Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

July 26, 2013 5:42 PM
The midterm had gone about in its usual chaotic way as a family of seven often did. The only real difference was that Harper was chattering up a storm now while running around and Ayita needed a heart to heart. Jeff and Kiva did the best they could with everyone, making sure they received most of what they had on their wish lists, or giving them gifts in other ways that they would appreciate. It was harder with the teenagers, but she hoped they enjoyed the time with the family.

Now though, it was back to work. Kiva watched the students as they filed in and made their way either to their respective tables or to their friends. She always enjoyed watching them in their elements. Everything was so genuine with them. Once everyone was settled though, Kiva stood and charmed her voice to speak over the crowd, “Good Evening everyone! I hope your Midterm was enjoyable. I am really happy to have you all back here.” She was sure that there would only be one or two people who were happy for the return but otherwise, everyone would have preferred to not have to go back to classes.

“So, before I let you all off to enjoy your food and chat with your friends, I wanted to discuss the end of Midsummer’s Fair.” Kiva called out to them, anticipating a few groans at the food being stalled. “Your participation in creating a booth is entirely voluntary, so I do hope we have some interest from you in creating them. Those of you who decide to have a booth at the fair, the school will provide all materials for your use, so you do not have to pay out of pocket for the supplies. If you have questions or concerns regarding this, please feel free to come and see me.” Kiva advised them. “I will be putting up a Booth Registry on the main board here in Cascade for you to register your booth. I will need to know what type of booth you will have, food, games, informational booth, craft booth, Group Fundraising booth, ectera.” Kiva listed as many categories of booths that she could remember off the top of her head. “The booths that are for Group Fundraising events should be the only booths that charge for services unless otherwise approved by myself. Otherwise, all booths are free.

“You will also be designing your own booth for the fair. So, when you register your booth, there will also be a box next to the sign up, submit your design in the box when you sign up. We will have a team to build the booth to your specifications or as close to them as possible. I know all of you aren’t artists or architects, so even basic information of what you are looking for will help us to create the look you want. The earlier you get this to us, the earlier your booth will be completed and the sooner you can have a look at it and critique it.” Kiva really wanted this to be about their wants since they were taking the time to volunteer for this event. The more the school was able to do for them and they could actual design something from scratch, the more excited they would likely be for the end result.

“The booths will run during certain allotted time slots so that we can try and have as little overlap as possible. However, booths will be running all day long. As much as I love enthusiasm and people who are willing to help out, please do not over extend yourself and sign up for all the booths because then you won’t actually have time to enjoy the Fair. And I want you all to enjoy the fair.” Kiva wanted to express that not everyone was exemplary enough to really do everything. It just wasn’t possible.

“Alright, I think that was all I had to tell you. So, enjoy the rest of your evening.” Kiva declared, setting them free.

OOC: Ayita and Kiva's conversation is currently being written, but it will be posted on wts to show permission was attained. Also, be on the look out for the booth registry, I'll post it within the week.
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Returning Feast 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5

Charlie B-F-R

July 26, 2013 5:54 PM
Charlie was not bouncing about. And it wasn't just because he had to come back to school. He was actually quite glad to get away from the scrutiny of his parents. At first, when they had asked him what was wrong, he'd feigned stomach aches. That had only worked until they threatened to take him to see the healer, or pick up a pain relief potion. He had then resorted to vaguer symptoms, such as tiredness or just feeling like being alone. The fact that all this had started since coming back from Grandpa Reynolds' house was a coincidence that had escaped no one's notice. His father and sister knew about the attitude Grandpa had taken over Charlie's choice of booth and tried to be reassuring that Grandpa was just old fashioned, and that he shouldn't mind what was said. But they didn't know that he'd also overheard the row between his Father and Grandpa. That he understood now why Dad was always 'working' when they went there. How mean Grandpa had been to Father about... everything. And that the same would happen to him if he didn't turn into a nice straight boy who played Quidditch and hunted and did whatever else 'proper' boys did. He'd always been happy about how unconditional his grandparents' love for them felt. He'd worried at first that being adopted would make a difference. That they wouldn't be regarded as real grandchildren. But Grandpa and Grandma had always fussed over them, indulged them and loved them. Now that could change. Not because of being adopted but just because of him, and how he was. Grandpa was going to stop loving him. Maybe even stop wanting to see him. He'd always brushed it off before when people teased him for his mannerisms or his interests. Part of his ability to do that had been knowing that his family loved him, and that being yourself was the right thing to be. But what had happened over Midterm put those things into question, which meant he couldn't fall back on them to make him feel better.

