Headmaster Regal

January 17, 2011 11:07 AM
David Regal was more than excited to start his career in the administration aspect of an educational institution. The sixty-year old man had been a Transfiguration professor for the last thirty-five years of his life, and even when he absolutely loved educating the young ones, there was a time in every man’s life that a radical change was needed. For the native Scottish, this was it. His two sons were already married, building a life with their new families and his wife was used to his long absences due to his previous job. Being the new Headmaster of Sonora would not change his life, just his responsibilities, and he was more than ready to take them. His wife had taken rather well the changes in his life, especially since the pay raise would give her more economical liberties. For him, it was a way of giving her a better chance of recuperating the life of luxuries that she had left behind when they got married and left England for the United States.

Months before the actual start of term, the new appointed Headmaster had spent a lot of time learning from Sadi about how Sonora worked. It had been nice of Sadi to show him the ropes, especially with her illness and how it had affected her. Some days it seemed that she was about to collapse of tiredness. It sadden him to see her like that, nobody should suffer through such a horrible illness. But alas, that was life, and he hoped researchers would find a cure for it. That was no way to live life, it also had made him see that life was fickle and it could change for the worse in an instant. Another of the reasons he was glad he had taken the job. It was never too late to start new endeavors, and at his 60 years old, he still felt pretty young. He was halfway through his life; one had to love how magic extended one’s life in comparison to the Muggles. More time to do what you wanted.

The dark-haired man Apparated to Sonora the morning of the new start of term, it was exciting. The 60-year old had brown hair marred by grey; it was hard to decide whether he was still brown-haired or completely grey-haired, both colors were prominent on his head. The Headmaster was smartly dressed for this joyous occasion, robes of the deepest blue pressed to perfection by his wife Addison. He had talked with his staff for a few minutes before walking through the extensive grounds of the school. When it was time for the students to arrive at the school, he promptly made his way back. Fortunately, he was in the Cascade Hall before anyone entered.

Once the older students settled down, and the first-years waited to be sorted, David addressed the Hall. “Welcome to Sonora! I am Professor David Regal, the new Headmaster. Headmistress Powell will be missed since she was an extraordinary Head,” his voice was solemn and serious. He had great respect for Sadi.

David had been happy to see that Donovan Cohen was employed at the school. He knew the man, and since he hadn’t spoken with his staff about the Deputy Head position, he asked for his help and appointed him Deputy Head for the time being. “First years, Professor Cohen will hand you a goblet. Please drink from it so you can be sorted accordingly.” David was excited about this part of the Opening Feast, since he wanted to see how the potion would affect the first-years skins. Sadi had told him that their skin would change into the color of the chosen house: deep red for Crotalus, blue for Aladren, sunshine yellow for Teppenpaw and muddy brown for Pecari.

Once the newly sorted first-years found seats with their housemates, David continued with his address to the school. “Before the feast can begin, I have a few announcements,” he took a deep breath and continued to talk, “Congratulations to our New Head Boy and Girl, Daniel Nash II of Aladren and Charlotte Abbott of Crotalus.” David clapped as they came to receive their badges. “Now let’s have a round of applause for the new Prefects! Edmond Carey of Aladren, Andrew Duell of Teppenpaw, Marissa Stephenson of Crotalus and Jose Hernandez of Pecari.” Again, he clapped before handing them their badges. He smiled at everyone, he didn’t know them, but was proud of them nonetheless.

“I am almost finished. Don’t fret,” David chuckled before finishing with his address. “Thanks to the generous donations of some families, you will be able to enjoy a new room designed to help cultivate your different talents, as well as to provide a place where you can escape for a while from your studies. Though, remember that you are here to learn! The room is still under construction, when it is finally ready we will have an appropriate inauguration.” The new Headmaster grinned. “The final announcements of the evening consist on letting you know that Professor Cohen will be the Deputy Headmaster until further notice, Andreas Stravinos will substitute the Astronomy class, and we have a new Librarian, Miss DiAnna Diaz.” He clapped for them and smiled at everyone.

“Let the Opening Feast begin!” when he uttered those words, the tables were instantly filled with food, it smelled delicious. Now that everyone started eating and chatting, he sat down and exhaled. His first Opening Feast had been a success, in his very humble opinion.

OOC: Welcome First-years! Please refrain from posting on other boards until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech! Otherwise, have fun!
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0 Headmaster Regal Opening Feast 0 Headmaster Regal 1 5


James Owen

January 18, 2011 10:17 AM
James liked school. He liked books, he liked learning. He liked desks, and he even liked his uniform robes (they were second hand but still newer than most, if not all, his other belongings). The one thing James had liked best about being at school last year was that for most of the year he was free of his sisters. Not that he didn't like them, but they were possibly the two most annoying people on the planet and he was glad to not have to spend every waking moment with them apart from during the holidays. It had been great.

