Headmistress Marnett

June 09, 2006 11:00 PM
Headmistress Marnett knew she should be calm and collected on the first day of the term. The staff and especially the students would expect it, after all, and she never was one to fret or appear particularly worried. But it had been two years since she last stood in this place, as the head of Sonora about to welcome a new set of first years. And, much against her logical mind and generally down-to-earth disposition, the headmistress was feeling quite paranoid as to how her school would fare over the course of this term.

This past year, or at least the half in which Lucinda was present to witness, had been pleasantly peaceful. Everything went on without a hitch and Sonora once again seemed to gain well-deserved respect from the community. It was nice, as well as a much needed rest. The year before, however. That was an entirely different story. Utter disaster didn't even begin to describe it. The school, staff, and possibly a few traumatized students were left in to suffer the consequences as the weather system, keeping Sonora in livable conditions throughout the year, seemed intent on destroying everything. The entire, horrible debacle finally ended anti-climatically when a prairie elf vigorously cleaning the school was discovered as the source of all the problems. And then there was the year before...pleasantly peaceful once again. The headmistress couldn't remember if the year before that was at all unbearable, but the chance of this term being “pleasantly peaceful” was beginning to seem rather unlikely.

As it was, nothing yet had gone awry. The students had arrived by way of the usual stuffy, uncomfortable covered wagons. They were escorted into the Cascade Hall as Tavarius Mims the painting of Sonora’s points keeper looked on, commanding them, like any old, stodgy professor would, to stand straight and quiet down. Most important to this evening, the first years were once again each given a chalice of clear, bubbly potion at their table and then, as one large group, told to drink. Upon drinking the potion, each student would turn the prominent color of their house: a bright blue for Aladren, deep red for Crotalus, a sunshine shade of yellow for Teppenpaw, and of course a mud variety of brown for Pecari. It was as the traditional sorting ceremony decreed, and as the founders, amused as they were with rattling the new additions, would have wanted.

And now, with this important part of the night out of the way and the first years fading back to their original skin tone, it was time to enjoy the best part of any feast…the food. Of course, a speech was required of her first. She never did like to prolong a student’s hunger more than necessary, so of course, it would be short.

Headmistress Marnett stood, appearing even more fragile and worn than the previous year, and cleared her throat in an attempt to gather everyone’s attention. When it quieted down, she began her speech.

“Welcome to Sonora Academy. First years: seeing all these new, pleasant, colorful faces has always been one of my favorite parts of our opening feast. I am very glad to see that you have arrived in one piece and I am sure you will find that the rest of the year is much more enjoyable than a ride on one of our covered wagons.” She paused for a moment and drew her eyes over the student population. “I suppose all our returning students would like to hear is that it is time to eat, correct? Well, I will not delay any longer.” Lucinda smiled and the large feast appeared across the hall in an instant. The school year had officially begun.
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Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Marnett The Opening Feast – Year 4 1 Headmistress Marnett 1 5


Mia Kerova

June 11, 2006 2:29 AM
For the fresh beginning of a new year, Mia didn’t feel so hot. That wasn’t the first time either. She walked into Cascade hall combing her fingers through her brown waves, trying to look peppier than she felt. She had been sick on and off all summer and towards the very end of last year. She got colds which made her feel dizzy and run a fever, but it always passed within a few days. When Antonio came by, which was much more often now that he and Lyn were truthful about their children, he’d leave her a potion for the colds.

Mia was a little thinner than when she left last summer, though she was thin to begin with. Her summer menu mainly consisted of chicken soup and plain toast for when she got sick. When she wasn’t sick she ate what any other person ate, just less of it unless her mother was around. According to Lyn, Mia was nearing the point of “too thin for her liking.” Lyn had become a whole different kind of motherly. Mia just wasn’t a big eater. Her mother made her eat at least seconds during any meal so she wasn’t as thin as she might’ve been. She doubted many would notice. She still looked healthy. Mia was also a little taller. She had grown an inch over the summer. She saw that as a plus, being one of the shorter fourth years.

