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


Chloe Jareau

October 12, 2013 11:16 PM
Chloe’s summer had been the worst. The absolute worst. Angel was sick. Like, really really sick, and Chloe didn’t know how to handle it. Chloe had never really been around those who were dying, it wasn’t an experience she had ever thought she would have to have at this point in her life. They were supposed to be happy and run around and play games together. That was what siblings and families did. That’s how it was in the stories!

As carefree as Chloe often was, her life had never been perfect. It took her eight years before she finally had a mother. With her mother, she gained a brother too. Sure, Kiva and Emery had been in her life for as long as she could remember, but at eight, it was made official. When she had been younger than eight, Chloe had asked after her biological mother. Her father had been really uncomfortable about saying anything to her regarding it. Chloe had always felt left out from other families in her neighborhood. They all seemed to have a mother and a father. She loved her dad, he was the best dad in the whole world, but she felt like she was missing something important by not having a mother.

Eventually, he had told her that her mother had been unwell and couldn’t take care of her properly. She had gone away to get better. At six, that had been an acceptable answer. At twelve, it just left Chloe feeling a little empty. Her mother had left her, her brother was dying, and now Ayita wasn’t in school anymore. Chloe was terrified that when she went back home for midterm, Angel and Ayita will both be gone like her biological mother was. Chloe didn’t think she could handle it.

Her mom and dad had tried to make things a little easier on the rest of them. They were honest about how sick Angel was and Ayita made no mention of leaving them, but Chloe just felt helpless and lost about it all. She didn’t want Angel to be sick anymore and she didn’t want Ayita to have graduated either. On top of that, because of Angel, her mom was leaving the school too. Unsure of how to handle all of this, the usual bubbly girl sat numbly at the Pecari table, staring at the food but not participating in it.

It had been a long summer. Chloe was hoping the school year will keep her mind off of things for a while. There would still be letters home to her dad and to Ayita asking about Angel, lots of letters, but she would do her best to keep her attention on the lessons and with making friends. That’s what everyone wanted and Emery told her to stay positive.

When someone bumped her, Chloe turned and gave a beaming smile. She had to stay positive, even when she wasn’t feeling it. “Sorry, did you need something? How was your summer?” She asked without waiting for a response to her first question.
6 Chloe Jareau I still wish I was home. 267 Chloe Jareau 0 5


Malcolm Carey

October 13, 2013 8:15 PM
Vertigo, Mal thought, ought to be used as a form of torture, and ranked right up there with the Cruciatus Curse. Put the two together, from what he had seen about the latter in his sister’s Intermediate Defense notes, and he thought anyone, anywhere, would spill anything they knew and feel glad for the chance after a few minutes. He had no idea how the school had ever gotten something approved for large-scale transportation which flew and didn’t even do so smoothly, but he’d like to find out what the trick was just before tying them up, dumping them in the back of a wagon, and then taking the thing for a joyride.

He found a seat, nearly tripped over his own feet getting into it, and glared at all three of the offending parties, too, as he got settled. Stupid wagons. Stupid seat. Stupid feet. Stupid whole body, come to that, a little taller now but still fragile and not hardy and pretty much useless for anything. Was nothing, he grumbled at the universe, going to go his way tonight?

The universe pretended to consider the question for a few minutes, until the end of the headmistress’s speech, at which point it answered him, through gales of laughter, no.

As he looked at the man up front with the headmistress, then from him to one of his relatives, and then back again, Mal’s right hand drifted to his mouth and he bit down on the nail of his smallest finger without noticing it. This development was not good for his chances of getting rid of his future brother-in-law before Brockert actually got his grubby hands on Mal’s sister, and to add insult to injury, he was going to have to play lackey to an older student, again. Not Brockert – Mal thought he might have mutinied if that had been the case – but still, none of the options he even recognized on sight were very appealing. It was rotten luck, rotten all around, and he wanted badly to take it out on someone, and couldn’t do that, either. He hated his life.

