Headmistress Powell

May 01, 2009 1:20 AM
It was a beautiful evening. Sunlight streamed in through the windows of the Cascade Hall, creating a dazzling display of ripples and rainbows as the final rays of the day were reflected by the waterfalls lining the room. Sadi had made her way to Sonora in her usual fashion: Apparition. She was wearing her customary plain brown robes and her graying hair was fastened, as usual, in a neat knot at the nape of her neck. She stood quietly in the far corner of the room as returning students noisily made their way into seats, and the first years were gathered by the door. The new students were greeted by Deputy Head Professor Flatt, and Sadi honestly wasn’t sure which party looked more nervous out of the first years and Henry. She understood the anxiety; she herself was concerned that she might make some terrible mistake during her first day as Headmistress. Hopefully those present would forgive any stumbles.

When all the wagons were empty, Sadi joined her colleagues at the staff table (although she stood in front of it, rather than sat behind) and called for attention. “Settle down, please,” she said, gentle but commanding, as always. When there was enough quiet to be heard without the assistance of charms, Sadi graced the students with a smile. “To our older students, welcome back. To our first year students, welcome to Sonora Academy.” With Henry’s assistance, each new student was handed a goblet full of a clear, bubbling liquid. When swallowed, this potion would turn the drinker’s skin the corresponding color of the House to which they now belonged: blue for Aladren, yellow for Teppenpaw, red for Crotalus, and brown for Pecari.

Most students enjoyed watching the sorting of the first years. Sadi couldn’t deny that the event had held her interest more thoroughly when she’d been Head of Crotalus, and so could identify her future students, but it was nevertheless an entertaining event. Therefore she waited patiently until all the students had settled once more before returning to her address.

“As always, the prairie elves have provided us with a magnificent feast,” she said, hoping to reel in the attention of those whose minds had wandered. “However, before we eat, I would like to make a few short announcements. Firstly, I would like to draw your attention to some changes in staffing this year. Professor Flatt,” Sadi gestured towards her colleague, now seated at the staff table, “will be supporting me as Deputy Head. I ask that you afford him every courtesy he deserves.” The worry about what would happen to the school if the government-appointed Deputy were to be unhappy remained unspoken. “Secondly, I would like you all to welcome Stella Nelson, who will be your new school Counselor. If you are having troubles of any sort, students are welcome to make an appointment to see the counsellor at any time.”

"Next I have a notice for the older students. You may have noticed that Professor Huntley is not with us this year. This is because Sonora Academy will, for the time being, not be offering elective classes." Call it pressure from above, cost cutting, lack of student interest, call it whatever you like - the situation remained the same, and was only made worse when one considered the school's inability to maintain all staff members from one year to the next. "If any students in fourth year or above wish to continue learning either Muggle Studies or Ancient Runes as independent studies, please see me."

“There have also been some alterations in Heads of Houses. Professor Flatt will be leading Teppenpaw, and Professor Taylor will take charge of Aladren House.” Sadi decided that the reasons behind this decision (namely to keep assorting governing bodies content) didn’t need to be shared. “Crotalus students may welcome Professor O’Leary as their Head, and Pecari House will be under care of Professor Baer.” Again, the reasons were not explained, though this time in sensitivity to Professor Baer; Sadi felt the transfiguration professor would be more adept at dealing with the boisterous Pecaris than the obstreperous Crotalus girls.

“Your Head of House will support and guide you during your time here at Sonora, and they are assisted by prefects and the Head Boy and Head Girl.” Bringing us nicely on to the next announcement, Sadi thought, as she reached into the pocket of her robes and brough forth a small box. “Could this year’s Head Boy, Geoffrey Layne, and Head Girl, Briony O’Leary, please come to collect their badges.” Sadi smiled at each seventh year, handing over the large badges bearing the school crest, and accepting the temporary badges they had been wearing until now. She replaced them in the box, where they joined four prefect badges. “Could this year’s prefects please join me to collect their badges. Congratulations to Lucas Smythe of Aladren, Josiah Ashwood of Teppenpaw, Lutece Anthony of Crotalus, and Irene Liddowe of Pecari.”