Fourth year. That made Mia laugh to herself. She couldn’t believe she had really been at Sonora Academy for three years and was starting her fourth out of seven. She had felt the same way last year, but it still amused her. She had come a long way from when she started as that ignorant little first year. She definitely looked different. She didn’t have her glasses anymore, she was taller, her hair was longer, and according to her friends and family, she was prettier. Mia didn’t see much change unless she looked at a picture. Seeing herself in a mirror everyday made the changes blend together. While on one of her hang out walks with her friends over the summer, they stopped by a group of boys they knew from school. When they left, Megan swore one of them had been eyeing Mia the entire conversation. Mia just rolled her eyes and lightly punched her best friend on the arm. For some reason she just couldn’t imagine it. She didn’t go the extra mile and wear a lot of make up like other girls in Jersey. The most she tended to wear was lip gloss like she was wearing now because it had the added benefit of preventing chapped lips. She didn’t need eyeliner or anything making her eyes pop because they stood out on their own.

Mia sat down at the Pecari table, ready to welcome the first years whether she was sick or not. She was in too good a mood to let a little cold bother her too much. Mia knew for a fact that she’d be getting a step brother and step father soon enough. Lyn and Antonio didn’t say anything, but Mia knew. She was excited for that whenever it would happen. Her mother finally had that look in her eye that hadn’t been there in so long. The look was there ever since she told Antonio about Mia being a witch and him telling her about Brayan being a wizard. Mia wished the look didn’t have to come from her mother and Antonio nearly being hit by a crazy driver, but she was still glad it was there.

Mia smiled and applauded the new first years, especially the new Pecaris, but her usually bright hazel eyes were more tired than normal. She toyed with her ever present charm bracelet while Headmistress Marnett spoke. She didn’t look so well either, but she had been really sick as far as Mia could tell. She had been gone for months. When the food appeared she took her usual choice of chicken and rice and such and ate her meal in comfortable silence with a content look, listening to the multitude of conversations around her. As much as she wanted to ignore her fatigue, it wouldn’t let her, but she didn’t have to show it. She’d talk to whoever came her way and do her best not to be a downer. Why start the new term off on the wrong foot? She could do with a friendly face anyway. \n\n
0 Mia Kerova Four feasts and it's still not boring... 0 Mia Kerova 0 5


Stephen Baxter

June 11, 2006 6:48 AM
There was an added bounce in Stephen's step this year. Perhaps it was that he was actually able to walk properly again and was making up for lost time. Alan had taken Stephen and three of his friends off for a few days to a friend's property a bit further east to learn some neat tricks on their motorbikes, and on the fourth day, Stephen had had a nasty accident with a jump. He still wasn't entirely sure in his head about what had gone wrong, just a memory of getting some great air, and then a lot of pain a short while later when his bike landed and he was thrown off. The bike had landed on him, and what with the leg broken nastily in two places, and the various other bumps, bruises and the greenstick fracture in his wrist, that had spelled the end of the trip for Stephen.

He had spent much of the rest of the holiday in his room, after being patched and plastered up in hospital. He had a little bell which he only bothered to ring when he was bored, and in a particularly mischieveious mood, had nearly eaten his parents out of house and home (Dad had said something about a growth spurt being imminent) and used Alan's feelings of guilt shamelessly to get help with his project. As it was, he had a pretty good idea of all that was needed to be done now. He had it all planned out and so when they'd finally been able to get magical assistance (not until the end of the holidays, even though his mother had been in contact with the magical authorities a little earlier than that, because of the whole thing with secrecy) and had even managed to get an owl out of the whole bargin, his mother reasoning that it was needed for those times when he did need to make contact, and not wait for them to contact him. Or them.

But that was all behind him now. He'd managed quite a bit of healing on his own, and then the Medi-wizards had visited before he went off to school and fixed up the rest, pronouncing him 'incorrigible' as well as healed. And now, here he was, back at school, and all the pent up energy that had struggled to find a way out during the year was pouring forth.

