The Coach

June 26, 2020 1:18 PM
The game was today. The first game was today! The team had been practicing for a few weeks and this was a home v home game, so the coach wasn't terribly worried about pitting the students against those from other schools. In a lot of ways, this was a trial run. But the school had pulled out all the stops.

Banners and decorations with jersey numbers of the players, showing which color they were playing for today, were hung around the stadium, and some of the elves had gone as far as setting up booths for students to get such treats as cotton candy, caramel corn, hot dogs, nachos, and more thematic foods, like mozzarella broomsticks, Quaffles (the coach was pretty sure they were pigs in blankets essentially), and a wide variety of candy. The coach appreciated the effort because it was well known that the students would decide today what this was going to look like in the future, and it was up to them to decide how popular or not this would be as well.

The coach addressed the waiting players as a whole, and smiled at all of them. They were mixed today, which was just as well because they were otherwise pretty uneven. It also meant that they all had the same knowledge and experience with any secret moves, which leveled the playing field a bit. A roster hung on the wall to remind players where they were playing today anyway:

Orange team:
Keeper: Tatiana Vorontsova
Chasers: Ness McLeod, Valentine Duell, Heinrich Hexenmeister
Seeker: Jeremy Mordue
Beaters: Felipe De Matteo, Hilda Hexenmeister

Green team:
Keeper: Graham Osbrook
Chasers: Morgan Garrett, Bonny Row, Parker Fitzgerald
Seeker: Anya Delachene
Beaters: Nathaniel Mordue, Evelyn Stones

"Today's game is going to be an experiment," the coach began, lingering on each set of eyes. "And you're going to show me just how well you can do. There's a stadium out there full of your peers. Let's show them what you can do, too."

The game began and the teams were, to the coach's pleasure, well balanced. This would be a good day. The music and fanfare outside was proof enough of that. It grew and surged throughout the game until finally, a very close game ended with the green team winning. It was exhilarating to be part of and to watch and most of the action was probably lost on the crowd, who were both distracted with the atmosphere of attending a sporting event, and undoubtedly out of practice with watching the play-by-play of a back-and-forth game of Quidditch. For some of the audience, the coach knew, this was their first time ever seeing a game. Heck, that was true for some of the players probably. This was, the coach thought, going to be a very exciting season.


Highlights -
- Near the end of the game, when the Seekers were nearing the Snitch, Felipe De Matteo attempted to smack a bludger at the opposing team and found it instead colliding hard with Jeremy Mordue. Jeremy sought medical attention after the game. (Approved by Felipe and Jeremy's authors).

OOC - Hello, all! This is an experiment as much for us as it is for our players and I am excited to see how it goes. You'll notice below that there is room for folks to thread pre-game, during the game, in the stadium during the game, and post-game. The goal is to really encourage anyone and everyone to be able to participate, not just players. You'll also please notice to I have (well, chatzy has) selected a winning team. That is to give us the most variety of threads we can do without the back and forth that can go with an FnF game when that hasn't happened for a long time. That being said, if there's a moment you want to thread during the game, feel free to do so.
Just don't assume that they won or lost for their team if that's not what I/chatzy decided. I think this will be a lot of fun and I am excited to see how it goes!

Happy threading!!
Subthreads:

Pre-Game

During Game (players)

During Game (crowd)

Post-Game
22 The Coach Quidditch Game 1! Winner: Green team! 0 The Coach 1 5

Evelyn Stones

July 03, 2020 11:36 AM
Evelyn didn't want to be beater. She hadn't been so adverse before, but now the idea of hitting something at people to try to hurt them or stop them made her downright sick. The fact that it was her boyfriend and best friend on the opposing team didn't help at all. But somehow, they'd gotten through the game and it worked. They won. Which meant that Ness and Heinrich lost. Evelyn would much rather have lost herself, especially since most of what she was doing was an accident at this point. The really scary part was that an undoubtedly large part of it was due to the fact that one of the opposing team's Beaters effectively knocked out their own Seeker. There was a good chance he hadn't meant to do so, but it wasn't totally clear from where Evelyn had been. She'd been aiming to do the same thing, of course, but Felipe De Matteo had gotten there first. Jeremy didn't look absolutely wrecked or anything, but he did seek medical attention after the game, so there was that.

