Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

October 26, 2012 7:42 PM
Midterm had come and gone along with Christmas and New Years. This was the first year of holidays with both Angel and Ayita. Kiva had no idea if they appreciated or enjoyed the holidays with the entire family, but they were both pleasant and everyone seemed to enjoy them. Hopefully, things would only get better. Angel had been officially adopted and that was because both of his parents were deceased and his caretaker and signed over all guardianship. Ayita’s was a little more tricky and they had to seek out legal counsel on what to do. But, they were still determined to complete it. Especially now that they were expecting.

Kiva was hitting her fourth month into the pregnancy. She would be able to remain throughout the entire term, but she was pushing it close to her due date. Although her robes were hiding any trace of her upcoming new motherhood, if she were wearing her usual garnets, her coworkers would be able to spot the baby bump without trouble. Still not quite that large, she was definitely growing faster than with Emery. She wasn’t going to make an announcement or anything and she had already told the staff, but everyone else could figure it out on their own.

Standing in front of the student body, Kiva allowed them a few minutes of chit chat to allow them that moment of excitement before forcing them to calm down again. Finally deciding that they had enough time for greetings and initial welcome hugs, Kiva began, “Hello everyone! Welcome back! I hope all of your holidays were pleasant and fun.” She greeted, smiling happy. She loved the holidays, but sometimes it was nice to come back to a routine.

“I’m going to make this short and sweet.” She advised them. She had no new staff members or anything, so there wasn’t a need for anything too long winded. “This year our Midsummer Event is the bonfire. Normally, we like to have the students contribute something during each of the events, but this year, we wanted to give you all a break. We have been very impressed with past years’ behaviors that we wanted to have this be an award.” Kiva explained to them. “We’ll be having a camp out in the Pitch and you’ll get to do nothing more than roast smores and have fun with friends. You’ll hear more about it when we get closer to the end of term. For now, enjoy your dinner.” With that, Kiva sent them off and the food began to arrive.
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0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5

Professor Skies

October 30, 2012 3:35 PM
The holidays had been lovely. Not peaceful. Not peaceful by any stretch of the imagination, what with relatives constantly visiting and two girls who were used to having a whole boarding school between them suddenly forced to share a moderately sized house again. But they had been enjoyable. For all that it was loud, chaotic and sometimes argumentative, Selina was a family person, and the effort involved in hosting her relatives was definitely made up for by the time spent together.

The new term had come around before she'd known it. The girls had been packed back off to school and she had come back to Sonora, although she would return home most evenings. That had the benefit of meaning she could see her husband but had the downside of meaning that she did not spend much time socially with her colleagues. The opening feast seemed like a good chance to remedy this, as did the bonfire planned for the end of the year. She thought it was nice that the school had its traditions and that there was some form of celebration every year.

“So, here we are again,” she smiled at the person next to her. Names and faces were familiar enough from staff meetings, and so she didn't think introductions were really necessary. “Did you have an enjoyable Christmas?”

She scanned the food in front of them, enjoying the fact that a delicious meal had been prepared with no effort whatsoever on her part. The holidays had been a time for indulging in naughty things but coming back to school marked a clear ending point. She helped herself to a piece of fish that looked like it had been cooked in some sort of tomato-based sauce, adding peas and salad to the side. She wasn't someone who believed that you could live off lettuce leaves, or that carbs were the enemy but eating balanced, not too fatty foods and making sure you got plenty of fruit and vegetables were important. This wasn't so difficult to do during a main course. The real test of one's resolve arrived when dessert was served...
13 Professor Skies Once more unto the breach 26 Professor Skies 0 5


Professor Fawcett

October 30, 2012 7:24 PM
Spending time with his family was pleasant enough, but John was always happy to come back to Sonora. He and his wife were very fond of each other and spoke at least briefly through the floo or by letter each day, but they were both also very private people, who had never been comfortable with too much togetherness and did not much like each other’s families or take much interest in what the other did for a living, so long as they got all their bills paid in the end. The only things they agreed on were politics – they had, in fact, met at a political event – and that they couldn’t imagine living any way other than the one they did. And so Allison ran the inn, he taught Potions and wrote articles on Magisociology, and they were much happier together when they were together than he honestly thought they would have been if they’d lived by a more conventional schedule and housing pattern.  
 
He took a seat at the staff table as the students began falling into the room, watching his Aladrens, in particular, to make sure that they did not behave themselves too badly as they returned. He saw their conduct as, to some extent, a reflection on him, and so he did hold them to a slightly higher standard, though he did not talk about this, suspecting that it might not be viewed as correct.
 
If it was going to become an issue, however, it did not seem poised to do so at the moment; his students were not causing any problems, that he could see. Now if they could just get the House Cup back, to balance the Quidditch one in his office…He was going to miss the current fifth years, he expected, when they were gone, since they were the backbone of the Aladren Quidditch team and he did not expect to see their like again any time soon. Certainly Aladren had never been viewed the way it was now when he was a student here, the House team of his day had been viewed primarily as a joke.
 