He had a quick glance around, not really worried if he didn't spot anyone he knew, as he'd find someone who he'd know soon enough if he didn't and saw Princess already settling down. He slipped over and snagged the seat next to her, but didn't say anything at first as the sorting was happening and there were confused firsties to laugh at (or better still, with) and then Marnett was making her speech. But when all that was done and the food was being eagerly partaken of, he took the time to look at his friend and aside for the instant assessment that she was looking pretty damn good, noted that there was something that was off.

She was smiling, yes. And she was eating. Of course there was the point where she hadn't noticed who was sitting next to her, but that wasn't quite it. Or maybe it was part of it.

He gave her a gentle nudge with his elbow, reaching out with his other arm to get something a little more appetising that the rice onto his plate.

"Hey Princess," he said lightly, questioningly. Her eyes didn't look at bright as he remembered or was that the lack of glasses? It was nice to be able to see her eyes without the glass inbetween. And there was a certain... slowness to her movements. Or so he thought. Maybe he was wrong. "You doing alright?"\n\n
39 Stephen Baxter Of course it isn't, I'm here! ;) 49 Stephen Baxter 0 5


Mia

June 11, 2006 11:19 AM
Mia was in a mix of eating and pushing the food around on her plate. She felt a nudge to her side and turned to see who it was. It was Stephen who started with his and the Cravens’ name for her that just never seemed to get old to them. It bounced off of her by then as if he was actually addressing her by her real name. She had to stop herself from looking around to see if the Cravens were stalking about. Those three could’ve been glued together for all anyone knew. Mia actually hadn’t had much trouble with Ash and Sorrel lately. Maybe they finally got over whatever their issues were with her. Whatever it was between her and them, she was pretty positive it wasn’t her fault. Something happened in a vague memory in their first year, but Mia wasn't going to start thinking of that now.

Stephen wasn’t acting like his normal jumpy self. When Mia thought of Stephen she connected him with hyperactivity. A lot like Jill. If those two ever met, Mia was sure they’d hit it off pretty well. He genuinely asked her if she was alright and did it very calmly. Did she really look sick? No, it was nothing, just another cold. Everyone got them one time or another and they didn’t help with appearances at all anyway. She just grinned, waving her hand to brush it off. The charms on her bracelet chimed against each other.

“I’m fine. I was a little sick just as the summer was ending so I’m still getting over it, but I’m okay. Do I really look that bad?” she finished jokingly.

“And what about you? You had a good a summer?” she looked back to her plate, pushing a piece of hair behind her ear and picking at what was left of her food. \n\n
0 Mia That's just a fact of life 0 Mia 0 5


The Craven Twins

June 11, 2006 7:36 PM
Sorrel was having one of the crises of confidence that seemed all too frequent at the moment. Much as she hated make-up, she couldn't help but like how she looked with eyeliner on. The way she did it made her look scary, which was a good thing. The point of make up was, supposedly, to make girls look prettier, so - if she was wearing it to look scary - then she was taking the piss of people who wore it, so it was ok. Those were her defences, and she was sticking to them. However, that didn't mean she wanted to face the jibes that people were undoubtedly going to throw at her. When they got off the wagon, she hung her head, even though her hair was no longer long enough to swing forward and hide her face (not that she'd ever worn it loose when it had been). The unconfident posture looked odd on her (although the gesture she threw at Mims' portrait for telling her to stop slouching was right in character).

"Come on, there's Stephen," Ash tried, tugging Sorrel's arm gently. She dared look up a bit.

"He's with Princess!" she hissed. "She can't see me like this."

"She's your room mate, Sorrie. She's gonna notice sooner or later."

Sorrel made a slight huffy noise. If Princess noticed in their room, it mattered less. If Stephen made fun of Sorrel in front of Princess, she would never live it down. She slouched miserably after Ash. She almost wished she'd left the heavy black eyeliner off this morning, but - although she would never admit it - she found she couldn't do without it now. It made her look more intimidating, and it made her... striking, was the word she had decided on. She wasn't ever going to be pretty, or beautiful. She kept telling herself she didn't want to be anyway, but certain of Mariella's comments had made her hate herself when she looked in the mirror, which meant she must care at least a little what other people thought of her appearance. Even if she didn't want to be pretty, she didn't want to hate her own reflection, or feel actively ugly. The eyeliner was the only thing that made her able to bear how she looked.

