Acting Headmistress Sadi Powell

October 14, 2011 9:40 AM
Considering the request for Sadi to step in as temporary Headmistress at Sonora while David Regal had been called away to a family emergency had been made at midterm, the former Ancient Runes professor had not expected to still be performing this temporary role by the year’s culmination. Yet, here she was, opening the Midsummer event. The Cascade Hall had been suitably altered for the occasion so it now no longer resembled itself: the walls were strewn with banners, streamers and tapestries. Along one side of the room were large oak tables, already decorated with candles and drapes, which would later bear a magnificent banquet of fresh meats and vegetables that might have been consumed around the time of Leith Clurican’s birth. The opposite side held a stage, where members of the most liberal branch of Pierces were ready to entertain with musical delights. The staff table had been replaced by a lower surface, covered in numerous re-filling goblets containing a variety of drinks, to which staff and students could help themselves throughout the evening. While the majority of the rest of the room was empty for dancing, there were several scattered chairs round the outskirts, clustered together in groups of two or three for conversation, and each chair had been dutifully transfigured to mimic an ornate medieval throne.

Even Sadi herself had made a transformation on a much smaller scale. While she usually wore simple robes in muted tones and her grayed hair was pulled neatly into a bun, her attire this evening consisted of earthy green robes that would have been in fashion five hundred years previously, and the bun was twisted a little more elegantly, sitting higher on her head; she had eventually decided against the traditional pointed hat. She had encouraged other faculty members to dress in appropriate costume, too, and hoped many of the students would take advantage of the opportunity. From her vantage point on the stage – keeping as best she could out of the way of the musicians – Sadi was able to survey all those who came into the hall. She watched people gather, some excited, some unsure of what to do with themselves, and even a few who looked as though they’d rather be somewhere else. As six o’clock approached, the Hall began to look nicely full, and so Sadi signalled to the Pierces that she was ready before casting the Sonorus charm.

“Good evening,” Sadi’s voice was magnified to be heard over chatter, the waterfalls, and the rustling of many gowns. “Thank you all for attending the Midsummer Ball this evening. Music will begin shortly, and the banquet will be served at eight. First, I have a couple of announcements to make.” It seemed the way that whenever an event occurred there were always announcements to be made first. “I’d like to begin by congratulating the current seventh year students on making it to their final year, and wish them all the best for the future.” From all accounts they’d been a very pleasant yeargroup on the whole, causing very little trouble other than asking incessant and pedantic questions. “Hopefully our current sixth years will follow their good example, led, of course, by their Head Boy and Head Girl.” The prefects would not be announced until the Opening Feast, but it was tradition to announce the most senior positions at the end of the year. “Congratulations to Jose Hernandez of Pecari, and Marissa Stephenson of Crotalus, who can collect their badges at the start of next term.” She led a short round of applause for the students who had been amongst those nominated by the faculty, but voted in by their fellow students.

“It is not only our seventh year students who will be leaving Sonora, but we’re also saying farewell to Medic Rocamboli, and to Professor McKindy, who will both be moving on to other exciting opportunities.” From a professional perspective, Sadi considered that this left a vacant position for Head of Pecari House, but she also experienced Aaron’s resignation on a personal level; next term would mark the first time in over a decade that neither of them was employed at Sonora. “We wish them all the best.” There was another short smattering of applause before Sadi resumed speaking for the last time. “Finally, I’m sure you’ll all join me in thanking everyone who has made this evening possible. So as the prefects lead the opening dance, let’s show our appreciation for the faculty, and for our guests from California.” One final round of applause, and Sadi cancelled the charm that amplified her voice, and vacated the stage as music began to play.

(OOC: As students are still posting in some classes the House points for this year have not yet been totalled, so look out for an OOC notice before the start of the new term to see which House has won this year.)
Subthreads:
0 Acting Headmistress Sadi Powell Midsummer Medieval Ball 0 Acting Headmistress Sadi Powell 1 5


Fae Sinclair

October 14, 2011 6:50 PM
Fae stood in front of her long mirror. She had butterflies in her stomach and she felt like she looked a little flush. This wasn’t like a real date or anything. She had no reason to be nervous. It was only Arnold and he was just her friend. He only asked her because they were limited to whom they could ask and considering they usually ended up together, it just seemed natural and more relaxing that they would go together. So then why was she so nervous?