He also noticed he was biting his fingernail again and lowered his arm abruptly, hitting Chloe Jareau on his way down by mistake. “Fine, and no,” he said, answering the questions in reverse order and lifting the offending elbow a little to demonstrate what he had hit her with. “I just moved the wrong way. Sorry.”

He considered asking about her summer, but it had just been mentioned that her brother was ill, so he assumed she, like he, wouldn’t really care for that question – his summer had been miserable, with Lu so happy about being purloined and Mother sending invitations to him and his stupid family, and while he didn't think he'd really get upset if anything happened to Andrew, he knew he would lie about it and pretend he cared if his brother had something more incurable than just being a Carey, so there was no point in going through that song-and-dance routine. Instead, then, he said, "Sorry to hear your brother's ill, too," then, holding out a bowl he had just finished with, added, "Carrots?"

You were supposed to give people things when something bad happened in the family, after all. That was the one thing he really remembered about when his father died, that all the people had worn black, that they had stopped whispering whenever he or his mother or sister or stepmother came near, and that most of them had brought food. There had been food everywhere, more than they could all possibly eat, even with all the guests who brought it helping out, and more sweets than Mal had ever seen before to that point. He had, he recalled, gotten most of them, too; Lucille hadn't been able to stop crying, so she hadn't eaten much, leaving him to have usually-forbidden cookies and slices of heavenly cakes until he made himself sick.
0 Malcolm Carey It has its merits and disadvantages 256 Malcolm Carey 0 5


Chloe

October 13, 2013 11:14 PM
It turned out that it had been Malcolm and apparently he had done it on accident. She wasn’t sure if she should be a little annoyed to be jarred from her thoughts or grateful that he had done it before she thought too much about her siblings and started to cry. Chloe had done a lot of crying over the summer. More than she had ever done in her whole life. Her parents tried, they really did, they tried to keep everyone moving and motivated, but it was too hard. Ayita was still living at home and going to college nearby. She had decided to stay and help out around the house, so Chloe was happy that Angel wasn’t completely alone or that Harper was his company. Harper was far too young to understand what was going on.

“Oh that’s okay.” She responded easily. Her face hurt. Smiling felt foreign at the moment. She felt wrong for doing it. Being positive was going to be harder than she thought, she was already exhausted from just this little bit of conversation. She didn’t blame Malcolm for it, it was just the circumstance. Looking up at her mom at the staff table, who seemed so collected, Chloe didn’t know how she was able to do it all. Her mom had to take care of all of them while her dad was working over the summer and hadn’t ever lost her cool. Maybe it was an adult thing.

Chloe refocused onto Malcolm, staring at the bowl of carrots and trying to figure out why he was offering them to her. “Oh, uh, thank you, but no thank you.” She said politely to the offered vegetables. She wasn’t sure how to respond about his comment regarding her brother. Did she say thank you to that? She felt wrong to just ignore it though. “And thank you about my brother.” She added awkwardly. She probably looked awkward about it too. No one told her the etiquette for these sorts of things and now that she thought about it, anyone who had been paying attention to the announcements and knew the Headmistress was her mother, would be saying the same thing to her. So, she would have to go through this all over again and on several occasions. This was not going to turn out well for her.

Trying to get back into the habit of being around people, Chloe decided to focus her attention on Malcolm. He was a year older than her, but he had worked with her in potions, so she didn’t find him all that bad. He seemed to have a super huge family too, so she was sure he had gone through some things as she had. Maybe worse things. “Who do you think you’ll sign up with for the concert?” She asked him. Chloe didn’t know any of the Prefects except for Clara, who she found really strange, but Chloe would likely sign up with her just because they had spoken.
6 Chloe What are the disadvantages? 0 Chloe 0 5


Mal

October 14, 2013 1:10 AM
Chloe refused the carrots. If, for whatever reason, he had been visiting her home after her brother’s death and had brought carrots, it would have been rude, he was pretty sure, for her to refuse them, but since they were just from a random bowl on the table and he was not making an official condolence visit, he thought he was supposed to let her refusal of the carrots pass.

