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

Grayson Wright, I think...

October 31, 2009 11:25 PM
Maybe only living a state away from the school, and so not being on the wagons for as long, contributed to it, but it didn't strike Gray as hard to eat after arriving at school for his fifth year. He was, in fact, looking forward to it a great deal - so much so that he was coming up with a play in his head on the topic of starving students being held up by a chain of firsties and the Headmistress' speech. He had never been a very impatient person, he thought, but surely they'd learn who their professors were in the next day or two anyway...

It probably didn't, as his mother claimed, help that he'd grown several inches since the previous September. He was now of about average height for a fifteen-year-old guy (sixteen in just seventeen days), which was a considerable improvement over being shorter than some of the girls. The appetite that came with it, though, wasn't as welcome, and neither were all the expeditions to buy new clothes. If he hadn't had to go on those expeditions, he'd still not know a lot of things about his cousin-sister (sisin? couster?) that he really didn't need to know. He also wouldn't have been traumatized by the weird shop ladies, which could only have been an improvement to his life.

He clapped distractedly for Professor Fawcett and the new Heads (neither of whom he had ever spoken a word to in his life, and who he did not expect to initiate contact with now). Surely they could eat after they heard who the new prefects were. Surely...

..."Grayson Wright"

For a moment, Gray thought he'd been caught daydreaming and was now being told off. Then he heard a reference to Lucie, Laurie, and Holly. He did the math, adding six and carrying four and so forth, but had trouble believing that he'd come to the right conclusion. If he was right, then Headmistress Powell - who he had always assumed was sane - had just said he was a prefect.

He followed the girls up front, wondering when the punch line was going to be introduced and how embarrassed he'd be after it was. Though he disliked her personally, he couldn't deny that Chelsea had connections. She was part of one of the Big Families, who had representatives in many years at Sonora and were pretty much institutions there. He was Gray Wright. His main claims to fame were that his cousin had been a severely obsessed and moderately effective Quidditch captain two years ago and that he'd written a play for the school Concert. He was the weird kid who made up names for the creatures in Care of Magical Creatures and turned Potions into a theatrical production on occasion. He wouldn't have been prefect material even if Chelsea's parents hadn't probably donated more money to the school last year than his parents had made in that same year.

In spite of this, the Headmistress seemed to be giving him a badge, and no one seemed to be laughing at him. He looked at the badge blankly, still half-waiting for Powell to say there had been a mistake or for the joke to become obvious. When they were allowed to leave the front, instead of going back to Aladren (which would have been the proper thing to do, considering that he was a prefect, but he figured that he could get away with forgetting he was one right now), he followed Lucie and sat down across from her, nodding to the nearby student who gave him an odd look. Gray was used to getting odd looks. His father threw them around like candy when he was at home.

As the feast appeared, he looked at the badge hard, then held it up for Lucie to see. "Does this thing look like a fake to you, or did she just make us prefects?"
16 Grayson Wright, I think... Say what, now? (Lucie) 113 Grayson Wright, I think... 0 5


Lucie Dupree

November 02, 2009 12:12 PM
Summer had been a rather interesting and while also a bit odd, Lucie hated to see it end. Once school had ended, final arrangements had been made for the wedding. She still couldn’t believe that Devian had actually gone through with the marriage to Rosalind Rabindra. She would have thought his wandering eye would have been enough for him to question whether or not he could enter something so sacred when he knew he couldn’t be loyal. While at school, even with Rosalind around, he had held a thing for Bella Santoro and one for Helena Layne.

Though, thankfully, in her opinion, both had been unrealized. She liked Bella enough, but she didn’t think she would be very good for Devian. She seemed the type that could cause waves and that wouldn’t sit well with her parents, especially not with the one that was to lead them all. Besides, with Danae and Josh’s betrothal, they already had a connection to the Santoro family so another one, while acceptable, was not needed. As for Helena, it was more that the only way he could have been with her was to do what Nicoletta did and leave the family.