Sadi distributed the badges with a smile and ‘well done’ for each student. She put the lid back on the box and returned it to her pocket as she waited for the applause to die down before attracting attention for the last time that evening. “Thank you for listening for so long. I have no more announcements to make, so you are free to enjoy your food.” With a wave of Sadi’s hand, each and every table was suddenly groaning under a multitude of dishes, plates and jugs, each filled to the brim with one or another of an impressive variety of foods and drinks. Enough, indeed, that no student had yet found the feast lacking, and no student was ever likely too.

As everyone began eating, Sadi made her way to her own seat, and sunk into it, relieved that the hardest part of her day was over. She poured herself a small measure of good wine, and sipped from her goblet.

\r\n\r\n
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Powell Let the Opening Feast commence! 0 Headmistress Powell 1 5


Cassandra Kerrigan

May 02, 2009 5:42 PM
Coming to Sonora caused mixed feelings within Cassandra. She had always known that one day she was going to have to go off to a magical school. The only other option was to be homeschooled, but her father didn’t have the time to teach her. Though, he did have the money to hire someone, which she had tried to argue. However, it was pointless to try to argue with an experienced attorney. It usually meant she lost. Besides, as he had pointed out, it would do her some good to expand her horizons and to try something new.

As she looked around nervously, there was no doubt that all of this was certainly new. She glanced around at the water coming down from the walls, the man greeting them, and worst of all, the seemingly numerous older students. Fortunately, or maybe unfortunately, she didn’t have to worry about it for long before a goblet was shoved into her hands. She looked at it wearily. She didn’t like things that she had no control over. She didn’t know whatever was in this cup would do. She didn’t want to drink it, but she had very little choice.

With a wrinkled nose, she brought the goblet to her lips and let the liquid slide down her throat. Horror sprang over her face as she watched her skin turning blue. She bit down on her lip to prevent tears from springing forth. She didn’t want to be blue! Looking around, she saw that everyone was changing colors. Okay, it wasn’t her. Had she not paid enough attention? All of the blue ones were heading towards one table and she turned to follow them. Cautiously, she sat down among some of the other blue colored and normal colored students.

Feeling calmer as her skin slowly returned to its normal fair shade, Cassandra turned her attention towards the Headmistress. She didn’t pay much attention to the announcements over staff changes since it really didn’t affect her. She didn’t know any different, but she did pay attention to when the Heads and Prefects were announced. She made a note of Professor Taylor being the Head of Aladren and it was good to know the Head Boy was also in Aladren. That would make it easier if she had any questions. She hated waiting.

Her stomach gave an angry growl. Apparently, her stomach hated waiting as well and she was glad when they were told that they could eat. Hungrily, she dug into the mashed potatoes and took two helpings of them. She didn’t bother with anything else and began to work on the food. It also gave her a chance to scope out the other students. She wasn’t sure what to think of them or what they were going to think of her. She was so busy trying to figure out the others that she failed to notice someone talking to her or rather at her. Her attention on them, she apologized, “Sorry. I…what were you saying?”
0 Cassandra Kerrigan Feeling blue... 144 Cassandra Kerrigan 0 5


Edmond Carey

May 02, 2009 8:48 PM
If Edmond had grown up with his parents - or even with the main line of the Virginia Careys - the crowd assembling in the Cascade Hall would not have seemed intimidating. As it was, he could never remember being around this many people at one time. The vastness of the scene alone was enough to make him want to cling to his sister, and the sheer volume of the room was worse. Morgaine, who knew how this strange new place worked, seemed like the only safety in the world from Edmond's standpoint.

Since he had known her primarily through the mail until the previous month and didn't want to look completely pathetic, though, he just sort of nodded blankly when Morgaine, whose imperious manner did as little to suggest that they were in any way related as her dark coloring and fine features did, told him to do as he was told and swept off to join her own House. He remembered its name: Pecari. And Gwenhwyfar, that other sister of his, had been in Crotalus. If he did not go into one of their Houses, he would go into either Teppenpaw or Aladren. Those were the two other House names. Reviewing those cold facts made him feel calmer and less adrift as he and the other first years were lined up.

When it was indicated that they should all drink the bubbly potions they had been provided with, Edmond took his in the same way he took medicine: quickly, trying not to taste it. That didn't quite work, but at least the potion didn't make him feel sick. For a moment, it seemed to be doing nothing, but then Edmond saw the purpose of it. He was turning blue, and since he wasn't excessively cold, the potion was all he could attribute the change to.

Blue, according to the Sonora Academy information packet he had memorized by the end of July, was one of the two colors associated with Aladren House.