"Dude!" Ash greeted Stephen.

"It's a statement, a statement against people like you, and if you laugh or say anything, I'll break your nose and then we'll see whose ug-... laughing," Sorrel barked at Mia, before she (or Stephen) could pass comment. "Got that?" she asked, running a hand through her now short and choppy hair, glad that she'd let her pride be wounded enough to admit to her mother that she wanted it neatened up. \n\n
0 The Craven Twins Speak of the devils 0 The Craven Twins 0 5


Stephen

June 12, 2006 1:32 PM
There was only one answer for that. Stephen relaxed and grinned. "Nah, Princess. You don't look that bad. In fact, given the opportunity I might even go so far as to say you you look 'not bad'. What happened to the gla—"

"Dude."

And of course then there was barely enough time to look up and start gaping at the sight that had come along with his room mate. That sounded like Sorrel, her voice at any rate. She'd never really seemed to have needed to defend herself like that before, not that he'd noticed anyhow. And, as for looks. Stephen's eyes took in her hair, that stuff around her eyes and then shifted his gaze to Ash. An eyebrow raised slightly over his eyes that were slightly wider than usual.

There'd been those letters and of course he'd wondered, but... it'd been less than two months! How could she have ... what had. He took one more look at her and then shut his eyes for a moment, recalling what Ash had written in the letters and clamped his jaw shut to hold the questions in. He wasn't sure if he wanted to laugh or... or something else.

"Er, just a sec," he said to Mia, standing up and moving back into the space between the tables. He looked at Sorrel, looked at Ash and looked at Sorrel again. Her eyes. Her hair! God, was there anything else?!

Not sure at all what to do, and not knowing what to say either - to tease or to ask if she was sick, maybe there was something going around, but he'd been warned not to tease, that she was being touchy about everything and that speech he'd just heard reinforced the warnings - he did the only thing he thought would be safe until he was on firmer ground.

"Ash, dude, good summer?"\n\n
39 Stephen what? where? *looks* 0 Stephen 0 5


Ash AND SORREL

June 12, 2006 8:45 PM
Sorrel watched Stephen's reaction, from the raised eyebrow to Ash, to the several stares that were hard to miss. She held his gaze steadily, whilst slowly feeling her insides scrumple up. Ok, so she'd been expecting to cause a bit of a shock. That was the whole point, she told herself. Stephen, as usual, was over-theatricalising the whole thing. He took her in and then...

'Ash, dude, good summer?'

Ignoring her? He was ignoring her?! Was this some kind of elaborate pay back for last year? But then why only her? Was he ignoring her because she had gone over to the Girly Side by wearing make up. It was a statement, she had explained so. And anyway, he... He was ignoring her.

"We had a pretty average summer," Ash replied. What was Stephen playing at? He'd warned him not to do anything that might hurt Sorrel's feelings, so he was ignoring her? What kind of stupid logic was that, even for Stephen?! She had Mariella calling her names on the one hand, and Stephen acting like she was invisible on the other. That was going to do wonders for her mental state. He wished he could try and signal 'what the **** do you think you're playing at, you dick head?' to Stephen, but Sorrel was way better at picking up on his signals than Stephen could ever be. "Apart from Smelly's wedding, which blew as expected."

Princess was another issue. Did her tell her to scat in case Stephen kept this up, or said something that completely humilated Sorrel, or did he keep her here in the hope that Stephen snapped out of whatever the hell was wrong with him, so it would be proved that there was nothing to see here?