Fae could almost hear Alice give her some logical explanation as to why her body was responding this way and then give her a funny look for having not grasped that concept to begin with. But, that was Alice for her. Nothing seemed to faze her roommate. Fae wished that she could go through experiences being completely stoic. She sometimes felt that she wore her feelings right on her face. Her sister told her she needed to keep that into check. If Fae became betrothed to someone not to her liking, Fae would need to learn how to control herself. Shelby said that if she didn’t, it might end up biting her in the nose.

There were too many things to keep straight and Fae didn’t want to think about that at the moment. All she wanted was for her stomach to stop doing somersaults and for her face to not feel so hot. She didn’t need Arnold to think he had made the wrong decision by asking her. That she wouldn’t be a fun partner for the ball. Fae could have fun. She could. She just needed to stop being so worried about it. She just needed to clear her mind, take a breath, and get on with it.

Taking a look at herself, Fae had to admit that her sister and mother really knew how to make her look nice. The dress they had picked was more modern than it was 16th Century. Its style still held that historical look, it just wasn’t so dramatic. A pale pink in color with gold threads, the color suited her nicely. Long sleeved, square neckline, and an a-line skirt. She could move just fine and her matching ballet flats would keep her from tripping over herself or someone else. She had decided to curl her hair and clip the front back to keep from getting into her eyes. She knew that the style back them, women had their hair teased and up high, but Fae couldn’t bring herself to do that to her hair. Putting on some lip glass, Fae gave herself one last look, glanced around to be sure she hadn’t forgotten anything, and then left the safety of her dorm to meet Arnold for the ball.

They hadn't specified where they were going to meet, so Fae assumed they would meet in front of the Hall and go in together. Still, she stood off to the side and occasionally looked in to see if perhaps he had gone in without her and was waiting at a table. If that were the case, she felt like a fool standing out in the hall waiting for him.

When she finally did see him, Fae smiled openly and waved to get his attention.
6 Fae Sinclair Stifling my nerves...or trying too. 194 Fae Sinclair 0 5


Arnold Carey

October 15, 2011 2:00 AM
It had been a chaotic kind of day, for so little to have actually happened during it. At least, Arnold thought so, and he thought Arthur agreed with him. It was the idea that fit best, anyway, with the way Arthur had kept muttering about how he should have known it was an omen when he touched his teacup and discovered it was a lot hotter than he’d expected or, playing with charms, meant for it to be. He had spilled the tea, too, in surprise; it wasn’t often that even Arnold got to see Arthur looking flustered, much less with tea all down the front of his robes, and he was determined to cherish the memory.

There was no sign of anything like that now, though. In very old-fashioned brown robes and a hat the Fourth wouldn’t even have worn in public to anything other than a party like this one, Arthur could have passed for a medieval scholar except for being thirteen and looking slightly distracted for some reason. Arnold didn’t ask; there were times when he would ask, but today wouldn’t be one of them.

His robes were of an equally old fashioned cut, but deep green and a little more elaborate, with some goldish stuff he was calling trim but which was really closer, in true medieval fashion, to being embroidery on the sleeves and front. It was less than the pictures of some medieval wizards Arthur had shown him, far less, but still. Not his idea, not his idea at all; he didn’t know whose idea it had been, actually, not only for him to be all embroidered, but for him to be the embroidered one. His brother seemed more amused by it than anything, but Arnold wasn’t. Only Mother and Father, of the whole family, didn't refer to them as a unit more often than as not one; they were supposed to go together.

Well, they didn’t go to the dance together, he did that with Fae because that was how things were supposed to work. But in general.

The entrance hall was crowded, and Arnold momentarily despaired of finding Fae before five minutes before the day ended. He didn't really think about his age too much, maybe because of being on the Quidditch team and being around the older and higher-ranking people there all the time until they stopped seeming like anything really remarkable, but now he noticed he was short and was annoyed by it. Then Arthur said something indistinct and touched Arnold’s shoulder before tilting his head toward something. The thing in question turned out to be Fae. Arnold smiled and started to head over before realizing his brother wasn’t walking with him.

“Aren’t you going to come say hello?” he asked.

“No,” Arthur said bluntly, then added in a milder tone, “Not now, anyway. I’ll speak with Miss Sinclair in a little while.”

Arnold frowned, momentarily troubled, as Arthur wandered off, but then shrugged and went on in the way he had been. He thought Arthur had gotten stranger since they started Sonora, but he had always kind of done his own thing without anyone really noticing, and Arnold guessed he always would.

