Sadi Powell

October 31, 2009 4:08 AM
The evening was miserable; rain trickled in never-ending dreary streams over the entire state of Arizona, punctuated by an occasional rumble of thunder. The stiffling summer heat only made it all the more unbearable. However, within the grounds of Sonora, where the weather charms were working perfectly, the school appeared beautiful. 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. Headmistress Sadi Powell 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, who looked a little under the weather. He had assured Sadi not half an hour ago that he was fine, but his unusually waxy complexion and a dark ring under each eye told her otherwise. He did, however, seem able to gather the first years together, so Sadi was not concerned for the time being.

When all the wagons were empty, Sadi joined her colleagues - several of them new - at the staff table 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 congratulate Professor Fawcett on becoming the new potions master here at Sonora, and I would like to welcome back Professor McKindy to teach charms.” Sadi was delighted to welcome back the charms professor, as not only was Aaron a good friend, but she'd had the impression he'd been more popular with the students than his recent counterpart. She was similarly pleased to have John as full time staff, but would miss the freedom of employing a substitute. “I would also," Sadi continued, "like to welcome several new faculty." Her announcement at the end of the previous term that so many of the staff would be leaving them should have indicated to the student that this year would see several new professors. "Our new medic, Cleo Rocamboli," Sadi indicated each new addition to the staff as she mentioned them, "Quidditch Coach Amelia Pierce, Professor Dakin to teach Care of Magical Creatures, Professor Carter to teach transfiguration, and Professor Levy to teach Defense Against the Dark Arts."

“There have also been some alterations in Heads of Houses," Sadi continued after greeting the new professors. Alterations were, of course, necessary, as few of the previous year's Heads remained. "Professor Flatt will continue to lead Teppenpaw, and Professor Fawcett will take charge of Aladren House.” Sadi would normally only elevate staff to Head of House after they'd been teaching at the school for some time, but considering the staff turnover situation this year, she'd been left with little choice. “Crotalus students may welcome Coach Pierce as their Head, and Pecari House will be under care of Professor McKindy.”

“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, Jose Santoro, and Head Girl, Elly Eriksson, please come to collect their badges.” Sadi congratualted each seventh year, and offered a smile as she handed over the large badges bearing the school crest. “I would like to offer my congratulations this year’s prefects, and ask them please to join me to collect their badges. The prefects are: for Aladren, Grayson Wright. For Teppenpaw, Lucie Dupree. For Crotalus, Laurel Cider, and for Pecari, Holly Greer."

Sadi distributed the badges with a smile and ‘well done’ for each student. 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 to.

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 kept some of her attention of the students, and some of it on Henry Flatt, and some of it on the egg noodles as she dished them onto her plate.
Subthreads:
0 Sadi Powell Welcome to the Opening Feast! 3 Sadi Powell 1 5


Helena Layne

November 01, 2009 12:09 AM
As she stepped into the familiar bright light of the Sonora foyer, its paintings and floor mural unaltered from exactly what they had been at the end of June, Helena shut her eyes and breathed deeply.

She did this for two reasons. One was that it was nice - it was wonderful - to be back where she had patterns to follow, rules to live by, and the personal lives the adults presumably lead didn't affect her in any way. The other was to avoid looking at her.

Though there had to be a hundred people here, Helena's gaze had been drawn immediately to a girl with light blonde hair who was shorter than she was. She hadn't seen a face, but a thing she was quickly discovering was how easy it was to be sure she was looking at a person she could blame for coming in and ruining her life. She hadn't wanted a second look to confirm it, and she wasn't going to take one. She felt that it was bad enough to know that the little princess was here to mess up her drama-free zone without actually seeing her.