When the game was done, Evelyn felt exhausted and had none of the usual satisfaction from winning a game. Nathaniel had been nice and helped her strategize at the beginning of the game, but it hadn't helped her clear her foggy brain. She'd gotten a couple of good hits in and usually sent the bludger towards the moving Quaffle instead of just towards the players, and it had worked apparently, but she felt awful still.

At the first opportunity, she threw the bat aside and ad to resist the urge to curl up in on herself. She wouldn't play beater again if she could help it. She hated being a weapon. Although . . . she did enjoy playing with Nathaniel. And playing against Hilda was kind of fun since they knew each other well. And she knew that Heinrich and Ness didn't really mind her just doing her job. Which meant maybe Evelyn was just thinking too much about things that didn't need to be thought about?

As she headed off the field, she noticed Nathaniel nearby and caught up to him. "Good job," she said first, remembering that they'd won and he was probably excited about that. "Are you doing alright? Do you get used to playing against people you care about?" she asked, trying to keep her tone easy. She hadn't gotten the impression the Mordue brothers were close, but that didn't mean Nathaniel wanted to watch his brother get pegged with a bludger either. "I feel so aggressive playing Beater."
22 Evelyn Stones How did that happen? [Nathaniel] 1422 Evelyn Stones 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

July 03, 2020 11:25 PM
They had won, but it was hard to feel much satisfaction over it. It had not, after all, been an abundance of skill which had won the game for Green, or even a happy nod from Lady Fortune. Instead, it had been phenomenal incompetence on the part of one member of the opposition which had almost surely decided things, and the criticism of his skills which De Matteo could expect at the next practice would be scathing enough that he'd probably wish that Nathaniel had just hexed him.

It wasn't, he reasoned, really nepotism, or whatever the word would be for taking up for one's own people over others regardless of logic when one didn't have enough power for it to count as nepotism. Hitting your own Seeker with a Bludger was the height of incompetence for a Beater; a Beater's first priority was to take out the other team's Seeker, and his second was to protect his own Seeker. Didn't matter if that Seeker was his brother or the sundry-strung-together-bits-of-profanity who'd just stolen his girl; you did not hit a Bludger even at another Seeker if it was possible it could hit yours.

He would, he was quite confident, have wanted to make some decidedly scathing remarks no matter what the case was. He also had better sense than to take it personally if someone happened to clip Jeremy with a Bludger; keeping an eye out for that kind of thing was something Jeremy would need to practice, too, and Jeremy was, well, a Seeker. Whenever he played Quidditch, there were at least two people whose first priority was to try to put him in the medical tent. Had Evelyn done it, Nathaniel would have been concerned that Jeremy actually needed said tent, but wouldn't have held it against Evelyn. If Hilda had done it, he...actually thought he might have been concerned for her; Hilda was good, so if she did something as monumentally stupid as take out her own Seeker, something was wrong with her. De Matteo, though, was another matter altogether.

His first impulse was to go over to the medical tent, both to ensure that Jeremy was either conscious or in the hands of the actual medic, and to determine the precise temperature of the coals he was going to rake De Matteo over at first opportunity. Unless he was putting on to try to get De Matteo in trouble, the requirement for medical attention suggested broken bones at least, and Nathaniel somehow didn't see his brother thinking up an anti-De Matteo plan quite so quickly, which brought him back to broken bones at least. As the usual post-game fatigue began to set in and bring back his usual awareness of his inadequacies with it, though, he hesitated. On one hand, Jeremy had literally instructed him to ensure nothing...untoward...went on if De Matteo's incompetence got out of hand, but on the other hand, Jeremy had doubtless assumed at the time that the remark was a mere formality, or even a Joke. However, back on the first hand - even if Jeremy was sulking already, it would be an absolute rubbish person who didn't at least check that he wasn't too badly knocked about, and Nathaniel had dealt with worse than Jeremy sulking in his direction. Nodding to himself, he was about to resume walking when Evelyn caught up with him.

Distracted and annoyed with other people though he was, he couldn't quite help but smile at her inquiry. "I help my brother train sometimes, and he's a Seeker," he reminded her. "So. I just think of it as helping him by trying to hurt him, and ignore details for something like...this. Good friends should be good sports, I wouldn't worry too much about it - even if you want to give them a minute or two right now," he added, reasoning it was fair even for good friends to have a few minutes to just be disappointed before they got on with being good sports.

He had no idea what good brothers would do, as he neither had one nor was one. However, it was a moot point, because it was like he had told Jeremy in one of the more coherent parts of that mad letter he'd written two years ago. Family was rarely something one chose.

