Selina Skies

August 07, 2021 9:08 AM
“Good evening,” Selina addressed the students. The relatively simple set up behind her of tents, an as yet unlit fire, and food, belied the thought and effort that had gone into this year’s event. The bonfire should have been one of the easier events in the rotation. After all, it was ‘stick a bunch of tents on the pitch, light some wood on fire.’ Even the main issue of making sure no one got hurt should have been relatively self-managing with eleven to eighteen year olds, though they had put a barrier charm around the fire just to be on the safe side.

That element of ‘health and safety’ had not been the primary concern this time around. Again, it was eleven to eighteen year olds they were dealing with…

“We will launch our celebration and our evening activity, which will be a camp cook out, shortly. Before that, some logistics… Tents are divided based on gender, as per your dorm assignments.” She was fairly sure that wording both accurately assigned the trans and non-binary student populations to their correct tents. “As a reminder, there is no maximum occupancy on tents, but there is a minimum occupancy of three.” This year, given the number of openly same-sex relationships occurring between students, the tent-sharing policy had needed to be revisted. Or rather, the existing tent rule would be firmly reinforced, and they would have to hope that a solid portion of gooseberries put a damper on anything more than hand-holding. “Beds are single occupancy, and similar charms to the dorm room corridors are in place to enforce this.” In this case, the spell related to the number of occupants, which was strictly capped at one. This only applied to people getting into the bed between the covers, so groups could still sit on the beds to chat, paint nails or—if they realised this loophole—make out and do inappropriate things. There was no such thing as a perfect system, but it was the best they had been able to come up with. She had debated whether or not to specify the bed rule, as she thought it was more likely to get people thinking about it than deter them, but had erred on the side of not wanting anyone to get a nasty shock—after all, she could envision a perfectly innocent scenario where someone was having a bad dream and wanted the comfort of a close friend; the last thing they needed was dumping abruptly onto the floor.

The other pause for thought was how to make the bonfire ‘interesting.’ Selina wasn’t sure why having a large fire and a camp out wasn’t a change enough from the normal routine by itself, but it seemed like they had to work out how to make every iteration of the event unique. She wasn’t fully convinced that was what the founders had had in mind when they had decided to celebrate summer with a rotation of four simple events, but apparently that was the expectation. Luckily, everyone had been happy with the suggestion of a simple cook-out.

Well, all the staff had been. She wasn’t sure how some of the students would respond to the suggestion that they prepare their own food. She thought it would be rather good for all of them, though she wasn’t going to force anyone.

“As stated, for the bonfire, we will be having a camp cookout. As well as the main firepit, there are several smaller pits laid. Once you have taken a seat by them, they are charmed to respond to ‘fire please’ and will ignite themselves. There are several food types on different trays with instructions, which you are welcome to take back to your fire and cook.” These ranged from simple things like hot dogs which basically needed reheating, to more complex things like chilli—although the complexity level had still been taken down a good few notches with most of the slicing done, meaning the only real thing the students would need to do would be combine it in a pot and supervise it. The food fell into the categories of things that could be wrapped in foil and shoved in a fire, put on a stick, or combined in a single pot. “Prairie elves and teachers can help if you’re not sure what to do, and there will also be some pre-prepared supper items to compliment your meals, or for those of you who don’t want to cook. The elves are only here to help guide you, not to do it for you,” she pointed out, though given their tendency to want to serve she thought that keeping them from doing the work might be a struggle even for those students who did have good intentions and only wanted a little guidance.

“I hope you will enjoy your evening. I declare the bonfire...open.” With a wave of her wand, the main pile lit itself.
Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies Bonfire - Let's Get Cooking 26 1 5

Bonabelle Row

August 09, 2021 12:31 AM
Bonabelle was going to share a tent with Val probably. It was what they both would want and it was probably what neither of them wanted. Nothing made sense anymore and Bonabelle was feeling destructive about the whole thing. When things hadn't worked out at home (her first home, back with her dad), they gave up. They moved. They got out of debt by pretending they'd never had any, they got out of bills by moving away from wherever they owed the bills. It rarely worked - owls had a way of knowing where to deliver the mail even when alias had been used - but it helped for a little while. Long enough to figure out a new plan or a new job and make it work until they had to do it again. And that was fine! It was perfectly friggin' fine. So why was nothing fine now and why couldn't Bonabelle just . . . move on?

She was anxious about sharing a tent with Val, enough that she'd almost decided to just stay in her dorm for the night before accepting that she'd regret that sort of decision and resigning herself to a difficult time emotionally. Emotions were stupid and she hated them still. They were messy. They were painful. They were carrying her swiftly toward a night that was going to make her feel feelings just to avoid feeling other feelings later. At that particular moment, when she spotted Stanley sitting alone at a fire, they were carrying her swiftly across the grass to sit with him. When she opened her mouth to speak, it came out sharper than she meant it.

"What's wrong with you, huh?" she demanded, not having properly asked before. Well, she was done with playing games and beating around the bush. Her voice wasn't coming out nearly as strong as she wanted it to, instead landing on sharp, sad, bitter, and defeated. "You could have made Valentine happy. You're a boy! Why did you break up with her, huh? The prince charming crown sit too heavily on your fat head or something?" Then, all she felt was deflated.
22 Bonabelle Row Yo, what's wrong with you? [Stanley] 1488 0 5