A very small, very rational corner of her brain told her it wasn't really fair to blame a firstie for ruining her life, especially when her life was only ruined because her father and mother were pathological liars. Helena told that voice, in no uncertain terms, to shut up. She couldn't hate Mum or Daddy, which left hating that woman and her kids. It wasn't fair, but neither was Geoff cutting her off the same way Anne had done to him because he associated her with the whole bloody mess at home, which had imploded again as soon as they'd thought it was settling down.

Once she sat down in the Cascade Hall, she found she could actually pay attention to Professor Powell. Unfortunately, paying attention to the Headmistress meant having all that attention quickly redirected to the firsties, who were too tiny to believe and the majority of whom she barely saw as she found herself, once again, looking at her.

When she looked like she was choking, Helena almost moved, feeling a vague sense of responsibility, before she checked herself. No way was she admitting that she was, in any way, associated with her. Within a few seconds, Helena had to bite her tongue to keep from swearing, which she'd become relatively good at over the summer. There was no way this was happening. Though she knew how ridiculous it was even as she thought it, she still couldn't help but think that she would not allow it.

She was in Crotalus. She was going to be in the common room, under Helena's feet, pretty much all the time for the rest of the year. That would make her goal of pretending that the girl didn't exist even harder than it would have been anyway. Helena really wished that she knew which deity she'd pissed off, because she'd like the chance to atone for it before things got worse.

That, at least, was something Daddy had once said that could be believed: it could always get worse. It wasn't quite as comforting as she thought it was meant to be.

To Helena's surprise, she met her eyes from across the room - and then walked away. She didn't even come and sit at the other end of the table. Instead, she went over to the Aladrens, taking what Helena suspected was Geoff's old seat but imagined she was too paranoid to identify in good faith. Helena blinked, surprised. What had possessed the girl to do that?

She was not going to obsess over this. There was no point. What was done, was done; she couldn't change it. All she'd done by trying to fix things was make them worse, and what could she do from Arizona, anyway? She had to try to get a life and get on with it, as though nothing were wrong. The mature, responsible thing to do would have been to make an appointment with a licensed psychologist and get it out of her system, but Sonora didn't have a shrink anymore, which left repression as her only option. She turned to look for the nearest familiar face and then spoke, trying her best, which wasn't half-bad, to sound normal.

"Hey," she said with a smile. "Good summer?"
16 Helena Layne Back, but not better than ever. 88 Helena Layne 0 5


Elly Eriksson

November 01, 2009 3:04 PM
Elly's summer had been truly phenomenal. Aside from the last week - which had been pretty good because she'd laughed it up in Austria with her parents and her cousins, went ice-skating on a frozen lake and watched groundhog Day in German, which was truly hilarious - she'd spent the entire summer in a covered wagon with Saul, travelling the Oregon Trail. Well, the first part of it, anyway. Saul was carrying on while Elly had to go see her family and then come back to school for her final year.

Wow, final year - that was almost as exciting as the summer. Elly had a lot to live up to this year. As if leading the Pecari team (which practically only had four people on it, now) to glory wouldn't be hard enough, she'd had the title of Head Girl thrust upon her, too. Last year, when the announcement had been made, Elly could barely believe it, but she'd been beyond excited. Now she'd had plenty of time over the summer to discuss it with Saul, she was still excited, but she also felt - guilty? That wasn't quite it, but that was certainly close to how she was feeling. Elly knew she had as much right to the position as any of the other girls whose names had been on the ballott, but she didn't feel as though she'd really earned it in the same way. Everything had always come easily to Elly - making friends, joining in, getting away with things. True enough she had to work twice as hard as everyone else to accomplish a new spell, but in the big picture called Life, things like that barely counted.

When she collected her badge from the Headmistress, Elly missed the exuberant yelling and cheering that would have occurred if Saul, Echo or Meredith were still at Sonora. Would she still have been voted Head Girl if her best friends had stayed at school to keep her in trouble? It didn't matter, anyway. Elly had practise at being responsbile - she had being a prefect and Assistant Quidditch Captain to thank for that. She was comfortable with working with others and making new friends. Like Saul said, she would be fine. Now she'd convinced herself, Elly just had to convince everyone else. She knew Jose hadn't been thrilled to have her as a partner, so to speak, but then Elly voted for Matt, so they were in the same boat. Still, she was determined to start the year on the right foot, so she followed Josh back to the Crotalus area to have a quick chat with him at the start of the feast.