He was glad of that, since he did try to avoid antagonizing people when he could help himself and they were outside the family, especially if they were related to people who were important, if only for the moment, and besides, he didn’t actually care that much about carrots. Carrots could be tasty, but were not interesting enough to be offended over, whatever was done to them short of someone spitting in his. It made no sense to him why the bereaved or otherwise inconvenienced were required to take food they neither needed nor liked or wanted, anyway; shouldn’t they, being in theory in need of comfort, get to have their own way?

“You’re welcome,” he said to her various thanks. “I think.”

It occurred to him, as he looked at the problem of how exactly these death and disaster courtesies worked, that he had never actually tried to play the tragic orphan card anywhere except his brief stint in Analysis, where the lady trying to make him play with dolls and draw pictures of how he saw himself had seemed all too eager to accept that he wanted to do things Mother disapproved of because he’d found Father’s death horribly traumatic. It had not been pleasant, that was putting it mildly, Mother had fallen out of her tree and then he’d suddenly had a baby brother on his turf after that, too, and the two events were linked inextricably in his mind, but he didn’t think it had ruined his life the way the lady doctor thought it had. It was what it was. Fussing about it wouldn’t change anything, and he couldn’t imagine that life would be that much better with Father around. Mother would still be crazy, there would still be a stepmother and a little brother – probably even more than one brother by now – and they would still try to take Lu away, so really, except for gaining sympathy if he ever needed to, or else making someone awkward like this was, he didn’t see that it really mattered…..

He glared at his carrots, and was glad when she changed the subject. “I don’t know,” he said. “I don’t really know any of them. I might ask some of my cousins who the interesting ones are. Or pick from what they’re doing, if anyone posts what kind of act they’re thinking about ahead of time.” He took a bite of the carrots, then one of butternut squash. “What do you think you’ll do?” he asked.
0 Mal Family dramas are high on the list 0 Mal 0 5


Chloe

October 15, 2013 10:08 PM
Maybe she wasn’t supposed to have said thank you in regards to her brother? Malcolm didn’t seem to appreciate her uncertainty or, perhaps he was equally uncertain to how to respond? She couldn’t be sure. Malcolm was a very stoic person towards her. Chloe had her emotions on her face as open as that of a book. She just didn’t know how to not be expressive. Her mom said it was her large eyes and big mouth – this said with love of course – that told people everything. She laughed easily, cried loudly, sulked openly, etc. Her dad said that it was a good thing she was so happy all the time, the most they would get were big smiles and doe eyes.

“Sorry, I don’t really know how to respond to things like this. No one really told me what to do.” She told him, looking apologetic for being at a loss. Perhaps if she had dealt with something similar in the past or her family had sat down and discussed all of this, she would have a better grip of it. Instead, they just kept telling her everything would be okay. That she didn’t have to worry. That was very unhelpful advice for her now.

Chloe thought that the concert would be a good distraction for her this year. She would have joined in no matter what because things like that were super fun, but making it mandatory just meant she couldn’t back out of it in her currently tormented mood. Of course, it would have been a little easier if she could just do something by herself, or with Emery, or with a friend (did she have friends? Was Ji-Eun her friend?... she really ought to work on that) instead of having to figure out who was the best to work with out of the leadership club.

She felt that Malcolm might have the right idea with waiting to see if any post the acts that they may be doing. She could always owl Ayita to see if she knows anything about the current prefects that were around when she was still in school, but Ayita wasn’t the most social, so Chloe didn’t think she’d be able to offer much. “I met Clara last year at the Welcoming Feast. She’s the newest Prefect. She kept winking a lot when we were talking and saying how we’ll be the best of friends or something and it was a little strange to me and I really didn’t understand the winking. Who winks?” As she talked on, her pace of words began to speed up because she had a lot to say and very little breath to get it all out in. By the end, she took a deep breath in. “Sorry, please don’t repeat that. She was really nice. I think I have an eye problem thing. Anyway, I’ll probably sign up with her since she’s the only one I know. Or see if maybe Ji-Eun has any ideas.”
6 Chloe Oh, I don't have many of those. 0 Chloe 0 5


Mal

October 16, 2013 10:12 PM
Mal realized his error. “You did it right,” he said matter-of-factly. “According to the woman who did tell me about what to do, anyway. I just always thought it sounded weird to tell someone they were welcome to thank me for being sorry about something – like I’m asking them to just keep doing it or something.” As if there were something exceptional about the ability to repeat social niceties. Given the caliber of some of the people he had seen recite them, he was pretty sure this was not in fact the case. Plus, that specific one seemed to him to imply something a little off about the egos of both parties.

