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


Araceli Arbon

November 10, 2015 8:17 AM
Delphine stared into the mirror. Araceli’s face stared back. It was still an odd sensation, even after two years, to feel herself doing one thing and see someone else’s body carrying it out. She was no longer startled by seeing her younger sister’s reflection when she looked in the mirror - in fact, it had become stranger to see herself, usually making her jump before she remembered she was in a safe place where she didn’t need to have taken the Polyjuice Potion. But it still felt like a mask. She doubted it would ever stop feeling that way, because - essentially - that was what it was. But, as ever, it was perfectly in place. She hadn’t really expected anything else - Araceli’s small, round face was not going to be cracking, showing her longer thinner one, her height was not going to be distorting and shooting upwards. And in all other features, they were more or less the same. Large grey eyes, pale skin, shimmering blonde hair… But still, she liked to check. It helped her feel solid and certain, ready to face her audience…

She slipped into the Cascade Hall, taking a seat. She was a little relieved when Makenzie walked by and sat elsewhere. She was the hardest person to pretend to, having at least got to know the real Araceli a little before they switched places. Their other room-mate, Shino, was also a challenge but for different reasons. She seemed much more cynical than Makenzie, and Delphine wasn’t convinced that Shino fully trusted her. But that she could deal with. Makenzie’s sweet and trusting naivety was exceptionally useful but it also made her feel guilty. Shino, on the other hand, she felt she owed nothing to. She was more challenging to manipulate but equally there was no guilt on Delphine’s part for doing so. Well, not so much. On a basic level she cared about the deception she was undertaking, but a background level of guilt at her dishonesty had become the norm, and her feelings towards deceiving Shino were no stronger than that.

The other… challenge in her relationships was Duncan Brockert. He inherently trusted her version of Araceli, having never met the real one, although she had to be careful not to let too much of the real her out, as her sister would be swapped back in once she was better - once she was able to socialise with the grace expected of a young Pureblood lady. Duncan needed…. Needed not to notice that. The thought hurt her heart. The times she felt best were when she told Duncan things about herself. Nothing that mattered. Trivial stupid things, like what she’d thought of someone’s outfit or her opinion on Potions class… But her own, real opinions. She had to get him to care for Araceli but she didn’t know how to foster that feeling of closeness without letting him in a little, and letting him in meant a certain degree of being herself instead. It was messy and confusing. At least tonight, tired from the long journey, she didn’t have to worry about that, as he was at the Teppenpaw table.

She listened to the announcements, applauded politely and sung the school song, before settling into a meal. She noticed that Liliana Bannister broke rank to go and talk to Duncan and bit her lip. He’d assured her last year that he and Liliana were just friends but then, that had been last year. Perhaps the opinions she was letting him on were so trivial they didn’t even register with him. She wanted something more solid and secure. A relationship. She pushed aside the little voice that added ’for Araceli because she didn’t like the conflict she felt when she thought it. If she left it unspoken, even in her own head, it was much easier to pretend that it was because it went without saying, rather than because she was starting to doubt her own motives.

Still, there was nothing she could do about Liliana right now, except stab her broccoli slightly more forcefully than she had really meant to. She tried to focus on her meal, content to just get through dinner and get to bed, although she would be sociable if called upon to be so.
13 Araceli Arbon Keeping up appearances 290 Araceli Arbon 0 5

Chaslyn Brockert

November 12, 2015 6:08 PM
Chaslyn was tense. She was always tense, but tonight was worse than usual. Tonight was the Opening Feast of her fifth year, where her class was the one having prefects picked. She had to get it or else Mother would be furious with her, like she had been with Amity-and unlike with her sister, Chaslyn would be there in person to be berated over the holidays. When Amity hadn't gotten it, she was already at Aunt Alice and Uncle Robert's house.

Besides, she really did want to make Mother proud and happy. It was something Chaslyn strived for every day but always fell short. Always. Mother rarely ever complimented her to her face but sometimes would mention the fifth year's accomplishments around their family and that made her feel good. Like Mother was proud of her, like she'd done something right. While Mother never seemed to be as out and out mad at Chaslyn the way she had been at Amity all the time,she often did seem really disappointed and that bothered the Crotalus to her very soul. All she wanted was to please her mother and give her what she seemed to want most. When she didn't, she felt like the biggest failure on the planet.

