Headmaster Brockert

January 26, 2018 10:51 AM
The school year was not off to the best start. First day back and they were already having problems with a student. Worse, they had an issue with a parent . Andrew James, the father of a student named Cleo James-someone Mortimer wasn't the least bit familiar with as she was not his grandchild, some other relative, a prefect or Head Student, someone Ruby or Emerald had mentioned or Joe Umland, whom Mortimer knew about before he became a prefect-had written Selina to tell them Cleo was half-veela.

Which had led to having to sit around while Selina talked to everyone one on one. Honestly, Mortimer was slightly irritated that Mr. James had not gone to him first, feeling it undermined his authority. Of course, he would have passed it off on Selina anyway because dealing with it would have irritated him too.

And then they'd had to have a meeting about how to put safety measures in place. Honestly, pain in his ass that was. Mortimer had no intentions of being alone with any student except his own grandchildren. However, he wanted to protect the staff from any false accusations. He didn't honestly think that any of them would do such unwholesome things with a student.

The students trickled in. Once everyone seemed to be in attendance Mortimer placed a Sonorus charm on himself and began to speak. "Welcome to Sonora for the new first years and welcome back for all older students. First years, you should have recieved a blank badge at the end of Orientation." At least they hadn't gotten it when they first got there, some were liable to lose it. "You will dunk the badge in the Sorting Potion and it 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."

After the first years had been settled, Mortimer continued."Would Fabian Brockert and Ingrid Wolseithcrafte please come up and get your Head Student badges? In addition I'd like to call up Zevalyn Ives , Georgia Kirkly, Arianna Tate and Lily Spencer to recieve their prefect badges. Congratulations." He was less then pleased with the fact that they'd had to give Miss Spencer the badge since Emerald disliked her. Mortimer didn't know quite why, as his granddaughter, like himself was not the most...effusive person, but the fact that Emerald didn't like her was enough for Mortimer to be against it. However, in this case he had no choice as she was the only option. Actually he'd probably wouldn't have given it to Miss Ives either but more because of her unusual beginning then any character flaw. On the other hand, she had gotten up to her grade level despite her setbacks so that was something positive about the girl.

"Now I would like to do introduce our new Medic, Healer Anisha Kapoor. Please welcome her to our school." Mortimer continued. "This year, our midsummer event will be the Ball. Now we will sing the school song." Which meant they were going to sing it as he sure as hell wasn't going to .

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.


When that was finished, everyone was free to eat and talk as they so pleased.
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Opening Feast 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5


Masha Adin

February 02, 2018 7:50 PM
Masha followed the rest of the kids to the hallways and into the huge room. Suppressing the need to turn and dash she took one shuddery breath.

I can do this.

Those few simple words became her mantra while the man was talking. He looked slightly intimidating to Masha. She glanced around the buzzing hall. Kids were silent now, whispering sparsely only in pairs.

Those before her wee dunking their badges in the potion and they were ushered toward the correct table. Masha wasn’t happy about her prospects, so far not many things happened to the way she liked it.

She did sort of met Alana, the girl was nice, but then again - Alana was Hawaiian, and she knew Alana’s customs.
She tried really hard not to think about the colour her badge is going to have. Sure she read about sorting process, it didn’t sound scary then. But now…

When it was her turn she was frozen for few seconds. She fisted her hands. Took a deep breath and stepped forward. Potion, she has to dunk… Curiosity got the best of her. In spite of her fear and overwhelming need to run and hide. Masha leaned over the cauldron and sniffed carefully. She didn’t know the potion - which wasn’t much of a surprise.

I can do this.

She closed her eyes and dunk her badge in the potion.
Peeking on one eye. Blue. She was directed to her table. She was now ready to bolt. Despite herself, she picked the spot far enough from everyone else, as much as it was possible. Which wasn’t much.

Her eyes firmly pinned to the table surface she sighed.

I can do this.
0 Masha Adin I can do this, I can do this… 1410 Masha Adin 0 5

Heinrich Hexenmeister

February 02, 2018 9:32 PM
Heinrich had stumbled through his first encounter with English-speaking Americans. He thought he’d done well enough and Nathaniel had even complimented Heinrich’s own ability to speak the language. He was tentatively willing to count the Oregon Mordues as, well, probably not friends, not yet, after just one conversation. But maybe allies or associates anyways. Acquaintances at the minimum.

Of course, then there was the tour. Heinrich followed . . . some of it. He understood ‘library’ anyway, and even if he hadn’t his eyes told him the nature of that book filled room, and that was the important one anyway. What was called ‘MARS’ looked like a good place too. His eyes told him more about that collection of rooms than what Herr Xavier was says though.

