Headmaster Brockert

November 06, 2015 5:23 PM
Ugh. Opal was pregnant again . Really, Mortimer had thought all that his son and daughter-in-law were trying to was get a boy and they had gotten one. Why in Merlin's name did they need another child? The woman was a moron and not cut out in the least to have so many kids so close together. He didn't mind having grandchildren generally speaking but no, just no. Not them. Not her.

Of course, his face remained stoic. He never ever showed the slightest hint of emotion, especially in such a public place. Last thing one wanted was to give teenagers ammunition. Just because none of them had been responsible for last year's incidents, didn't mean that Mortimer trusted them in the least. Besides, he wasn't upset, just a tad annoyed. And he was sure he always seemed a tad annoyed. Because he usually was.

As the first years filed in, he stood and began to speak. "Welcome to Sonora for the new first years and welcome back for all older students. In just a minute,first years will be receiving a goblet distributed by Deputy Headmistress Skies, in order to sort you into your houses. You will turn the color representing your house which are blue for Aladren, yellow for Teppenpaw, red for Crotalus, and brown for Pecari. Afterwards, you may join your house table."

Much like two years ago with Owen, Mortimer took a slight interest in the Sortings this year, with his niece Angelique coming in. Two years from now his oldest grandchild, Emerald would be here and though he would only admit it to himself-because Mortimer never admitted how he felt when he did feel something-he was looking forward to it. He hoped Emerald would be an Aladren, like he had been. She was quiet and bookish and did not seem to have inherited her mother's total lack of intellect.

Anyway, he noted Angelique's sorting and though he didn't smile-that wasn't an expression that Mortimer's face naturally made and when he tried, he looked like an animal about to eat it's prey and besides, it kind of hurt a little to do so-he was pleased with it. Angelique might have been silly and spoiled, but at least she managed to get a perfectly respectable house.

Once the first years had found their new houses, Mortimer said. "Would Arnold Manger and Ji-Eun Park please come up and get your Head Student badges. In addition I'd like to call up Clark Dill, Jake Manger, Chaslyn Brockert, and Lionel Layne to recieve their prefect badges. Congratualtions."

After they had sat back down, Mortimer announced. "This year's Midsummer event will be the bonfire. Now we will sing the school song." Which none of you will ever remember, he silently added as sheets appeared in front of the assembled mass.

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.


With that, food appeared, students were free to converse, and he was free to enjoy his meal.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5

Nevaeh Reed

November 07, 2015 11:38 PM
To say she was nervous was a bit of an understatement. The orientation had been pretty fun and not too concerning, and the girl she met, Tess, seemed very nice. But now things were getting real. Like super real. They would be Sorted into the Houses with which they would live for the better part of the next seven years, and if they didn’t fit in, too bad.

Her hand clenched around the end of Scout’s harness, and in supportive response, he nuzzled gently against her leg. And his reassurance helped, honestly, because it reminded her that no matter what, she had the good fortune of never being alone. Nevaeh would always have her partner.

As Deputy Headmistress Skies helped her with the Sorting potion, she couldn’t help but wonder if a particular staff member was watching her. She didn’t feel any sort of change, but evidently, her skin, normally a rich brown, had turned to a deep blue, as the Deputy Headmistress informed her that she was an Aladren and gently directed her to that specific table. The smart house, Nevaeh thought to herself. As Scout led the way, she wondered briefly if her birth mother was proud as she sat among friends, and if any of them knew.

She helped herself to an empty seat, letting go of Scout, who made himself comfortable beside her legs, one paw resting protectively on her foot. Nevaeh listened politely to the rest of the Headmaster’s speech, although the names of Prefects and Head Students meant nothing to her since she didn’t know any of them, and this Midsummer event thing also made little impression beyond the thought that a bonfire sounded nice. She didn’t join in the singing of the school song, though not for lack of spirit; it was just that, even assuming her copy of the sheet included Braille, she didn’t think she could read and sing what she read at the same time. Instead, she hummed along quietly, doing her best to follow the melody.

Now released to their meals, Nevaeh took a deep breath in through her nose. An interesting and unfamiliar food scent to her right interested her most, so to the neighbor in that direction, she smiled, “Hey, could you pass me that when you get a chance? I have no idea what it is, but it smells delicious.”


