Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau

October 04, 2013 7:11 PM
Kiva stood at the front table with all the other staff members sans Professor Skies, who would be with the first years. There were a couple of new faces at the staff table that might have some of the students interests peaked and a couple of faces missing. Every year there were staff changes. No matter how hard Kiva had tried, making everyone happy or their lives easier was never enough to keep them all on board. It was just another hassle in the many hassles of being the Head of a school. Unfortunately, she was going to be throwing the students a curve ball tonight and there was little she could really do about it.

Her summer had been absolute chaos. A mother of five should expect chaos, but not like this. Ayita had graduated, so the family had thrown her a party. They had tried to keep the celebrations going, but Angel’s health had suddenly begun to decline and his potions just didn’t seem to be working any longer. It had all been a terrifying experience for them to go through. Harper was too young to understand, but she was pretty attached to Angel and she became upset whenever they had to keep her away from him. Chloe and Emery were downtrodden throughout the summer. Emery had done his best to keep a positive attitude on it, which was normally Chloe’s job, but there was only so much he could do about everything. She appreciated the gesture though. Jeff had received a promotion and was now a head executive at the advertising firm. She was proud of him, but it meant less time at home, which meant, Kiva needed to be home more.

And here lies the issue.

She watched the students milling about while they found their friends and discussed their summers. She took it all in before the new Deputy Headmistress brought in the first years. They had a smaller group this year, but Kiva wasn’t worried about it. It just meant that the Professors could focus more individually on them than they could in the past. When the first years began to file in, the older students settled in because they knew what was coming.

Charming herself to be heard, Kiva greeted them all “Good Evening, Everyone! For the returning students, I say welcome back and to our new students, welcome to Sonora Academy. For those who do not know me, I am Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau, but feel free to call me Professor K.” This was a standard greeting, but it was always necessary. She didn’t want to just jump right into things and be too overwhelming.

“Our first priority for the moment is to have the first years sorted.” Kiva turned her hazel eyes to the newest group of students. “In order for this to be done, I need for each of you to step up one at a time to your new Deputy Headmistress Skies, who is also the Transfiguration Professor, and take a sip from the potion she will offer to you.” Kiva explained, nodded to Selina to indicate who the Deputy Headmistress was (although the goblet in her hand and the fact that she had lead them into the hall should have made it obvious). “Once you have taken a sip of the potion, your skin will turn into the color of the house you will be spending the next seven years in. Once your house is indicated, please have a seat at your house table. Yellow is for Teppenpaw, blue is for Aladren, red is for Crotalus, and brown is for Pecari. Please, if you could form a line and begin…” She gestured for the first student to step up.

Once the sorting was completed, Kiva called for attention once more. “I would like Nora Dobson and Linus Macaulay to please come up to the front and accept your new Head Girl and Head Boy badges.” Kiva stated. She grinned and handed each their appropriate badge. “Congratulations to you both.” She said before having them return to their seats. “Aria Yale, Heaven Baird, Clara Abernathy, and Lucian D’Alesandro, please come and join me up front.” Kiva called out and waited for the four of them to join her. She gave them each a badge, “Everyone, meet your newest Prefects. Be sure to congratulate them when you see them.” She clapped with the students before having them return to their seats.

“As usual, we do have some announcements to make. First, as I stated earlier, Professor Skies has stepped up and taken on the role of Deputy Headmistress. She will also be the Head of House for Crotalus. As we all know, Coach Pierce left at the end of last year. Unfortunately, we have been unable to find a suitable replacement for her at this time. I was going to cancel Quidditch due to this, however, Professor Olivers has stated interest in substituting as Coach for the time being. I still expect all Quidditch Captains to fulfill their duties and treat Professor Olivers with great respect. Most especially since she is taking time out of her schedule to give you all the opportunity to continue playing this year.” That was a lot to say, but it was done. Now on to the next.

