Headmistress Powell

July 30, 2010 3:59 AM
Every four years Sonora would repeat the same Midsummer celebration. This year was, inevitably, the fair. However, unlike the previous fair which had been primarily student-lead, this year left current students free to enjoy organised activities. During the evening, there would be a Muggle-influenced fun fair with rides, food, and game booths. During the daytime, current students would have the opportunity to interact with alumni - Sonora students of previous years who had volunteered to return and share their post-Sonora experiences. For the older years this might offer an insight into future career options, or a first-hand account of their prospective colleges. For the younger years it would be a demonstration of what they could achieve, or what magic, more generally, could do.

The morning of the Midsummer fair saw the Headmistress at the Head of the Cascade Hall (where tables and chairs had been arranged in its corners, leaving the central space clear of furniture, but currently full of students), having already greeted the returning alumni – some of whom were familiar to Sadi, some less so. Many would be familiar to the current students, too, particularly to the older years, who may even have shared classes in the past. It was nostalgic to see so many faces return, and it offered the Headmistress a chance to wonder what her current pupils would be doing by the time the next fair rolled around.

“Good morning,” Headmistress Powell greeted the collection of students, past students, and staff, “and welcome to the Midsummer Fair. During the day you will have the opportunity to discover how Sonora alumni have filled their time since graduating. Talks and presentations will be taking place according to a schedule - which you can find displayed at various locations throughout the building – in the gardens, on the pitch, in the library, and here in the Hall.” Spreading the alumni about provided them with most space and privacy, and the opportunity for students to learn outside the classroom, which Sadi believed was always beneficial.

“A lunch buffet will be served here in the Hall, and during the evening the Quidditch Pitch will be transformed to offer a range of entertainment opportunities.” This had been planned to include rides such as a Griffin-go-round and the more terrifying Wronksi Feint, assorted game booths for prizes, and unhealthy food stuffs such as cotton candy and burgers. It was an opportunity for everyone to relax, for the alumni to catch up, and to celebrate the end of another term at Sonora. Sadi couldn’t believe how quickly this year had gone; this evening she would be announcing next year’s Head Boy and Girl. First, though, she had planned a day of activities that would hopefully be fun and informative. “Arrive on the pitch at six o’clock to join me in opening the festivities. Until then, enjoy your day.”

With that said, and a smile to the assembled crowd, Sadi cancelled the charm that had increased the volume of her voice, and was available to direct people as necessary to the nearest schedule (helped by the Head Boy and Girl, and the prefects, who were in charge of taking care of the returning students). Each schedule was identical, and read:

'In the library
Zack Dill will discuss his education in astrophysics, astronomy and arithmancy with small groups;
Rosalind Rabindra will discuss her experiences of married life with small groups;
Anne Wright with discuss her prospective career in spell development with small groups.

In the Cascade Hall
Morgaine Carey will conduct a presentation on Healer training;
Mia Kerova will discuss her Charms apprenticeship with small groups;
Geoffrey Layne will conduct a presentation on further study of potions;
Helena Layne will conduct a presentation on her work at the Department of Magical International co-operation;
Blake Taylor will conduct a presentation on his current position of Transfiguration professor at Sapient University of Magic.

In the Gardens
Dalila Bastet will discuss her experiences of traveling with large groups;
Catherine Gardiner will discuss her experience of Married Life with small groups;
Saul Pierce will discuss his experiences in the entertainment industry to large groups;
Earl Valentine will discuss study of Art at Sapienti University of Magic to large groups.

On the Quidditch Pitch
Stephen Baxter and Geoffrey Spindler will discuss their enterprise in broomstick engineering to large groups.

Feel free to talk to as many alumni as you choose. If you have any further queries, speak to a member of staff.'
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Powell Midsummer Fair Part I 0 Headmistress Powell 1 5


Helena Layne

August 02, 2010 8:15 PM
She was an idiot. A complete, bona fide, no-doubt-about-it idiot.

The soft noise of the waterfalls seemed almost obscenely loud as Helena rubbed her temples against a post-Portkey headache not helped by having her brother, who she could tell was occasionally glancing in her direction even if she was pointedly ignoring him, in the room with her and having sighted at least one other person she really didn’t want to see and another she was uncertain about. And she had just been here last year, and captain of the Quidditch team then, so at least almost everyone in Crotalus would still be inclined to see her as ‘one of them’ instead of a supposedly wise adult. Which, considering how her career was going in the wake of a seriously failed attempt at getting some self-esteem and maybe a promotion, she wasn’t anyway. She suspected half the reason she’d been given the days off to come and do this thing was so they could discuss transferring her to some godforsaken corner of Canada with less risk of her finding out about it and screwing something else up by attempting a counter-play.

What had she been thinking, coming back? She had come up with some rubbish about showing the people in her House that there were options in the world beyond being pretty and sitting on a vast estate, but it was seeming thinner by the second.

She had been happier at Sonora than at home for most of her seven-year tenure, it was true, but she had also said she was going to make a clean break. Be done with her family. Get so far away from them that she had to use her mother’s name, rather than her father’s, just to get a flicker of recognition from anyone other than the handful of relatives she had on the other side of the Pond. She was going to be her own person and not get sucked into the drama, and yet, here she was, fresh off pulling a “Mark Layne” of her very own and denying, with increasingly little success, that she’d come at least a little to remember when people had thought well of her and because she knew her brother, the Head Boy, was bound to come.