Now brought to the Cascade Hall, Heinrich was handed a blank badge though he didn’t understand what he was supposed to do with it until he saw his yearmates dunking theirs into a caldron and pulling it out bearing the color of one of the Houses. Ah. The Sorting.

He dunked in his blank badge and pulled out a blue one. Aladren. He smiled. From what he had read, that was the one he had guessed he might get. He was pleased to have been right.

Heading over to the table, he took an available empty seat near a blue-badged girl who had been sorted shortly before he had, figuring it was safest to stick with another first year for now. Then the Headmaster began talking again. There was a bunch of what sounded like gibberish to him, but he soon realized they weren’t unfamiliar English words, but names of older students as they came up to get badges a lot shinier than his own now blue one. Then he welcomed someone and pointed out a lady at the staff table, which Heinrich took to mean the lady was as new to the school as he and the first years were.

Finally he mentioned playing ball in the middle of summer, which seemed an odd thing to Heinrich to bring up, but maybe the Headmaster just really liked Quidditch. To each their own.

Then there was singing, which Heinrich tried to join into, but reading English and music at the same time was a bit beyond his capabilities, so he mostly just hummed along with the melody until it was over and the food appeared.

With some relief, he did see some dishes he was familiar with, and took a fair sized helping of those, plus some less identifiable foodstuffs that smelled appealing but which he could not identify. Cautiously, he tried a forkful of some kind of very yellow rice and his eyes widened and he reached for his glass of juice to quench the fire in his mouth. “Das is spicy hot,” he warned his neighbor (remembering to use English only after the first word), as he pointed at the yellow rice. He took another gulp of his juice.


OOC: Not sure exactly what the rice dish is. I based it vaguely on an Indian dish I had at a company potluck. If you know something that is spicy with yellow rice, feel free to call it that. Heinrich also has a low spice tolerance, so what he considers burning hot may seem pretty mild to someone who regularly eats spicy foods.
1 Heinrich Hexenmeister You absolutely can 1414 Heinrich Hexenmeister 0 5


Masha Adin

February 04, 2018 4:24 PM
Masha tried not to flinch when the boy sat next to her. It wasn’t so much that he was a boy but more that she saw him talking to other kids. She assumed he is a chatty type and she was not in a chatty mood.

She sighed a silent relief when the boy didn’t start talking right away.

Too many foods were at the table. Some of it familiar some of it not. She carefully took a bit of chicken meat and some potatoes, carefully picking a fruit for later. The boy next to her took Indian dish she was familiar with. In a way she was impressed - the dish was spicy hot. Masha didn’t like spicy food, at least not spicy food that had a tendency to burn your mouth.

“Das is spicy hot,”

Masha blushed. The boy was talking to her. And not just talking - he used the foreign word. One she was unfamiliar with. Clenching her hands around knife and fork she glanced at the boy with a tight smile.

Should I just nod or respond?

Masha decided that response might be expected. The boy was polite and it looked to her like he was trying to warn her. After all, if she keeps conversation on food, nothing can go wrong. Hoping that she is doing the right thing she mimicked boys informal way of addressing.

“It is if you don’t like spicy hot food you should avoid Indian food.” Masha didn’t know too many Indian dishes, but all dishes Mrs Inamari made were hot “That is Khichdi. Mrs Inamari always puts ginger and cayenne peppers and other hot things inside. It is hot.”

She did it again. Every time! Every time she was forced to talk when she was nervous Masha would start to talk, giving the unnecessary information to her surroundings. Well, if she didn’t somehow offend the boy, he would probably run away from her.

That is how it always was. She would say something unnecessary stupid and kids would just start avoiding her.

OOC: By the description, I’d say the meal is Khichdi, it can be hot spicy or not. Traditionally it is (even if Indian people would say it is not :D ), but that varies depending on the part of India - each part has its own unique flavour.
0 Masha Adin You probably don’t want to eat that 1410 Masha Adin 0 5

Heinrich Hexenmeister

February 04, 2018 8:48 PM
The girl blushed when he addressed her, and for a second he thought maybe she was shy and wouldn't respond at all, but then she did. She had an accent that he didn't think was German but it seemed easier somehow to understand than the Americans he'd spoken to earlier. Accented or not, though, she was a much better English speaker than he felt he was. She also told him the name of the rice, though he was sure he would never remember it as anything other than 'hot yellow rice.' The hot parts were apparently 'Ginger' and 'Cheyenne Pepper'. He recognized the Pfeffer well enough, as they sounded a lot alike between the two languages. However, his knowledge of spices was limited in German and worse in English, so he wasn't quite sure what 'Ginger' was. But if it had Cheyenne Pepper in it, then yeah. Hot. He used his fork to push the rest of it to the side of his plate and decided he'd had enough of that.