Now, of course, things were very different, as Josephine had made quite clear the entire wagon ride to Sonora, during which she'd talked, asked questions, been very ill and threatened to vomit on him, complained that her uniform robes were his from last year and that he hadn't looked after them properly, and generally made a nuisance out of herself. If this was any indication of how the next six years of his life would be, James might not be prepared to stick it out.

As soon as they landed, James grudgingly wished his sister luck, and left her side to find the furthest spot possible from her. Sitting with the other Aladrens, he watched the sorting of the first years only to the extent that he could ascertain jospephine was ,i>not in his House - thank Merlin for that - and politely listened to the new headmaster's speech with complete disinterest. It didn't surprise him that the Aladren prefect was a Carey - it was exactly the sort of family that James had grown up hating, because they had everything and he had nothing and it just wasn't fair.

What was left of his good mood now completely obliterated, James reached for a bread roll and started taking out his frustrations by ripping it apart. When the roll was destroyed he felt much better, and started to dish himself out some soup to soak up its remnants.
0 James Owen Back for my second year 168 James Owen 0 5

David Wilkes

January 18, 2011 2:26 PM
Summer had been…summer. David had enjoyed it, but that was probably at least partially because nothing had really changed from every other summer in recent memory.

His older sister Annabeth had come home from college, on a technicality, but she had yet to forgive their parents for letting David turn her walk-in closet into a library, so she’d spent more time out with her high school friends than she had doing anything else. His younger sister Selena had chattered on about all the cool things she’d learned in science over the previous year and spent an unnatural amount of time dissecting the roses and making the whole family stand around and listen to her lectures on the anatomy of a plant. David had spent a while rambling around the property to help her look for new species of plant – actually to make sure she didn’t mess up Dad’s vegetable garden, though Selena hadn’t noticed – and a lot more reading sci-fi and reorienting himself to technology.

The lack of tech was really one of the worse things about Sonora, at least when he had to go home to it. He’d always preferred actual books to reading on screens or anything like that, so that part of the wizarding world suited him fine, but his seven-year-old sister was now as good as he was on the computer, and his three-year-old cousin Halleigh had an iPad. While everyone acknowledged that Hal’s parents were nutters who threw money around way too freely, and that Halleigh was way too smart for her own good, to the point where she could pass for five without any trouble, there was still the point of the thing. If he wasn’t careful, he was going to lose his ability to function outside this place. He’d kind of liked the ‘living the fantasy’ aspect of being a wizard, but he had always hated the way the hero had to choose which parts of his life to give up in the end; in fifth grade, he’d hated it so much that he’d written a long, rambling short story just so he could give it an ending that didn’t involve that. It had been really bad, he’d dropped more plot threads than most of the books he’d read even had, and it had been close enough to Tolkien that the lawyers would have come after him if he’d published it, but at least the ending had worked for him. He wanted real life to work out the same way.

It was stupid, since he’d never even met the woman personally, but David still felt a sense of loss when the previous Headmistress came up. He also wasn’t sure what to think of the new guy having his name. In a way, it was kind of cool, but on another, it was kind of weird, having a teacher – the principal, Headmaster guy, no less – have the same name he did. He clapped when an Aladren was made Head Boy and the new Aladren prefect was announced even though he didn’t know Daniel Nash II or Edmond Carey beyond recognizing them from Aroundness and the Concert last year, but was more personally pleased about the Feast appearing.

His roommate, sitting across from him, though, either had a problem with rolls or was one of those people who liked to mix all their foods into a mess that David couldn’t help but think looked like someone had been sick on the plate. The addition of soup made it seem more like it was a case of the latter.

He and James were not exactly the best of buds, not least because he found James a little weird despite being fully aware of how little room he had to say that about anyone. It didn’t seem polite to just sit without saying anything to the guy, though, and it would be good if they could be pals, so David took a bite out of his own roll, but left the rest intact and standing up on his plate. “This bread’s good, isn’t it?” he asked after he swallowed. Table manners were one of Mom’s bigger things. “Have a good summer, James?”
16 David Wilkes It'll be the best ever 169 David Wilkes 0 5


James

January 18, 2011 3:57 PM
Making friends had never been something at which James had excelled. Even David, who he must have seen every day they were at school together, simply due them waking up in the same room every morning, was no more than an acquaintance. james thought he was no more or less annoying or pleasant than any other person, though he did sometimes make reference to Muggle items that James didn't understand, and in a petty way he'd held this against him. Some things just couldn't be helped.