“We have a new Librarian this year, Ms. Amelle Nicchi.” Kiva made sure to pronounce her name correctly as Ah-mel, instead of Emily like she had originally thought it sounded like. “In case you have not noticed, but our Groundskeeper, Mr. Brockert, is no longer with the school. He has taken a position working with exotic plants. We as a staff wished him the best of luck when he gave us his goodbyes. I hope you all will do the same. In his place, we have our new Groundskeeper, Nathan Xavier. Please give him and Ms. Nicchi a warm welcome when you see them.” So many announcements and there was still one more to come.

“As some of you may be aware of, my son, Angel, has not been able to return to Sonora. He has become quite ill and the Healers have not been able to find a solution. Due to this, I am unable to fulfill my duties as Headmistress of this school in a way that it deserves to be.” Kiva informed them. “The man to my left is Mortimer Brockert. He has been a part of the education process and administration for many years. He has decided to take on some of the roles that I cannot take on currently while my son is ill.” She had no idea if this would really affect anyone but her and her family. Still, she needed them to know what was to come. “This term will be a transition period for Mr. Brockert as he becomes acquainted with the site and with his new found duties. At the end of this term, I will officially step down as Headmistress of this school and Headmaster Brockert will take over. I wanted you to all be aware of the situation because there will be times when he will be running the school while I am away. So, for the year, you will have two Heads of this school.” Kiva paused for the moment to let this all sink in to everyone. It wouldn’t be as terrible or weird as some people might think, but she and the administration thought this was the easiest way to go about things.

“Last thing before we sing and eat.” Kiva stated, moving this on quickly. “This year’s Midsummer Event will be the school concert. Each Prefect and Head Student will be putting on a show for the student body. Every student must be in at least one of their shows.” She waited for the negative reactions. “I know I know, how dare we force you all to participate, but it is what it is. However the Prefect or Head student wants to handle it is up to them. A sign up sheet will be placed in the Hall and each Prefect and Head’s name will be listed. There is only a limited amount of slots under each name, so sign up early. Okay, now onto the song and the food.”

Sheets of music appeared in front of the students. “Let’s begin.”

Every day we strive
Learning to survive
Life’s hardships and to solve its mystery.
Learning to defend
Our honour and our friends,
Flying high to meet our destiny
We will stand and face those who want to harm us.
We won’t let the world transfigure, jinx or charm us
I won’t fight alone, as long as you are with me.
Sonora be my home, my tutor and my spirit
Vasita quoque floeat; Even the desert blooms.


Once the song ended, the food appeared before them. A feast of great magnitude. “Please enjoy the rest of your evening. When it is time to head back to your Houses, your Head of House will call for your attention and bring you to your destinations. That is all.” Kiva concluded and then took her seat at the staff table.

OOC: Welcome First years! Please do not post on any other board until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech, which should be up in a week's time. Have fun at the feast and remember the site rules. Happy posting everyone!
Subthreads:
0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau Welcoming Feast!! 0 Headmistress Kijewski-Jareau 1 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

October 05, 2013 1:15 PM
Theodore was quietly confident as he stood, waiting to be ushered into the hall. He and Francesca had discussed the houses in some detail, and it was clear that he was Aladren through and through. That would suit him well. He admired the characteristics of the house and it meant he got to be with his sister. Not only did that have comfort and familiarity, and easier opportunities to be sociable with one another, but it meant that they would be on the same Quidditch team. He was always with Francesca when they played pick up games at home, so to be opposing her in a real match, attempting to thwart her attempts at scoring, would have felt dreadfully alien.

A small smile still crossed his features as they turned blue. An expected result could still be a satisfying one – in fact, most of the time it was. One expected a potion to turn out a particular way if attended to correctly – that it did, if careful attention had been paid, was not surprising but was extremely satisfying. If your team trained harder and had more talented players, you expected to win. It was expected, but satisfying. It was true of every area he could think of, in terms of studying and achievement. That suited Theodore. He was happiest when the world worked as it should.