“Hi,” he said, coming within natural speaking distance of her and smiling before he bowed. “You look nice, ah, really nice tonight.”

That wasn’t quite the way he was supposed to say it, but he had sort of noticed at some point while he was talking that she did look nice – not that she didn’t always look nice, just that she looked…nice-er, dressed up. Really nice, instead of just nice.

Straightening up, he offered her his arm, making a mental note to maybe do something nice for Terry sometime. Yes, she had to put up with it just like the rest of them, but she was the only girl who’d been around when he was learning to do this, so he possibly owed her. He really did owe her if they actually danced at all, because proper dancing wasn’t something that had come naturally to Arnold, and his cousin’s feet had been trod on a lot when they both learning, much more often than his had. “Would you like to go in now, Miss Fae?”

It was all going to be all right. The trick was just not to start talking too fast. As long as he did that, he’d be all right. He knew what he was doing, and really, he and Miss Fae had already been to a party together once, sort of.

He had thought of that to reassure himself, so he was surprised when he did, in fact, find himself feeling better after he thought of it, more comfortable with the situation and his place in it. He was still a little worried about dancing, but he was pretty sure Derry had done that at the same party he was thinking of last year, and it was a rule of the universe that anything a Pierce could do, a Carey could…well, all right, a Carey who wasn’t Arthur could do; the mere thought of Arthur attempting to be as cheerful as Derry was terrifying. But the rule held in all other cases. If Derry could dance, then Arnold, if he needed to, could dance.
0 Arnold Carey Likewise... 181 Arnold Carey 0 5


Fae

October 17, 2011 9:31 PM
Arnold and his brother spotted her in the crowd of students. She felt that was a downright miracle that he had been able to. Fae would never have made any sort of negative remark on Arnold’s height, but she couldn’t deny the fact to herself that Arnold was not the tallest in her class. On any given day, this fact did not bother her in the slightest. Fae was petite. She will always be petite. Where Shelby gained their father’s height, Fae gained their mother’s lack of height. Two second years in which neither had height as an advantage to them did not fair well in crowds. It was by chance that they were able to connect.

Fae curtsied as Arnold bowed. She felt like she was playing a game with him by being so formal and over the top in their outfits. Almost to the point where she felt a bit of laughter bubbling up from her stomach. Almost. She was still rather nervous about being here with Arnold. The bubble of laugher flopped in her stomach and instead of laughing, Fae had to hope she didn’t look suddenly ill. If nothing else, she hoped the smile she wore showed how excited she actually was about going to the ball.

“Oh, thank you, Arnold.” She commented, blushing slightly without wanting too. She didn’t realize how strange it felt to be complimented on her outfits or looks and she wasn’t sure what to say in return. “I enjoy your costume. It is definitely Medieval.” Fae suddenly felt that her dress wasn’t sufficient enough to be Arnold’s date for the evening. As beautiful and comfortable as it was, it didn’t hold the same Medieval quality that his did. “I’m sorry if my dress isn’t perfect. My mother was afraid I wouldn’t be able to stand up properly if she allowed me to wear something more authentic to the times.”

Fae took his arm when he offered it, feeling only slightly foolish but that was more for the blush she still had on her cheeks than for walking into the Hall on the arm of Arnold Carey. “I would love it, Arnold.” Despite the nervous butterflies in her stomach, Fae really was looking forward to the ball. Maybe it was the girl in her that was bringing out her glee, she couldn’t say for certain, but she knew that she couldn’t wait to be seated with others who were dressed in costume, eating wonderful food, and then dancing the rest of the night away.

“I’m rather glad that I am not a Prefect.” Fae said lightly as they walked into the hall and she took in all of the scenery. “I have a difficult time with dancing comfortably as it is, I wouldn’t be able to do it in front of the entire school for the first dance of the evening. The pressure would be too much.” She shivered just thinking of it. She wasn’t going to lie, she liked the idea of being Prefect because than she was being recognized for something. She just wasn’t sure she liked everything that came with such a title. “Where would you like to sit?” She knew she had just switched topics rather suddenly, but she was having a hard time keeping her train of thought. She hoped that this would get easier as the evening went on.
0 Fae You're nervous too? 0 Fae 0 5


Arnold

October 18, 2011 1:05 AM
She was blushing. What did that mean? Terry did that sometimes, but she usually wanted to hit him when she did, so he was guessing - hoping - his friend and his cousin had different motives for doing that. He was almost sure he hadn't said anything that should make her want to slap him yet.