The first utterance David chose was a comment about the bread, which James decided to ignore because he thought it might have been detrimental to his behaviour. however the second sentence spoken was obviously directed at him, as it held his name in the question. He couldn't very well ignore it, and as it was less potentially insulting than the first, James didn't mind responding, anyway.

"It was okay," he replied, because it had been okay. His family couldn't afford to do, well, anything, really, so mostly he'd chased the chickens, who were chasing the gnomes, and he'd given his dad's old broom a fly around but nothing more exciting than that. "I like being here." he didn't go as far as to say he preferred being at Sonora, because he did like seeing his parents, and having his own room, and the freedom of strolling beyond the enclosure of the yard. However Sonora had classes, and large meals three times a day, and no Jade to drive him insane.

"Did you have a good summer?" he asked David the same question in return.
0 James Then won't every subsequent year be a disappointment? 0 James 0 5

David

January 28, 2011 8:05 PM
“It was all right,” David said with a shrug, thinking it was probably better to not admit to another guy that he had voluntarily spent a lot of it hanging out either with his little sister or in what had once been his older sister’s closet. It was starting to look a lot more like a library now, but it still had a clothes rack running along above the shelves. He was going to have to get his dad to take that out sometime. “I read a lot.”

That was something he might not have admitted to another guy in his old school at home, but that was the great thing about being in Aladren. It was expected that he would spend a lot of any time he had reading, with even those who chose not to subscribe to House stereotypes being used enough to the idea of Aladrens as geeks and nerds and general bookworms to not be surprised to hear it. Plus, the magic world was weird in a lot of ways, and occasionally David had no clue what people were talking about and had to beat it to the library to do research, but picking on said geeks and nerds and general bookworms did not seem to be something they did a lot of, which was enough to recommend the system to him. If they could just figure out how to rig an Internet connection, his life here would be pretty swell. David loved actual books, and using them, but he was practical enough to realize the advantages of Google when it came to assignments on subjects he wasn’t too invested in.

The textbook list hadn’t included a lot of updates, since they were still beginners and going to be in classes with the first years. David was curious about how that was going to work without his group either re-learning everything or the first years not learning the basics they needed to get by, but willing to give it a chance. After all, Sonora had been around for almost two hundred years, now, so they had to have something going for them.

He’d gotten the impression James came from a magic family, so maybe he’d know more about it. “Do you think classes are going to be harder this year?” he asked.
16 David Not if you don't have expectations. 169 David 0 5


James

February 03, 2011 7:50 AM
James nodded when David claimed to have read a lot. Reading 'a lot' was open to interpretation, but as a fellow Aladren, James thought David could probably believed to have read sufficinet to be counted as 'a lot.' James would have liked to have read a lot, but there weren't all that many books around in the Owen household. His mom had cooking books, and James had found his textbooks in a second-hand bookshop his family knew quite well, but once he'd purchased the few new textbooks required for his second year, and some 'new' uniform robes (which were never really new) there hadn't been any money spare for him to buy any books purely for pleasure. He'd sometimes thought that one day he'd simply write his own books, then he'd always have something to read, and he might even make some money by selling them.

"Do you think classes are going to be harder this year?" David asked then, and James frowned as he thought about his reply.

"Considering that we shared most of our classes with the second years while we were in our first year, it would be fair to assume that now we're in our second year we'll be sharing classes with the first years," he said. "I've thought about this before, and I think the professors must spread the designated curriculum over two years, and it doesn't really matter whether you learn it in your first or second year," he surmised. "The couple of new textbooks indicate some advancement, though, so maybe there will be harder homework assignments. Anyway, the short answer is no, if anything I think this year will be easier because we don't have to start from scratch, so to speak. I think third year is where you start to notice everything getting a bit harder." Which meant this year they could basically relax, because they were no longer at the bottom of the school, had no new classes to add to their timetables, and had no exams looming. Quite peaceful, really. Almost boring.

"I might even think about some extra-curricular activites this year, considering the workload will be manageable," James thought aloud. "I don't knwo what the school offers besides Quidditch, though, and I don't fancy being knocked off my broom in front of the whole school." He liked flying enough and playing mini versions of Quidditch with his younger sisters, but trying out for a team and playing in front of everyone was a different thing entirely, and not one james was prepared to contemplate as a second year.
0 James But you said it would be the best. 0 James 0 5