"What about you? Why don't you tell us what you got up to?" he asked. In his peripheral vision, he saw Sorrel's arms folding defensively across her chest. She wasn't appreciating the treatment, nor his less than subtle pokes to try and get Stephen to speak to her. He could picture the way she'd be pulling that face like she was rolling her eyes without actually doing it. He was surprised she hadn't stormed out yet. Although Stephen probably got allowances that Mariella didn't. He could practically see a little clock counting down to kick off though...
\n\n
0 Ash AND SORREL Here! In front of you... Not invisible... 0 Ash AND SORREL 0 5


Stephen

June 13, 2006 12:11 AM
He wasn't stupid. Stephen picked up on the emphasised 'we' and 'us'. He managed to hold back the pained look he wanted to send Ash's way. He didn't know what to say to Sorrel. What was he supposed to say? All Ash's - short - letters had seemed to indicate that there were only things he shouldn't say to her, and now that he'd seen her... he didn't want a fight like last years again and he couldn't see a way of not having one either. This was impossible.

The glare escaped. Why couldn't Ash have given him better preparation for this? Some friend. Of course Sorrel was an even better friend. Usually. Argh!

"Oh, you know," he said, getting slightly grumpy because of his inability to see a way out of this stupid situation with Sorrel. "Had a mad time out on my motorbike until I had a little accident and broke my leg. Spent most of the summer in bed or hobbling around awkwardly. Actually, Summer mostly sucked. For some reason," if there was going to be a fight, he wasn't going to be in the wrong. No way. "My best friend couldn't be bothered writing to me - which would have been nice while I was an invalid - even though others managed to do so. It was boring as anything most of the time, and I couldn't do anything except read and watch TV - and that was only when I managed to get into the loungeroom - there was other stuff but-"

This was stupid. Sorrel... if one discounted her hair, it looked like she was trying to become a girl, but that wasn't Sorrel. Stephen shook his head. At least with the real girls, when they were starting to change it wasn't unexpected and he'd worked out how to react. Sorrel was different. What was he supposed to say? 'Hey, you look good with that makeup' or something similar, like he'd say to any other girl? The Sorrel he knew would try to beat him up if he said anything like that. And while generally that would be reason enough to say it, it was different now and ... he didn't know why.

And the next possiblility 'why?' seemed like the kind of thing that Ash had warned him against. It was a case of 'head? Meet brick wall'.

"-but whatever." This wasn't the time. It wasn't the place. There were firsties about. He looked at Sorrel again, gave her a small nod that did nothing to hide his mixed feelings and took his seat again. "You two eating?" he asked, trying to get back into neutral territory where he'd at least know where he was.\n\n
39 Stephen Are you sure? 0 Stephen 0 5


Sorrel and Ash

June 13, 2006 11:04 AM
It was one of those times Ash wished he could pause time. Pause it for everyone but, on this occasion, Stephen and himself. He wondered how Stephen would have reacted if Ash hadn't tried to prepare him, which made him wonder if the way his twin was being treated was slightly his fault. Judging by Stephen's glare, Stephen thought so. But all he'd done was try to protect Sorrel's feelings, and if Stephen was too thick to understand his warnings, he couldn't be blamed. He waited to see if Sorrel was going to respond to Stephen, but she didn't seem to be going to. Ash could read between the lines fairly well when it came to Sorrel, and pretty much knew this meant she wasn't sure that Stephen meant her any more by 'his best friend'. It probably hadn't helped that Stephen was refusing to look at, as well as talk to her now.

"We never normally write you letters," he defended them, "We would have if we'd known you were bored, but only just found out." He left off a snap such as 'forgive us for not being psychic', because he didn't want to accidentally goad Stephen into yelling at him that he'd known. As far as Sorrel was aware, no communication had passed between Stephen and either of them, and that was how it was going to stay.

He internally breathed a sigh of relief when Stephen looked at and addressed Sorrel, even if the level of communication wasn't ground breaking.