Looking over its table, Edmond decided he was okay with the look of Aladren. Though still bigger than the groups he was used to, Aladren didn't appear to be a very big House. That made it immediately more comfortable than the tables brown- or red-hued students were flocking to. It was also supposed to be defined by intellectual giftedness. While that was at least a little intimidating, Edmond had come in with enough pressure on him to succeed that the idea of an academically inclined House was almost comforting. In such a place, he'd be less tempted to let his studies go.

After the Headmistress' speech, Edmond knew a lot of names, but could only firmly attach three of them to a face. Those three were Headmistress Powell herself, Briony O'Leary, and Geoffrey Layne. He knew he would figure out who all of them were soon, but at the moment, it seemed like a daunting, if not impossible, task. This whole first day of school thing, which he had been looking forward to for months, was really turning out to be overwhelming.

He was grateful to turn his attention to the food. Eating a meal was something he could do. Julia, his guardian's wife, had pounded proper table etiquette into him years before he had even thought of Sonora Academy. Besides, it had been an incredibly long time since lunch, and the food the kitchens had prepared looked and smelled delicious. Because they had been placed relatively close by, he decided to have some of the pork and potatoes first.

As he looked up from his plate, he found his sister, in her seat across the Hall, looking at him, her green eyes sharp. Edmond couldn't read her expression at all, but the intense look she was giving him recalled him to his manners. It was proper to attempt conversation at the table when in strange surroundings. Noticing that the girl seated directly across from him was also eating potatoes, Edmond decided to try to talk to her.

"The feast is very good, isn't it?" he asked.

For a moment, she didn't respond, and he thought he might have met his first truly rude person. Before he could get too interested in the occasion, however, the girl noticed him, apologized, and asked him to repeat himself. Edmond, not wanting to make enemies on his first day the way Gwen supposedly had, obliged. "I said, the feast is very good, isn't it?"
0 Edmond Carey Me, too. 143 Edmond Carey 0 5


Cassie

May 06, 2009 3:03 PM
At the question, Cassie’s fork paused over the potatoes as she glanced down to them before her brown eyes shifted to the boy again. She hadn’t really had much of the feast aside from one dish, but the statement was agreeable. “Yes. The potatoes are very smooth. My dad never makes them like this. When he tries, they always end up half cooked and lumpy.”

In truth, they never had feasts like this or even a mini version of one. Her dad just didn’t have the time to and Julianna only made simple meals since she had a lot of other work to do in addition to caring for them. Not to mention, she had her own family to take care of when she got home from work. It was no wonder that she didn’t want to have to cook two meals, let alone one being elaborate.

Though, when they went to her maternal grandparents’ home, it was another story altogether. Every time, there was a huge dinner filled with all of their favorites and her grandmother fussed over them. It was probably because they didn’t go there very often anymore. Not since her mom had split a couple years ago. Seeing her pictures, her room, and her things was just too painful for them all.

When her mom left, she and her sisters had become closer as a support system for each other whereas before they had squabbled constantly. Cassie wondered if coming to Sonora would change all of that. She supposed it already did since she didn’t have anyone here. It was rather disorienting to suddenly find oneself in the midst of strangers rather than family, but everyone had to start somewhere.

Would the boy in front of her become friend or foe? Or would he merely drift into the vast sea of unknown faces? Though, one way or the other was more likely since they were obviously in the same House, but of course, a stepping stone of introductions was necessary. Besides, not to would be incredibly rude. “I’m Cassandra Kerrigan, but I go by Cassie.”

Cassandra sounded just so formal sometimes. It sounded like the sort of name that some snobby person would have and while there were many words to describe her that wasn’t one of them. Though, she was sure that a lot of people would say that it fit Veronica. She tended to look down her nose at others for not having as much and often she got Delilah to follow along.

That was how it had been for as long as she could remember. Veronica was the leader of the two and Delilah the follower. Even when they were younger and Delilah wanted to go out on an adventure, she would stay home and play dolls with her sister, because that’s what Veronica wanted. She couldn’t imagine what they would do next year if they ended up in separate Houses.