As much as she disagreed with Devian sometimes, she loved her brother. It was already weird that he was no longer living at home. After the wedding (she had gotten to be a bridesmaid – very exciting), they had gone on their honeymoon and when they had gotten back, they had moved into their own place. Now, it was just she and Danae at home and soon, it would be just her. Unless, by some chance, she ended up getting married first, which she hoped wasn’t the case. She was still trying to find a way out of it, but how? She thought she had come up with a solution last year, but it had become apparent that it wasn’t going to work.

Lucie was so deep in concentration on formulating a new plan that one might have thought her a statue. She wasn’t even eating any of the delicious food before her. She might have stayed this was for the entire feast if the sound of her name hadn’t broken into her thoughts. Glancing up in concern, she caught the rest of the announcement. Oddly enough, she wasn’t surprised that she had ended up with the title of prefect. It had been a fifty-fifty chance to whether or not she would get it, which really she wouldn’t have been surprised if it had gone the other way either.

No, what took her by surprise were her fellow prefects as she got up to go along with them, especially Laurel Cider. If anyone had gotten it in Crotalus, she would have thought it would have been Anabel or maybe Cecily since they seemed to be the leaders of their little group. Weren’t natural leaders, among other qualities, usually looked for when choosing prefects? Not to mention the fact that Laurie had been tied to the same boy for how long? Didn’t she want to see what else was out there? Were they going to get married? It seemed silly to not at least see what other people were like. Maybe she was scared, but if she was, then that meant that she might not have tried anything really and how could one be expected to give any advice to others if they never left their own little box?

Of course, it wasn’t like the Headmistress knew of all these little dramas. Or maybe she did and that’s why Laurie had been picked. Being with the same person also suggested a form of stability, which was probably good in a prefect. Although, that brought up the question of how Holly had become a prefect. Everyone knew that she wasn’t exactly stable, so that one really boggled Lucie’s mind. But then there might have been traits in the other options that might have made Holly’s flaws pale in comparison. She wondered if that had been the case in determining between her and Josiah. Who knew? Then, there was Grayson versus Chelsea. She would have thought Chelsea would have been picked before Grayson since Chelsea’s sister, Kaylie, had once been a prefect, but then that didn’t necessarily mean Chelsea would be the same.

Then, Grayson did participate. Wasn’t being able to work in a group and be helpful part of the role of prefect? The four of them would have to work with each other. Maybe that was it. Maybe the Headmistress hoped they would bring out the best of each other to be awesome role models. That sounded like a good theory and she decided to go with it. She wondered what her positive and negative traits would be. What would make her an awful prefect and what would make her a great prefect? It was hard to tell since she knew the logic behind her thinking that obviously someone else wouldn’t know and so something that seemed awful to someone else might not seem the same to her. More logic to why they had all been chosen.

While standing with the others, she snuck a look over at Grayson. He was taller than her now, which made her notice him a bit more. She had flirted with him before and she liked him as a friend, but had never really considered anything more seriously. Oh, it wasn’t that he had been displeasing to the eye, because he hadn’t. It was just a combination that she was discovering flirting and that he had been a little height-challenged. She liked when the guy was taller than her. It made him seem manlier. She didn’t think she could ever date someone that was shorter or even the same height that she was, which made it a really good thing that she was short. It gave her more options even if Rook was still in the picture.

After she got her badge, Lucie headed back to where she had been sitting previously. She paused to admire the badge a moment before her stomach gave an unhappy growl. She was about to reach for one of the many dishes when the person across from her gave her pause. She hadn’t expected Grayson to come sit at her table. Not that she minded in the least as it would give them the opportunity to catch up before getting back into the swing of the busyness of classes, which this would probably be the worst year ever since they would have C.A.T.S. It was a rather anxious thought, because she knew that she had to do well on them for a multitude of reasons that she didn’t really want to think about at the moment.

