Professor Lilac Crosby

April 22, 2011 12:00 AM
It had come to Lilac’s attention, in a roundabout way, that her lessons were reportedly too difficult for the younger years. Now, the brunette had expected some of them not to accomplish the spell on the first try, maybe not even on the first day. Eventually, however, even a first year could, with practice, accomplish everything she had assigned. That was called pushing themselves. That was her goal.

Apparently, however, that wasn’t good for some students. Maybe they were becoming discouraged. In any case, Lilac was going to have to decrease her difficulty level for the beginner’s class. At least, that was, for the first years. Maybe she would do different things for the different levels.

Perhaps a usual Lilac would have been disheveled by her classes needing change--which she often hated, especially if it wasn’t change by her own accord--but she was still metaphorically walking on air. As happy as the perky professor usually was, she radiated joy nowadays.

In any case, she decided to make her lesson a bit more traditional. As usual the spell wouldn’t be expected and possibly not understood, but not for difficulty reasons this time. All of the desks were lined in perfectly straight rows. The door was open welcomingly, awaiting them hospitably. Even Lilac herself looked more… normal. She had muted her normally outrageously bright appearance. Instead of slippers that she tended to wear for comfort, she wore black dress shoes. A pencil skirt to her knee, a white blouse, and a pull-over sweater finished her teacher-y look. For the first time, she wasn’t wearing a speck of orange.

Rising from behind her desk and walking to the door when she was pretty much certain everyone who was coming was already seated, Lilac ran a hand through her brown hair, which was also looking more normal than its usually explosive mess of curls and tangled. Just as she had for the Sinclair party, she had straightened it, but now that shoulder-length hair was pulled up in a professional ponytail. Gently shutting the door, she turned her attention to the students.

“Welcome to class, students,” she began. “As many of you have noticed, my classes have been less than typical for a while, maybe too difficult. Since that is the case, I apologize. Please know I was only trying to push you all towards your best.”

“Today we will be going a bit backwards,” explained the Russian. “Inanimate to inanimate transfiguration.” She pulled her wand from her pocket and traced letters through the air, which left readable words behind it. Second years: “Usorlibrum” First years: “Ignis Acu”

“First years, your spell is one of the simplest Transfigurations spells out there. You will turn matches into needles,” she elaborated. Picking up a match from the counter, Lilac demonstrated. “There is no wand motion other than pointing. Ignis Acu. What was once a match in her hand was now a pointy needle. “Simple. Please do your best not to hurt yourselves. If you find this spell too easy, after you accomplish it, you may take a crack at this other spell.”

“Second years, your spell is a bit unconventional,” Lilac confessed. “You will need a shoe. You can either practice on your own shoe, or there are shoes on the counter as well. These shoes have never been worn, so don’t fret about hygiene.”

Removing her own shoe from her foot and holding it up, the twenty-seven year old continued, “Now, watch. Your wand should flick left, then back to the right before going straight down.” In demonstration, she performed said movement and incanted, “Usorlibrum.” Where her shoe had been was now something else.

“If you correctly performed the spell,” she said with a smile, “you should be holding a book. Which book it becomes will generally depend on what sort of thoughts you are having while incanting or what you thought last before using the spell. You may begin.” With that, she sat down at her desk and began to read her shoe book. It was one of her favorites.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Lilac Crosby Pointy things and shoe-books. [First and second years!] 0 Professor Lilac Crosby 1 5


Sara Raines, Pecari

April 23, 2011 9:01 PM
As usual, Sara approached the Transfiguration classroom warily, waiting for some kind of trap or peculiarity. She had heard of pranks on the older years, and while that kind of thing didn’t happen to her class as much, Professor Crosby was simply too erratic for Sara to trust her. It was very bad when she had to thank her lucky stars that her Head of House was the man who walked around in public wearing a pink bubble hat just because of who the alternative was.

To her mild surprise and not-so-mild pleasure, though, the classroom looked very…normal. So did the woman at the front of it. Sara didn’t think she could be unbiased enough to consider Professor Crosby elegant even if she somehow managed it, but what she was seeing now was a dramatic improvement over what she had become grudgingly accustomed to. She looked like a grown-up person, a figure who could be trusted, so while Sara still didn’t trust her, she did, as she walked to her seat – posture immaculate, chin up, as always – find it in her to give the professor an approving smile.

As she sat primly on the edge of her chair, her small hands folded on the desk, hearing the lessons for the day made Sara think that this transformation wasn’t completely voluntary, since first years would have been expected to turn a match into a needle within two weeks of beginning in a more normal class and the only reason Sara could think of for them to be reverted to that now was because the grades were so bad that the administration had decided to take a hand, but she wasn’t very troubled by that. So long as her education was not harmed and she was not forced to demonstrate her Pecari survival skills every time she came to class, she was all right with the situation.