"Sure," Sorrel shrugged, wondering why she alone was being punished for not having communicated with Stephen by being ignored now in return (that being one of many current theories circulating around her head). "Shove along Princess," she said, deciding to take out her frustration somewhere it didn't matter. "Why don't you go and find... whoever it is around here who actually likes you?"\n\n
0 Sorrel and Ash WE are sure that WE ARE here 0 Sorrel and Ash 0 5


Mia

June 13, 2006 5:01 PM
Mia’s day had been pretty good. She may not have been feeling her best, but it was a pretty good day. She had been looking forward to coming back to school and to magic other than potions for helping with colds. She missed using her wand the most. And when she got to her table not knowing if she’d be eating alone, Stephen came along and after a little convincing, was back to his normal high spirited self. That was the Stephen she knew. He was in the middle of asking her something when they were interrupted by the two main reasons Mia dreaded coming back to Sonora every year.

"It's a statement, a statement against people like you, and if you laugh or say anything, I'll break your nose and then we'll see whose ug-... laughing, got that?"

Mia looked up when the voice started preaching and saw Sorrel. At least she was pretty sure it was the girl Craven. Her hair was practically hacked off and her eyes were veiled in eyeliner. Eyeliner? Sorrel? What parallel universe had she fallen into? But as Sorrel spoke, Mia knew it was the same creep who had been torturing her since first year. Her eyes didn’t stay surprised for long because Sorrel brought her attitude back from summer break and then some. Mia’s eyes slowly settled into a glare by the time she finished. What did she expect Mia to do? Tremble and bow? Yeah right. Mia wasn’t scared of Sorrel even with the creepy load of eyeliner. She could admit the girl made her nervous in the beginning seeing how she and her brother could be, but she was too used to Sorrel running her mouth all the time. It wasn’t scary or intimidating. It was annoying.

Mia was about to snap back with a sarcastic comment that might’ve ended up getting her nose broken, but Stephen drew her attention when he got up looking back and forth between the twins. Mia hoped he wasn’t trying to be discreet about it, because he wouldn’t have won any awards for that. He spoke to Ash and started a whole mini drama at the table making Mia feel more awkward by the second. Her eyes traveled back and forth between the players in the drama. She was a bit angry that Stephen hadn’t said anything about Sorrel threatening her like that. She knew she was one of his best friends, but even so. Mia felt he could’ve said something.

When it was all said and done and the three of them seemed to somewhat get their issues out and dealt with, of course it was Sorrel who had to be the jerk to Mia…again. Jeez, Mia barely spoke a single syllable to the girl if she could avoid it. What was her deal? Why was she always taking her frustration out on her? Had she really thought the first words out of Mia’s mouth would be to insult her? Mia had more decency than Sorrel seemed to know because as much as she didn’t like Sorrel, she had no intention to insult her about her look. What did she care anyway? Her glare which had faded as her eyes traveled came right back to Sorrel before she started putting some more food on her plate. Mia didn’t pause to let her words sink in too much. Yeah, so the Cravens were pretty popular with just about everyone around the school and Mia wasn't. So what? She figured that wasn't the intended message, but those were the feelings the words brought up.

“I don’t know.” She said, though her voice held no uncertainty whatsoever on her actual decision. “It was actually you who came over here interrupting a conversation I was having. Maybe you two ought to find some place else to sit if my presence bothers you so much. I’m sure there are a bunch of people who would love to see you who are sitting somewhere that isn’t here.”

First she was supposed to take Sorrel’s insults and then she was supposed to move? That didn’t make sense any way she turned it. She had been perfectly happy with her seat before the Cravens showed up. She just felt a little bad that it might make Stephen have to pick. If the Cravens moved, which she somehow doubted, would he follow them or would he stay and talk to her like he started? Or would he just agree that she move? She didn’t plan on that either and all three of them together surely wouldn’t end well. Mia inwardly sighed. The Cravens had a nasty habit of ruining things for her.\n\n
0 Mia But I wish you BOTH weren't 0 Mia 0 5


Ash and Sorrel

June 13, 2006 5:51 PM
Sorrel returned Mia's glare full force. Glaring was one of the areas, along with Beating, punching, kicking and Chinese burns, in which Sorrel excelled. Mia had this irritating habit of trying to pretend she wasn't bothered by Sorrel, or afraid of her. Mia was scrawny little thing though, so Sorrel knew it had to be a bluff to try and get her to back down. Mia could never beat her physically, so she'd try and talk or indifference her away.