His sister being already seated between two other Aladrens, he found his own space. He listened attentively to the headmistress' announcements. He had known about Coach Pierce leaving, which was of definite interest, although it had yet to be seen what, if any, would be the repercussions for him. For them. Although he was hungry, he was happy to sit and listen for as long as the speech went on for. It was the calm before the inevitable storm. He had long since resigned himself to the fact that this evening was going to be long and exhausting, as it was bound to involve a great deal of conversation with unfamiliar people. This was something Theodore was perfectly adept at – he did not lack the skills to be socially graceful. He just found it rather tiring, and looked forward – at the end of any long period of socialisation – to having some time to himself.

He joined in the song, softly but more or less tunefully, following the printed sheet as best he could. Music had never been his forte, but he had some knowledge, and – once the starting note had been established – it was easy enough to see whether it was going up or down, and to pick out refrains where it was repeating itself. He resumed his seat, eyeing up the food. It looked most definitely enticing and, whilst it was not going to taste exactly the same as the food at home, he felt that he could feel at home with the food here. There was pie, for example. How could one feel dispirited in the presence of pie? He carved himself a slice – enough to be enjoyable but perhaps leave room for sampling something else – and accompanied it with some buttery potatoes and peas. Feeling buoyed by the prospect of a good meal, he turned to his neighbour.

“Good evening, I am Theodore Wolseithcrafte, of the Wolseithcrafte family of Chicago,” he introduced himself.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Literally but not metaphorically blue 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5


Leonidas Bennett

October 05, 2013 10:22 PM
As he moved in a line with the other first years into the Cascade Hall, Leo Bennett tried his best to stop smiling. It was a difficult task, but one he felt he had to complete before he came within viewing distance of either of his older siblings at the school. At least one of them, he was sure, would have noticed at some point over the courses of their lives that Leo only smiled for no obvious reason when he was uncomfortable and nervous, and he didn’t want to think of Paul and Gemma finding him amusing because of that tonight. This was his social debut, to a large extent, and he wanted it to go just so.

He thought he succeeded, but it turned out to be only a temporary success. There was little doubt in his mind which House he would go into, but the nervous attempt at a confident smile popped right back up when the woman who had charge of them for the moment gave him the potion which would confirm it. Quickly, without hesitating, he raised it and drank it down to hide his mouth, then held his hands out in front of him, watching as they turned…blue?

For a second, he frowned in genuine confusion, processing this. He had been sure he would go to Crotalus, be in the same House as Paul and Eliza, his oldest sister, who had picked up her distinctive habit of wearing eye-catching red here, in the House with red as a color. He, though, was blue – Aladren. No one from his family had been there yet. There was nothing wrong with it, he thought – from what he had read in the school brochures, it was an excellent House, really excellent, and from what he had gathered from listening to Paul and Eliza, it was almost certainly easier to live in, for all the minor glory of having the Deputy Head as a Head of House which Crotalus had – but it just wasn’t what he had expected.

That, however, was possibly not the worst thing, and he smiled around at his new classmates as he joined the Aladren table. He didn’t know much about Eliza or Paul’s time at Sonora, just scraps overheard, but he’d gathered that Eliza, at least, had gotten into some tense situations, and so perhaps it was for the best, being in a different House, somewhere where he could make his own reputation entirely from scratch, rather than having members of his family precede him. He would not be burdened with them, as he might have been in Crotalus, and almost certainly would have been in Teppenpaw – he had never gotten the impression that Gemma was very smart. He was better off making his own impressions.

The Headmistress gave a speech, during which he nodded along as though he knew just what was going on, though he was really surprised at the part about a Brockert becoming head of the school and started to turn to look at Paul before he caught himself and reminded himself to just look it up later. At the end, he sang along with the school song, feeling a little uneasy about the martial tone of its lyrics, and then began deciding, since the rest of it was really beyond his ability to influence or control right now, what, of the several attractive options being presented to him, to eat for supper.