“What do you think our House will be like?” Cassie asked, beginning to worry some. Through all of the chaos of the day, she had never considered one very important fact. She was going to have roommates. She had never shared a room in her entire life. What if they were really mean, or worse, messy? She didn’t think she would be able to handle that. She was a complete neat freak. What depressing thoughts!
0 Cassie Good to know I'm not alone. 0 Cassie 0 5


Edmond

May 06, 2009 9:42 PM
Edmond wasn't sure what was more worthy of interest: lumpy potatoes, the thought of which almost made him shudder - a dish called 'creamed potatoes' was not supposed to be full of lumps, and Edmond disliked things that weren't how they were supposed to be - or a father who cooked. He wasn't at all familiar with his own father's habits and talents, but in five years, he had never once known Robert to enter the kitchen. That was Julia's domain.

He decided to go with the potatoes. "That sounds terrible," he said. "Julia - my, er, aunt - makes them that way if she gets behind with the rest of dinner, and my cousin Jane and I can barely eat them."

“I’m Cassandra Kerrigan, but I go by Cassie.”

Edmond smiled, the expression lighting up his green eyes. A social encounter had reached introductions without a disaster caused by him. He would have to write Jane and let her know, once and for all, that years and years of manners training had a practical use after all. "I'm Edmond Carey," he said. "I go by Edmond. It's nice to meet you, Cassie."

Though there were five distinct kinds of Carey, Edmond did not include a branch. It was, in his opinion, entirely too complicated to get into.

He had been born in Georgia, the only son and heir of the patriarch of the Savannah Careys. He'd even lived there a long time, but then his sister Gwenhwyfar had almost been disowned and something bad had happened to make Thomas, a very powerful man and the head of the whole Carey family, decide it would be better if Edmond was brought up with a modestly-incomed sub-branch of the Virginia Careys. Since Thomas' word was pretty much law in the family, he'd been with Robert and Julia since a month before he started his study of German.

Though he was not brought up wealthy, a lot of emphasis had been placed on bringing Edmond up well-educated. While Jane had been allowed to play outside, or with her dolls, he had been learning foreign languages. Now, he had schedules down in writing for when he was supposed to have mastered a wide range of other concepts over the course of the year, and in the summer, he was to made his first foray into less simple mathematics. He had been brought up, in all practical ways, as a Virginia Carey, but someday the father he could barely remember would die and he would have to go back to Savannah and take over as patriarch. He had to be well-educated.

There were a lot of things, actually, that he had to be on account of being born who he was. It was kind of annoying.

"Aladren's known as the academic House," Edmond said when Cassie asked what he thought the House would be like. "So we'll probably be expected to do well. It should be quiet for studying, so that'll be great - for me, at least. I'm not used to a lot of noise. It was just two of us at home for years, so..." he realized he was talking too much. "I apologize," he said. "That was off-topic. How do you think it will be?"
0 Edmond That would be sad. 0 Edmond 0 5


Cassie

May 12, 2009 8:17 AM
Carey? He couldn’t be related to the very Careys that she read about in the socialite section of the newspapers, could he? Realizing that it was quite possible, a certain sort of shyness and anxiety seemed to grip her. Her family wasn’t anywhere near the level of being featured in the papers. While they had a more than comfortable life, they weren’t a famous wizarding family by any means. At most, her father was mentioned in passing as defending on person or another in a court case, but they weren’t high profile trials and most were settled out of court.

Cassie decided that the best course of action was to ignore what his last name was. If he were related to the high profile Careys, she wouldn’t know what to say and it would create a new sense of awkwardness. And if he weren’t, then it would only serve for a different sense of embarrassment for she certainly knew how to put her foot in her mouth. She settled for simply saying, “It’s nice to meet you too, Edmond.” She half wanted to say Edmond Carey, because she liked the way it sounded. It seemed so stately a name.

Of course, she refrained from doing so since it would probably make her seem weird. Veronica had been kind enough to tell her that she more than likely wouldn’t make any friends since she was such an oddball sometimes. Well, what did she know anyhow? She seemed to be doing okay so long as she remembered to do the simple things such as breathing. Oh, and actually answering the person she was speaking to so that there was a conversation rather than him just talking at her. That would have been mortifying to both parties.

She nodded when Edmond mentioned that Aladren was the academic House. That was a more than excellent thing. Julianna had always called her smart, but now it was like having real proof that she was. Her dad would probably be pleased to read about it when she wrote home. Though, now she had to be worried about whether or not she would do well. What if a mistake had been made and she really didn’t belong in Aladren? What if she ended up being a horrible magical student? Talk about pressure. There was no choice, but to succeed.