He drifted into the Returning Feast, not really feeling all that hungry. He was keen to see other people though. To be amongst people who liked him and to try to find reassurance, although he wasn't really sure how he would be able to be sure of that, given that his own grandfather had been putting on a façade for years. He gravitated towards Julian, who was probably the person he felt closest to at school, friend-wise. She seemed to like him... She'd put up with all his squealing over outfits, and his fussy ministrations as hairdresser and make up artist for the ball last year, and never called him names or rolled her eyes over it all. At least, not to his face... The headmistress said a lot about booths, which he knew he would need to know – if he still ran his silly idea for girls - but which pretty much washed over him. Henny would be listening. She could fill him in. Or he could just tell everyone that he'd changed his mind. They could still run it without him if they wanted. The food appeared and Charlie pulled some soup towards him, stirring rather than eating.

“Julian...” he began slowly. He knew it was pathetically needy but... well, right now he was in need. He didn't know how to make everything alright or make it all feel better by himself. And he wasn't sure he could just believe that what was on the surface was true. “I know when people ask this there's what you're supposed to say. But I don't want you to say what you're supposed to say. I want you to be honest. Do you... do you actually like me?”
13 Charlie B-F-R I'm not really hungry (tag Julian U) 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian Umland

July 26, 2013 7:17 PM
Julian felt a little uncomfortable as she sat down in the Cascade Hall, smoothing down the front of her new dress and tugging the skirt straight where it had tried to fold up under her knees when she got into her chair. Mom’s mother had come to see them, something she did every few years, and on such occasions, all the kids got new clothes - really new clothes, not just new to them, or the second-owner stuff which they wore on Christmas and Easter. That happened every now and then whether Mom’s side of the family intervened or not, Julian had had a new dress when she came to Sonora the first time and Stephen had gotten new businessy robes when he finished school, but it was uncommon enough that she felt the need to be extra-careful, so she didn’t damage the navy blue garment she had on beneath her robes.

Blue and green were probably not New Year’s colors, she thought vaguely when she saw Charlie heading her way, but with the new dress, and her shoes freshly polished and a matching ribbon in her newly-cut dark brown hair, she felt almost pretty, which had to count for something. So long as she didn't slip into vanity, anyway. She smiled brightly at her friend as the Headmistress began to speak, quickly overwhelming her with the thought of all the potential Fair options.

She really was not, Julian was a little embarrassed to admit, looking forward to this year’s event. Just going to a fair would have been fun, but she felt obliged to somehow help out, to be involved in things, and she didn’t really know what on earth she was supposed to do. Maybe, if all else failed, Charlie could find her some minor role in his project; she’d hate to ask a favor of a friend like that, but, well, someone would have to keep things straightened out and know what they were running short of and that kind of thing, right? She could do that.

Julian frowned slightly when she noticed the combination of Charlie unenthusiastically (a pair of words which did not go together well in her mind) stirring his soup and hesitating, not sounding very cheerful, when he said her name. Then he went on and she got worried. Then he asked what he wanted to ask and she got confused.

“Yes,” she said, after a slight pause. “I do. Why? What’s wrong?” She frowned again. “Did I do something that made you think I don’t?” she added. She hadn’t noticed anything weird before the holidays and didn’t think she had said anything that shocking in the card she’d sent him at Christmas, but one never knew. She and her brothers had all, at one time or another, just known one or all of the others were mad at them and had no idea why. Donne was right that no man was an island, but Julian thought they were more like peninsulas than firmly-connected parts of a continent most of the time. That, or islands linked by bridges, or Alaska, or...well, not really continents, anyway.
16 Julian Umland *Offers cup of tea instead, then.* 254 Julian Umland 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

July 27, 2013 11:29 AM
Julian affirmed that yes, of course she liked him. It didn't magically make everything better but he tried hard to believe her. They'd had a whole year group of people to be friends with, after all. Ok, they were in the same house but people didn't always stick with their housemates. Grandpa hadn't really chosen him, he'd been stuck with him whether he liked it or not. But Julian had chosen him.