OOC: Mentions of DH Skies approved by her author.
12 Nevaeh Reed I guess it's Aladren for me! 325 Nevaeh Reed 0 5


Barnaby Pye

November 08, 2015 9:22 PM
There are spies everywhere.

These words were the only ones going through the inherently suspicious Barnaby’s mind as he entered Sonora that afternoon. He had endured some rather uncomfortable run-ins with his older brother while around the estate that summer. Each time had been when no one else was home, as if Alfie knew that was the perfect time to show up unannounced. Each instance Alfie acted surprised that Father wasn’t home, each interaction there was a slim woman with a fair complexion and dark hair hovering besides Alfie’s elbow. There was a glittering ring on her finger and when Alfie saw him looking at it he made the excuse that he had gotten engaged over the summer and was there to introduce his fiancee to Father.

Barnaby didn’t buy it. He recognized that woman’s face from somewhere—he was certain he’d seen it on some paper in Father’s study, and besides he knew Alfie well enough to know that his older brother was not giving up his womanizing ways just like that in one summer, especially when he had such a harem of young professors to flirt with at school. (As if Barnaby didn’t notice the way Alfie talked to the other young professors versus the way he dealt with everyone else at the school). As he watched Alfie lead the first years into the room, Barnaby’s hand closed around the tiny vial in his pocket.

Tarquin had swiped some stuff from his Father’s supply room before he and Barnaby saw each other for the last time, he said. He was worried that the others would be trying to keep them from writing many letters to each other over the summer and so in addition to the multitude of tea leaves he had provided Barnaby with several vials of a serum which was promised to help Barnaby keep his thoughts to himself and away from the prying mind of his older brother who, under all circumstances, could not be trusted since he and Tarquin had later further investigated and found that the woman Alfie was with was listed under the faces of “not to be trusted” in Father’s files.

“In the end, we only have each other,” Tarquin had whispered under his breath to Barnaby as they parted for what would be the last time until the annual Christmas party Barnaby’s mother insisted upon having. It was a farce, a show to the rest of the world that the marriage between Barnaby’s parents was more than just a union for appearances (and that they could stand each other for longer than it took to get each other off), but it helped cement their image as a family versus an aloof father, a party girl mother, and the strange unsociable child.

The serum Tarquin had given him was an extract for him to ingest that would help keep people out of his mind. One drop would suffice, Tarquin had said, but Barnaby had taken a few drops back in his dorm room when he was the only one in there and had taken it with him to the Feast just in case. His fingers were itching to put a couple drops into his tea, but he didn’t dare, he couldn’t risk confiscation of Tarquin’s gift.

His main goal for now was to try and eat and then to get back to the dorms. His body was feeling tired and heavy. He had no energy to talk with anyone—if someone were to approach him he didn’t think he’d be very responsive. Besides, Tarquin had promised to write once he was Sorted and Barnaby wondered if the owl would come while he was in Cascade Hall. Logically he knew it would take longer than a few hours, but he also couldn’t remember the last time he felt this sluggish.

Barnaby’s hand fumbled for the teapot, one hand grasping tightly around one of the the ceramic cups that were available for the students to drink hot beverages out of. An intense pain began to form just about his right eyebrow in his temple region and Barnaby shut his eyes tightly unaware at how pale his skin had become, not even feeling the beads of sweat that were beginning to form on his forehead.

There are spies everywhere, the refrain echoed in his ears and Barnaby squeezed some lemon into the ginger tea. He highly doubted there was feverfew available at the moment but he was certain he could gather the ingredients he needed from the gardens or perhaps pester the praire elves into creating some sort of concoction for him. Although Tarquin distrusted the bustling creatures Barnaby had been all but raised by Father’s house elf and he had an unusual soft spot for the creatures.

A blue girl who was sitting next to him asked him to pass a dish that was to her right. If he had been so focused on his headache and the nagging feeling deep inside him that something was wrong he would have likely noticed that the girl hadn’t sung the school song—which would have automatically put her slightly higher on his list of first impressions than most. As it was his first impression of her was an very smiley girl who was willing to eat something that she didn’t know what it was.