"We're not bothered about you," Sorrel told her, "Or where you choose to sit. Just thought it fair to give you warning that we plan on sitting here," she informed her. She leant in, easily shouldering Mia along the bench a bit - even before the girl had lost weight, she'd been pretty skinny, and Sorrel did chin ups most days and had played Beater her whole life. She and Ash slipped into the available space, Sorrel next to Mia, Ash next to Stephen.

"So, you spent the whole summer getting better?" Ash asked, as Sorrel leant across, blocking Mia out of the conversation. "How come you didn't just get a mediwizard on it?"

"Tell us more about the accident," Sorrel tried, even though she wasn't sure whether Stephen would reply to her. She wasn't even sure Mia was grossed out by blood and stuff, but it was worth a try. "Was there blood everywhere?" she asked, putting ketchup on her helping of sausages, "Go into lots of detail. We want to hear all about it..." \n\n
0 Ash and Sorrel We BOTH wish the same about you 0 Ash and Sorrel 0 5


Stephen

June 14, 2006 6:35 AM
Sorrel and Ash might have been his friends, but that didn't mean that they could just go and shoulder into the middle of everything. Especially when he was annoyed at them. And what the hell was Ash playing at? And Sorrel!! He looked at the both for a moment after their questions were asked, not missing Sorrel's deliberate attempts to block out Princess. Without saying a word, Stephen climbed out of his seat again, moved along the table.

"Shove over," he said, still struggling to sound neutral. He pushed his way into the space between Sorrel and Mia, and then leaning back over the twins to retrieve his own plate, and moving Sorrel's over so that there was room for it in front of him.

Then, with a momentary apologetic look at Mia, he answered the questions. "Couldn't get a mediwizard," he explained, poking at the sausage on his own plate. "It happened when I was with Alan and his friend Ben, and Owen, Darren and Jimmy - my friends back home - they were all there too. And we didn't really have any way of contacting anyone magical. Mom and Dad are Muggles, remember? They've got no idea of some of the stuff that wizards can do. And when we did get an owl, the one delivering my school letter, Mom wrote to get help then. But by then it was a bit late. No way to explain a miracle recovery. So I had to deal with the slow healing way until it was time to come back to school. They visited again last night and fixed up what hadn't healed already by itself so that my leg was back to normal. I did get an owl out of the whole thing though. Well. Mom did. She talked to the people who came the first time and got it sorted out, so I shouldn't be so isolated if anything like that happens again."

He took a little longer getting to Sorrel's question. It wasn't as though he hadn't had plenty of time to think about it, but... "A bit," he said, non-committedly, recalling that Princess had looked a bit peaky when he'd sat down next to her. "It was an awesome jump though." He turned slightly towards Mia, finishing the explanation as he'd mentioned it in passing to Ash already in their letters, and by default that should mean that Sorrel, if she was in any way still Sorrel (and the way she'd treated Mia had him leaning towards her still being herself, somewhere in there), would already have heard that bit already.

"I went motorbiking with my brother and some friends. His buddy Ben's got this great course set up on his parents property, and I had a bit of an accident. But I'm ok now," his lips twitched back towards his usual grin for a moment and he patted his leg, recalling the sight of the bone sticking out with a barely noticable shudder.

He shrugged at Mia again and turned his head to take in the twins. Maybe if he just kept the questions neutral. Not asking about Sorrel's new look, or... eh, anything that seemed related to it. Ash had mentioned the wedding, that had to be a safe topic.

"How'd you both make it through the wedding alive?" he asked, turning slightly again to smile at Mia so she'd know he wasn't trying to exclude her before giving his full attention to the twins.