“I think about that kind of thing too much,” he added by way of elaboration. “That was a bad time to point it out, though, sorry. Really.”

He listened to the tale of Clara Abernathy very quickly, but thought he got the gist of it. “I won’t repeat it, but I will say that nobody winks,” he said. “Unless they’re really doing something crooked. I’d run.” He took another bite of his squash. “If acts aren’t posted before we have to decide, I guess I’ll go with Devereux, from Crotalus – she’s some kind of distant cousin of mine and friends with my sister, so she ought to be all right. I don’t think we’d win any awards, but the job would get done, anyway.”

Idly, he wondered if Alex would take over Arthur’s old function as head of the family at Sonora. That tradition, he understood, had been formed by Jane Smythe, the foster-sister of the absentee technical temporary owner of most of Mal’s stuff, when she had made everyone cooperate at the last Concert, and Arthur was a great admirer of hers – Mal had seen him hanging on her every word in the library at the Reunion, standing behind her chair, looking more like a lover than a cousin, it had really been sickening. Arthur had also mentioned that he was appointing Jay to make sure they all passed their exams now that Arthur himself was no longer around to force-march them through the material until he was satisfied that they knew it, but that didn’t preclude Alex leading and deputizing that to Jay. Mal had always thought it was a menial-seeming position, one below the dignity of someone telling the rest of them what to do. He guessed, though, that he would just have to wait and see.
0 Mal Want some of mine? Half-price! 0 Mal 0 5


Chloe

October 21, 2013 10:02 PM
Chloe’s smile became more genuine as Malcolm spoke. He made her feel less weird about all of this somehow. Like, if she had to keep this going on until everyone in the school figured out that she was, indeed, of the same family as the Headmistress’s sick child and they had their moment with her, she would be able to get through it. She had flubbed up her first one and he had flubbed it up back to her and made her feel better that there was no ‘right’ way of doing this. Although, what he said made her think that he had gone through this before. Or something similar. Or knew enough people who had to be taught how to reaction properly to it. Unless that was just standard protocol for proper families, which really shouldn’t surprise her any. Propers had a funny way of doing things.

“Oh, that’s alright.” Chloe said, not really bothered by any sort of miscommunication they might have had. “I’m actually pretty pleased by this. I feel better knowing I’m not the only one who finds all of …this a little off putting. Plus, I’ll be better prepared for it the next time someone apologizes for my brother’s…sickness or hearing about it.” As she said the sentence she realized how odd it really was. “Or whatever it is exactly that they are apologizing for even though it’s of no fault to anyone and just an unfortunate thing to happen.” Chloe said, repeating what her Daddy had told her.

Chloe gave a giggle. A real giggle that lit her face up and she brought a hand up to cover her mouth. Hearing Malcolm say that no one winked made her feel immensely better about being bothered by it all. She wasn’t even sure she knew how to wink and so, being in a conversation with two people she had only just met to have one of them winking throughout the entire thing made her feel, well, disturbed. But she hadn’t told anyone but Emery and that was because she thought it would have been rude to say negative things about other people. She had liked Clara. She just hadn’t liked the winking.

“Devereux…” Chloe said to herself, looking thoughtful as she tried to recall if she knew that name or not. She didn’t. “You are related?” She asked, surprised, when his words regarding his relationship had finally sunk in. “You have a very large family. I never would have thought you had relatives that weren’t Careys too.” Chloe didn’t have other family as far as she knew. Her dad didn’t really talk with his family after what happened with her mother. And her adoptive mom was an only child. Chloe felt this was a large reason why they had taken in Ayita and Angel. They wanted to have a big family.

