hadn't put anything in it and promptly added some of whatever-the-heck-is-in-that-jug, and lifted his glass again. "Cheers," he said before taking a drink and returning his glass to the table. "You're Aladren Head of House right?" he confirmed, knowing this already because of course he did but it was polite to confirm such things probably. "My niece just got sorted there," he smiled. "Bonny. Or Bonabelle?" He didn't actually know what she wanted to go by here. "So that's a thing."
22 Killian Row Will you write it? 1450 0 5

Grayson Wright

May 12, 2020 9:29 PM
Gray was mildly confused by Killian's question, but nodded just the same. "I am, yes," he said. "For...eh, it's been a few years anyway. Since before Lawrence came," he added with some confidence - Rory Taransay had been Head of Aladren before Gray had been Head of Aladren, and Rory Taransay had also been the Care of Magical Creatures teacher. Gray was not very good at keeping track of timelines in real life (one of the many ways in which fiction was preferable to real life, it was much easier to sort out what happened when on the page), but he was confident of both of those facts. "Why?" he asked in return.

The reply instantly made the question make sense. He nodded, privately betting, inside his head, that the girl was more likely to call herself Bonny. Bonabelle was a name like Grayson, he thought, bit clumsy, easier to shorten than to work with, though the sounds were completely different - the trouble with his name was how it had too many consonants, and slid toward an unappealing z sound in the middle in most enunciations. Bonabelle was all soft sounds, there was nothing particularly uneuphonious about it, it just sort of seemed like it would take too much of a whole breath to say at once.

He did not share these musing with her uncle. "Excellent," he said instead. "She's in a good place - I'd say the best of the Houses, but I'm double-biased," he admitted. "I was an - er, that is to say, I was a student in Aladren, twenty..." no, he was forty now, somehow, and had left Sonora well before he was twenty... "five or so years ago," he concluded. Twenty years ago he had been twenty, so five years before that, he had been fifteen, if he was doing math even vaguely right, and therefore, he had been in Aladren at that time. "So it's home. Did you expect her to be in Aladren?" he asked curiously. He thought of Aladrens as people who were usually easy to pick out for what they were. There were a few exceptions, of course, but even those tended to become more Aladren the longer they were in - the basic materials were there, even if they sometimes expressed themselves differently. Gray himself had not been the most typical Aladren, but he could look at the House description and see himself just the same - and, better yet, his House, at least, had not seemed to mind. There was little of the infighting and passive-aggressiveness one could get with groups of Crotali, or the roughness some Pecaris could have when dealing with others, and he thought it edged Teppenpaw out for the Best House title simply by virtue of having love of learning and problem-solving skills as part of their charter. Most likely, Bonabelle had the makings of some form of greatness, and while Gray felt that he had never really lived up to his potential, he still thought Aladren was a better place for tapping into one's potential than the other Houses were, as a rule.
16 Grayson Wright Maybe, we'll see if it lends itself to plot. 113 0 5

Killian Row

May 13, 2020 2:05 PM
Killian grinned, amused to see his colleague and friend so modest and proud all at the same time. It was precious and Killian made a mental note that Gray would look rockin' in blue so he had some ideas for Christmas. Also, the man wasn't strictly wrong. Certainly there were a variety of students in every House, and sorting didn't necessarily prove perfectly accurate in terms of defining characteristics, but so much prolonged exposure to other kids who valued braininess and a "brainy" reputation would push even the least academically-oriented student to give it another go.

"I don't actually know her very well," Killian admitted, not feeling so bad admitting this to Gray as he thought he might. "I only met her in the spring, and then we spent some time at my parents' house this summer. She's a curious one, that's for sure." He sort of wished he had a better answer, but there wasn't much to be done about that. "Do you have any family here?" he asked, remembering the other student who'd just been sorted into Aladren, last name Wright. It wasn't a terribly uncommon name but the wizarding world was small and two Wrights in the same vague vicinity with magical ancestry was a bit less common than just worldwide 'Wright' populations.
22 Killian Row Oh, there will be bunnies. 1450 0 5

Grayson Wright

May 13, 2020 2:50 PM
"Ahh," said Gray, upon hearing some of the backstory of Bonabelle Row and her uncle. There was almost certainly a story there (Gray was an only child, but had been exposed to people with larger families enough to know that one usually knew one's uncle reasonably well or not at all), but out of respect, he thought he would not ask about it unless details were offered. "Well, curiosity is a good fit with most of us. She'll do well, as long as she doesn't make the kind of friends who egg each other on into dangerous experiments too much, and I don't think we have many of those in the House these days."