When his neighbor – and, he supposed, roommate – introduced himself before Leo had filled his plate, he realized that shouldn't have been his first priority. “Good evening to you as well. I'm Leonidas Bennett,” he said, carefully using his full first name. It was almost never used at home, but, well, he wasn't at home. He was at school, which meant he was too grown-up for nicknames. "Of the California Bennetts," he added, "though I did live in Chicago for a while a few years ago. I liked it there, too. Have you ever been west before?"
0 Leonidas Bennett Better literally than metaphorically in this context 269 Leonidas Bennett 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

October 06, 2013 3:35 PM
As far as enforced socialisation went, this encounter looked to be pretty positive, as well as foretelling potential positive things about his life in general at Sonora. Judging by the fact that the boy next to him appeared similarly oxygen-starved, he was presumably a fellow first year. As he was a he, that made them room-mates. He was, therefore, someone whom Theodore had to get to know at some stage, and preferably get on with. Better now, whilst he was feeling fresh, than at the end of the evening after having chatted to someone else for some hours. It might also spare him prolonged chatter between the feast and being allowed to retire quietly to bed, as he would have already got to know his room-mate. Unless there were more of them... He tried to scan quickly and discreetly around the table but it was hard to be sure without more detailed scrutiny, which would have been notable and disrespectful to his companion. And, beyond the reasons of civil cohabitation, his room-mate seemed someone worth treating respectfully, hence the idea that the years ahead held promise. He knew of the Bennetts, and that some attended Sonora, though those that did were significantly older than Francesca, thus were not well known to her.

First names were less important, as far as blood went. Really, the most salient factor he noted down from learning his room-mate's name was not to allow people to shorten his own name to Theo. He had not been planning to indulge anyone who asked, as he had never been a Theo. He was Teddy, sometimes, at home and to familiar people, and would be willing to allow its usage amongst closer companions at school. He imagined it might spread rather quickly to the Quidditch team, via Francesca. But he would not be Theo. His room-mate had not indicated that he tolerated abbreviation but, if he did, the consequences could be tragic. Leo and Theo. He had never harboured any desire to be part of a double act and that lack of desire remained firm even in the face of such a glowing opportunity.

“I'm afraid that I have not have the pleasure. Excepting my current position, of course,” he added, realising it was somewhat inaccurate to be claiming one had never ventured west whilst sitting in Arizona, “We have always been of Chicago and, when we summer, we become even more Eastern,” he explained. “At what age did you move?” he enquired. Leonidas had spoken of Chicago as if he recalled it reasonably well, so he must have had several years under his belt before they departed. Theodore was far less prone to paranoia about his family's reputation, or people's attitude towards them than his sister – being male naturally shielded him somewhat in such matters – but he was politically astute, and perfectly capable of experiencing a slight moment of anxiety, hoping that the Bennett's move hadn't been because of his family. That would be awkward. Though at least he had only asked when they had moved and not why. Asking any Pureblood family why they had moved was not the done thing.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Neither is positive anywhen else, that I can think of 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5


Leonidas Bennett

October 06, 2013 8:17 PM
Leo wished Theodore – another long, vaguely Greek, he thought, name; maybe he, too, was shedding a childhood nickname for the first time today? – had addressed him by name, since he was curious to see how his full name actually sounded when someone else said it, but he was sure it would happen sometime, so he wasn’t too put out by it. He bit the inside of his lip, trying to remember how long he had been where he was now.

“I was…six or seven,” he said. “Though we’ve visited several times since as well.” Mother, he knew, hoped Gemma could marry into a family there, since Mother herself had liked it very much, so she was interested in preserving the family connection to the place as much as she could. Besides, it was where Uncle Victor had lived before he had gotten sick, and there was no point in completely losing any foothold their family had gotten in a place where there were a good number of families and money, especially since their family was still working its way up in society. The best time to be an American wizard had been in the early eighteenth century, he thought on the basis of what he’d heard his father say; now, it took a lot more effort to become prominent.

