Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

June 01, 2012 7:47 PM
Midterm had been eventful with Angel now living in the house, but Kiva was happy to have helped him and her family was warming up to the idea of having Angel around. Emery and Chloe had had the luxury of growing up together since Jeff and Kiva had become friends shortly after the two were born, so they were going to have a difficult time accepting someone else right off the bat. Chloe seemed to have taken to him rather easily, but then, Chloe took to most people rather easily. Kiva sometimes worried about how easy and open she was with people. Emery had a much more difficult time with accepting new people, but he eventually grew to trust them. Kiva wasn’t sure how well Angel had accepted all of this since he was so quiet and withdrawn, but hopefully, with time, he grew to accept all of them as family. He was stuck with them for the next five years.

She stood in front of the students waiting for them to all calm down she that she can get to the point of it. She couldn’t really blame them for being so excited. They had just spent the last two weeks at home, getting gifts of all sorts, probably had loads of sugar, and a crazy amount of free time that they wanted to tell all their friends about, which they could do… after the feast. Clearing her throat, Kiva cast the Sonorus charm on herself and called to the students to quiet down.

“Welcome back, everyone!” She greeted with a smile. “I hope that all of your midterms were eventual and full of good cheer. We have a few things to discuss before I can set you off to eat.” Kiva advised them all. “First, I would like to introduce to you are new Divinations teacher, Professor Lowrski. For those of you who would like to take her class, please be sure to advise your Head of House so that they can update your schedule.” Kiva waited for the murmurs to die down before continuing. “This year our Midsummer Event is the school concert. I’m excited to announce that we will be hosting this event in Phoenix and inviting your immediate family members to join us during the celebration. Because we are going to be showcases the school to your family, we are making it mandatory that all students participate in this Midsummer Event.” Kiva knew that she wasn’t going to have happy students with the announcement that it was going to be mandatory, but she felt that if the parents were going to be traveling to see them, they ought to have their children actually participating.

“Now, you don’t actually have to be on stage to participate. Backstage work, creating the show that you are going to put on, or whatever other role you may have at making this successful is just as well as being the person on the stage. We just want to make sure we are putting on a wonderful performance for your families in which everyone participates in. You are to choose how you do it. Whether as group performances or individual ones, we will be marking down what everyone is doing so that everyone is getting the proper credit and when the programs are printed, your families are aware of what your duties were.”

That was probably a lot for them to take in. That was alright. “If you have questions, please see any staff member or myself. Okay, that was all that I had to tell you, enjoy your feast!” And with that, the food appeared.
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Lucian D'Alesandro, Aladren

June 04, 2012 12:12 PM
Lucian used his hand to push his dark brown hair from his face and looked around Cascade Hall. Other students were buzzing around chatting while he sat and thought about his life over midterm. To most it would have seemed uneventful, dull even, but to him something about it stood out. Something was changing between his parents, but he wasn’t sure what it was.

Upon his arrival home, Lucian’s mother didn’t miss a beat in telling him how awful he looked with his longer hair. He hadn’t paid much mind to it while away at school, and it had grown out and revealed his natural wave. His sister, Alex, also chimed in about how perfect her hair was compared to his and that his mother should take him to get it all cut off, leaving him bald. Lucian shot his sister a sideways glare just as his father chimed in, to his relief, that the longer hair was a nice change and to “leave the boy alone.” This was unusual though, his father overriding his mother. The man was usually quiet, much like Lucian, and let his wife run the household as she pleased. Lucian’s mother had given his father a quizzical look, as if questioning the sudden offering of opinion for herself, but simply closed her mouth and stood in a sulking position. She resembled a child that had just been scolded for trying to take a cookie from the cookie jar before dinner.

Lucian spent the rest of his midterm shopping for more comfortable clothes with his nanny while his parents were away at business functions. His father told him to buy whatever he liked, as long as it was what Lucian actually wanted to wear and not what he thought he should wear. This was a foreign concept for Lucian to digest. He was allowed a little freedom time and again, but for the most part his mother offered her opinion on what articles of clothing he should want to wear. After all, he was “representing the family name every time he went into public.” He settled on black and white Converse sneakers, a pair of jeans, and a navy blue striped hooded sweatshirt. He wished he had a camera to take a picture of his mother’s face when he walked downstairs wearing his new outfit after she had told him to get ready for a party. She opened her mouth to most likely scold him and tell him to change, but Lucian’s father again chimed in to “let the boy wear what he wants”. And, yet again, she resembled a child caught with her hand in the cookie jar. His parents did not talk much on the way to the party, but as soon as they walked in they appeared to not be able to stay away from each other. Lucian had assumed it was for appearance’s sake and took a seat at a nearby table and looked over his notes from his Potion’s class while his sister annoyingly flicked grapes at him from across the table.