She had forgotten that there was no way Anne would pass up the chance to come home, which was likely as large a part of why Geoff was here as his feeling of obligation over being a former Head Boy, and just how poor the terms she and he had last parted on had been. She seemed to remember calling him pathetic to his face, and possibly accusing him of being something similar to the same kind of coward as their father, who being angry at was their sole point of unity at the time. Even if Anne didn’t eviscerate her for that – and there was no denying that Anne was family, too, even if it was warped by Geoff wanting to marry her and her being that one relative Helena really felt she could, indeed, live without – she could see why Geoff himself might very well still feel more inclined to punch her than make polite conversation over corn dogs.

Still, here she was, and unless someone happened to have a very exact kind of connection to British international politics, the Russian embassy in London, and an apparently fairly well off but largely inconsequential guy from Scotland, nobody here would know that her daddy issues had finally boiled over in an epic attempt to show the old man up that had backfired. If she could just remember not to be too cynical, as she’d too often let herself forget in the past year, then she could go back to being sweet, efficient Helena the Crotalus Quidditch captain, better known for shadowing the Two Geoffries than for anything she had really done herself. It hadn’t been a bad life, when she forgot about the daddy issues that had gotten her into this, and she had made a conscious effort to focus on her life here whenever possible. The RATS she’d needed to get away had not come for begging. She could impress that on the students if she could do nothing else.

That was the ticket. Three presentations, at ten, twelve, and two, with times when the students could ask questions about whatever and casually talk to her afterward. A bit of wandering between times, to hopefully covertly check to see how well her classmates were doing compared to her. And then there would be the evening part of it, which would almost certainly involve some level of interaction with the Geoffrey she was sure she didn’t want to see and probably with the one she was ambivalent about, but her Portkey wasn’t scheduled until noon tomorrow and she wasn’t running from something without a really good excuse, and deciding if she was going to get up at the crack of dawn to have breakfast with her parents before hopefully not having the problem again for another year or two was not good enough.

After the Hall had cleared enough that she could be fairly sure the people in front of her wanted to talk to her, she straightened up her spine a hair and smiled brightly. “Hi,” she said, noticing, absently, that her accent had drifted to the degree that those who’d known her might do a bit of a double take. “As I’m, sure some of you remember from last year, I’m Helena Layne. I was Quidditch Captain for Crotalus in my sixth and seventh years, Assistant Captain before that, and I participated in Crotalus’ contribution to the last Concert as our former Quidditch Coach, Amelia Fox.” At the time, that had seemed insanely risky; now, the memories made her smile. That had been one of the most straightforward, unplanned, no-agenda fun things she’d done in her life. “After graduating, I left home to work in my mother’s native country, which is how I came to be here and talking about my experiences at the British Ministry of Magic’s Department of International Magical Cooperation.”

She had conjured up some visual aids, which she projected into the air at this point, at least a little to keep the focus from being on her face for every second of the time. She wasn’t yet that comfortable with the spotlight. Most of them were stock images of tourist attractions from around the world, with a Ministry seal in the center to show how this was all connected. They weren’t much, but they would keep some attention. “So. College isn’t a requirement, as it usually is here, so I was able to start work almost immediately after school. Almost because there were some paperwork snafus, but my great-grandmother got most of those straightened out.” She had, to her mild surprise, gotten used to being related to moderately prosperous people instead of complete non-entities, and to a little name-dropping. “Start at the very bottom of the ladder. There’s always going to be some people who have the right connections, or who are just that good, who fly to the top, but really, most of us start there and have to work our way up. It’s better to be patient, make friends with your coworkers, flatter your boss, and advance a little at a time. Lots of people try to move too fast and end up getting in over their heads.”

Well, she had done all right at making her coworkers like her, at least. And even an adequate job of flatting her boss. If not for that moron Duncan, she could have been all right. “I really do think that making friends with anyone you can is the key. It’s connections that get you somewhere. Never make anyone angry with you if you can help it.”

Good, good advice. “But anyway.” Good Merlin, she was already falling back into her old speech patterns. “You’ll most likely spend your first year at a desk. Probably your second, too. If you’re very good, then within a few years, you can staff for one of the ambassadors and get to travel a bit, though you might stay in one place that isn’t home for a long period of time.” Not a concern for her, not when she didn’t have anything she’d call a home. “Those with multiple languages are at an advantage, for obvious reasons, especially those who know non-human languages. Mermish and Gobbledegook are in especially high demand.

“Eventually, you can travel a substantial portion of the world, though long-term posts and ones where you make many public appearances usually tend to be things where it’s believed you have a good enough knowledge of the culture and personality to keep from offending anyone. It’s quite possible to retire from a desk job, if you aren’t good enough to do anything larger-scale. It’s really a matter of what your talents and traits best suit you to do to benefit the group and the government in general on the international stage.”

She stepped forward slightly, folding her hands, which she’d been gesturing with as she talked, primly at her waist. “I’ll take any questions you have now.”
16 Helena Layne Desk Jobs on the World Stage 88 Helena Layne 0 5


Helena

August 02, 2010 8:29 PM
 
16 Helena Questions (Third Session) (nm) 88 Helena 0 5


Helena

August 02, 2010 8:30 PM
 
16 Helena Questions (Second Session) (nm) 88 Helena 0 5


Helena

August 02, 2010 8:31 PM
 
16 Helena Questions (First Session) (nm) 88 Helena 0 5