“There’s Waverly too. I did the baking club with her. She’s very organized. Maybe I’ll see what she’s doing too.” Chloe said as an afterthought. “Do you have any talents that might help your group?”
6 Chloe No no, that's okay. I like being drama-free. 0 Chloe 0 5


Mal

October 23, 2013 10:38 PM
“They’ll stop eventually,” Mal said, assuming this would be welcome news. “Here…well, everyone you see, you see all the time, so I wouldn’t think you’ll have to put up with it for more than a week or two.”

For him, that would have been enough time to get thoroughly sick of hearing about it, but it beat the month or two it could take outside, from what he’d seen since he’d been old enough to pay attention. He didn’t know how long people had said they were sorry about Father; he had been too little to know how long anything was, then. It occurred to him that Chloe ought to have an easier time than she might have even in a school, too, though, since her brother wasn’t actually dead yet, but he didn’t mention that. Death was something you weren’t supposed to talk about, he’d been told, except to explain to your kids that this is what happens to people who are bad.

Mal was confused for a moment by the confusion over Alex. “Her mother’s a Carey,” he explained. “Though from another branch. I don’t know if there are any connections to my mother’s family here, though.” He looked around the room, as though expecting one to jump out at him, but the strongest resemblance he saw to himself in anyone else at Sonora was in the face of Charles Boxton-Fox-Reynolds, who he was pretty sure was not related to him in any manner or degree. Surely, no power above or below could be so cruel as to give him a relative who wore such atrocious clothing in public “I don’t know much about that side of the family, really.”

Thomas and Morgaine had never approved of Mother having much company, and they had approved even less of any of them going out of the house. The restrictions had loosened since Thomas died and Lu got older, but Mother still didn’t have much to do with her own relations, she was too busy focusing on how she was a Real Carey, and the mother of Real Careys, and someone worthy of respect. That she had been born almost as much of a nobody as Alex’s father, with nothing to recommend her but a fanatical loyalty to the pureblood cause, a trait his father had always apparently….lacked, was not something Mal thought his mother wished to think about or have them know. He only did because he’d looked it up on his own time, just because he’d sensed that she didn’t want him to.

“I doubt it,” he said, contemplating his talents. “I could be an extra in a play, I suppose.” He shrugged. “We’re Pecaris, right? Adaptability. I’ll work something out. What about you? Besides baking?” He didn’t really see baking being a thing which would work in what his sister had made the Concert seem to be. Not even a demo – what could be less interesting than sitting in place for an hour and just watching someone else cook?
0 Mal More fun for me, then, it seems 0 Mal 0 5


Chloe

October 27, 2013 10:43 PM
Chloe took what Malcolm said with great thought. It was true, she saw everyone hear daily and eventually they would learn to stop asking because Chloe could only tell them that she was okay and that they were doing what they could for Angel. Her parents had never lied to them about what was going on. Some people might have thought they were too young to know, like their Nana, Melissa, but Kiva and Daddy wanted them to understand there was a chance, a great chance, that Angel would not make it. He was very sick and had been for a long long time.

The moment Angel was in their lives, her parents explained his past life to them. Chloe and her siblings, her family as a whole, had always wanted Angel to know what a loving family was. Now seemed like the most important time for him to have it and she wasn’t there to make sure he knew all the time. It was incredibly hard for Chloe to be away from him. “I hope so. Or, at least, if they keep asking me that I’ll be not so awkward about answering them.” She assumed that if any question happened after the initial first week would be more on how Angel was feeling, so hopefully she would be able to provide anyone with updates. Although who those people were, she hadn’t a clue. Angel would be a sixth year now and Chloe didn’t know who he was friends with from that year.