The greeting from the Headmistress interrupted Lucian’s thoughts of midterm and brought him back to the present reality. When she mentioned the school concert, Lucian wasn’t sure if he should be excited or mortified. It was a way to showcase his musical talent, but at the same time it opened a window of opportunity for him to make a fool of himself. He wasn’t the best performer in front of a large group of people. He had to sing in a choir for an entire church on Christmas Eve when he was younger and nearly forgot all of the words to the song. He was finally making friends here, and he didn’t want to mess that up by becoming the laughing stock of the concert.
Just then, he noticed a girl at the Crotalus table glaring at him and contorting her face in disgust. It took him a few seconds to get a good look at her through the rest of the students at her table, but when he did he saw that she was the girl from the music room. He wasn’t dense, so it was easy to notice she did not appreciate his efforts of showing her how to properly play a song. He didn’t understand what her problem was, so he kept trying to talk to her when he saw her in class. Apparently midterm did not change her thoughts towards him. He glanced back after some time and saw her stabbing her lettuce aggressively with a fork. Assuming that she wished her salad were his face at that moment, Lucian turned to the nearest person and said, “I wish they had a class that helped boys understand girls. They are the most complicated subjects.”
0 Lucian D'Alesandro, Aladren Complicated Contemplations 0 Lucian D'Alesandro, Aladren 0 5


Jay Carey

June 05, 2012 9:18 PM
Getting everyone sorted out in the morning was always a difficult task at Jay’s house, one filled with double loops and fraught with complications, but it was, he had discovered, much worse on mornings when he and Terry were going back to school. Invariably, it seemed, the whole house was plummeted into utter chaos, an endless cacophony of shrill mother, flaring floos, half-cooked breakfast items, lost clothes, misplaced books, crying younger ones, trunks falling on feet. Father had tripped over a toy and missed several steps on the way to the ground floor and bruised his shoulder badly, Brandon had been sick on a pair of boots, a terrible fight had ensued when Theresa discovered that Diana had attempted to appropriate one of her hats. When the wagon had finally lifted off the ground, Jay had realized, when they reached open air, that he had been holding his breath; when he had breathed again, the world around him, after the madness of the morning, had seemed almost preternaturally calm.

Jay had no idea how they were going to all survive it next year, when there were three of them involved in the process, but the thought was not so bad now as he thought it would have been if things he hadn’t been home for hadn’t happened, things which Henry refused absolutely to talk about and seemed to feel an urgent need to exercise at the very mention of, but they had, and so the thought of the chaos that would ensue in September brought with it almost a sort of relief. His brother was not a Squib; he might not ever be very good at anything, but he was not a Squib. The worst had been suspected, but it hadn’t come to them.

It was strange, he thought, feeling relief that something wasn’t true when he had never suspected it was in the first place. He wouldn’t have thought that would happen, that he could be relieved at the failure of someone else’s fears after the fact, when even they weren’t afraid of that anymore. He had wondered a lot, over the holidays, if anyone else felt the same way, but had, in keeping with the way the matter was discussed only in whispers which mostly dealt with how narrowly Henry had missed dying and how he was now, never found a time he thought was good to ask.

He and his sister parted ways at the door to the Cascade Hall, Theresa hurrying off to the bathroom to check to make sure her clothes were in order before the Feast while Jay dusted himself off and went to find a chair at the Aladren table without any further fuss. The ride wasn’t, after all, that bad, and at home, his pants and shirts were so heavily starched that he wasn’t sure they could wrinkle if he went out of his way to make them, at least not until the end of the day. They looked like they were in good enough order to him, anyway, and his curly hair had been cut short again during the break, so he didn’t have to worry about that even as much as a self-respecting male could anyway.

He smiled politely at the mention of the new Divination teacher; he wasn’t sure if he would take the class or not next year, but it was good that they had the option, anyway, as for one thing it sounded very interesting and for another thing it was always good to have more things to study. The best of the tutors at home, the ones they had both liked and learned from, had always emphasized how learning everything was the best way to improve your fortunes and – far more importantly, since the stupidest man alive could have lots of money and then lose it, or at worst use it in ways to make the world worse, rather than better – yourself. The announcement about the Concert did not interest him very much; Jay thought he would make himself generally useful to a group, doing any behind-the-scenes task that no one else wanted or was just standing there needing doing, and that would be fine. It was really no different than being at home with his immediate family, after all; putting on plays was one of the ways they kept Brandon and Diana entertained, and he’d eventually gotten the idea to use it to teach them their literature lessons, too.