Or at least, he added mentally, if there were, they were good enough at it to not draw attention to themselves. This, however, was not the kind of statement which seemed particularly likely to draw approval from her uncle, so he kept that thought to himself. As long as they only moderately endangered themselves, didn't endanger anyone else, and technically stayed on the right side of the law when testing their limits in some of the...dodgier...aspects of magical law, he thought it was best to let them get on with it. Persecuting them for what was more or less harmless would only drive them to be more creative about avoiding detection, which could make it worse if things did get out of hand.

"Not that I know of," he said about having family of his own here, with a curious glance toward the Aladren table. "I'm an only child, so definitely not my nephew. The family has been on this side of the Pond for a long time, though, so it's not impossible we're distant cousins of some kind. I imagine your family's a little easier to keep track of - while you're here, anyway. Do you have a large family in general?" he asked, always a bit curious about other people.
16 Grayson Wright ...why does that sound ominous? 113 0 5

Killian Row

May 13, 2020 3:11 PM
Killian couldn't exactly promise that Bonny wouldn't try some outlandish experiments, in part because he just didn't know her that well and in part because she did seem adventurous. He chocked most of that up to the fact that her experience was generally limited though and she just wanted to know more stuff. He couldn't imagine she was that different from her new Housemates in that regard. Probably.

For a moment, Killian wondered what House he would have been in if he'd gone to Sonora. He'd been a Hufflepuff but that certainly didn't carry a one-to-one correlation to any of the Houses here. Teppenpaw didn't strike him as quite the same fit although it was probably the closest. Somehow Pecari seemed closer, although Gryffindor certainly hadn't. There was no way to know unless the potion down there worked for adults too. He doubted that would go over well although the image of himself vaulting the staff table to drunk a badge in the potion was pretty entertaining and, he thought, brought him that much closer teeth Pecari side of things.

"Pretty easy," he agreed about keeping track of his family in the States, grinning. Sometimes people got weird, not knowing what to say from someone who was clearly a foreigner. Killian thought it was wonderfully amusing that Gray, who clearly considered himself at least mildly weird, was the most normal about such things. He was a good dude. "None of us actually live here. Bonny and her dad, my brother, live in London, and I guess I sort of live in Ireland? I'm a bit all over most of the time. My immediate family is fairly small, just my parents and my brother and me. And Bonny now, I guess. But I haven't seen my brother in a long time before now, so it doesn't really feel like a big family most of the time. I've got a few aunts and uncles, but that's about it."
22 Killian Row No reason. 1450 0 5

Grayson Wright

May 13, 2020 6:47 PM
A few pieces of the puzzle were, so to speak, assembled for him as Killian talked about his family structure. Gray reminded himself that it was not nice to regard people's screwed up life stories as narratives, even if he did so in the context of appreciating the way those people were constructing said narratives he was not supposed to regard as narratives.

"I have plenty of aunts and uncles, but not as many cousins as you'd expect," he volunteered. Then, to atone for the sin of regarding Killian's family life briefly as a narrative, he added, "that's all on my father's side of the family. I could have anything on my mother's - she's a Squib, you see. Her parents apparently threw her out of the house with a fistful of galleons and a 'good luck' the day she turned seventeen. That's literally everything I know about them."

That was one of those things he understood - of course it would be horribly painful, and his mother would not like to think about it, much less talk about it - but still slightly regretted it. There had to be stories there, ones that, written just so, could actually do things - stories that could move people, rather than just entertaining them. Nevertheless, he had long since resolved never to ask her about it. There was such a thing as ignoring the greater good for the sake of the individual, after all, particularly when the greater good was purely a possibility and not a certainty. One did not just hurt one's mother on a maybe.

"Families, huh? Can't live with 'em, can't curse 'em."
16 Grayson Wright ...I am still suspicious. 113 0 5

Killian Row

May 14, 2020 12:21 AM
Killian's eyes widened with the appropriate level of shock, and he muttered a low "geez" as Gray explained his major's experience as a Squib. Killian really really hated people like Gray's grandparents and he sort of wanted to hex them all so their socks would always be wet forever and they would be miserable. He wanted to do more than that, but he had long since learned that violent thoughts only led to violent words and violent actions, so he tried to avoid those ones.

