Headmaster Regal

May 20, 2011 7:57 PM
It was the end of his first term as Headmaster of Sonora Academy, and he had loved every single day of it. Yes, it was a lot of work, but he liked the working atmosphere the Staff members brought. They made his job a whole lot easier. Of course, there had been some ups and downs along the way, but that was normal in life. David was happy about taking this job, his wife had been even happier, the increase in his paycheck had enabled her to do some things she wanted for a long time, like change the kitchen and stuff like that.

In his time at Sonora, his hair had grayed considerably, he didn’t mind, that was part of life. Getting older, but with age came knowledge and experience. Things he wanted to pass down to the younger generations, the main reason he had pursued a career in education. There was really nothing better than to mold the future generations of the wizarding world.

The Quidditch Pitch had been transformed, once again. Half of it was filled with wizarding tents. They would give the students from different houses the chance to sleep together. Of course, they were charmed to prevent any coed after-hours activities. Each tent had four comfortable cots and a bathroom, to be shared by the occupants. On the other side of the Pitch was a big mound of wood that would house the massive bonfire, a few yards from it a stage had been constructed for the musical entertainment of the night: the Nowhere Men. He had been told that that particular group had ties to the school. A few yards to the right, there was a long table laded with every kind of food and beverages imaginable. David was happy about everything. It was now time to start with the fun!

David stepped into the stage and addressed the congregated students, “Good evening!” his voice sounded throughout the pitch, thanks to a sonorous charm. The sun was setting, giving a rather breathtaking scene. “Welcome to the end of term bonfire,” David smiled. “Before we start with the fun, I want to announce that Daniel Nash and Charlotte Abbot will continue with their duties as Head students for the next term.” David applauded them, they had done a rather good job, and he was happy to keep them in their positions.

“Now, the main activity is to have a kind of cleansing ritual. Each of you will burn something of your past, as a way of getting rid of what burdens you.” The Headmaster patted his robe pocket, where he was keeping what he was going to burn.

Headmaster Regal stepped down from the stage and ignited the mound of wood. He stayed there watching the fire do its jobs. The fire would be controlled by magic, to prevent any kind of accident. Once the flames were dancing, he took out the picture of Scotland and threw it into the fire. He smiled, he had to let go of the past, since his future and present were in the United States. “Now, we can begin!” He took a step back and watched everyone do their thing. After the cleansing ritual, they would be able to enjoy the amenities. He could hear the group starting to play. This was an excellent way to end his first term as Headmaster.
Subthreads:
0 Headmaster Regal Bonfire! 0 Headmaster Regal 1 5

Sophie Jamison

May 21, 2011 11:18 AM
Sophie liked fire.

…Actually that sounded a lot more freaky than she was. The second year enjoyed the look of it, the way the flames danced. She liked the warmth it generated, the somehow calm feeling she experienced as the heat comforted her. She wasn’t a pyromaniac or anything; on the contrary, she understood the damage even the smallest flame could cause when it engulfed its surroundings. However, the flicker and the heat enticed her, and she always felt memories flood into her mind around a fire.

The blonde remembered days before her father was so busy. His cases had been harder to come by before he was more widely-known, it hadn’t been too much work to tend to the orphanage, et cetera. Summer nights were filled with bonfires and roasting marshmallows until they seemed inedible. Jacob Jamison always enjoyed the burnt ones. This was the summer when she was around eight, the second best summer she in her immediately tangible memory, second only to the one last year, when Ryan came over. She hadn’t had enough with her mother to consider those years in the running.

Sometimes Sophie loved her mother. Sometimes she hated her. All the time, the Pecari felt betrayed by her. The wounds from her mother’s suicide weren’t so fresh, but it seemed they had never scabbed over properly. She felt like her mother had done it because she didn’t love her enough to stay and raise her. Sure, she had been grief-stricken over Saxen, but so had Sophie, and so had Jacob. As a family, they were supposed to get through it together.

That was why the small thirteen year old chose to burn her mother’s favorite necklace.

She had to move on. That was all there was to it. Constantly terrorizing herself over her mother was going to drive her insane. This storm she weathered inside and mostly alone; she had told Ryan everything, even taken him to her brother and mother’s graves, but she didn’t like to mention them thereafter. Actually, she had somewhat mentioned her mother to a girl, Hope Brockert, in class, but the statement “I have a dead mother” had not been intended for deeper trust, just to try to show her there could be worse things.

In these tents on the Quidditch Pitch, she was sharing with Hope. She didn’t honestly know the younger girl that well, but she liked her. Plus, she was distantly related to Ryan, so that automatically made her awesome. (Though sometimes it seemed like half of the school was related to Ryan in some way or another.)

It felt kind of like a joke now. Whenever in the tent there was a slightly awkward silence or Sophie thought Hope was about to be sad, she casually stated, “So, I have a dead mother” and laughed. Laughed! It was sort of a sadistic joke or sounded just plain cruel to any outsiders, but it was sort of an inside joke.

When the time for the bonfire came, Sophie headed out of her tent, a purse on her shoulder. Towards the large stage-type-thing she went, ready to hear what the Headmaster had to say. When he got down and started the fire, her sky blue eyes lit up. She didn’t see what he threw in, but that was fine. Others seeing it wasn’t the point.

