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

Evelyn Stones

May 08, 2020 11:45 PM
On the whole, Evelyn shouldn't have been surprised to be prefect. She knew as well as the next person that Malikhi just hadn't been there for it over the past few years, and even if Evelyn wasn't most people's first choice, she was more involved if nothing else. Really, she wasn't surprised. She knew from the previous year and Heinrich's prefect assignment that this would happen for her class this year. Still, she tried to avoid eye contact with Malikhi as she made her way up for her badge. Her shiny new prefect badge that her parents hadn't thought she'd ever be good enough to get. She did try to find Heinrich in the crowd, and sent him a beaming grin, but the best part was that Ness was there. Ness was a prefect too! Since Topaz was terrible, that made a lot of sense. But now they would have prefect duty together and they could use the prefect lounge, and it would be perfect. Would she have duty with Heinrich? Or Nathaniel! He'd been nice. And Katerina was great, of course. She didn't know Allegra well but she thought that she was probably nice, too. Also, none of the prefects were boys, which was exciting. They each had very distinct ideas of what their own identity meant for them, and that was really cool.

These thoughts were fleeting however, because when she returned to the Pecari table, she was reminded that Aelia friggin' Astley was a Pecari now. Julius' sister! She'd heard about Aelia, although she and Julius didn't talk a lot about family, but she wouldn't have expected any Astley to be a Pecari. This was wonderful and a bit hilarious.

Evelyn was feeling good. She'd had a mostly good summer - a mostly great summer really - and she was sixteen now and those were both exciting things. There were bad things though too, including a really crappy letter from her mom. She'd gotten it just before her birthday and it was nice to know that she was alive and well, but any lingering feelings of sympathy for her mother were quickly replaced with anger and near hatred for a woman who had utterly betrayed her own daughter to the hands of horror. What kind of mother was that? Evelyn could only hope Michaela would have it better than she did. It was a bit odd really, because she had the same feelings about CJ. All she could hope for for her young siblings was that they had a better go of it than she had. Evelyn had found happiness but she certainly hadn't started there.

Geez. She was feeling reflective tonight! The Opening Feast always made her feel a bit that way, because there was always something new about it. It was a reminder of where she'd been before and where she was now. It made her think about how she'd gotten there because what else could she think about? Her life had turned around in a lot of ways since her first year, and she was beyond excited to see where it went next.

Right now, it was going to go to scrambled eggs and waffles. Breakfast for dinner seemed like the right sort of celebration for a night like this and Evelyn was starving. She had, as she did every year since her first, worn thematic makeup. Her lipstick was chocolate brown and her eyeshadow featured some color from each House. Where blush had been applied to her cheeks, gold dust had been added to emphasize that, as happy as she was about Sonora, she was happy about Pecari. That was new, too. To think that if she'd been in Aladren where she'd wanted to be, she and Ness couldn't have both been prefects!

When the song finished, Evelyn turned to the meal with the rest of her classmates, and dug into the breakfast she was so excited about. That's when she looked up and really saw who she was sitting across from for the first time.

"Hi," she grinned. "What are you thinking for dinner?"
22 Evelyn Stones Well this is an interesting turn of events. 1422 Evelyn Stones 0 5

Tatiana Vorontsova

May 09, 2020 11:19 AM
The trick, Tatiana had long since realized, was to simply nod and smile to Mama's face, then do as she would behind Mama's back. This trick had failed her very few times in her minority, and she had not yet seen fit to test whether being more open could work better since she had attained her majority. Most of the time, this only applied to wearing the jewelry she wanted, but this year, it was also about matters far more serious.

That was not something that would come up tonight, she supposed. It was too busy, everyone getting back to school, settling in. In the morning, however, she would have to make her position clear, and then there might be trouble. Possibly, if Katya did not heed Tatiana's hissed warnings about demonstrating the benefits of having a year's worth of access to the Restricted Section under her belt if Katya carried any more tales, she would even have to deal with Mama over it. Tonight, though, she could concentrate on more normal things, and so before coming down to the Feast, she had pointedly ignored the things Mama had suggested she wear, instead decking herself out in the closest approximation she could to Pecari's colors for this, her last Opening Feast.

Gold was easy to do. She had a whole set of golden bracelets and a necklace and a pair of double-drop earrings all of hammered golden beads in the old Eastern Empire style, which she had promptly donned, her wrists in particular heavy even by her standards with bracelets - besides the ones which matched that necklace, she had also her everyday chain bracelets, and on one wrist also an extra enameled bangle, just in case Dorian should for some reason scan her wrists. Brown, however, was a hard color to bring in - she didn't even have anything enamel in brown, because why would she? It was not a very pretty color most of the time, at least in jewelry....