"Thank you," he said when she complimented his costume, his smile widening in relief as he decided this most likely meant he didn't look stupid. Noticing he felt a little flushed at the compliment, just as she was, helped, too. Then, though, she started apologizing for her dress. It was nothing he would ever wear, of course, and somehow he didn't see Terry in it, either, but it looked nice on Fae for all he knew about such things, and he didn't want her to feel bad anyway. That seemed wrong to him somehow. "No, it looks great," he assured her, or tried to. And, since she'd used the word, he added a "Perfect. Really." 

Going in was okay with her, so he counted that off the list of things that could have gone wrong but hadn't. "Edmond's going to have to do it," he said when she started talking about prefects and leading the dancing. "It's probably better him than me." Though better him than Arthur in sixth year, maybe, despite Arthur already deciding he'd be prefect while Arnold was the Quidditch captain. "I'm sure you'd be great, though," he added, hoping as soon as he noticed what he'd said that using the same word he had used in an earlier compliment wasn't a huge problem. "Do you want to dance some when the prefects are done?"

It would be different for Anthony, who was about nine and already had the family speculating about which girls were about his age and was usually good at talking to people anyway. It might even be different for Arthur, who enjoyed being around adults and never got nervous or worried about people at all. The problem, though, was that it was Arnold who was here with Miss Fae Sinclair, who was pretty in her pink gown and who he'd like to impress and maybe make smile and have a nice time but would settle for not looking stupid in front of. He didn't really know what he was doing, and while he usually didn't mind working things out as he did them, this was...different, somehow. He was, for once, worried about what would happen if he messed up - and an impressive thing it was that this was what would cause him worry, since most of his potential mess ups involved his body hitting things like walls or trees or the ground at high speeds.

Still, he  hadn't really messed up so far, which meant there was a chance he wouldn't really mess up at all. He'd just have to do the best he could, starting with finding seats.

"Er - " He hadn't really thought about where to sit. "Is over here okay?" he asked, spotting two open chairs without any students very much older than them around. Older students were intimidating, sometimes, especially the ones he had never played Quidditch against and so had no ground with, and he didn't think that feeling like someone was looking down at them or else that they weren't worth noticing was really what either of them needed tonight.
0 Arnold A little bit 181 Arnold 0 5


Fae

October 18, 2011 8:25 PM
She tried not to smile so happily when Arnold said that her dress looked perfect. She really did try not to smile. She thought if she did smile like she was, Arnold would get worried. But, she couldn’t help it. She liked the compliment. It made the butterflies in her stomach dance in a rather peculiar way. Not in a way that made her feel jittery and ill, but one that made her feel more elated. Maybe there would come a time when compliments didn’t have the same effect on her as they did now. But, until that time came, she’d enjoy every compliment that was given to her.

“Oh right. Your cousin.” Fae commented quietly when Arnold mentioned Edmond. She had a terrible time remembering that just because she was the first in her family to attend Sonora did not mean that was the same for everyone else. Arnold had many relatives here and had many relatives attend in the past. She was a bit envious of that. She sometimes wished Shelby was here with her. Only sometimes. She knew that if Shelby was actually here, Fae would be in the shadows wishing that someone would notice her like they did her sister. She really only missed her when she was trying to figure out what she was supposed to do around people.

She didn’t think she’d ever stop being flushed because Arnold was complimenting her again. If he continued down this path, Fae was going to look like a tomato. Much like she had on her very first day at Sonora. He wasn’t sure if he was asking her because he was being nice and assumed Fae had this die hard need to twirl around the dance floor or if it was because he actually really did want to dance. She was hoping for the latter because she didn’t want to force him into dancing if he really hated it. “I would like to dance, yes, but if you do not like to dance or anything, I am okay with sitting the dance part out of the ball.” She explained to him. If they did dance, this would be her first time dancing with someone who wasn’t a tutor or family.

Fae looked to where Arnold was indicating. She didn’t realize how difficult it would be to find a place to sit and eat. She figured it would be like it normally was and she could eat with the small handful of people she would like to consider friends. She never pictured it quite like this. Maybe she should have. Chaos seemed to rule much of this school. “That is fine.” She said after a moment. So long as they weren’t sitting with a group of seventh years, Fae didn’t really mind.