She was less all right with accepting the assertion that the shoes they were going to transfigure were completely hygienic because of the source, though, and so took out her gloves. She spent more time wearing one and loaning out the other to other girls in this class than she did in any other, since Potions and Care of Magical Creatures required a separate, sturdier pair as part of their class supplies. At least it provided a good chance for establishing friendly connections. She had made more of those in this class than she had in any other. Maybe Father had noticed that before she did, and that was why he wouldn’t have Professor Crosby fired?

Well, it didn’t matter. Now did, though. “Good day,” she said to the person next to her. “Would you like for me to get you a shoe as well, since I have gloves on?” She thought she should go ahead and get what she needed early, since even the first years, after being pushed so hard for so long, weren’t likely to stick with the needle assignment for long.
0 Sara Raines, Pecari Disbelieving and Networking 0 Sara Raines, Pecari 0 5


Renée Errant {Crotalus}

April 25, 2011 10:22 PM
She wasn't a person who usually got nightmares. And she wasn't exactly sure if last night she had experienced one. But she had woken up with sweat matting her curls to her brow, and strange images flitting across her mind. Distracted, she had spent most of the day in rare quietness, and walked into Transfiguration without her usual eagerness for Professor Crosby's usual interesting and entertaining lesson plans. She mumbled a general greeting to the Professor and slid into a seat without actually focusing on the Professor's appearance, but as Crosby began to talk Renée's head snapped up and she looked on in amazement at the figure before her. "She looks great." She hadn't meant to speak out loud, and was grateful at least that her tone was low. She hadn't wanted Marianna's passion to seep into her, but she could no longer deny that she held an interest in clothes and fashion. And while she appreciated Professor Crosby's unique sense of style (and that last word was used loosely) she appreciated more this new look. Almost as if the woman was "dressing up" as a teacher.

Pushing the images of the dream to the back of her mind - 'Further... further... there, that's good. Stay there.' - she listened along with the rest of the class to the instructions given to them. She felt bad for the first years, since they had all probably mastered that spell already. For the second years, their own challenge was a bit more exciting, though not to the usual Crosby standards, which was fine since Renée's usual energy was lacking. Sara Raines, a familiar fellow second year Renée had never really spoken to, turned to her after the instructions had been given.

"Oh, no. Gracias." She was perfectly fine sitting there and having someone fetch her shoes, but she'd been receiving instruction from Soledad and apparently she was an awful selfish naughty nasty little girl. Which was true, but coming from Soledad it sounded almost bad. "I'll go up with you." She looked down at the gloves the girl had on and smiled. 'Pretty.' She reached into her own bag and pulled out her own pair Marianna had given her. "I would have never even thought to use these. But then I'm bad at cleaning spells, and I don't like to get these dirty." A testament to her unusual lack of energy that she was actually allowing herself to talk about a secret pleasure of hers. She stood up and walked towards the shoes, waiting patiently behind other students before pulling on the gloves; forest green satin with a crimson R stitched into the skin of the left one.

She felt as if she herself was dressing up as she donned the pair, having only worn them for formal parties before, and then once when Marianna had pulled her, giggling, into bed. The two of them pressing their hands together, and Marianna teasing the slowness of her growth. Renée picked up her shoe, wrinkling her nose but her face relaxed as she realized, with gratitude, that there was no smell. She headed back to her seat and settled down, placing the shoe on her desk. She began to pull the gloves off, but then changed her mind and kept them on. They felt nice. She pulled out her wand and flicked left... right... and then down. "Usorlibrum."

She blinked down as the shoe to shake, and then it simply turned over. "Huh." She tilted her head, and tried the spell again. Left... right... and down. "Usorlibrum." This time the shoe flattened. Her mind wandered and she began to wonder what she herself was wondering about, and what her book would then be about. She looked over at her neighbor's progression, idly repeating the motions and repeating the spell. She wasn't in much of a hurry. 'This no-energy thing is relaxing.'
0 Renée Errant {Crotalus} What's to disbelieve? 0 Renée Errant {Crotalus} 0 5


Sara Raines

April 28, 2011 11:20 PM
Sara couldn’t say she was exactly sorry, in this case, to have her offer rejected. She had no personal feelings toward Renée Errant, since she’d never even really spoken to the girl, but she had heard about that incident at the Sinclairs’, and had known there was something going on between her and Eliza even before that because she was a student in second year and not very stupid, and those two things…well, Sara had enough problems with people associating her with Aunt Lila and all their scandals just because they had the same surname as it was.