“Where does your family go in summer?” he asked, remembering that Theodore had mentioned going even further east than Chicago in the summers. Did they have a vacation home, or were they visiting family, or something else? Sometimes, it was so annoying that prying was only allowed with relatives at home, not with new people. He saw the practical side, since he didn't want people digging into his family any more than he guessed they wanted him to dig too far into theirs' scandals and real estate holdings and things, but...

Just how boring propriety meant a lot of the conversations might be was, honestly, one of the things Leo had not looked forward to about coming to school. He was glad that this one was not too bad so far and hoped this would continue.
0 Leonidas Bennett True, but in other contexts, if I had to pick... 269 Leonidas Bennett 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

October 11, 2013 8:09 AM
“I've always found it an enjoyable city to live in,” Theodore nodded at Leonidas' comment, glad that he found his city worthy of revisiting. Or that his family did. “Although I'm sure the West Coast has many things to recommend it too. Where abouts are you located?” he asked.

“We have a place in the Adirondack Lakes,” he explained, when Leonidas asked. He loved their summer residence. It had decent entertaining space, and so it wasn't like they were completely cut off but it could feel like it. The countryside was stunning and, when they weren't having to cater to guests, they were free. Really free. To just be their family, without scrutiny or comment, away from prying eyes, and enjoying each other's company. For all that he admired his mother's conviction, and enjoyed the intellectual company that it brought with it, he did not enjoy the controversy of their lives, or the seeming invasions into their privacy. In the summer they went swimming, hiking or just sat back, enjoying the view with a good book and each other. He and Francesca often took a picnic out together and just enjoyed each other's quiet companionship. He appreciated that about his sister – she understood that not every moment had to be filled with doing or saying things when you were with another person. Sometimes it was enough to just... be. They understood each other well, and he was closest to her out of all his siblings. People were often surprised by that. He supposed it was because they naturally assumed they would divide into boys and girls but his brother, Barnabus, had remained in the East for school, their mother tactically dividing them to spread their views further. Maybe if Theodore had been destined to go there too, it would have cemented that relationship, but he knew that he would be with Francesca, here, so it had cemented that one instead. His older brother was someone a little remote, someone to admire rather than be close to. Or perhaps people grouped them on the even more spurious reasoning of appearance. He and Francesca shared the long, straight family nose, but she was blonde haired and blue eyed. His own hair – neatly clipped and brushed so that it didn't touch his collar – was brown, like Barnabus and Ingrid's, and his eyes were sort of hazely-green. You could tell they were siblings, easily, from the nose and their mannerisms – something about the look in their eyes. The similarities were definitely there but it took a more careful observer to see them than it did with his older brother and youngest sister.

“Although my siblings and I usually spend a week or two at Quidditch camp too,” he added, “Do you play at all?” he enquired.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte I can't think of many appealing examples of either 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5


Leonidas Bennett

October 11, 2013 2:54 PM
“Near Santa Barbara, mainly,” Leo said of his family’s location. “Though the family has another house in the mountains, sometimes we go there.” He decided to assume that ‘you’ had meant literally ‘Leonidas Bennett and immediately family’ instead of ‘the entire Bennett family’ and so didn’t mention his uncles or Aunt Katherine or his grandparents or anyone, including Mother’s family, even though Eliza was staying with them most of the time right now, learning about banking.

That, he thought, was probably not quite the thing to tell his roommate about, though. She did plan to get married, after all, once she found someone she thought would make either a reasonable partner or reasonable face for Eliza just running their business interests herself, but it just wasn’t one of the usual things that girls did. A lot of families would have expected Eliza to be married already, and really, even theirs wouldn’t have complained, though he did think Father would be happy if she were just too much like…well, Mother, just a housewife who didn’t concern herself with business at all. Gemma would probably be like that, but Eliza was one of Father’s kids, rather than their mother’s responsibility, so she had gotten more or less the same education as the boys, and Father didn’t really seem to see as much difference as Leo sometimes thought he probably should.