But then Elly saw the look on Helena's face, and without conscious decision she sat by her, instead. "Hey," Elly returned the greeting with a smile of her own. "Yeah, my summer was great, thanks." Elly couldn't hide her joy - it really had been an amazing time. "Um, so, are you okay?" she asked Helena, lowering her voice a little because that's what you did when you thought someone was upset by something. "You seem..." Elly hesitated a split second while she found the right word, "down."
0 Elly Eriksson Can't say the same. 92 Elly Eriksson 0 5


Helena

November 03, 2009 1:30 PM
For a few seconds, Helena experienced a thrill of horror at the realization of who she was speaking to. This had little to nothing to do with Elly personally, and was more about a sudden certainty that, somehow, she'd let herself become so distracted that she'd joined the Pecaris for dinner and was about to have a lot of explaining to do.

Then her common sense kicked back in. The table she was at possessed a gang of annoying fifth year girls. It also had quite a few other people she knew for a fact to be Crotali and a few small red people. Elly had come over from Pecari instead of Helena coming over from Crotalus. She wasn't so strung out as all that, which meant normality could ensue. She laughed, sounding faintly embarrassed, when Elly asked if she was all right.

Oh, yeah. Daddy just has this other daughter who's rich as sin, and it turns out Geoff's not my brother and Lavinia's, he's hers. Oh, didn't I ever mention Vin around here? She's a Squib, but we don't talk about that - Daddy thinks no one would ever marry me if we did, and God forbid I actually do something productive with my life and marry someone I can talk civilly to. But anyway, Geoff has this other mother who's dead, and he never knew about this any more than I did, so now he's not speaking to anyone as far as I know. His niece is here, though, and she's living in my House as of tonight. How 'bout them Ashwinders?

Yeah. The Grand Canyon would fill up with water before she uttered those sentences. Even in her head, it sounded way, way too crazy to have happened.

"Oh, I'm fine," she said instead, waving it off. "Headache. I swear, the wagons are still murder to ride all the way from South Carolina." The long ride had gotten easier over the years, but it was still unpleasant. "Thanks, though." It was nice of Elly to ask; in the other girl's position, Helena suspected she would have read it as Elly still being sore over the Head Girl thing and went on about her business. "So, you excited for this year? I've always heard seventh is awful, but I've got a good feeling about it."
16 Helena Well, you can say half of it. 88 Helena 0 5


Elly

November 04, 2009 1:57 PM
Helena waved off her apparent blue mood by attributing it to a wagon-ride headache. "You're telling me," Elly replied with a laugh. "I had a nine hour flight from Vienna, and got the wagon in Virginia. Just as well I slept on the plane, 'coz I'm on about 4 in the morning." As if on cue, she stifled what would otherwise have been an enormous yawn. She supposed an uncomfortable wagon ride could send you a bit grumpy, especially if it gave you a headache. Not that Helena seemed particularly grumpy, but she certainly wasn't on Elly's level of cheer. "Plus I spent like three months riding a wagon, so it's a bit weird to be off again so soon, to be honest." With a cheery smile, Elly picked up a single breadstick and started munching it, not sure yet whether she would sit there and eat or head back to the Pecari table.

"So, you excited for this year? I've always heard seventh is awful, but I've got a good feeling about it." Helena said. Elly considered this for a couple of second while she swallowed her current mouthful, a small frown indicating she was giving the question some thought.