She had hoped to use the division of Crotalus to somehow find a way in, but it had only driven Jordan and Eliza – the two her mother was most partial to her befriending – closer together, and her plans to make friends as they made enemies had been thwarted by either bad luck, not being brave enough to take a few opportunities in the moment they were right in front of her, or – this was the one she really didn’t like to think about – maybe just not being thought of as a contender at all. She could have gotten away with a lot of things because of her last name, but being a Pecari automatically isolated her from other people of her own social standing, and sometimes, it felt like that was getting more frustrating by the day. She was prettier and smarter than Jordan or Eliza, and had an advantage over Eliza because she had standing family ties in an area Eliza’s family was new to, and yet there they were, best friends and potentially able to make her do anything they wanted to keep from being drug down by association with people she didn’t even know that well.

Being frustrated was still not, of course, enough to make her openly support someone they were openly against, but it did make her at least remain polite to Renée. And Daisy, though Daisy had the most annoying habit of giving her this strange look whenever she said hello or good afternoon or anything like that, then making a sort of laugh noise and moving on. Sara really had no idea what was up with that girl, nor did she care, so long as Daisy didn’t start doing things that changed things up even more and made her need to care.

“You’re welcome,” she said in English, catching herself a second before lapsing into Spanish. She’d been spending too many summers with Margaret in Madrid, where her father’s cousin had become something of a power in her own right after forty or fifty years of carefully exploiting the resources of the Mendoza family she’d married into and had, for four or five years now, seemed to see Sara as something of an apprentice.

She looked politely at Renée’s gloves after the other girl clearly looked at hers. “You should work to improve on them,” she said when Renée denied skill with cleaning charms. “They’re one of the most useful things there is to know.” They were ladies, for Merlin’s sake; they could not go around with stains on. She smiled slightly, politely, in leavetaking and then went up to the shoes.

She removed her gloves once she got back, then took out her wand and concentrated on the shoe she had gotten, frowning in concentration. “Usorlibrum,” she said, performing the wand movement as precisely as she enunciated the spell word.

It wasn’t a perfect book, but it was book-shaped – bulging too much at the spine, covers a little uneven, but book-shaped – and had pages, though they were too thick, and felt strange to the touch, clearly not parchment or paper or anything like that. The writing was also too blurred and faint to make out. Better than adequate for a first attempt, but she hoped to do better by the end of class and sat back patiently to wait for it to revert to a shoe so she could try again.

In the meantime, thought, since she had nothing better to do now, she looked over discreetly at her neighbor’s work while she waited. Not as good as hers. At least she had that.
0 Sara Raines That she looks like a teacher! (WotW) 179 Sara Raines 0 5


Renée

May 04, 2011 8:26 PM
Her mind wandered but came back to her in time to see another neighbor manage to make progress on the shoe. She waited for herself to feel that familiar stirrings of competition, and then became impatient with herself when no such stirrings came. "Usorlibrum." The spell came out in a bored sigh and she knew even before she had finished casting that it wasn't going to work. She had a natural affinity for getting things quickly... she also had an affinity for being lazy and distracted. She was distracted now.

Playing with the gloves, feeling the fabric, imagining herself in a ball room dancing. She was taller in her mind, and her long dark curls even longer, a gorgeous dress on, and the dance floor had become forest green and soft against her bare feet. The partners in her mind alternated between her brother and her father, the two of them laughing and twirling her around the large broad trunks of trees that had sprung up in the dance hall. At a point it was just her and Gabriel dancing, bright dark brown eyes smiling at each other, and then it was just her dancing in what was now a complete forest. Her feet were bare, her dress was ripped, her hair wearing a crown of fallen leaves, and the only thing respectable remaining were the gloves.

"Usorlibrum." Renée blinked and looked down at the shoe she'd just transfigured. "Puede ser tan fácil?" She mumbled in light surprise and pulled what looked like an intact book towards her. The cover was a bright red with no title but the design of what looked like an "R" in green. Something a small child who was still learning how to write individual letters and numbers would try to draw. She pulled open the book in growing excitement at her first publication, but her face relaxed in idle amusement at the series of blank pages in front of her, all bright green. She flipped through the blank pages for a minute, but then stopped as she saw what looked like writing in one of the pages near the back of the book. "... and the girl danced, and the girl danced... and the girl danced. She danced in wild abandon, with reckless unseemly impulses, that betrayed the high superiority of her birth. She danced with her instincts and passions leading the way. She danced like the commonest basest muggle."

Renée blinked at the words, having unwittingly spoken them out loud though quietly. "That's not what I was thinking." She was indignant and closed the book, no more writing in it to be looked over. She glanced at her gloved hands touching the leather spine and took them off, wanting to forget about dancing, and wanting to redo the shoe-book. It looked nice, but it hadn't become what she'd wanted. She'd try again and get it right. She cast another glance, this one much more open and curious than the last, at Sara Raines. She could feel her energy for competition return in full. This time it was directed at herself, and her own annoying non-passive mind.
0 Renée How's the networking going? 0 Renée 0 5


Sara

May 05, 2011 9:59 PM
Sara was working quietly on her wand movement before she attempted the shoe again, as she thought that might make her next attempt more successful, when suddenly Miss Errant began to talk about a girl dancing. When she said something about base Muggles, even after a comment about the high birth of the girl in question, Sara looked all the way over at her in wide-eyed and slightly indignant surprise. The high birth comment must have been sarcasm, and somehow, Sara had a feeling this had something to do with her cousin Catherine….