Thankfully, at that moment, Grayson made her laugh at his disbelief that they were made prefects. “I’m fairly certain that she made us prefects. Otherwise, it would be a horrible joke on Laurie and Holly as well,” she stated as she brushed back some of her long blonde hair. It wasn’t as long as it had been in previous years since she had gotten it cut over the summer, but it was better styled bringing out more curls than just her natural ones. It wasn’t the only noticeable change. Her face was devoid of any of the chubbiness of childhood. Her skill with makeup had improved making her skin glow and her blue eyes look wider. Even the rest of her body was changing. She felt very feminine and with the addition of the badge, she felt very grown up. She had a good feeling that it was going to be a great year.
0 Lucie Dupree The world is topsy-turvy 114 Lucie Dupree 0 5

Gray

November 03, 2009 5:46 PM
Gray considered Lucie's point. He could see someone with an incredibly cruel sense of humor running that kind of number on Holly to watch her completely break down after it became apparent that she wasn't really a prefect, and he and Lucie were probably considered only marginally saner than she was because they didn't cry in class or abuse drugs, but Laurie was way too normal for it. No mental instability, that he'd seen, whatsoever; he even thought she managed to sustain an impressive number of stable relationships. Making a fool of Anabel would, no doubt, get much more of a response, so Laurie was probably a real prefect.

If Laurie really was a prefect, then setting the rest of them up would fall kind of flat.

That would completely defeat the sadistic point.

Therefore, they really were prefects.

"Mom's gonna flip," he said in wonderment at the conclusion of this logic, imagining how his mother was likely to react to the news that her only child had just beaten a Brockert for something. It would probably involve fainting and screaming. Screaming, though, made him think of another person flipping. "If they decide I'm Quidditch captain next, I quit school."

It was half a joke - he was abysmal at Quidditch, and had only signed up in his fourth year because the team had been short - but being an artist did not give him a death wish, and he had no desire to see how his cousin would react to that event. Anne was in therapy now, but Gray wasn't sure it was working. For one thing, she was lying to everyone she knew except him about it, and for another, becoming girly and cooperative on the surface didn't prevent all of her new hobbies (including writing really bad poems) from involving a lot of simulated violence. Gray was half-convinced at times that her friends and boyfriend didn't actually exist outside of her head, either. It was going to be a few years before he trusted her not to be an itsy-bitsy bit territorial about her old job.

Since he couldn't do anything about that or the fact that he'd just been handed power on a plate, though, Gray's badge was carefully put down and his attention sent to more profitable areas, such as dinner and Lucie. She looked... different, somehow. Recognizably Lucie, just different. He chalked this up to the same thing he had chalked Anne's sudden interest in make-up and clothes: Some Weird Girl Thing. There was no way he'd ever understand it, but the effect was nice. "So, uh, do anything interesting this summer? Your brother graduated last year, didn't he?"
16 Gray At least the hurly-burly's done. 113 Gray 0 5


Lucie

November 05, 2009 10:19 PM
OOC: I meant Liz Guthrie not Josiah. That’s what happens when you have too many characters swimming around in your head wanting to post. :P

BIC:

Though, she didn’t say it, Lucie had to agree that quitting school was a good idea if they made Gray Quidditch Captain. In her opinion, he was the most academically gifted person in the class, but physically gifted, he was not. She wouldn’t say that though since she didn’t want him to perceive her as being rude. Lately, what people thought of her was taking greater precedence in her life. She wasn’t really sure, but supposed it had something to do with her mother’s training. There were so many rules, more than ever before! Maybe because it must have been successful since Danae was going to marry a Santoro and she wasn’t the only one.

“Yeah, Devian graduated last year. He’s being prepped for a position in my dad’s company. He moved into his own place about a month ago and he got married. Actually, it was to a girl that was in your house. Rosalind Rabindra. I was a bridesmaid. The dress was actually really nice and in a lavender. I had to partner Rosie’s cousin, Curtis, though,” Lucie said with a face. Curtis was only thirteen. Her betrothed had been the best man and had walked down the aisle with the maid of honor, Rosie’s sister, Audrey.