“A little,” Leo said. “I haven’t quite decided if I’m going to try to join the team here or not, though my brother – my older brother, that is, he’s in Crotalus – says the Aladren one is very good. We’ve only lost the Cup once since he came to school, and he’s in seventh year, now.” Leo, of course, had not been involved in it at all, but he still felt proud to be in the House with that kind of record. He liked the idea of being among people who accomplished things, hoping that it would help him to do so as well.
0 Leonidas Bennett That is so 269 Leonidas Bennett 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

October 11, 2013 5:56 PM
“Do you have a preferred position?” he enquired. He was a little disappointed that Leonidas was only a 'maybe' for a team. Although, on the plus side, if it turned out that he couldn't stand the sight of him, it would give him some space from the other boy. There was also considerably more to his own life than the game – he wasn't one of these meatheads who was only capable of bonding over sports – so he and Leonidas still had the potential to find other common ground. Indeed, given their sorting, they were bound to have something other than sports in common, and there were certain positions that would give him more reservations about his room mate rather than reassuring him. Seekers, for example, he was convinced had to be either narcissists or masochists.

“And we won it last year,” Theodore informed Leonidas, in regards to their house's record with the Quidditch Cup. Claiming some sort of ownership felt natural, as he would be part of the team (if only as a reserve) as soon as possible, and owing to his sister's part in Aladren's victory. “My sister helped,” he added proudly. One large difference between him and Francesca was that he had a significant amount more candour than her. She kept her cards close to her chest, played them carefully and was always watchful or wary of how people would react. He would simply rather state the facts and then deal with the consequences, especially in this situation. He and Leonidas had to live together for seven years. If this was going to be an issue, it was better to get it out in the open now, rather than tiptoe around each other for months, second-guessing each other's opinions and motivation. Besides which, small talk bored him senseless. It was a necessary evil, of course, but if the opportunity to move onto more interesting topics presented itself, he was always keen to take it.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte Is that check or check mate? 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5


Leonidas Bennett

October 12, 2013 11:57 AM
Leo shrugged over positions. “Chaser or Keeper, I’d think,” he said. Keeper seemed a little more to his taste, but he was not convinced that a first year was really going to be anyone’s choice for that, if there were even openings on the team this year. He was still kind of…short for it. Playing with other first years, he thought he would acquit himself well enough, but some of the sixth and all of the seventh years were adults, and he was, as little as he liked to admit it, very aware that he wasn’t in the same league as them. That was part of why he wasn’t too worried about picking a spot: he would be very surprised if he and Theodore didn’t both end up as reserves at best.

“And you?” he asked in return, since he was pretty sure someone who liked the game enough to attend camps for it every summer was going to have a stronger preference about that sort of thing than he did.

He blinked, surprised, when Theodore said that his sister had helped with last year’s Aladren victory. However, that wasn’t one of the issues his family really cared that much about – all his family cared about, actually, was money, a stance Leo approved of very much, since it made so much more sense than caring about girls or Muggleborns or whatever because of themselves instead of just admitting that it was all about keeping the money to themselves – and Leo didn’t actually know why it was that girls weren’t supposed to play Quidditch except maybe that it was too violent, and if Theodore’s family didn’t if his sister got her head knocked in, Leo didn’t, either.