"I'm defintiely excited," she replied, "but I'm also sort of terrified." Elly laughed - terror wasn't something she would normally confess to experiencing, but if something could give her nightmares wherein she exploded the potions lab, killed a couple of first years with some out-of-control fireworks and got expelled from Sonora, then yes, she could attribute the emotion. "What if I run the Quidditch team into the ground, mess up the end of year activities and fail all my exams?" She voiced her more sensible concerns. At least she was only taking three subjects - Elly had seen the state of Saul and Geoff at the end of last year, at could at least be greatful she wasn't an academic enthusiast.

Speaking of Geoff... "How's your brother, anyway? Got all Os, I expect." Elly smiled; she could now admit to herself the crush she'd had on Helena's brother last year. It would have just been embarrassing if she'd allowed herself to be aware of it at the time. Especially as she had always thought he'd been the other part of a couple with Anne Wright.
0 Elly That is true. I am back. 0 Elly 0 5


Helena

November 05, 2009 6:14 PM
For a moment, Helena simply looked confused. The words were all standard English, but they seemed meaningless; it could have as easily been standard Arabic. Plains were what could be found out West, and it was not physically possible to go from Vienna to Virginia on a broom in nine hours. Not short of very strange and probably dangerous magics that only the very brave and very stupid would try, anyway.

Then her brain caught up. If it was this slow on the uptake once classes started, she was dead meat. Having not seen an actual Muggle since she was eleven was no reason to let her (admittedly not stellar; she could pass for one if it was a matter of necessity, but only a slightly eccentric and old-fashioned one) knowledge of Muggles slip away altogether.

"Oh," she said. "You're talking about airyplanes, not geography." She thought that was what the metal bird Muggles flew in was called, anyway. "I was wondering how you managed to cross the Atlantic in nine hours."

She wondered what it would be like, riding an airyplane. It sounded more comfortable than a broom, and the person going to the destination didn't have to steer or even be aware of where the location was, but she had heard they had a rather distressing habit of sometimes falling out of the sky and - for some reason - proceeding to explode. Maybe just sitting a broom had its advantages after all. Of course, if she did that, she might get tired and fall off and drown, which was far from ideal, and...

...And she had no reason to think about all that. It wasn't as if she was planning any transcontinental trips. She did, however, seriously consider it when her brother came up.

"You know him so well," she said lightly. "I think he made an E in Charms, actually, but it didn't seem to bother him much." It had never happened, but she could almost hear it in her head as he announced what Devian and Morgaine could do with their richness-equals-worth theories. She knew her brother very well; much better, in fact, than he knew her.

"He's all moved out now," she added, to cover for why she'd lack details in a major way if asked for them. "He came out to California at the end of July." At least, a few comments her father had let slip had made it sound like he'd gone to find Anne, succeeded, and then had his position betrayed to Mark by said Anne (Anne being subtle enough to pass for the double agent hurt her brain; the girl she'd known had been, among other issues, about as capable of sneaking as a dull-minded elephant), and Anne had evidently become attached to her relatives in California. Once Anne was attached to some poor person, place, or thing, she tended to stay with it. A lot. Sometimes a little too much.

"So, why were you on a wagon all summer?" Apart from being a little uncomfortable lying to someone who'd always been, as far as she could remember, perfectly decent to her, she was curious. She knew for a fact that Muggles had moved on from wagons to cars (that word, she was sure of) years and years ago, despite the fact that some people believed cars would cause the end of the world. She couldn't imagine why anyone would voluntarily ride around in a wagon, though...
16 Helena Until the end of the term, anyway. 88 Helena 0 5


Elly

November 08, 2009 4:29 AM
"Oh, you're talking about airyplanes, not geography," Helena said, and Elly couldn't help but laugh again. It was so bizarre; she herself had received enough practise by now to seamlessly slip between magic and Muggle conversations (and indeed, lifestyles). Elly sometimes forgot that others didn't have that same flexibility, born from never needing to execute that habitual switch.