It was a point vocalized by Edmond, one that caused the corners of her mouth to turn down in worry. “What happens if we don’t do well? Would we have to have a different House?” That probably sounded quite silly, but she really was concerned about it. Was there anywhere else she would fit? Half trying to reassure herself and half wanting him to like her, she switched to a smile and continued with the other things he had said, “You don’t have to apologize, but to put us on fair ground, I can tell you that we don’t have a lot of noise around home either except for when Veronica blasts the Wizarding Wireless Network.

That’s my younger sister. She’ll probably be here next year along with my other sister, Delilah. Usually, it’s the three of us either with Julianna or Dad.” Now, who was the one talking too much? She bit her lip and pushed some of the potatoes around on her plate in embarrassment. Glancing back up, hoping that her face wasn’t red, she concentrated on the actual question he had asked, “Anyhow, I’m not sure what I think it’ll be like. It’s hard to say since everything is new. I hope that Professor Taylor is nice and that my roommates are too. I’ve never shared a room before. I guess you haven’t either since you said there’s only two of you at home.”
0 Cassie Yes, it would, but now I get to be happy. 0 Cassie 0 5


Edmond

May 12, 2009 2:20 PM
So Cassie had two sisters, too. Veronica and Delilah. Just knowing a few small facts, like the sisters' names and the habit Veronica had of sometimes blaring the Wireless, made her seem more familiar and therefore less intimidating. It was a pleasant change; though he could still hardly say he knew Cassie well, at least his sister wasn't the only soul in the room he was on speaking terms with anymore. He gave her a grateful smile for letting him off the hook over the rambling.

"Never," he confirmed when she brought up rooming. "Or been around other boys, really. I have Jane and two sisters, but no brothers or anything." Of course, he doubted brothers or roommates could do much more in the way of getting into his stuff than Jane had, so that might not be much of a problem to get used to. Jane was great for making sure his relative importance in the family didn't go to his head. "So that'll be an adjustment. The family wouldn't have let me come here if they didn't think I could handle it, though, so maybe it won't be too bad."

Edmond wasn't actually sure that was the case, but the idea was to make them both feel better about it all. The family, as a whole, hadn't wanted him to go to a real school at all this year. Robert and Julia had somehow talked them into it in the end, arguing that marriageable girls went to schools and that he couldn't learn how to interact with people in a social setting from a book, but he had heard Thomas was not best pleased. After all, look at what had happened to Gwen. She had been a good girl until she came to Sonora, and then all hell had broken loose.

He, of course, wasn't going to be like that. He'd spent his entire life learning about his responsibility to the family and his debt to Robert and Julia, neither of which gave him a lot of room for going wild. Pity the family wasn't overly inclined to take the word of an eleven-year-old.

"I don't think they can throw us out of the House, though," he said. This was something he was more sure of. "One of my sisters is in her seventh year here, and she's always sworn she's nothing like the other people in Pecari." Always was, of course, from the end of July to the present, but he felt no compunction to share that bit of information. "My sister who's graduated was in Crotalus, too, and she isn't that... conventional." Morgaine had talked much more about Gwen and Gwen's school years than she ever had about herself.
0 Edmond Two is company. 0 Edmond 0 5


Cassie

May 13, 2009 5:54 PM
Edmond’s admission made her feel a bit guilty about being worried over sharing a room with other girls. While she hadn’t shared a room, she had been around other girls whereas he hadn’t been around other boys. Though, maybe it was a good thing that he hadn’t, because otherwise they might not be getting along so well at the moment. Actually, they might not have met at all yet since he would probably be talking to other boys in the year rather than to her. At the moment, she much preferred it this way simply because it gave her a fighting opportunity for friendship.

Growing up, there had been other children in the neighborhood, but she hadn’t really been friends with any of them. It was more than likely due to her intense nature. Just like Veronica, she could be quite bossy at times, but it was a different sort of bossy. Hers was the kind that came from wanting, no, needing, to have everything perfect whereas her sister’s came from wanting control over others. Thinking about it, she didn’t think either of them was deemed appropriate for roommates. But it was good to know that they couldn’t be kicked out for such things or by the way it sounded, anything really aside from major rule breaking.