“Aside from that, it was the usual, you know? I had to spend time with Rook, getting to know him and all.” She stuck her tongue out slightly at that one. She couldn’t stand him at all. He was an arrogant jerk who seemed that all women should immediately adore him. The fact that she didn’t seemed to displease him greatly and only upped his attempts. It was terrible! She had thought about inviting Grayson to the wedding, but had thought better of it. For one, it would probably have upped Rook’s trying. The other had to do with her parents’ disapproval, especially her father’s.

As was polite, she asked, “What about your summer? Was it good?” Besides being polite, she was genuinely interested. She wondered if Anne was still living at home. If not, what she was up to, what Gray was up to. How his room was going. Had he done any extra credit work over the summer? She figured that like her he had probably done a lot of reading. “So, how many books did you get to? Or were you too busy writing? The play Aladren did last year was amazing. I don’t know if I ever got around to telling you that.”
0 Lucie Very true. 0 Lucie 0 5

Gray

November 07, 2009 1:59 AM
To judge by Lucie's expression, Rosalind Rabindra (who Gray only remembered because of that bet between Layne and Anne, who'd both believed Morgaine Carey would not tolerate being compared to another smart girl but disagreed about how long it would take Morgaine to figure out a way to push Rosalind off a cliff) came with better connections than she did with in-laws. Lucie's expression went on to suggest that time hadn't improved Mr. Chess Piece the Fiance, either.

Gray gave very careful consideration to what to say. It wasn't like he could exactly grasp her situation. Not only was he a guy (usually the more powerful party in the sort of pureblood world she lived in, which was one reason he couldn't see how it worked; Dad couldn't take care of himself, never mind run a family), but the Wrights didn't do arranged marriage. His parents had begun to get pushy about his lack of a girlfriend, but his father had married a Squib. There wasn't much forcing the kid into a union distasteful to him after that. Lucie had worse luck there than he did, which was an odd concept.

"I'd, uh, offer to go beat them up for you," he said after consideration, "but I don't think that would work well."

Some geeks were incapable of admitting what they were. Gray was not such a traitor to the Code of the Supernerd. Maybe, in a moment of temporary insanity, he had flirted with some other ideologies in his fourth year, but he was better now. His muse was almost completely back, which meant he did not need another outlet for frustration, and he was very secure in his identity. The only person he wanted to prove much of anything to was his father, and he was smart enough to know that was about as likely as Anne ending up happily married.

Anne might have found someone willing to date her, but that wasn't the same as getting married. Gray was sure there was only one person in the world stupid enough to want to marry Anne, and that was Layne, who she clearly didn't want.

Any thoughts he might have had about his summer went right out of his head when Lucie complimented his play. Even he wasn't sure if he was more pleased or embarrassed to hear that she'd liked it. He liked compliments as much as the next fellow, but he never quite knew what to do with them. It was one of those things he'd have to work on, if by some chance he did become an internationally respected author someday. "Oh, uh, thanks, Luce," he mumbled, getting the impression his ears weren't quite their normal color. "Anne helped a lot - she didn't trust me not to put the Olympians in it or something."

He grimaced at the vivid mental images of Anne's handwriting that comment brought up. He never wanted to think about the love poems (or the fact that he'd come to the conclusion they were mostly or entirely about Lucie's cousin) ever again. Most of her stuff was just badly-composed angst, with bits and pieces of going on in horrid metaphors about Quidditch and talking about what she'd like to do to the guy who killed her mother. The romantic stuff was sappier than the average pine tree. He had learned a lot of lessons about the importance of respecting other people's privacy from those poems and her diary.