“So we are,” he said pleasantly to Professor Skies when she addressed him over the dinner. “Quite pleasant, thank you.”
 
Not precisely true, for his extended family – his father had been in the hospital again, and there were rumors that the soap opera his brother had played on for twenty years might be canceled, a threat his brother seemed to take seriously and fear deeply, as he had made his living bouncing back and forth between his ex-wife and his current wife on the small screen for so long that he seemed to view Ken, Katherine, and Katrina as quite as essential to the story as Scott Fawcett, Nicole Howard, and Isabel Stewart were – but he and Allison had enjoyed their vacation, and he’d successfully attended the Wagner family holiday reunion without exchanging cross words with his father-in-law, which was always an occasion for great celebration. "And you? Not too much lesson-planning, I hope?"
0 Professor Fawcett We may yet make it through alive 0 Professor Fawcett 0 5

Professor Skies

November 05, 2012 5:25 PM
Although she new relatively little about her colleagues, Selina liked John Fawcett. From what one gathered via impressions during meetings or the whispered comments of students when they thought they were out of earshot, he was an old school professor. Strict but fair. Methodical. With standards. She liked that. She sometimes felt younger professors were a bit flighty or a bit too informal. Sometimes, it was little things she couldn't quite put her finger on, which probably simply meant she was getting on or being fussy. Sometimes it was more definite things, such as what she deemed a strange way of teaching, or – in the case of that librarian – inappropriate attire for someone in a position of authority. John Fawcett seemed stalwart and reliable. And he was a good... what? Maybe forty years older than her? That definitely helped. Whilst she was pleased to see her girls growing up and making her proud she wished that it didn't have to mean that she too was getting older. The fact that she was in her forties was not one on which she liked to dwell.

“Enough to know what I'm doing, not so much as to ruin Christmas,” she smiled, when he joked about lesson planning. She didn't quite feel comfortable with laughing it off entirely, implying that she had slacked, lest he thought of her as one of the flippant young professors of whom she disapproved. “And yes, it was enjoyable. Not quiet, not by a long stretch, but it's worth it to spend time with people.

“We had people coming and going all through the break, and then I had to bundle the girls back off to school first thing this morning, though they seemed pretty keen to get going” she added, smiling, “They've got rather used to having a whole school between them and being in different years and different houses. I think they were starting to get on each other's nerves,” she explained, before realising how bratty that might make them sound, “They're nice girls, both of them. They're just... very different to each other,” she added. “Were you mostly hosts or visitors?” she asked.
13 Professor Skies With a little luck 26 Professor Skies 0 5


Professor Fawcett

November 07, 2012 5:29 PM
He had worked with them in the school for about ten or so years now, but children in his home remained one of those subjects John looked at, despite having had a wife for decades longer, with the eyes of a confirmed bookish bachelor: other people had children in their homes and seemed to enjoy them, and certainly they could be interesting enough in short stints, but he certainly was glad they went home after a while and stopped threatening all his worldly possessions. Having students, even the Aladrens during the school year, seemed to him to be a very different matter than having one’s own children; he would have never tolerated the kind of disrespect from his students as Scott and his wives put up with from their daughters.
 
Though, that could have been a matter of the adults involved, he supposed. John’s main interaction with his nieces had always been when Scott left them with him and Allison two nights a year so he and Nikki and Isabel could attend the Daytime Emmys, but they had still never spoken to him or Allison, as far as he knew, the way they did to their parents. Even Ashley, who he knew for a fact sometimes enjoyed doing amusing impressions of them behind their backs, was civil to their faces, where she usually was not to Scott and Isabel. Still, Allison had never been interested in having children, and they were far too old now for her to become interested in it, so he would have to leave that particular theory untested.
 
His theory that siblings were naturally inclined to argue – one based on how he, Carlene, and Scott sometimes managed it, despite the impressive age gap between Carlene and Scott – did, though, get some help from Selina Skies’ reflections about her winter break and interactions with her daughters. “My sister and I were often the same way,” he reflected when she said they were different from one another. He and Carlene had not been as argumentative as he had gathered girls often were, but it had often been pleasant to get back to Aladren after living in close quarters with his Pecari sister for a time.
 
“More traveling than hosting,” he said of his own experiences of the holidays. “My wife is Muggleborn, as is Mother, so most of the family can’t get around as easily as we can.” Allison’s family, in Texas, was entirely Muggle to the last man except for Allison herself, and his mother and Carlene were the only other wizards in his family. Scott, as far as they could tell, didn’t have a trace of magical ability, and neither did his three daughters. John and Allison Apparating out to visit their family members was much quicker and cheaper than the family flying in to visit them, and so that was how it generally went. “I must admit, I'm pleased by the prospect of staying in one place for a few months after it all.”
0 Professor Fawcett Here's wishing good luck to both of us, then 0 Professor Fawcett 0 5