Smoky quartz was the closest she could get, which was where Mama would have disapproved - she would not think it nice enough to bother with at all, much less to wear to a formal event. It was what she had to work with, though, so she had pinned three large brooches of smoky quartz set in golden sunbursts around the neckline of her robes. Then, though, she had felt there needed to be something more between the necklace and the brooches, so on had gone a slightly longer necklace of collet-set opals, rounds alternating with opals. Good enough, she thought, even if she was called up as Head Girl.

She did not expect to be Head Girl. She had made a point of letting everyone know that of course she could be, but had demurred that it didn't sound like very much fun, too, to make things easier for Vladya. Still, though, she held her breath for a moment when the announcement was made, only to let it go in order to make a point of clapping for Dorya and calling "urra!", her rings glittering in the candlelight as she did and did so with a smile.

She let the rest of Brockert's remarks go un-listened to (she would find out what she needed to know later, when she wasn't in such a crowd, at the end of the day) and instead turned her attention to socializing and eating. She smiled at Evelyn Stones as the Feast began.

"American food," she said in response to the question. She had noticed that the kitchens sometimes tried to supply something like Russian food, bless them, but it was her last first night at Sonora. It seemed somehow fitting to act more American than usual, just as it had seemed fitting to be more Pecari than usual in her dress choices. "Urra to you also," she said, pointing to Evelyn's badge. She raised her glass to Evelyn. "Na tvoi zdorovny'," she said. "Or you say - to you? To your good?"

OOC: Since they exist, jewelry pictures: gold necklace, opal necklace.
16 Tatiana Vorontsova Really? 1396 Tatiana Vorontsova 0 5

Evelyn Stones

May 09, 2020 10:08 PM
Tatiana was one of the first people who had been nice to Evelyn. She'd met Ness and Malikhi first, but Tatiana was a sweet older girl who had helped her feel a bit more okay, and suggested she talk to Katrina because they were the same year. She'd been a third year then and it was sort of amazing to see how far she'd come since then, even if from afar. Evelyn didn't especially a lot of attention to Tatiana, but she was hard to miss, and it was lovely to think that Evelyn was changing as dramatically as her Housemate. She was pretty sure she legitimately was, too.

Evelyn grinned when Tatiana raised a glass to her, and she mirrored her movement. She wasn't actually sure you were supposed to say but 'to you' sounded good enough. "And to you," she agreed. "Congratulations."

American food was such a funny thing to Evelyn because she'd so often heard that there was no such thing. She thought that was bananas because the state of Texas practically had their very own cuisine, and even things passed on from other cultures were distinct in the United States sometimes. "Are the Russian dishes good?" Evelyn asked, not having tried any that she could remember. If she had, she hadn't known that that's what it was. She was bold, sure, but when it came to food, there was no time to waste. Eccentricity only got you so far if you ended up eating gross food, and mid-school year wasn't exactly when Evelyn was feeling the most adventurous. She was pretty sure she was supposed to like fish 'n' chips a lot more than she did though, what with Mo's being basically home on the Oregon coast, but she just didn't get into it.
22 Evelyn Stones Maybe an interesting swerve of events. 1422 0 5

Tatiana Vorontsova

May 10, 2020 8:15 PM
Congratulations - that was a good English word. Tatiana knew what it meant, or at least would have said she did a few moments before. She wasn't sure why Evelyn would say it to her, though. She had done nothing so far, other than applaud some people and make a point of specifically congratulating Evelyn for being a prefect...perhaps Evelyn was trying to teach her the word she should have used in an English toast?

"Congratulations," she repeated. "I know this word. It is also the word for right now?" she asked, just to check.

In theory, she had no real reason to continue trying to learn the subtleties of English. In theory, after this school year, the knowledge would not be very useful to her again - even when she met other English-speakers, they, too, would most likely not regard it as a primary language. She knew this, all too well. Perhaps it was just habitual to ask, though - and anyway, a year was a long time. She would need to do the best she could to keep up with everyone else for the rest of it, just like always. Plus, well, wouldn't it be a good party trick to know the correct way to toast someone in English when she did happen upon other English-speakers as an adult?