"She, uh, wasn't around the house much this summer - summer classes and a social life - so I got a lot of reading done. Fifteen books. It was almost like being an only child again." A note of satisfaction about that faded as he began to look a bit guilty. "That might, uh, have been kinda my fault, though. Layne turned up for some reason, and she knows I don't like him."
16 Gray Of course it is. Would I lie to you? 113 Gray 0 5


Lucie

November 15, 2009 1:06 PM
The picture of Grayson beating up Rook was enough to send Lucie into a fit of giggles. “No, no, I don’t think it would.” Though, Grayson had grown, Rook still had more muscle on him. Besides, the idea of Grayson beating anyone up was just ridiculous. He just wasn’t that sort of person. Lucie didn’t think he was even capable of hurting a mouse, which was actually a very good thing. She liked that Gray wasn’t a ‘tough’ guy since it seemed that most acted like jerks trying to keep up some sort of image of being that. Rook was kind of like one of those guys. That’s probably why her dad liked him so well. He was perfect for the family business.

She hated the family business. It was as if her family members were the Olympians to be feared. They ruined everything and she worried that if she would follow in that tradition. Was she setting Gray up as her friend only to knock him down? No, that was silly. She liked him and it was adorable how his ears turned red over her compliment. “You’re welcome. At any rate, the two of you did a great job and I don’t think it would have been so bad if the Olympians were in it. You could have gone a lot of ways with that.” She was already thinking of some amusing twists and turns that could have happened, but then that was natural with meddlesome forces.

It didn’t seem as if Grayson had too many meddling forces over the summer since he had gotten so much reading done. She hadn’t really gotten any done and she would have commented on that if the conversation hadn’t turned to Geoffrey Layne. She raised her eyebrow in interest. “Oh? Why don’t you like him? Didn’t he date Anne or something?” She had heard that somewhere, but she couldn’t recall. If they had dated that probably made leading Quidditch together previously a bit awkward, but what was more important was Gray’s reaction. She couldn’t picture him not really liking someone.
0 Lucie Maybe 0 Lucie 0 5

Gray

November 16, 2009 3:44 PM
Lucie's giggles over the idea of him versus the chess piece and random in-law weren't completely contagious, but he did half-smile and shrug. He might be capable of holding his own in a magical fight, but physically...Well, Gray was just glad Anne had been around and threatening to knock the stuffing out of anyone who bothered him for his first three years.

He hadn't actually planned to do anything with the Olympian deities in the play - that had been a case of Anne becoming confused, refusing to admit it, and piecing things together in her head so it sort of made sense but was off-base - but he wasn't surprised, somehow, that Lucie liked the idea. He made a note of it just the same. "Maybe next time," he said philosophically. "If we keep up the - rotation-thingy, then there'll be another one when we're...seventh years? Yeah, I think that's right."

Seventh years. The very thought that they could someday be such bizarre things was downright unsettling. It would end life as they'd known it; the Duprees being Duprees, they'd probably never see each other again. Lucie would marry the chess piece, and he'd...do something. Probably journalism; it would be years, if it was ever, before he could come up with enough decent stuff for the author thing to work, and writing was the only thing he'd ever really enjoyed doing. A job that didn't feature it would probably bore him out of his mind.

A look of horror, bordering on disgust, crossed Gray’s face at the notion of Layne dating Anne. He was sort of accustomed to the idea that people could read the long-time primary relationship of his cousin's life that way, but it was another thing altogether to hear someone talk about it. “No,” he said firmly. “Never. She introduces him to people as her brother.” His tone indicated just how much he thought of that. She’d developed a habit of doing the same to him, which implied Layne was his brother, too, which was not a situation Gray was prepared to tolerate. He’d liked being an only child, and it had been enough to have to get used to having a ‘sister’. He did not need a brother, especially one who was a jerk. Which brought him back to Lucie's actual question.

“But I don’t like him because he’s a self-centered jerk who used to look at my cousin like she was a cat and started looking at her like – “ he remembered that he was speaking to a girl, a proper lady no less, and changed what he was going to say – “– uh – a mannequin or something since she started wearing skirts and painting her nails and stuff. It’s creepy." He did not mention that he had a problem with guys like Geoff - ambitious, assertive, athletic types - just on principle and in general, as said problem was completely pointless.
16 Gray Well, then. 113 Gray 0 5