"But you can curse at them," he pointed out, tapping the side of his nose before continuing a bit more seriously (but not that much more seriously because yeeesh was this turning out to be a heck of a start to a new school year). "Seems your mom did a good job with you. How'd you get into teaching Charms?" He remembered his conversation with Gray and Marsh at the Ball and the revelation that Gray was a writer and radio show personality, but somehow Charms professor made more sense of the man who sat beside him. Which, since that was apparently a later choice, meant it made the least sense. Because people were upside down and everything else was sideways and Killian really liked picking that all apart.
22 Killian Row 0:D 1450 0 5

Grayson Wright

May 14, 2020 12:40 PM
"Quite," said Gray at the response to his mother's early life. "Though she always says it could have, you know, could have been worse - they did look after her till she was old enough to look after herself."

It was a distinctly pessimistic view, and when Gray had been younger, he had wondered why she was like that. Now, well, he still didn't exactly agree with her thoughts on the sorts of people who tried to advocate for better legal standings and such for Squibs (she thought it was foolishness which would drive even more wizards to simply drown any Squib children they might have which somehow survived whatever attempts their families made to force magic out of them, as treating said children the way her parents had could result in being publicly embarrassed if said children made a public fuss and refused to change their names), but he could see where she had come by them. Nasty business, people could be.

He was confused by how his mother led to his job choices, but rolled along with it. "I had to get credentials in something, and I picked Charms after I left here...more or less just because it wasn't Transfiguration," he said with an apologetic half-shrug. "My closest cousin works in experimental Transfiguration, so I knew...I'd have survived advanced coursework there or in potions, but it would have been difficult, so I, uh, gambled, kind of, that charms wouldn't be as bad. I wasn't too worried about it after the first two years anyway, because I'd started getting paid sometimes for, er, the other thing, what I used to do - really just finished the program to please my mother. She'd have been a Crotalus, if she could have come to school, always wanted to be prepared. Which was smart," he admitted. "As eventually, I got on the wrong side of office politics, contracts didn't get renewed, and now - here I am," he concluded. "What's your story?" he asked in return.
16 Grayson Wright Your use of cipher is not decreasing my suspicions. 113 0 5

Killian Row

May 14, 2020 5:18 PM
Killian rather enjoyed finding the threads that ran consistently through people's lives. So far, much as Gray seemed to think otherwise, family was a big one for him. Killian had suspected that perhaps his mother's lack of magic had encouraged him to study it more or to prove himself, but it was a bit funny that the son of a squib had become a professor of Charms to avoid the Transfiguration studies his cousin had been doing and then only completed it to please his mom after all. Family, it seemed, was a shaping factor as much for its encouragement as discouragement. Killian understood how that went.

He chuckled at the idea of sorting folks who hadn't come to Sonora, as that's precisely what he'd been thinking about as well. "I don't think my mother would have been in Crotalus," he said, thinking of the way she was basically never prepared for anything but loved to take care of others. Of course, it was exactly that tendency which had made everything that Lorcan had done with his life such a fiasco for the family. Perhaps family wasn't a shaping factor only in Gray's life.

"I sort of got into this by accident," he admitted, not exactly sure what else it would be to become a half-qualified magic academy staff member. He certainly didn't have the credentials of his faculty colleagues. "I was sort of interested in a little bit of everything in school, but nothing enough to really pursuit it except Muggle Studies. I spent some time abroad in Muggle cities but obviously couldn't stay there forever." He thought about explaining a bit about his brother, but since he'd established that Bonny was his niece and that he only had one sibling, that seemed like it wasn't exactly his story to tell, even if Gray wouldn't be one to misuse that knowledge. "I knew some close friends and family members who were not on the straight and narrow, shall we say, and I got mixed up in trying to help them all through it. Thought that maybe that would have been easier if someone had been there to do it a bit sooner on, so I ended up doing exactly that. Or almost exactly."

Gray was easy to talk to, which was nice because there weren't that many people who were easy to talk to. That wasn't to say Killian didn't have an easy time talking, because he nearly always did, but he that wasn't to say that he always managed to talk to someone effectively. Sometimes, he felt sure he was talking at people. Other times, he thought that maybe he was talking into people, which was a bit frightening. It was a bit like he was pouring punch for folks, which wasn't particularly hard to do, except only some of them had empty cups. The others had full cups, or just a straw, or just wanted him to pour it directly into their mouths. Blech. Turned out to be a rather nasty comparison. In any case, folks like Gray and Marsh were a bit more like they had empty cups and a punch bowl of their own, happy to share with Killian and happy to take what he had to offer. Which was punch. But only metaphorically. Because usually it was bread. Or just rugged good looks, but he suspected that was less effective in this case. Shame really.

Anyway.

"I'm glad we made it here at the same time," Killian said with a smile.
22 Killian Row I'm completely innocent! 1450 Killian Row 0 5