"I'm actually going to make sure his brains are still in now, though, and ask if he has a preference about which curse I use on his roommate if he's too battered to deal with it himself," he added, deliberately changing his tone so it might sound like he was joking. Hopefully. The books he had read had not been able to really clarify what Humor was for him, but it seemed, based on them and his observations, to have as much to do with tone as the actual words. He therefore mimicked tones he heard Aunt Avery and Uncle Alexander use when they made remarks which other people laughed at, though he rather suspected such laughter was sycophantish at least as often as not. "So I guess you do get used to it, but it's still not my favorite thing, anyway. I hope you don't have to get too used to it."

He wondered how things were going with her and her brother now. It was not his business, of course, but it persisted in feeling like it was, perhaps just because he had been involved with it for almost a calendar year, now: first helping Alexander try to figure out who he was, then talking him down from the brink when he'd found answers and realized why curiosity was not really a good thing, and then the conversations with Evelyn...

"How have things been with you?" he asked. "No more wandering knives, I hope?"
16 Nathaniel Mordue Believe me, I want to find out. 1412 Nathaniel Mordue 0 5

Evelyn Stones

July 04, 2020 8:08 PM
Evelyn grimaced. Nathaniel was, as far as she knew, a kind, nice person. He was a good one, too. He wouldn't actually hurt Jeremy's roommate, right? The younger boy wasn't someone Evelyn had spoken to much, but she got the feeling - and had heard, because the rumor mill at Sonora only had to turn over once or twice for news to reach everyone on campus - that he actively did not get on with Jeremy. At this rate, she almost felt worse for the one who was about to have the whole school thinking he'd done this on purpose than the one who was about to have his body magically healed up. One of them would be fine tomorrow and one may not be.

She just nodded though, appreciating his platitudes. "You're pretty calm, on the whole," she said, acknowledging that he did seem used to it. "I can't imagine how I'd be if Heinrich or Ness got hurt. Or Parker . . . Hilda . . . Morgan . . . you. I don't know you half so well as the others and I'd be all sorts of worried. I guess it's just hard for me to actively want to hurt people when I care about them the rest of the time?" She made it a question, hoping he understood. Also hoping that he didn't read too much into the fact that she was not overly concerned about Jeremy's wellbeing. Other than the fact that he was a person, he was too much like the sort of person her father would have loved for her to marry for her to really want much to do with him.

She grimaced a bit more playfully and flexed her hands, looking down at them as if to make sure they were still whole. "No," she decided. "No more wandering knives. I've settled on applesauce instead of apples mostly. Spoons are safer," she pointed out, miming the act of scooping a mouthful of the non-dangerous form of apple into her mouth and smirking. She wasn't going to answer the rest of his question because Nathaniel, she had noted, seemed to approve most of the sort of stoicism with which Heinrich might have been able to answer but which Evelyn herself had never mastered. She wasn't generally a skilled liar and the only way she could be really convincing was if she answered some other part of the question instead of just lying. Find the truth. "How 'bout yourself?" she asked, genuinely curious.
22 Evelyn Stones Be nice though, K? 1422 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

July 04, 2020 10:38 PM
Evelyn would be upset if he got hurt? Nathaniel hoped he didn’t look as surprised as he felt by that. He assumed it was just politeness, as he was, well, here. She acknowledged that he didn’t know him as well as the other people she listed, too, which he took more or less as confirmation that politeness was involved, though he was still touched, just a bit, by the effort.

“Yes. I’d have been a lot happier if I hadn’t been playing against family,” he admitted. “I try to think…I don’t really want to hurt anyone at all. I don’t know what the other Beaters are going to do, though, so I need to protect the people who are on my team. For playing offense…well, a Bludger can get the job done, as far as keeping the other team from scoring, even if it doesn’t hit anyone. Sometimes, though, you do just have to…accept that we all signed up knowing everyone’s going to take a few knocks sooner or later,” he admitted finally. There was, after all, only so much rationalization one could do. Sooner or later, the thing was what it was. It was like life that way.

He smiled, though, despite life rarely being much fun, when Evelyn said she had switched to applesauce. “Indeed,” he agreed about the safety of spoons. “It would probably take a lot of effort to cut yourself with a spoon.” He doubted it was impossible, but it would definitely take effort, either beforehand or in the act itself.