She tilted her head a little when she asked if Russian dishes were good. "I think so," she said. "But at my house, we always eat them, yes?" She smiled, blue-green eyes crinkling with amusement at a memory. "You should see my friends, when I show them how make tea," she added. "But some of their food also good. And sometimes I find interesting food here. What food you like most?" she asked, finding this a perfectly reasonable topic of conversation. Food was essential to all, from highest to lowest, from lowest to highest, and it really was interesting, seeing how many kinds of it there were in the world.
16 Tatiana Vorontsova I can see how it could change your direction a little. 1396 0 5

Evelyn Stones

May 13, 2020 3:56 PM
Evelyn nodded. "Yes," she agreed. "You're in your seventh year now! That's very exciting." She supposed 'congratulations' might have been a bit preemptive, as Tatiana might be really ticked off about this fact, but oh well. Evelyn, for her part, was very much looking forward to being an adult and being away from the constraints of her father's house. If nothing else had come from this summer, a reinstated hatred of the man had.

She smiled a bit at Tatiana's comment about Russian food at home, not sure whether her question hadn't been clear or whether Tatiana hadn't understood it. It was a good answer either way, she figured. "Are the Russian dishes at Sonora good though?" she clarified. "Like do they taste at all like what they do at home?"

It was always a bit funny talking to girls like Tatiana because it was these sorts of people that made Evelyn release beyond all doubt that all her conversations with Ness about sexuality and such really were loaded, little as she might have known at the time. Sure, she liked a boy. But with girls as pretty as Tatiana in the world and people as amazing as Ness in the world, it was almost harder to imagine anybody not being open to dating anyone else. She supposed she might not have thought Heinrich was pretty with so much jewelry, so she wasn't quite free of some of her more gendered ideas about such things, but still. In any case, Tatiana had lovely eyes and when they were all filled up with amusement, Evelyn felt good for taking the conversation somewhere the older girl found funny.

"I've never had much tea," Evelyn admitted, ready for the shock that was undoubtedly coming her way. "I love eggs. And brownies, but that's not a dinner thing usually." She gestured at her plate and the eggs there. "They can be cooked so many different ways and they're almost always delicious. Plus they're in cake and stuff." She grinned.
22 Evelyn Stones I think I'm supposed to be an adult at some point. 1422 0 5

Tatiana Vorontsova

May 13, 2020 5:50 PM
Tatiana nodded when her educational status was brought up. "Yes," she said, unsure why they were here now when they had been talking about words, but willing to go along with it. "I have seventen years," she added, since her birthday had been in July. As soon as she had said that, she remembered the English word for the concept - seventeen - but she did not correct herself. It sounded enough like the literal translation from Russian she had made that Evelyn would probably just assume that it was Tatiana's accent distorting the right word a little. "So, all six years here, now year seven. And you have four years, now year five."

She listened closely as Evelyn clarified her question about Russian food, feeling silly - it really was sort of obvious that most people would like the food of their own cultures, wasn't it? Why would someone ask her if she liked Russian food in general? Perhaps they could reasonably ask if she liked American food better, but if she had not had some appreciation for Russian food, she would have never lived long enough to attend Sonora.

"It is not bad," she said. "It is nice, when we have some here. They follow the book good. The paskha last year, it was good! But American elf still does not make the best kulich," she added sadly, reflecting on the attempt from last year, when she had stayed here for the western Easter break, Pascha having occurred later in the spring this year. She had still eaten it enthusiastically, of course, because she had sensed it had been made more or less specially because she was there, and because so-so kulich was better than none at all, but it had not been quite right, not like the kulich they had at home for Pascha. "One time there was okroshka, was good, and they have...I think you say dumpling? These are not always what I know, but they so-so like."

She looked blank, more than anything, at the idea of not having tea - how did anyone survive without tea? - but was distracted by briefly thinking that Evelyn was talking about cooking brownies into things, using brownie as an ingredient rather than an end goal. The hand gesture drew her attention to eggs on Evelyn's plate, though, and she figured out where her comprehension had gone wrong.

"This is so," she said with a nod when she understood what Evelyn was getting at. "At home we also use much eggs - put things in egg, put egg in things...when it is Maslenitsa, oh! so many eggs, to make blini. When I am small, they take...egg out of...egg-outside, keep the outside in whole, and I put paints on them with my sisters, give to Mama and Papa and other family," she recalled happily, hoping she was more or less comprehensible. "We do this...springtime. Like your Easter. So many eggs for blini and kulich, so we play. Do you do this also?"
16 Tatiana Vorontsova Honestly, it's overrated as a pastime. 1396 0 5