"Danke," he thanked her, forgetting again to use the language of his new school. He realized his mistake and corrected, "Thank you, I mean. I am called Heinrich," he introduced himself, figuring he may as well do that now that she had shared part of a recipe with him.

He pointed at a different rice dish, that looked like it was just plain and safe white rice, but he figured he may as well ask, "Is that safe rice? It tastes not spicy hot?"
1 Heinrich Hexenmeister You are probably right 1414 Heinrich Hexenmeister 0 5


Masha Adin

February 07, 2018 1:38 PM
Masha looked while boy carefully pushed the Indian dish to the edge of the plate. At least she did help a little bit. It appeared that he didn’t like hot food any more than she did.

"Danke,"

That language again. She did recognise the word, however, even if she didn’t know the meaning. Definitely European. She heard it loads of times on the streets among groups of tourists.

"Thank you, I mean. I am called Heinrich,"

Masha smiled shyly at the boy. She remembered one time they had to wait for 4h in Munich airport for their flight. She heard that word a lot. Also, boy’s name sounded like he’s from that part of the world. Panic! She didn’t know anything about his country or their customs.

“Это нормально” she nodded and then froze. That is what she would reply to her parents, after all ‘It’s ok’ was customary reply to ‘thank you’ in her home. But she wasn’t at home.
Hoping that boy didn’t hear her, she barely whispered the words, after all, she cleared her throat.

“You are welcome. I’m Masha.”

Masha sighed a breath of relief when she noticed that the boy directed his attention to food again. He was pointing at another rice dish, obviously thinking that she knows something about cooking.

"Is that safe rice? It tastes not spicy hot?"

She glanced at the direction he pointed and shook her head.

“I think this is plain rice.” If he keeps asking about each dish, we will have a problem

She smiled at the boy encouragingly, blushing, wanting him to take the rice and stop asking about food before she runs out of the answers.

OOC: Это нормально - It is normal, which can be used as it's ok in informal surroundings
0 Masha Adin I don’t know that much about food 1410 Masha Adin 0 5

Heinrich Hexenmeister

February 10, 2018 10:13 AM
His very first thought when the other first year spoke and said something completely incomprehensible was that it couldn't possibly be even English. Much of English was incomprehensible to him, but he felt he knew enough by now that he could at least recognize when it was being spoken, and that wasn't it. That somehow made him feel more confident in his English skills, because as foreign as it still sounded, it wasn't that foreign.

His second thought was relief. Relief that he wasn't the only one letting their native language slip out without meaning to. He felt a sudden kinship toward Masha. They didn't speak the same native language, but they seemed at least to be in same position of being utterly surrounded by the unfamiliar. It was good to know he wasn't the only one. Uncle Karl said Sonora was friendly toward international students, but it suddenly seemed a lot easier knowing he wasn't the only one in his year group.

"Thank you, Masha," he said again, careful this time to use their shared second language, and took some plain white rice. "I am from Germany," he told her, so she knew what the language was that he occasionally slipped into. "My German still comes out sometimes, too. What language was that? Where come you from?"
1 Heinrich Hexenmeister We have that in common 1414 Heinrich Hexenmeister 0 5


Masha Adin

February 20, 2018 4:37 PM
The boy thanked Masha and then he said:

"I am from Germany,"

Germany! A country in Europe. I don’t know anything about Germany!

Masha was starting to panic. The only bit of good news was that the boy didn’t seem offended so far by anything she said or done. She smiled shyly at him and nodded, losing great deal of her confidence.

"My German still comes out sometimes, too. What language was that? Where come you from?" asked the boy.

He seemed friendly, but his questions were the reason for Masha to start panicking again. First in the Gardens girl asked her about blood now this! She tried to smile again but failed. Masha had no idea how to explain where is she from.

For a brief time, she contemplated not to answer, but that seemed rude. Finally, she opted to reply to the easiest of two questions.

“That was Russian. My parents are from Russia. We speak Russian at home.” She tried to smile again, uncertain how to explain next “Ummm….I’m born in Egypt, but we don’t live there or in Russia. We… ummmm …. Move a lot. Because of my mama’s work.”

She closed her eyes briefly and peeked at the boy. Masha had no idea where she is coming from - the question never arose until now. She supposed she is Russian because of her parents or maybe Egyptian because it was written on her passport. She could always say that she is resident of the World, but that seemed like a bit too much to say.

Holding her breath she hoped that the boy won’t mind her vague answer. At the same time the boy...Heinrich was fine and polite, even if he did ask unpleasant questions. In a way it was much easier to connect with kids here - they seemed more open and not so stuck on customs.

She smiled at the boy again. Maybe she had at least some prospect of finding friends here.
0 Masha Adin What now? 1410 Masha Adin 0 5