“What sort of food do you think they will be serving?” Fae asked as she started to make her way over to the vacant seats. “I-uh-didn’t really do much reading on the subject for this ball.” Fae confessed. “I wish I had though. I am not really a fan of the unknown or of surprises. “
0 Fae I thought you'd be cool as a cucumber 0 Fae 0 5


Arnold

October 19, 2011 12:01 AM
Compliments, Arnold decided, were a good idea, because while Fae turned redder, she also smiled. Smiling was good. He liked it when she smiled.

He filed this away as a clue about what the right things to do were. Compliments were a good idea. Maybe not too many, because he had heard Arthur grumble about how when people praised his work too much, he thought they were either lying or covering for something less flattering they were thinking, but he would need to review that because Arthur wasn’t a girl, and was Arthur. It was different, a lot of the time, between boys and girls as far as he could tell, and Arthur wasn’t even like other boys. What bothered one might not bother another, and any of it might bother or not bother Arthur.

“No, I don’t mind,” he said when she said she’d like to dance. “It’ll be more fun than sitting in one place all evening, right?”

Immediately, he wondered if that was the right thing to say, since she might have just been being polite about it and thought he really wanted to dance, but it was too late to worry too much about it now. Besides, it would be more fun to dance than just to sit there all evening. They got to sit still and not do anything every day during their lessons, and this was supposed to be about a break from that routine, wasn’t it? At least, the clothes in particular suggested a change. This wasn’t their everyday attire by a long shot.

He had thought about that, but not about how the menu might be affected, and as he sat down beside Fae, he wasn’t sure what to say again. “I’m sure it won’t be anything too strange,” he said, hoping to be reassuring. “I don’t really know, but my great-great-grandfather’s banquets are okay, even the things we don’t normally see, and he grew up in the early nineteenth century.” That was several centuries away from the theme of the night, but it was the best he could do. “I don’t think they’d put anything that they really thought we wouldn’t eat out.”

He hoped, anyway. It had already been a while since lunch, and after dancing, he thought he was going to be hungry. It would be really bad to have his stomach start rumbling in front of his date.

"What kinds of food do you like?" he asked, the first question that occurred to him. Well, at least he could learn more about her this way while not letting the conversation flag, which wasn't polite.
0 Arnold Maybe I'll get to that later. 181 Arnold 0 5


Fae

October 21, 2011 10:21 PM
Fae had to agree, if the two of them did nothing more than sit around a table with other students they may not have been familiar with, they would more than likely grow bored and Arnold might not want to be around her in the future. Fae did not want that. Arnold was one of the few with whom Fae felt some form of contention with. She wouldn’t know what to do if Arnold found her boring or anything thought her boring. That was the last thing she wanted. Shelby always said that a girl who exudes a sense of excitement is usually the most popular. Fae was trying to do her best by following Shelby’s advice, but with every decision she made, Fae was terrified that the outcome would be negative.

“You’re probably right.” Fae said in agreement. “At the other outings with my family, I could only sit or stand and ‘mingle’ with others.” Fae was saying to him, trying to sound like she had some experience in this even though she had very little. “It wasn’t very fun at all. I think maybe dancing would have liven things up a bit. Besides, I haven’t ever really danced aside from lessons. It will definitely test my abilities.” Everything about this evening was going to test her abilities. The main one being her conversational skills. Another was being Arnold’s perfect date. She was fairly certain she would fail at both.

She really hoped that Arnold was right about the food. Fae wasn’t one to go outside her comfort zone for much of anything, but most especially food. That was due in great part to the fact that she was raised on a strict diet. She was only allowed to eat certain foods because in order to be the ‘Perfect Wife’, they had to maintain a certain look. So, when Arnold asked her what she liked to eat, Fae was momentarily stunned. She had no idea how to answer that. Even at school she had kept to this strict diet out of fear that her mother would be angry with her for stepping out of it.

“Er…” She started and then fumbled with her words like an idiot. “I’m not really sure. We are only allowed to eat certain foods. Mostly fish. If we’re having a gathering, we usually eat a French Cuisine. Father’s choice, of course. I suppose, I don’t really know what I like since I’ve only been given very little choice.” Fae wasn’t sure how that sounded, but it was the best way she could explain herself. “Do you have any food that you enjoy?”
0 Fae With the dancing 0 Fae 0 5


Arnold

October 22, 2011 5:22 PM
Arnold wasn’t sure whether to be surprised or not that Fae’s parents apparently took her to social occasions all the time. He was thirteen now, old enough according to his grandmother to be in society and his whole future planned out to the smallest detail if she had her way, but only because he and Arthur had just had their birthday in February, and there hadn’t been time for that to mean anything in the social sense yet. They were, though, boys where Fae was a girl, and Aunt Gigi swore girls learned to act like civilized beings much earlier than boys did, so maybe that was the difference. Fae was very civilized, even compared to other girls he knew, though that wasn’t a long list.