Cassie breathed a sigh of relief, before commenting about his sisters, “Wow. You have a sister in the seventh grade and another one that graduated? They’re practically adults.” There was no actual practically about it since the older one had to be over seventeen if she was graduated. Though, it confirmed her suspicion about his family. She suddenly felt very insignificant next to him. Finished with the potatoes, she looked around for something else to eat, more just to find something to do with her mouth so foolish things wouldn’t come spilling out of it. Spotting the chicken, she took a rather large piece. Picking at it would keep her quite busy.

Giving her time to think, she was able to come up with more reasonable questions rather than focusing on his family’s reputation, “If your sister is nothing like the other people in Pecari, then why is she in that House and what’s that House like or Crotalus? You’re lucky to have older sisters that could tell you all about Sonora before you got here. That way you’ll have no surprises. Unless you like surprises, of course, then it completely ruins all the fun. Personally, I don’t like them at all.” That wasn’t entirely true. She liked them when they were good. It was the bad ones that took away from the entire surprise experience.
0 Cassie Then, what's three? 0 Cassie 0 5


Edmond

May 15, 2009 5:21 PM
"Yes," Edmond said, nodding as Cassie summed up his sisters and their situations. "Morgaine - the seventh year - turned seventeen a few days ago, and I think Gwenhwyfar's a little over eighteen." He couldn't say he knew how old Gwen was because he wasn't entirely sure about her birthday, but he felt sure enough it was in the spring to assume that she was still eighteen. Eighteen just sounded too old to be his sister's age, but it really wasn't. Since his birthday fell in December, he would also be eighteen when he left Sonora.

The way they were spaced out was odd, really. He was about six years younger than Morgaine, who was only a few months more than a year younger than Gwenhwyfar. They also failed to look at all alike - though Gwen looked almost as dainty as Morgaine in the pictures he'd seen, she wasn't as small in stature, had blonde hair and blue eyes, and didn't have so much as the look of her eyes in common with Morgaine in the face. He'd heard that he looked just like their mother while Morgaine took after their father and Gwen was almost their father's mother made over, but any stranger who just looked at the three of them would have never assumed their surnames were the same, never mind that they were all full siblings.

In blood, anyway. In reality, he couldn't see that they had much more in common with lives than they did with looks. He felt something for them - they were his sisters, and what kind of person felt nothing for his sisters? - but the day-to-day fact of the matter was that Jane, who barely had any blood in common with him at all, felt more as if she was his sister.

He considered Cassie's questions. "I don't really like most surprises, either," he admitted, deciding that would make a good place to start. "But Mor - er, they didn't tell me too much. Morgaine told me a little about the Houses, and I did some research on my own, but I think I'll get to have a lot of surprises here, too."

He thought back to what he'd heard or read about all of the Houses. "About the Houses...Morgaine doesn't know why she's in Pecari, since she thinks she belongs in Aladren. They're supposed to be sort of...rowdy." That would do. It wasn't a perfect word - he preferred to use words that didn't have a bias attached - but it would do. "A lot of Crotali are from the old families, conform, follow the rules, and sort of do their own thing away from the rest of the school."

Actually, Morgaine had described the Crotali as a psychotic sorority of repressed, would-be political socialites, but a more biased description was hard to imagine. Besides, there had to be some boys in the House.

"It might be really different in our year, though," he was quick to add. "I suppose we won't know until classes start and we get to know everyone."
0 Edmond A party or a disaster. 0 Edmond 0 5


Cassie

May 20, 2009 10:01 AM
It was hard to imagine having a sibling that was eighteen. It was hard enough to imagine herself being eighteen let alone her sisters. It seemed like a lifetime away, but then so had coming to Sonora. When she had received her letter, she had read it over and over to the point that the piece of paper was folded up every which way. Sure, she had been anxious and scared about going, but she had also been excited. Because of that every day seemed to take forever so that the entire summer had been forever. It was as though it would never end and she would never get here, but she was here finally and there was just so much to learn!

Like how one couldn’t judge a person really on anything. There was no simple way of telling who was from a family of reputation and who wasn’t. It didn’t really matter to her whether or not they were other than she didn’t want to make some horrendous error, which would cause her to be a social outcast to prove Veronica right. Though, thankfully, she had yet to do so and her entire face lit up with a smile when she learned that she and Edmond had something else in common. She was keeping a mental checklist in her head. Thus far, they each liked creamy potatoes, had siblings, didn’t like surprises, and were in Aladren.