He shrugged slightly when asked about his own wellbeing. “I can’t complain,” he said. “Study, try to keep the Teppenpaws out of trouble, do this. I get a little irritated with the studying sometimes, Advanced work cuts into my photography projects more than Intermediate did, but it’s all right. I’m glad they make us prefects in fifth year, though, so we’re used to it before the Advanced work – though I imagine your Pecaris are harder to keep in line than my Teppenpaws?”
16 Nathaniel Mordue I'll try. 1412 0 5

Evelyn Stones

July 05, 2020 12:28 PM
Evelyn nodded a bit sadly, recognising the truth in what Nathaniel was saying. She thought it also rang surprisingly true of her own life, where she'd apparently come to the conclusion that it would be easiest if she took all the bludgers herself, and her team was pointing out that they were still losing if that was the case, and that they could help. It was hard to let people help. "Protect the people on my team," she repeated with a small smile. It sounded like Heinrich might not be the only paladin she knew.

"Ugh, can you imagine?" she grimaced playfully at the thought of trying to stab herself with a spoon. She laughed loudly. It was an easy, comfortable sound and it felt good to have a reason to use it again. "I'm not sure about getting used to this either," she chuckled about studying. "CATS are coming up for me and I think that I might just die. Helps that my friends are mostly Aladrens and Heinrich's done it before so he helps me a lot. What say you? You want in on the tutoring chain?" she asked, raising an eyebrow at him.

She started to nod at the fact that the Pecaris were almost definitely harder to keep in line than the Teppenpaws before deciding that what she considered "in line," as a Pecari, was probably different than what Nathaniel did, so there was a trade off. Also . . . "You got Alexander," she reminded him. It was funny though, because she got Mab. Originally, she hadn't realised the humor in that. "I got his foster sister," she added, in case Nathaniel hadn't made that connection or wasn't sure whether he was allowed to speak to that. "It's odd to think of all the little connections, isn't it? There's a theory, it's a muggle one, that everyone is connected through 6 or fewer degrees of separation. So like, I know someone who knows someone who knows someone . . . six times, to get to anyone. It's probably fewer in the wizard world because there's not as many people, though," she admitted.
22 Evelyn Stones Thank you 1422 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

July 05, 2020 8:39 PM
“I…can, but it’s absurd,” said Nathaniel when asked if he could imagine stabbing himself with a spoon, and he smiled slightly as Evelyn laughed at the idea. It was sort of nice, making people have positive reactions, dealing with them in context where no-one cried or wanted to cry. It felt normal, like something that could happen to other people. He didn’t know if his life could ever actually be normal, but it was nice to have flashes of feeling as though it could.

He was surprised again by her remark about tutoring, and wondered for a moment if she was asking if he wanted Heinrich Hexenmeister to tutor him, too, or if she meant that she wanted him to tutor her. After a moment’s reflection, he decided that he thought she meant the second one.

“I’m pretty good at Potions, if you ever need a hand there,” he said. “With the other classes, I think I’m doing well to keep up.”

This felt like a strange thing to admit, somehow. He wasn’t sure he should have. He knew that he was only of a generally mediocre intellect, but he was supposed to be a leader in society, wasn’t he? Perhaps not of his family in the broad sense – he was in theory second in line, behind Simon, if primogeniture was observed, but he could not fathom any circumstances where that worked out – but society generally. The price of the privileges that came with his birth. It was not a social role which lent itself to mediocre intellect. Since he had already said it, though, he supposed there was no real point to dwelling on it.

He couldn’t help but laugh – a low, somewhat restrained, reserved laugh, it would take rather a lot more than a bizarre coincidence to reduce him to knee-slapping, but it was a laugh - when Evelyn said that she, Alexander’s half-sister, was the prefect over his foster-sister. He thought he could have made that connection, had he thought about it, but he had never really thought about it.

“It’s a small world,” he mused. “I’m going to spend all evening trying to think of random people and see how well it works…well, I suppose it depends on how we define ‘know.’ I could say that if I’ve spoken to another prefect, I’m within one link of everyone they’ve ever spoken to…still, I think we’re more connected than most people at this point,” he concluded, another mild surprise, considering they’d only had the most passing of interactions until the end of last year. By the theory, of course, they had had the Alexander condition since the first day of the previous academic year, even if neither of them knew it, but it was still a curious coincidence.
16 Nathaniel Mordue You're welcome. 1412 0 5

Evelyn Stones

July 06, 2020 3:04 PM
Evelyn grinned, appreciating that even when he was being playful, Nathaniel was formal. 'Absurd' was an almost hilarious word choice, just because it was so . . . big. It was a fancy word for fancy things and politics. Like when old ladies say 'I found the whole thing utterly absurd' because they're talking about something that seems pretty normal to their grandkids but whatever. Except now it was 'I find the idea of stabbing myself with a spoon whilst consuming applesauce to be utterly absurd' and that was just A+ comedy gold right there. Completely by accident, too, if she had a halfway decent read on her teammate.