From the moment Chaslyn had woken up this morning, she'd felt like butterflies were attacking her stomach. She'd barely been able to eat her breakfast and it had only been getting more intense as the day wore on. She had kept to herself on the wagon as usual-she wasn't on the same one as all her cousins, because she lived in Seattle and they lived in Colorado-and the lurching of it had not really helped much. Once they arrived at Sonora, she'd gone to her room to try and study or work on her sketching but had been much too distracted to concentrate.

Which was in fact another failure, her first of the year. For Chaslyn, failing didn't just mean not passing an assignment-which the mere thought of filled her with terror- it meant failing in Mother's expectations.

As the first years were sorted, she held her breath and didn't let it out until she heard her name called. She had gotten it! Mother will be so happy with me, Chaslyn thought, with a mixture of relief and excitement. She sat back down at the Crotalus table across from Araceli Arbon. "Can you please pass the mashed potatoes?" She asked the younger girl, feeling that for the first time today that her stomach was relaxed enough to eat.
11 Chaslyn Brockert Tremendously relieved 281 Chaslyn Brockert 0 5


Araceli

November 22, 2015 12:16 AM
“Certainly,” Delphine said politely, picking up the potatoes and passing them to Chaslyn. Chaslyn Brockert… Amity Brockert’s sister.


“Delphine...”


She still remembered Effie’s tone perfectly. The sudden shift. They were lying out on the big flat rock in the cove, sun-drying after a swim, head next to head, with their wet hair spread out, overlapping, intermingling, joining them together, bodies pointed in opposite directions. They’d been spotting shapes in the clouds but now Effie’s tone was suddenly serious.

“What is it?” Delphine turned her head slightly, finding her sister already looking at her. Her eyes were shining with tears. “Effie, what?” she insisted.

“Daddy’s decided,” she whispered. “I… I have to go.”

“No,” Delphine’s voice cracked, her own eyes mirroring Effie’s as they filled with tears. The subject had been raised at dinner last week, that the Arbons might abandon their tradition of home schooling. That with three daughters to find husbands for, there would be a need to expand their social connections, and that Effie might be sent to school, as a sort of ambassador for the family. At first the two sisters had quailed at the prospect of a year apart but the prospect of real school with other people was exciting. A year was manageable, and then they’d be together again. But then the blow had been struck. He would not consider sending Delphine. He still didn’t trust these mixed blood schools and the influence they might have on proper young people. One year would not be sufficient to measure its influence on Effie, and he would not risk them both.

Out on the rock, she had turned around, and she and Effie had wrapped their arms around each other and cried together. Effie had stroked her hair, and whispered comforting things. They would write every day. It would be the holidays before she knew it. They would still be best friends. Always. Forever.

But none of it was true. Effie wrote frequently, but it wasn’t possible to exchange a letter each a day. She hadn’t really expected it would be but however many letters they wrote it was a poor substitute for each other’s company. Christmas came slower than it ever had before, and when Effie came home she was full of stories of school, and about the girls she shared a room with. And, over the years, one name had come to the forefront, mentioned more than any other. Amity Brockert. It was true that Effie never neglected her sister in favour of this new friend - she wrote just as frequently, and when she came home they clicked back into place as if they’d never been apart. Except with more mentions of what Amity would have thought about this, or that, or what Amity had done. And Amity got to be with her every day. She got the side of Effie that Delphine had always had. And Effie called her ‘best friend.’

In Effie’s first year, Delphine had made a wish when she blew out her cake candles. Let Daddy send me to Sonora too. It had of course, come true. Only a few years too late…

And now here she was, serving her second sentence of forced separation from her sister. Had she never come to Sonora in Araceli’s place, she and Effie would be together again already. And, to top it off, who should she find herself next to, but Amity Brockert’s sister? She had no desire to replace Effie in her own affections, but it wasn’t as if she could even really connect with Chaslyn, even if she’d wanted to. She was never going to have a close friend here, just pretend and make them on behalf of Araceli. The only light at the end of the tunnel was the same as it always had been… Returning to a normal relationship with Effie at the end of it.

“Congratulations on the badge,” she said mildly, because it was the polite thing to say, rather than because she could actually find it in herself to care.
13 Araceli Be careful what you wish for 290 Araceli 0 5