The blonde stepped up to the fire, at about the same distance as the Headmaster had, and pulled out from her bag her mother’s necklace. It was a silver chain that had never rusted, still glorious with its small hoops linking the thinner slivers together. Strung along was the pendant, a Snitch-sized turtle made entirely of sapphire, except for the eyes, which were small diamonds. It had been expensive, but now was the time for it to go.

Sophie wound her arm back, then threw the necklace into the fire. As she watched it hide underneath the flames, she again dug into her small purse and removed from it a bag of marshmallows. The Pecari pulled her wand out of her pocket, stuck a marshmallow on the tip, and held it out towards the fire for a nice roasting. To a neighboring student, she grinned, “Want one?”
12 Sophie Jamison And even when your hope is gone, move along. 34 Sophie Jamison 0 5

Nic Sawyer

May 25, 2011 11:52 AM
Nic had not known what to burn. There wasn't really anything he needed to move beyond except maybe the Quidditch final. But he didn't really have anything for that. His broom belonged to the school and he wouldn't be stupid enough to burn something that expensive even if it didn't. His Quidditch robes might also be school property (he wasn't sure if Mom and Dad had paid for those or not) but again, it wasn't something he could burn without some people (like, say, Charlie) taking it entirely wrong.

So he decided he wasn't going to burn a thing, he was going to burn a scrap of paper that had four words on it: Aladren scored four goals.

He dropped it in the fire and watched it crumple and burn. It did feel oddly cleansing. He wasn't entirely sure why, though. It had still happened. He could still remember quite clearly how much that last bludger had hurt. He'd been with Medic Rock for two hours making sure his collar bone had been fixed right.

It was, he was sure, entirely in his head that his shoulder hurt whenever it was about to rain now.

But, somehow, inexplicably, thinking back on that day now only left him feeling that he had plenty of room for improvement instead of like a horrible failure and a useless Keeper. Maybe there really was something to this ceremony. And maybe, if Charlie really needed a Keeper next year, he might even consider coming back to the team after that humiliating defeat.

But only if absolutely necessary. Please Dear God and Merlin, let there be a firstie Keeper coming to Crotalus next year.

As he moved out of the immediate proximity of the fire to let other students in for their ritual burnings, he looked around to see if he could spot Rachel, but he saw Sophie first. He allowed himself a small smile and decided Sophie was definitely cool enough to hang out with tonight. Especially since she seemed to have marshmallows.

He moved back in toward where she was at the fire. "Sure," he agreed casually, as though toasting marshmallows was no big deal. Being too excited about it would not be cool. But as he settled in beside Sophie and stuck a marshmallow on a stick of his own and held out over the fire, he was smiling.
1 Nic Sawyer Move along just to make it through 165 Nic Sawyer 0 5

Sophie

May 26, 2011 3:12 PM
At the beginning of the term, Sophie had begun to notice boys. So far, she had noticed Neal and Jose. Now she was noticing Nic. The slightly older boy was tall--exceedingly, especially compared to her trademark vertically challenged-ness--and, well, just awesome. She liked him a lot.

Therefore, she was very, very happy when it was he to whom she offered marshmallows. Yesyesyesyesyesyesyesyes. Nic accepted the marshmallow, her hand brushing his so lightly he probably didn’t even feel it. But she felt it. Instantly her blue eyes peeled away, embarrassed and over-exaggerating, like this meant something. She knew it didn’t.

“Um, so…” the blonde trailed, trying to figure out what to say. She wasn’t good at this having a crush thing, not in said crush’s presence. Sophie’s skills didn’t range into that field. Give her ingredients and instructions, she’d have a potion in two minutes flat. Hand her a broom and Quaffle and blink, she’d be at the hoops on the other side of the pitch. Stick her with a boy, for all she knew, she might as well have been told to speak Latin backwards.

The Pecari popped a marshmallow in her mouth to avoid having to make awkward conversation that she didn’t know how to begin. However, chewing and swallowing the heavenly fluff only took up a short amount of time. Glancing into the fire, her eyes caught the remains of her mother’s necklace. As she looked back (up) at Nic, she figured out what to talk about. “What did you throw into the fire?” asked the thirteen year old. “I burned my mum’s necklace.”
12 Sophie Oh, the wisdom of All American Rejects.. 34 Sophie 0 5

Nic

May 31, 2011 10:14 PM
For the first few seconds they didn't say much. Nic was okay with that. He didn't need a lot of conversation, but then Sophie said Um, so which meant she expected conversation, and that made it instantly awkward. He started trying to think of conversation starters, but they were all dumb.

Sophie found one first, though honestly it was one he had discarded as too personal. His offering wasn't anything less than obvious for the school's worst Keeper, but he thought other folks may have taken it more to hard and tried to get past something more private. Sophie preceding comment that she'd burned her mom's necklace only confirmed this assumption for him, and he felt glad he hadn't asked her. That was the kind of thing that should be volunteered not asked after, and there was no way he was going to anywhere near the question of why she decided to burn that.

Talking Quidditch was much much much safer ground. "Nothing too special. Just a piece of paper that I wrote the final score of the Quidditch final on." He grimaced slightly. "If the new batch of first years next year has even one would-be Crotalus Keeper in it, I think I'm off the team. Which I'm fine with really. I never wanted to play in the first place. Charlie just needed someone to sit in front of the goals."

Though Crotalus had not played Pecari in any of the games he'd been in, he was reasonably sure she was on her own House team. "You planning to play for Pecari again next year?"
1 Nic Just don't reject the wisdom 165 Nic 0 5