"Ah, darn," she laughed. "I'm alright at potions. Dating the potions assistant helps, though. Of course . . ." She paused to consider her most recent homework grades. "I'm not going to turn down extra help." She nodded to the idea of feeling like doing well was keeping up. She'd always been a so-so student since so much of classwork depended on the actual practice of magic - she could nail the theory and still not be able to perform the spell, although she was getting markedly better at that - but it had gotten harder as life had gotten harder, which was . . . well, it was utterly absurd.

She grinned again when Nathaniel laughed because she was pretty sure it was the first time she'd ever heard it. Perhaps it was an addiction she'd formed in the course of befriending Heinrich, but she took great pleasure in making reserved people come a little unreserved. She felt like a super sneaky secret spy, doing the sneakin' and making people smile. She gave up when she couldn't come up with anymore suitable S words, but the idea was lodged firmly in her head: being funny and being kind and being playful were positive ways to interact with others.

"I think the idea of the theory is having met them at least once, so it's pretty loose. But you're right, especially for magic folks, we're probably a whole lot more connected than that. Get this. So my foster family is . . . like . . . cousins or family friends with Mab and Alexander's foster mom. That makes you, what, like two connections from her, if you don't already know her? That's bananas!" Another thought crossed her mind and although she was a bit more hesitant to bring it up, it suited the topic and Nathaniel already knew more about her than she was pleased about so #yolo, let's do this thing. She was also firmly in the camp of wanting to start this thing off right and normalizing therapy was an important part of moving in the right direction. "Here's another thought. My social worker probably knows tons of people, right, but then she also just suggested a therapist to me - a Ms. Lillian Greene, which is about the fanciest name I can imagine - and I bet she knows lots of people! I've got to be connected to bunches of folks now, and I'll never know because of confidentiality." She shook her head in amazement and hummed a little of the tune to Small World.
22 Evelyn Stones Look at us being nice and stuff. 1422 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

July 08, 2020 7:20 PM
Nathaniel raised his eyebrows slightly when Evelyn mentioned that her foster family was somehow connected to the foster family Alexander and the girl called Mab lived with. “Interesting,” he said. “So…would that make me both one and two links away from Mab?” he asked. “I know Alexander, who knows Mab, and I know you, who are a link further from her? Or does it only run one way, not through people you both know?”

This was something that was going to hurt his head to think about too much. Everyone knew so many people, who knew other people, and they got connected through multiple channels…it could drive someone to madness, he thought, trying to work through it all, even for a small number of links.

He was glad this had come up in the context of people they knew and how they were connected, though, because he wasn’t sure he would have known what to say if the discussion of foster families had just been thrown at him so casually. He didn’t know exactly how to respond to such a thing, at least not with her. Even with Alexander, he had only known how to react to it as an improvement over being abandoned in a building with many other children and no family at all. He knew what it was like to have a dreadful family, and even parents who abandoned him, but he didn’t know how Evelyn could be so casual about it….

…among other things.

“Huh,” he said. “I – I suppose that’s true. Probably for the best, though, I’d expect.” Because of course he wouldn’t know. Of course not. What use would he have for a therapist, after all? He was fine. “Though really – Lillian is a fancy name?” he asked, hoping to change the subject to something else silly for the short distance left between him and checking up on his brother. “Fancier than mine, even?” he asked with a slight grin, aware that ‘Nathaniel Mordue’ was a fairly good mouth full. He was amazed that his cousins and brother had ever forgiven him for the trouble doubtless involved in learning to string all three syllables of his first name together smoothly back in the day.
16 Nathaniel Mordue Downright civilized of us. 1412 0 5

Evelyn Stones

July 08, 2020 10:12 PM
"I think the idea is to go the shortest route," Evelyn decided thoughtfully. "At least for the sake of making those six connections."