Barnaby bit back the caustic reply that threatened to emerge about eating things when you didn’t know what they were—poison was always an option, after all, because last year his less-than-friendly attitude had gotten him in a debate with a first year when all he’d wanted was to be left alone. Better to grin and bear it, he thought to himself. Just get this interaction over with, the sooner the better.

And so he grimaced in response, a smile that would have looked friendlier if he hadn’t been in so much pain, and passed her the dish. “Here you go,” he responded, placing it right in front of her. “Let me know how it is?”
10 Barnaby Pye And a rarely complaisant Barnaby too, you lucky girl! 298 Barnaby Pye 0 5

Nevaeh

November 09, 2015 12:32 AM
There was no immediate reply, and for a moment, Nevaeh was unsure if anyone had even heard her. It was completely possible, considering the hum of chatter surrounding not only their table but every table, all the students either catching up with old friends or making new ones. Her request could have easily gotten buried in the other conversations all around them, or else her neighbor could have just been not paying attention.

Still, she allowed a silent moment in case the person was in the process of doing what she asked and just had replied nonverbally. That was also a strong possibility. If they had not seen Scout lying at her feet, it would be easy to not realize that Nevaeh was blind. She didn’t subscribe to the stereotype of her disability; primarily, she didn’t wear sunglasses to cover her eyes, which was generally a staple of blind people on television and such. So she permitted a moment to pass in relative awkwardness, most of all to avoid an even more awkward moment of repeating herself if her neighbor was already in the act of passing.

“Here you go.” She heard the plate clatter before her at last. “Let me know how it is?”

“Thanks,” she replied cheerily, fingers fumbling slightly to locate it and scrape some onto her own plate. Nevaeh was pretty good at navigating the world by now, having had eleven years to practice, but sometimes it was a little less than graceful. When she had enough on her plate, she took a bite, chewing happily at the pleasant taste. “It’s good,” she said after swallowing. “I think it’s turkey, or maybe some other kind of poultry. I like it, whatever it is.” Nevaeh grabbed a fairly large piece off her plate and handed it down to Scout, who sat up and received his share with fervor. “Good boy,” she smiled, wiping her hand off with a napkin before returning to her meal.

“I’m sorry,” she added a moment later. “I don’t think I introduced myself. Nevaeh Reed. And down there is Scout.” She pointed down as she offered the dog’s introduction. Certainly he had noticed Scout by now, and she always liked to give his name as well. He was her buddy, her partner in crime, and he deserved recognition in the conversation too. “What’s your name?”
12 Nevaeh I feel honored! 325 Nevaeh 0 5


Barnaby

November 13, 2015 10:50 PM
Barnaby raised an eyebrow slightly as the girl seemed to have some trouble with getting the food onto her plate, but the turkey eventually made it’s way to her mouth and Barnaby watched as she reached below the table to feed the animal sitting there. If he was at his full capacity then he likely might have put everything together and realized Scout, as the girl called him, was a service animal. He had heard of those in the Muggle world before though he had never encountered a fellow wizard who used service animals in that way and so, to Barnaby, at least the presence of Scout might have indicated someone from a Muggle background.

“Of course it’s good,” he said in response, his voice not carrying as much bite as it normally did due to the nauseous feeling that was quickly rising within him. “The praire elves made it. Elves are fantastic cooks.” There was a slight tinge of respect, even of appreciation and pride in the manner Barnaby talked about elves, something that those who knew him better likely would write off as sarcasm since the rest of his being was just so utterly caustic. “We have a house elf at home, I’ve never had better food in my life.”

The ommittance of the full, proper introduction that so many purebloods used alerted Barnaby to Nevaeh’s social standing, if not her blood status however things of that sort didn’t particularly bother Barnaby. Certainly those of pure backgrounds had the prestige to merit good connections, but logically Barnaby knew blood didn’t mean anything. Anyone could have a brain, he could see it in the histories of the great witches and wizards. And good blood didn’t mean anything either—he’d heard the name Dempsey cross the lips of Father once or twice and had taken the liberty to look it up.

There was a Dempsey there that year, he’d heard the name during the sorting, but he had gone to Pecari (he really wouldn’t have expected anything more of the brutish clan) but it was the first one in years. “Barnaby Pye,” he said curtly in response, not feeling up to the full introduction, knowing that it didn’t matter anyway in present company and those who were so inclined to be turned away by such restrictions weren’t worth his time if they didn’t have the capacity to think on their own versus blindly following illogical directives.