The sausage remained on his plate, ignored for the moment.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
39 Stephen Oh for crying out loud! Must we do this every start of year? 0 Stephen 0 5


Ash and Sorrel

June 15, 2006 11:08 AM
The combined weight of the twins was something that Stephen couldn't shove aside, the way Sorrel had easily pushed Mia along the bench. However, when he determindly dug himself in between Sorrel and Mia, they had little choice but to move up. Sorrel kept herself from glaring, because she didn't want to seem like she was bothered in front of Mia, but she was deeply hurt that - after ignoring her - Stephen was now picking Mia over her. Well, sort of. Either way, she regretted not trying to see Mia off with a jug of pumpkin juice in her lap whilst she'd had the chance.

Her annoyance increased further as he brushed off her question, and then told Mia all about his summer, when she didn't know anything about it either. He clearly was still trying to ignore her, at least in part. She would have left and let him get on with being a total dick, but she didn't want Mia to think she'd left because of her. So she was going to stick it out.

"Cake, mainly," Ash replied to the wedding question. Sorrel didn't seem keen on answering any questions not directly addressed to her, not that he could blame her when Stephen was clearly hurting her feelings so much. "And the promise that we'd be grounded if our mom had to spend the rest of her life hearing Mariella whinge about it. She said she'd heard enough about the wedding to last her a life time before it happened," he grinned, whilst silently resolving to learn a deafness charm to use on Sorrel for future occasions when he needed to yell sense into Stephen in front of her.

"It's cool you've got an owl now," he added, keen not to talk about the wedding (Sorrel had promised not to bring up his funky moves provided he didn't mention her underwear, but even without that, the topic was sickening and painful) "You can write us in the summer if we don't get around to writing to you. Didn't mean to leave you isolated, we're just not big on letter writing," he told Stephen, madly pulling a face at him, as Sorrel leant Stephen and Mia's way to grab a drink, hoping Stephen would get from it that all was possibly not as it seemed, regarding letters, even if he couldn't communicate exactly why. "So how'd you pass the time when your leg was getting better?" he asked. \n\n
0 Ash and Sorrel It's tradition. The school's all for that... 0 Ash and Sorrel 0 5


Stephen

June 15, 2006 12:32 PM
What was her excuse, Stephen wondered, feeling distinctly out of sorts. He at least had the 'Sorrel has apparently gone mad and must be treated with caution until it is known what has happened' excuse. Of course, he thought a second later, that might be her excuse too. Not the part about finding out what was wrong with her, as presumably she knew that part, but the being mad bit. And now Ash was pulling faces at him now too. Stephen wondered if the madness was catching. Or maybe it was just genetic, and Sorrel got hit first because she was older.

"Not big on letter writing?" Stephen said. "I think I know that by now, they-" He stopped. "Yeah," he jumped back in a moment later, having had a new thought occur to him. "Yeah, what was it? Just that one letter before I came to stay with you. And that was written by your mom to mine, and it was muggle post so... it doesn't even count." He suspected that there might be an actual conversation due between him and Ash and... he suddenly also felt a little sorry about how he'd been reacting to Sorrel.

Not entirely sorry though. So, maybe she might not have known about the letters and all that, but that didn't mean that she had to act like she'd been acting, and anyhow. She looked different. She was wearing makeup, and just last year she'd attacked Ty for doing the same thing. And Stephen for not minding! She was impossible. How was he supposed to keep track of what... she was supposed to be his best friend, and part of that involved not changing in ways he couldn't understand. In ways that just weren't Sorrel. He didn't know how to react when it was her.

"Pass the time?" he repeated, trying to get his focus back on the conversation. "This and that. Telly. Driving Mom mad. Driving Dad mad. Discovering new and more interesting threats about what can be done with a bell if someone rings it one more time to ask for someone to fluff his pillows. Guilting Alan into helping me with this idea I've got for Fido. Short letters." He picked at his sausage again, noticing that it'd become cold. "Jimmy tried to get me into playing a handheld baseball game, but it sucked because it wasn't as good as the real thing. Had a glance through the new text books." He shrugged. \n\n
39 Stephen Just so long as Marnett's theory isn't tradition... 0 Stephen 0 5