Malcolm’s family was entirely too large. If a family had different branches to it, then they were just far far too big. She knew through marriage that names changed and family connections grew or whatever, but he had so many Carey relatives that it seemed never ending that to add to that family with different last names and a person’s head could swim. “My adoptive mom is an only child, so I don’t have to worry about random family members from her, but Daddy’s family is somewhere around. He doesn’t really have a relationship with them because of my biological mother. I don’t even know her name, so I could totally have family here and not even know it.” Her father had a brother and some cousins, that much she knew. Sometimes her uncle paid visits, but those stopped almost entirely once Daddy had married Kiva. A Pureblood from a not so known family marrying a Half-blood after conceiving a child out of wedlock with an unstable woman did not sit well with the family. Her father never really spoke of it.

Chloe thought about what she had to offer and then shrugged. “Daddy says my talents are breaking things and chatting someone’s ear off about nothing of importance.” She smiled when she said that so Malcolm knew that her father said it in jest. “I don’t think either of those things will be very helpful. I'm good with animals...but that might be a family thing.” Chloe added, more to herself. All of them seemed to have taken up a liking to animals because of their mother. Ayita was even going to school for Magizoology. "I doubt we'd have a show on animals for that to be of much use though."
6 Chloe That's what it looks like. 0 Chloe 0 5


Mal

October 30, 2013 7:47 PM
“Good luck,” Mal said, since he didn’t see what else, besides experience she evidently didn’t want, could help Chloe learn to be less awkward about responding to queries over her brother’s health. He had always practiced his lines in front of his enchanted mirror until he realized it might spy on him for Mother, but those things were untrustworthy and expensive and thought mostly – at least if they had the same charms on them that his did; magic mirrors were not really something he had ever made a study of, so he didn’t know what others might do – about what clothes went well with the viewer’s complexion, or would bring out the viewer’s eyes. Even if Chloe could afford one, the first and third problems would still make having it at best more trouble than it was worth and at worse useless.

Her comments about his family were enough to actually surprise him. The content was only surprising insofar as he usually assumed that other people had families closer to standard issue than his was, but having that disproven was enough to catch his interest, and she was just talking about it, without a hint of shame. As though she didn’t see why anyone would hold any of it against her, or regard her as damaged goods because of it. It seemed as though she thought it was the most normal thing in the world.

He couldn’t imagine what that was like, really – he didn’t feel shame about Father and Father’s divorces and Father’s other children and Father’s death or any of the other unflattering things that could be associated with Father, it didn’t really see what it had to do with him or why he should care what had happened before, in a lot of cases, he was born, but he couldn’t remember the time when he hadn’t known he should, and that he had to act as though he did. It wasn’t hard; to him, Father was just a forbidden subject for practical reasons. Mother reacted poorly to it. Mal had seen Lucille draw such reactions down on herself, decided he did not want any part of them, and had learned a lot faster than his sister had just to never mention Father unless Mother specifically ordered him to recite whatever moral lesson she had finished off a rant about him with.

“My family hasn’t a monopoly on complicated situations, it seems,” he said, glancing at Chloe as though he had never seen her before for a moment, still feeling…off-center, somehow. “Is nothing written down anywhere, or do you not want to know?”

Mal, personally, had always wanted to know, and had eavesdropped and broken into things he wasn’t supposed to see until he found out, mostly because the forbidden added a tiny bit of interest to otherwise very dull days. Not everyone, though, was like that; his sister hated that he did those things, saying that Mother’s version was bad enough without having to think their entire family was composed of crazy people. It was possible that Chloe was more like Lucille than him in that regard, or just not a curious person – which he found even harder to understand, really. Even Lu would listen to what he found out with the half-sickened, half-entranced expression of someone watching a dissection.

“I suppose one could train some to do interesting enough tricks,” Mal said slowly, thinking of the applications of animals to a live show. “Though some would be hard to get, and most of the more interesting ones wouldn’t be appropriate for an indoor concert.” He shrugged. “Though if worse came to worse, I suppose you could play to the adults in the audience and do a presentation of What We Learned This Year in Care of Magical Creatures,” he added. Dull, but it would solve the problem of what to do quickly and might have some positive effects on their overseers’ perceptions of her, and it wouldn’t be too hard, so Mal could see the advantages of the strategy.
0 Mal If you're really sure, I guess I can manage it all... 0 Mal 0 5