“Third year Aladren,” he paused for a moment, grimacing slightly as another sharp pain made it’s way as though it were using an ice pick to pull out his right temple. “And from your blueberry skin I can only assume you’re a first year?” He opened his eyes and spotted a tea pot nearby. Perhaps a hot liquid would help, they had in the past so he didn’t see any reason why they wouldn’t now.
10 Barnaby As you should. 298 Barnaby 0 5

Nevaeh

November 20, 2015 2:06 PM
Nevaeh knew about Elves and things--her parents didn’t have any, sitting cozily in the middle class, where everything was tended to but nobody got any kind of servant--but she liked listening to this boy talk about Prairie Elves and his personal House Elf anyway. He seemed like someone who knew a lot of things, and sometimes, people who knew a lot of things wanted to share what they knew. That, to Nevaeh, was something that was very kind; they just wanted to share.

He introduced himself as Barnaby Pye, a last name was familiar for clear reason. There was a professor here by that name, the Defense Against the Dark Arts professor whom she had met at Orientation, the one whom, if she was not mistaken, was also their Head of House. Barnaby also said that he was a third year, and Nevaeh thought that made sense. His voice sounded like somebody his age would, on the cusp of maturity. Just like most people had a general idea of someone’s age from their face, she was starting to get pretty good at guessing it by their voice, at least with younger people.

And from your blueberry skin I can only assume you’re a first year?

Nevaeh chuckled and glanced down at her arm, to little result, of course. “Heh, yeah,” she smiled. “You got me. So what do you think I should expect over the next few years? Were your first and second years good?” She knew in Muggle schools, the young people, the “freshmen”, didn’t always get treated super nice, and she was admittedly a little bit nervous about that tendency transferring over to the Magical schools, with first years taking the brunt of the bullying. Although Sonora did seem like a really safe, happy place. And if everybody was as nice as Barnaby was, Nevaeh didn’t think she would have anything to worry about.
12 Nevaeh I must've befriended somebody important. 325 Nevaeh 0 5


Barnaby

November 21, 2015 4:07 PM
As his conversation with Nevaeh continued, Barnaby felt his headache slightly ebbing away. It was funny to think that having such a civil conversation with someone who, despite being sorted into Aladren, thought it prudent to eat unidentifiable foods the first time she was ever at somewhere would do anything for the migraine occurring in his head, but strangely enough it was working. Whether it was Nevaeh’s strange name that reminded him of a house elf’s or his gratefulness for the conversation having given him some relief from the terrible migraine he had been enduring, Barnaby found himself not becoming frustrated with the younger girl’s questions and answering them in a friendly tone despite himself.

Were first and second years good? Well, Barnaby didn’t really know how to respond to that. He certainly had not made any friends while at Sonora—not that he wanted them, either, though there had been that brief stint with Jack their first year. His classes went by alright but he had always chalked that up to his above average intelligence and ability to think harder, faster, and better than many of his school mates. And then there had been that whole matter of the satori the previous year—he had spent a good majority of the summer wondering how it was that the satori had spilled one his his secrets. He certainly was paranoid enough and had enough anxiety to feed a whole den of satoris for a month.

He would have chalked it up to the special lessons father had promised him once he turned thirteen but he had turned thirteen at Sonora the previous year and Father had been so busy over the summer that he hadn’t had a chance to divulge to Barnaby and instead promised that it would be something he could start to learn when he came home for the winter break. Further secrets about the family would be divulged at age fourteen, Father had reassured him, when Barnaby was old enough and mature enough to be able to properly understand and support his family unlike Alfie who had basically all but disowned Father.

“Good is a relative term,” Barnaby said slowly. “I think it all depends on who you are and who you surround yourself with, how you spend your time. And then, of course, last year there was that whole issue with the satori that bothered a lot of people but I wasn’t affected by it.” A reassuring smile, a blatant half-truth. “But you don’t seem to be freaking out about your skin so I’d say you’ll probably be fine so long as you’re not secretly a vampire in which case you’ll probably have to turn your wand in.”