She nodded with a small frown, agreeing that a therapist was for the best. The idea was frustrating but she knew that she would suggest therapy to someone else in her shoes, so here she was. She was about to say something about that when Nathaniel made another joke. About himself! Mr. Spiffy McHighSociety was making a joke about his own name. Her nose wrinkled with humor and she laughed again. She felt a little bad for being surprised that Nathaniel had a real personality of his own. She'd known that he did, of course, because everyone did, but his was different. Behind all those layers of pureblood propriety was a real boy, ala Pinocchio. It was that way with all the good ones, she'd found. Behind layers of Heinrich's valor, layer's of Ness' ferocity, layers of Gary's plotting, layers of Parker's grin . . . there were real people out there if you only took the time to find them. She hated to think of what her own layers looked like, though.
Were people meant to push past her playfulness? Or her history?

Focusing on names was easier than focusing on layers, though, so she put that thought aside and replied: "Your name might take the win, I'll give you that. 'Nathaniel Mordue'," she said, rolling all the sounds around in her mouth. "Very fancy. But at least you have an actual name! Mine sounds like the first part of a bad sentence. 'Evelyn Stones'. What does Evelyn stone? A person? That's awful!" she laughed.
22 Evelyn Stones I think maybe we're friends. 1422 0 5

Nathaniel Mordue

July 09, 2020 10:25 AM
Nathaniel nodded slightly to the idea that the connections should be made through the shortest paths possible. “I suppose that does make it a little less confusing,” he acknowledged. “And probably helps the math work a little better, though it’s still hard to get my mind around, I suppose – is it really supposed to be anyone in the world? I don’t know how you could possibly get from me to – I don’t know – the Australian Minister of Magic, or someone like that, in less than a hundred…Probably, anyway?”

This was said almost as a question, as he was struck by uncertainty. Not knowing who or what his father had been up to in years didn’t help, and neither did his mother marrying a tradesman – through them, he supposed he could be connected to any number of unlikely people. His aunt and uncle were also sufficiently respectable socialites that they knew important people, who might know other important people…probably still more than six knows-someone-who-knows-someones from any specific major foreign figure, though, right? And that said nothing of any attempt to make it span between worlds; he knew Muggles had a staggeringly high birth rate, compared to the average wizarding community, which made it seem even more impossible that any random Muggle would be within six associations of a wizard, never mind a specific powerful one….

He couldn’t help but laugh again – maybe a little out of relief that they seemed to have escaped the topic of Dr. Greene – when Evelyn pointed out that her last name could be used as a verb. “Oh – I’m sorry – but that is, er, yes, I’d hope you didn’t go around stoning people,” he said. “And that nobody went around doing that, really, rather barbaric. I think Mordue was originally a Welsh name, which is one reason why I never plan to learn Welsh,” he added, leaving out that he had never had much of a skill for learning languages anyway. “I’m not sure I want to know if it means anything in particular.”
16 Nathaniel Mordue Who'd have thought? 1412 0 5

Evelyn Stones

July 10, 2020 9:09 PM
"I think that's the idea," Evelyn agreed. "Think about it though. You know Professor Skies. I bet she's met someone who knows the Australian Minister for Magic. If they have kids or something, she's probably met some of the professors at that school. Or someone on staff probably has." It was a weird thought and a bit hard to wrap her head around, especially when you started thinking about it on a timeline. CJ didn't have that many connections, but Headmaster Brockert - for all that he seemed to wish he didn't know anybody at all - certainly knew lots of people. Because Evelyn had met him, she was connected to all those people too now.

On the topic of names, Evelyn found herself laughing again. "I promise," she giggled. "If I'm not cut out for beater, I have to think that stoning people won't be on my to-do list," she added, eyes glinting. She bit her lip to keep from laughing way too hard when Nathaniel said that stoning people was barbaric. He was right, of course, but somehow this whole conversation was just so hilariously funny. Perhaps it was the adrenaline leaving her limbs and the exhaustion that was taking over instead, but she thought that if she let herself laugh as hard as she wanted to laugh, she would probably end up with tears streaming down her face and a stitch in her side. She covered her mouth when a squeak of laughter escaped. "I'm sorry," she said, trying to keep it together. "It's just so ridiculous to think about." With that, she let it go and burst into laughter. "Dragons were the first thing that came to mind and I'm just imagining a Welsh Green sitting in a library, ready to show you the books on name translation," she giggled. "I'm so sorry, it's really not that funny."
22 Evelyn Stones Not you, I suspect. 1422 0 5