Then, there were the Houses to learn. They were sorted into them by whatever traits they might possess. She listened carefully as Edmond explained the differences between Crotalus and Pecari. The corners of her mouth turned down with the description that Pecari was rowdy. That didn’t sound good at all and she seriously hoped that neither of her sisters ended up there. She was more worried about Delilah than Veronica though. Deililah was a bit spunky when left to her own devices, which wasn’t often with her twin around. Maybe it wouldn’t matter what she was like, but how she behaved around her sister.

If that were the case, then they were sure to end up in the same House, which by the sounds of it, Crotalus was right up Veronica’s alley. She was a stickler for the rules, because to her, they represented power and control. It was a little scary, but for the time being, she was going to concentrate on what all this meant to her and those currently around her. She could freak out about the twins next year. Now, that she had an idea of classes, Edmond brought up another valuable topic, one that she wanted to ask about, “Have you done any research on the professors or know anyone that has?”

The latter part of the question was a subtle way of asking if he knew anyone already in their year. She had yet to decide if he did if it would be a positive or negative thing. If he did, then he might be willing to introduce her and she would maybe be able to be part of a small group. Of course, he might not want to and the reasons for him not wanting to were more extensive in her head. He might simply forget about her and go off with his friends or what she felt more likely to happen is that they would stand up and he would realize what a freak she was. Cassie was all arms and legs, too tall for her age.

She was taller than most of the boys, but then a lot of girls were, but she was taller than most of the girls in her neighborhood too. They tended to look at her like she was some sort of giraffe, but they were too polite to say anything or maybe they were just scared to get on her little sister’s bad side. It was rather explosive whereas she was rather calm in comparison. She wondered which category Edmond fell into, but she really didn’t want to find out. Actually, she didn’t want to find out what anyone’s temper was like. However, in theory, that would require getting to know someone first.

“Do you think it could really be different in our year?” Cassie asked. By the sounds of it, the other years stuck to their own Houses. Was it even possible to be different? Did she want it to be different? Did that open up the doorway to acceptance or rejection? Would it break down social barriers or just allow new ones to form? If the groups determined by House were broken, would that create the way for ones to be determined based on popularity or some form of social ranking? Would Edmond then be among those popular kids? It was all very disconcerting to think about and she really didn’t know which she preferred more. She really hated the unknown.
0 Cassie Is it wrong to hope it would be a disaster? 0 Cassie 0 5


Edmond

June 01, 2009 11:48 AM
Edmond shook his head regretfully when Cassie asked if he'd learned anything about the professors. "I'm afraid not," he said apologetically. "My sister is the only person here I'd ever met before tonight, and she said the professors change too much to bother telling me about them. I think my family might have done background checks on them all, but I wasn't told what they found."

His tone was matter-of-fact as he mentioned the background checks. Edmond was used to people being slightly paranoid, especially when it related to his safety. After all, there was nothing but tradition to stop his father from at least trying to take him back, which the family, for some reason of its own, definitely did not want. They couldn't be sure his mother's family wouldn't try something, either, and it would be doubly bad if they did. Security was always a big concern, which was why he'd gotten the distinct impression that Robert and Julia's house was Unplottable and that not many people even knew it existed.

It was enough to make him feel slightly bad, sometimes. If they, for whatever reason, hadn't been chosen to take care of him, they could have had a normal life. Jane would have had inferior tutors, but that was the only drawback Edmond could see of not having him around. Of course, Thomas knew best and did what was best for the family, but what was in the best interests of the family wasn't always in the best interests of its individual members. He'd never once heard Robert or Julia complain, but it was still...uncomfortable to think of himself as a burden to them.

He had meant his comment on how things could, theoretically speaking, be different in their year just as a reassurance, but her question made him actually think about it. It was a pretty interesting question. "Well," he said slowly, "there is always the possibility for change. If we don't go in assuming the Pecaris will be vulgar and the Crotali will look down their noses at us and then have some of them turn out nice, there's no reason why we couldn't have a multiple-House group."

Edmond actually found himself warming to the idea. While a friend (potentially Cassie) would be great, friends plural would also be nice.

OOC: Ack, sorry for the wait. The evils of RL got me for a while.
0 Edmond I'm...probably not the best person to ask that. 0 Edmond 0 5