His voice, a tone he had not used in a long while, was halted at first but as he spoke to her calmly and pleasantly he felt himself relaxing, feeling more at ease. He hadn’t felt at peace in so long, it was as if he couldn’t remember what it was like to loosen up. It had been almost equally as long since he had cracked a joke with someone that wasn’t Tarquin.
10 Barnaby You know just what to say to a guy. 298 Barnaby 0 5

Nevaeh

November 24, 2015 2:46 AM
“Good is a relative term.” Well, that wasn’t a promising beginning, and as such, Nevaeh preemptively pursed her lips together. But when Barnaby went on, things didn’t sound so bad after all. He did have a definite point; being around unpleasant people would make her year unpleasant. That was basically common sense. He also mentioned the Satori thing, which Nevaeh had heard about, or rather, overheard about. She had possibly been listening from upstairs when Isis had talked to her parents about the whole thing, just to reassure them that the school was in fact safe and that she would be fine, “especially with me there.”

She wasn’t sure how she felt about that part yet.

“Do people do that?” she asked in regards to his comment about freaking out over the skin color, a laugh touching on the sentiment. “Well, that’s not really a problem for me, anyway. I can hardly see a difference.” Nevaeh lightly ran her hand across the opposite arm, glancing down at it to little result. Her blindness was not complete--she could see some--but the severity of its limitations was a major factor in her life. A factor that, since he had yet to establish it in conversation, she wondered if he hadn’t realized. “Oh, and I’m not a vampire, so no worries there, either,” she added cheekily, the nature of the afterthought almost seeming to imply that she was, or wanted to jokingly make him believe she was.

“I’m guessing you’ve found both the right and wrong people to surround yourself with?” Nevaeh commented, though the inflection implied a question. “Since you know so much, I mean.” She paused briefly but spoke again before he had the opportunity to answer. “If you don’t want to talk about the bad parts, that’s fine. I was just hoping you found some friends now is all.”
12 Nevaeh Casual reminder that I am in fact 11. 325 Nevaeh 0 5


Barnaby

November 26, 2015 5:04 AM
Barnaby didn’t really know how to respond to the well-wishes from this girl who barely even knew him. His head was still pounding even though the majority of his illness had started to fade by now, but he was to fascinated at this point to really care about tending to the migraine that was starting to build up in his temples. She could hardly see the difference? Did she see the world in odd colours? He wasn’t nearly in his right mind and he could tell there was something that wasn’t functioning completely right in his mind, but then again he really didn’t have the patience to figure it out.

Everything was jumbled, nothing made sense. He was almost enjoying the company of this first year. It was insane, it was— “I have enough friends,” he replied without fully answering her question. He couldn’t lie, something in him wouldn’t allow him to, but he wasn’t going to admit to the first year that by ‘enough friends’ he meant his best friend who didn’t even attend the same school as him and who was two years younger than him—Nevaeh’s age, in fact.

But her first statement was true, he had found the right and wrong people to surround himself with. The right sort was no one, other than the Donovans who Barnaby had to keep a close eye on in order to protect his assets he really didn’t want to be around anyone at Sonora, and even them he didn’t enjoy being around all that much. The wrong sort, that meant was pretty much everyone else. So instead Barnaby just kind of shrugged. “I guess,” he said as he poured himself some more tea and added some more lemon. He really didn’t want to have anything else other than tea at that moment and the tea really wasn’t helping all that much but…

His hands fumbled with the lemon, placing the lemon peel on his empty plate and went down to grasp the tiny bottle in his pocket. Did he dare risk it? He supposed he could just tell Nevaeh that he had medicine that he needed to take, but what if an older student saw it? What if a professor saw it? If Alfie noticed Barnaby adding something to his drink he just knew his older brother would be over at the Aladren table faster than he could say Tanacetum parthenium demanding to know what Barnaby was doing.

In the end, Barnaby slipped both hands under the table and blindly squeezed a couple of drops of the serum onto one finger, bringing the finger up to the table oh-so-carefully so as not to spill it, and stirred the hot tea. The beverage nearly scalded his pointer finger but the soothing feeling the serum would bring him was almost worth it and as the sour tinged drink touched his tongue he nearly sighed with relief. He could fix the panging in his finger later, for now he just needed to relax into the tea that was lying in front of him.
10 Barnaby This is true. 298 Barnaby 0 5