“I suppose my brother helped Crotalus lose,” he said. “Technically. His roommate’s the captain there, so Paul hangs around as a reserve.” Leo didn't really know what it was all about - he was not close at all to his two oldest siblings, just someone who watched them from afar, and who they seemed to find vaguely amusing - but Paul seemed to like his roommate better than he did most people, or at least find him entertaining, even though Leo had gathered that Mr. Macaulay was not pureblood. It had just been one more thing which gave him the idea that school was a complicated place and that he was glad, now that he knew, not to be a Crotalus.
0 Leonidas Bennett Well, it would be better to be sad than blue with cold 269 Leonidas Bennett 0 5


Theodore Wolseithcrafte

October 15, 2013 5:19 PM
“Keeper,” Theodore replied, glad to find out that his room-mate wasn't the kind of psychotic egotist that he believed it took to make a Seeker, even if it might meant they were competing for the same spot. “Though from what I've gathered, that's quite likely to put me on the bench for a year or so but that's fine with me,” he explained. Being on the bench would give him a longer time to build up his skills and he would rather wait for the position he really wanted than play something he didn't, just to get on the first string. The only issue would be if they didn't have enough players unless he did that. Apparently Aladren had only just filled its rota last year, and some of the core members of the team had graduated. It seemed the incoming year might be crucial.

“You should go for it,” he encouraged Leonidas. If he himself was on the fence, he thought he would not be persuaded without a compelling reason and sought to find one in order to make his remarks seem more than a token gesture. Honesty really seemed the best policy. “A lot of the old guard graduated last year. I mean, we're not going to be up where they were but they won't expect us to be - I think they'll still be keen to get new blood onto the team.

“It doesn't sound like he struck the fatal blow – or failed to,” he commented, as Leonidas mentioned his brother's position on the Crotalus team. “I think they're the only one Francesca didn't have to play but she said everyone was tough competition.” Leonidas didn't seem put off by the subject - he definitely wasn't speaking out against Theodore's sister, and didn't even seem quietly affronted in that he wasn't blustering and staring at his plate or attempting to change the subject. It definitely seemed like the next seven years might be workable.
13 Theodore Wolseithcrafte True, ditto deoxygenated 270 Theodore Wolseithcrafte 0 5


Leonidas Bennett

October 24, 2013 7:19 PM
“From what I’ve heard, they might need it, whether they want it or not,” Leo said of new blood on the Aladren Quidditch team. “Paul thinks they’re going to go to pieces without those Carey twins, and I’d hate to let him be right….”

Though really, he thought it might be better if his brother would just openly gloat over that kind of thing. He doubted, though, that it would ever happen. That just wasn’t Paul’s style, not exactly. A smirk here or there was as much as he would ever let on, at least directly, and it would be more for the form of the thing, Leo thought, than from any real satisfaction over being right, because honestly, he wasn’t sure there was much in the world Paul did care that much about. He was fond of them, his brothers and sisters, Leo was pretty sure, especially the two girls, Eliza was his confidante and he seemed to find Gemma funny, but he didn’t get enraged by things as Eliza did, or excited as Leo himself could; he just regarded all the world with a sort of mild-humored polite interest, just inside the realm of interest instead of disinterest.

“Crotalus lost to Teppenpaw last year,” Leo said. “My sister – third year – is in Teppenpaw, though not on the Quidditch team, and apparently it was reckoned quite a coup. It seems the final is always Aladren-Crotalus, until last year it wasn’t.” It must have been pretty exciting for Gemma to notice and then think to write about it, though she was attached to her House – she liked fitting in, Gemma, feeling part of the group, and it seemed that Teppenpaw was the House where everyone Sorted there had the chance to feel that way. They were kind and cooperative, they believed in personal development. Their whole doctrine ran against excluding people.

Really, the more he thought about it, the more the whole House system seemed a little strange to him. It was all right for him, of course – Aladren was the House with the attributes which allowed them to compensate for things they didn’t have. The others, though? All the planners in one House, all the adapters in one House, all the problem-solvers in one House, all the kind people in one House…it had the potential to turn them all into messes, he thought, though he was sure he was missing something, since the system did seem to work well enough.
0 Leonidas Bennett That's definitely bad 269 Leonidas Bennett 0 5