"Yeah, sorry," Elly added. "I spent the last week with my Muggle family, and I forget that sometimes I need translating," she explained. Then after a brief catch-up on Geoff, Helena asked Elly about her summer: in particular, how she'd come to spend so much time on a wagon. "Well, Saul had this idea to do the Oregon Trail," Elly said, her tone indicating it hadn't perhaps been a brilliant plan, and her infectious smile indicating that hadn't mattered. "We started off in Missouri, and he's still going on to Oregon even as we speak." Elly interrupted herself with a laugh, then said, "I'm sure he'll get there some day. I didn't know he was planning on building the wagon himself," Elly told Helena, with the air of someone sharing a particularly funny joke. "The Sonora wagons are luxury, I swear." She knew Saul hadn't wanted to use magic on his trip, but Elly was sure she wouldn't have survived without the odd spell here and there - cushioning charms in particular. "It was brillant, anyway." She told Helena, and decided to leave it there, because she knew there were very few people in the world who would be interested in hearing in detail what the two of them had accomplished over the summer.

"How about you?" Elly asked her Crotalus yearmate. "Any exciting adventures to speak of?" Deciding to stay talking to Helena, at least for the time being, Elly poured some juice into the empty goblet in front of her, and drank while she listened.
0 Elly Then we'll be here no more 0 Elly 0 5


Helena

November 10, 2009 4:36 PM
Helena forced a smile as Elly laughed at her plains/planes mix-up. She thought she might normally have been at least mildly irked, but couldn't trust herself to judge if something was actually offensive at the moment. She'd been irritated to discover how much easier she was to irritate now, which hadn't helped the condition at all.

It was interesting, though, to think of why she’d never heard of a Muggleborn superiority movement, or at least a half-blood one. She was a witch and proud of it, but she could see the benefits of being able to move between worlds with ease. What she couldn’t do with that ability…Half-bloods, it seemed to her, were ideally placed to take over the world, because they could – theoretically, if their parents were smart – have a near-complete knowledge of Muggle and Magical customs and technologies. Separation and ignorance was the basis of the status quo, in which neither society dominated the other; if the half-bloods ever decided to muck that up, the status quo would go straight out the window.

The whole pureblood program really was very stupid. Daddy had always favored her above Geoff, but he’d limited his ambitions for her to a marriage above her station and using her new contacts to help her brother because she was a girl. By rejecting Muggleborns, half-bloods, and women out of hand as inferiors with no useful contributions to make to society (except, of course, manual labor and babies), it seemed to her that the richest and most influential sector of society was cutting off its own wand hand to spite its arm.

The direction of her thoughts was starting to make her uncomfortable, though – it was so very Daddy, in spirit if not details. She wasn’t ruthless and proactive. It just wasn’t her. She took circumstances and worked from there to turn them to her advantage, but she didn’t actively plan to make things happen. Summer talk was almost a welcome distraction.

“I can imagine,” she said faintly when Elly said the wagon Saul had constructed made the Sonora ones look luxurious. She’d never really thought about it before, but a wagon seemed like it could be a very complicated thing to build. For one thing, the body of it had to be strong enough to hold the rider and all of his stuff up and provide shelter from the elements. For another, it had a lot of parts. Most of all, though, it had to be one complicated piece of magic that made the thing fly. “I’m glad you had fun, though.”

She decided not to ask if they were together. It had sure looked that way at the end of last year, and this trip made it sound more likely, but it was none of her business, and she knew, courtesy of Geoff, how irritating it could be to have people asking about her love life. She would have listened to his unfounded accusations that she was having a sordid little affair with Josh all day now if it just meant he came back and things went back to normal, but it had been irritating at the time.

And then it was her turn to talk about what she'd done.

"No adventures I can think of," Helena said lightly, taking a sip of water. "We had some relatives visit right before Geoff left, and I finished half of a cross-stitch project and caught up on my soap, but that was about it."
16 Helena It's sad. 88 Helena 0 5