Dancing skills, though, were things he could speak on a little more easily. “Mine, too,” he said with a smile that was slightly relieved at hearing that she, too, hadn’t done this beyond lessons before. “I’ve only ever danced with my cousin Theresa. She’s the only girl old enough for most of us to learn with, so it’s good that she likes dancing.”

Loved it, more like. Now that he was a bit more used to the idea of girls playing Quidditch, he could see her being very good at it, if she was given the chance, because she loved dance lessons better than any other, she was almost as quick as he was to propose a game of tag if the occasion arose, and she didn’t spend a lot of time sitting still if she could help it. She liked to read, which was reasonably sedate, but to hear her tell it, she was horrible at sewing, and he knew she was no more than an indifferent musician and painter. The family would never hear of letting her on a broom, though, and there were only so many Careys Edmond could get away with having on the team anyway, so he guessed it was good that she’d taken up archery.

His attempt at a conversational question didn’t go over the way he had expected, and he found himself startled enough by the idea of someone having such a limited diet that they didn’t like any of it that he forgot himself enough to answer honestly. “Sometimes, my mother makes brownies,” he said. “She doesn’t do it often, but she likes to bake.” He noticed he’d just said that, but if Arthur was right and it was normal for people to collect as much information about their schoolmates as Arthur did, then she already knew where his mother had come from, anyway. That she was a pureblood, even moderately well off, but not exactly the kind who normally married Anthony Carey VII and was the mother of Anthony Carey VIII. Just the kind that could claim a lot of wizards in her family tree, most of them intelligent, sensible sorts.

Most of them. There was always the occasional Great-Great-Uncle Virgil, who Mother had been warning him about being like since he was small. The fellow had taken it in mind to ride a griffin when he was on holiday in Greece at sixteen and had never made it back to have nephews. But he was an odd one; most of Mother's relatives had never done anything remotely interesting in their lives, were boring enough that her marrying Father was regarded as Virgil-like behavior, despite his branch being respectable enough that even Grandmother thought it should override his mother's family being a bit...unimportant in society's eyes.

“But fish are good, too,” he said, hoping to make her feel a bit better instead of longing for brownies she couldn’t have. “Sometimes we have that, too, at home. I don’t know if we ever eat French food, though. No one tells us what things are at formal dinners.” He had never liked formal dinners, and could never help but double check with his parents that there was no way out before one. Somehow, he always did something wrong, and Grandmother would always wince just a little and then so pointedly not notice it that Mother turned red, and then everyone was all tense about it until Mother and Grandmother finally had another fight, often about something else, and got it over with. Even on nights nothing bad happened, everyone just kept waiting for something to.
0 Arnold I promise not to step on your feet, anyway 181 Arnold 0 5


Fae

October 24, 2011 8:59 PM
“When I was a little girl, my Father used to dance with me.” Fae said in almost a wistful way. Everything seemed so much at piece when she was a child. Her father, usually around Christmas, would put on a record and pull her close for a special Father/Daughter dance with only the fire crackling in the fireplace as a source of light. Her mother was usually resting in her chair with a glass of wine and Shelby would be playing with dolls on the floor. If Jaiden was around, he would usually be playing a card game, but normally by that point he was already off in his room. It had been a couple of years since her father had done that. Now he was just too busy dealing with the business, especially with the current economy. The goblins were being stingy and making things difficult. Life was so easy back then. “But, otherwise, it was just with my Etiquette tutor.”

Brownies? Fae was fairly certain she had never had any of that, but they sounded familiar. If she was correct, these were desserts. Fae wasn’t allowed much for desserts… or sugar really. “I’m not sure my mother has ever been in our Kitchen…” Fae commented, her brows furrowed as she tried to remember whether or mother had ever bother trying to cook or bake. She was positive she never had and Fae had to wonder if that was normal or not. She thought it was. If her mother truly believed that wives should be cooking or baking, Shelby and Fae would have begun having lessons by now.