As he began tucking into the feast, his roommate, in the seat beside him, spoke up, and Jay looked at him curiously. “I don’t think they understand us, either, if that helps,” he offered. “Unless you’re just really close to one. Brandon and Diana, one of my brothers and one of my sisters, they seem to understand each other and no one else understands either one of them. But Theresa seems to think we’re as confusing as we think she is.” Technically, he had two sisters besides Diana, as he was pretty sure Lucian knew, but Cecilia wasn’t really old enough yet to have an opinion on the matter, at least that he knew of. “What made you think of that?” he asked, since he thought it was a little strange that girls and how they thought would be the first thing on Lucian’s mind on the very first day back at school after the holidays.
0 Jay Carey Those are pretty common in life 0 Jay Carey 0 5


Lucian D'Alesandro

June 06, 2012 12:30 AM
Lucian saw the curious expression on his roommate’s face and decided to provide further explanation of what led up to his comment about the complication of girls. “See that girl over at the Crotalus table?” he said nodding his head in the direction of the scowling girl from the piano room, “she seems to hate my guts because I tried to help her with a piano piece in the music room awhile back. I don’t understand why that is so terrible. I was just trying to help, you know?” Lucian didn’t even give Jay a chance to respond before he continued his rant. “It’s like they always need for everything to be perfect, but it is only perfect if they say it is. So everything we try to do is not good enough.” He caught himself going off on a tangent in which his repressed feelings towards his mother’s perfectionism began to surface. Lucian stopped and took a deep breath before continuing. “I’m sorry,” he said turning to Jay, “I had an interesting midterm break and getting glares from a girl who doesn’t even know me didn’t help. Maybe you’re right. Maybe we are just as mysterious and confusing to them. I think I will try to handle it differently from now on.”

Lucian started to think about why the opinion of a girl who didn’t even know him well mattered much. Perhaps he just wanted to be liked and make friends. No one really wants to be disliked and people in general do care about what others think, though it would be easier if it didn’t matter. This is why he had always found the best friends to be books, or at least the characters within them. Jay seemed to be quite sensible though, and Lucian did find it easy to talk to him.

“So, how was your midterm break?” Lucian asked Jay after giving him some time to recover from the previous rant. He also decided to ask him something that popped into his head. “How would you like to be in a group with me for the concert?” Lucian decided that forming a group would be a good idea. The chance of him making a complete fool of himself on his own would be reduced, and maybe he could help Jay find a musical talent he didn’t realize he had. “I’m sure we could find something for you to do or play,” he continued, “at least maybe a tambourine in the background or something.” Lucian said with a grin, hoping his roommate understood his humor. “Seriously though, we will find something awesome for you to do.”
0 Lucian D'Alesandro A little too common in mine unfortunately. 223 Lucian D'Alesandro 0 5


Jay

June 07, 2012 8:55 PM
Jay glanced toward the girl Lucian was indicating, recognizing her as one of the unfortunate souls who’d been Sorted into Crotalus with Miss O’Malley – Miss Baird, he thought, though he hadn’t worked with her in any classes yet that he could remember right now. He nodded, too, as Lucian explained why the two of them had a problem, wondering if there was more to the story – perhaps how the help had been offered; Lucian had always been pleasant enough to him, and Jay found him perfectly satisfactory as a roommate, but then, he’d kept his work to himself, and some people were just more touchy about that kind of thing than others anyway – but not saying anything, or really getting a chance to as his roommate went on with his story.

“That sounds good,” he said when the rant ended, smiling slightly and wondering what kind of midterm break Lucian had gone through, anyway. Interesting, in his opinion, was a terrible word, because it could mean so many things. Even using it to talk about a book could be dangerous, depending on tone, and sometimes tones didn’t come out the way you meant them to. It could cause all kinds of exceptionally large misunderstandings.

Of course, if he thought about it long enough, that could almost apply to any word he could use without getting in trouble, and most likely some of the ones he couldn’t, too, so maybe that didn’t mean anything at all.

“Mine was all right, I guess,” he said lightly about midterm. “I’m not sure if my family got louder or if I’m just not used to them anymore, but it was a little overwhelming being at home with all five of them, but we got through another year.” He liked Lucian well enough, but he wasn’t going to discuss Henry with him. Besides, that had been fine, except for that awful thing at Grandmother’s on Christmas. Jay was still, after finally figuring out the whole story, trying to figure out how anyone had thought taking Hen back in that house, tradition or no tradition, was a good idea, but it hadn’t been that much of an incident, really. It had just made him angry on his brother’s behalf. “There was still some talk about more memorials for Great-Great-Grandfather’s brother – “ Thomas’ death was something Lucian did know about, as Jay had been gone for a few days in the beginning of the previous month to attend the first round of services – “but that seems mostly settled, people are starting to adjust.” Or so it seemed, anyway; he hadn’t heard anything that made him think he was wrong. Things had seemed more settled, the adults less nervous, by the time he got home for midterm than they had been a few weeks earlier when he went home for the funeral.

He was a little startled by the offer to work together for the Concert, though he guessed he shouldn’t have been. Jay couldn’t help but laugh, though, at the image of himself standing in the back and playing a tambourine. His mother would probably start crying the second he started; it would, he thought, make her think of Diana, which often had the effect of making her need her nerve tea, if not her actual nerve potions. “I don’t mind being in the background,” he said. “I’m good at that, really. But thanks, I’m sure we can come up with something for it.” It was good to at least have a starting point for that; Jay liked being able to plan ahead what he was doing.
0 Jay I...may be able to understand that 0 Jay 0 5