“Oh, no,” he said hastily, looking up at her as she asked whether she'd done something wrong. “No, honey, of course not,” he stated emphatically. He hated the idea of making other people feel bad over anything, let alone over something they hadn't even done.

“I just... someone was giving me a hard time over the holidays,” he explained, going back to staring morosely into his soup bowl. It was Minestrone, with pasta shells. He poked them with his spoon, dipping each one below the surface until it filled with liquid and became to heavy to stay afloat.“You know, over being...” What was he? Gay? He didn't really have feelings towards anyone yet but it was kind of clear that was where he was heading. Proto gay? “all freaky and queer,” he finished, his tone quiet but clearly hurt.

“You don't mind that stuff?” he asked, turning his blue eyes back to bore into her inquisitively, trying to be sure of whether he could trust her response.
13 Charlie B-F-R Have you been speaking to my Father? 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5

Julian U.

July 27, 2013 4:12 PM
Julian was glad to hear that at least she hadn’t done whatever had prompted that question, but still didn’t know exactly what had brought it on, and almost thought, when he did say what an unspecified someone had been giving him a hard time about, that she’d heard him wrong, since he was speaking quietly and people were talking all over the Hall. Probably, though, she had not.

Asked directly for what she thought of ‘that stuff,’ she paused for a second to try to organize exactly how to answer. She didn’t have the gift of quick speech anyway, and this was…well, at her house, this kind of discussion over the dinner table might have been all right, but at school, she would have rather have had it more privately. Mentioning that, though, was definitely not the way to go, so she started with one thing she was sure of.

“Well, I don’t think you’re a freak,” she said. The other thing he’d been called, her mother thought was a bad word, so she didn’t repeat that. Actually, Mom wouldn’t be too happy with the first half either, but she was disregarding that. “But…if you were, or whatever, well, I’d like you anyway. You’re fun, and you’re always nice to me –”

Which wasn’t the point. “But even if you weren’t, that wouldn’t be a reason for me to be mean to you about anything about you, and I don’t think I should anyway. I mean, I don’t think they’re things to be mean about.”

She was, she reflected, horrible at speaking about anything on the spot. She needed to work on that. A lot. “Okay?” she asked, a loaded question if she’d ever asked one. Are we all right? Did I say the right thing or make things worse? She was upset he was upset and really hoped the last option hadn't happened.
16 Julian U. He and my mom must agree about some stuff. 254 Julian U. 0 5

Charlie B-F-R

August 04, 2013 12:46 PM
Julian seemed to take a bit of time choosing her words. What were probably mere seconds weighed heavily as Charlie weighted for the response. He wasn't really used to feeling sad – his emotional reactions were usually acute; extreme, but short lived. This new kind of sadness, the kind that hung around and stuck to him, seemed to make everything take longer. Time moved slowly, and he moved slowly through it. Her words, however, were well worth the wait.

“Thanks,” he said, giving her a small smile. Resting his head on her shoulder, he put his arm around her shoulders and gave her a grateful squeeze. “You're the best.” She liked him. And she backed it up with reasons, and it all seemed so believable. That made all the difference in the world to him. Plus she overall seemed to think such discrimination was wrong, which was good to know. Julian was just generally a super nice, good person. He felt bad for ever doubting her, as she had never given him any evidence to the contrary. It didn't solve the problem between him and Grandfather, and it didn't mean its existence didn't hurt him. But he did feel like he might be able to put it to one side. Like it might not have to consume every waking second.

“Very okay,” he nodded, taking a spoonful of soup. It was rich and tomatoey and warming right down to the toes. “How are you? How was your Christmas?” he asked.
13 Charlie B-F-R Tea is a great source of bonding 252 Charlie B-F-R 0 5