“At Christmas, I’m allowed to have pudding.” Fae told him looking pleased. “It is quite lovely. Usually I have vanilla, but they served pudding here before and I decided to try the chocolate and that was pretty amazing. I didn’t tell Mother that though, she would probably be upset with me for straying.” Fae pouted at the thought. The chocolate pudding had been wonderful and different. It seemed to have more flavor than the vanilla and Fae had to wonder why her mother never served chocolate pudding at Christmas.

She didn’t know if he was trying to be polite or not about the fish. Some dishes were better than others (usually thanks to the sauce), but fish was just fish and if one eat it for days at a time, it often lost its appeal. When this happened, Fae ate salads. “Oh, I know what I love to eat!” Fae declared, looking excited as she said it, “Raspberries. I love raspberries!” She wasn’t sure why she hadn’t thought of them when he had asked. Perhaps because she had been thinking more along the lines of actual meals instead of specific foods. “When I was little, Mother would take Shelby and I to this raspberry farm and allow us to pick as many berries as we could. Shelby would always squish them and then put the red juice on my lips and cheeks to make it look like I was wearing lipstick and blush. It was fun. Sort of gross, but definitely fun.” Fae paused for a moment and then looked a little crestfallen. “Now I want raspberries.”
0 Fae I'll forgive you if you do. 0 Fae 0 5


Arnold

October 27, 2011 9:22 PM
“That’s nice,” Arnold said about Fae’s father dancing with her. He had rarely seen his father dance, and even less with his mother. Father and Uncle Donnie had both been known to dance with their sisters at events – Uncle Donnie usually spoiling the dignity of the event by trying to make Aunt Emma laugh; he was nearly the only person who could – and with Aunt Gigi, especially when she and Uncle Donnie were in one of their phases where they acted almost more like a courting couple than a married one with a lot of kids, but Father and Mother seldom did. “My parents don’t dance very much.”

There had, he remembered, been one time Mother tried to teach Arthur some odd dance, though, not a very formal one; it hadn’t seemed as strange for her to do it, it had even looked more natural than when she attempted formal dances, but Arthur’s attempt had been ridiculous, and not just because Mother had been so much taller than him. Even he had laughed a few times before the end of that episode, and even when they were little, that hadn’t happened very often. Arthur said it was just that he often didn’t just find the same things funny that other people did.

He didn’t know quite what to say to her mother not going to the kitchen ever. He knew this was more common than what Mother did – Grandmother would have been tremendously offended at the very idea, and even Aunt Gigi, who had the largest family and least help of anyone, didn’t except maybe to throw a tiny bit of something on a cracker for a snack – but wasn’t sure if he should call his own mother an eccentric or not.

Luckily, Fae then brought up pudding. “I won’t tell her, either,” he said. “I don’t tell my mother lots of things. She might make me stop playing Quidditch if she knew about all the Bludgers during practices.” He liked to bring out real ones even when he was practicing on his own or with just a few of the other members of the team outside of the official practices; the kind the Beaters had tried out with were all right, but it was only getting pummeled for real an awful lot which had finally gotten him better at avoiding the real ones. A slightly guilty look crossed his face as he added, “And the practicing the nights before tests.”

He was startled by Fae’s sudden declaration of knowing what she wanted, but pleased to hear there was something she enjoyed after all. He couldn’t help but laugh at the way the paragraph ended, though. “Maybe they’ll have some at the banquet,” he said. “Then you could have all you want.” He didn’t understand what it was about adult witches and food. Aunt Gigi went on crazy diets every time after she had a baby, and then she always got really irritable and it wasn’t good. Mother, who didn’t do that, wasn’t as thin as Aunt Gigi, but she wasn’t fat, either. The Fourth had finally put his foot down about Aunt Gigi dragging the girl cousins along with her and they just had to have everything portioned a lot more carefully than Arnold did and to exercise every day. Which really didn’t bother Terry and Diana. Di was a little more interested in dolls and stuff than Theresa was, but she was always wandering after Brandon, too, always trying to keep up with their brothers.

“Me and Arthur used to go get pumpkins like that, like you were saying about Miss Shelby, when we were home at Halloween. Sometimes we’d end up throwing stuff at each other before Mother could Vanish it.” He liked Halloween. All the food had pumpkin, but he liked pumpkins, and candy, though Mother didn't always like him to have it. She said he was enough to keep up with without giving him lots of sugar at one time.
0 Arnold I appreciate it. 181 Arnold 0 5