Or not, since it turned out Miss Errant was reading from her book, which had a big ‘R’ on the front in truly dreadful handwriting. Her brown eyes moved from the book to the slightly garish gloves.

If Sara assumed that had not been an attempt at insulting her because her father’s cousin’s wife had carried on an affair with a Muggleborn gardener for many years, then it could seem logical, especially with the monogram, to assume Miss Errant had been talking about…herself. If so, she certainly had a conflicted view of herself, but that wasn’t even the thing. The thing was that the statement had ‘half-blood’ written all over it.

That was impossible, though. Miss Errant had been invited to a formal function over midterm. She was in Crotalus. Her affinity for Quidditch meant she might be either very foolish or one of those girls, but still. Sara was going to have to write home and ask for more information about her.

Her eyebrows lifted slightly at the comment about how that was not what Miss Errant had been thinking. “It seems it was,” she said. “Otherwise, it wouldn’t have been there.” Seeing that the other girl was watching, she picked up her wand and made the now-perfected wand movement again, saying, “Usorlibrum,” at the same time. The book came out smoother this time, and the now-legible title appeared to be a social history of magical Illinois.

Well, at least she could explain that much better than she could have disjointed sentences about behaving vulgarly being a sign of high birth, much less Muggle birth qualifying as such.
0 Sara Quite poorly, I think. 0 Sara 0 5


Renée

May 05, 2011 11:18 PM
Renée raised a brow at Sara's comment. "No." She stated simply. "I just hadn't gotten the spell right." She looked down at the title that had appeared on Sara's book. It occurred to Renée suddenly - and though she had made her peace with her sorting there were still traces of bitterness in her mind - that somehow her name and Sara Raines had gotten mixed up and that was why the society obsessed twelve year old was stuck in Pecari, while the societal secure princess was trapped in the den of plots, whispers and vicious gossip. 'It's meant to be. I'd be too happy in Pecari. How utterly boring.' Struggling for her freedom every single day at least gave her something to do. If she achieved her freedom, somehow made it over to the brave knights and beautiful princesses of Pecari, what would she have to occupy her time then?

She was looking at her book, raising her wand again, and spoke clearly. "Usorlibrum." Once again her mind hadn't focused, and the book tried to tell her what she was thinking. This time the binding was perfect, and she was startled by the brightness of the red cover. She paused, not sure she was going to like what she read, based on the title. Una niña de la máscara. The writing looked more like her own, but when she had just mastered the language. The letters curved more, and dotted the cover as if the ink was still fresh. Though of course there was no ink.

In one sense, a very large sense, Renée knew she was different from the other Crotalus girls. She could enjoy her status in New York which went unchallenged, and she could enjoy the many joys of Spain. The family was wealthier than most, and by and large Renée didn't have to deal with having to become friends with someone to increase social standing. She came from a family where the grownups had their own dealings, and weren't so fragile or pathetic that they had to use their own children to advance their standing in society. Renée was free from all that. She remained mainly ignorant of it too.

What she was not free from, was the deception. Soledad and Oro had entrusted her with but one task; keep up the pureblood facade. It was easy enough to do, she had already considered herself a princess anyway. Gabriel had told her she was. But having to denounce David as nothing more than her mother's eccentricity, having to pretend to have had another father who had died in service to Spain, having to pretend that she was something she was not... all towards what end? Not her own advancement. But it was keeping the family together, somehow. Reputation was apparently important, and Errantez power had prevented any of the dark secrets (of which there were numerous) to come out about the family.

Renée flipped open the book, her own mind a confused jumble of thoughts and feelings that she could not make out and was unused to. Her eyes landed on the first page, startled to see familiar curly handwriting that continued on for half of the book. "Following a path not my own, the strands of fate tied and twisted, dragging me along..." Her voice trailed off as she read on. She leaned back a little in her chair, raising the words closer to her face, unaware of the back of the book which had a blurb on it reading: The narrative of a young woman startled at her family's ball by the appearance of Vision. Vision tells her she may choose two paths. One of respectability, comfort, and the possibility of true love. The other, a life of movement, passion, constant uncertainties, and loss of status.' The blurb continued on but Renée's hand was unwittingly covering it.

She closed the book, upset at the words inside. 'This girl isn't me.' She looked around the room for a distraction, but there was nothing. 'Something become entertaining now!' She cast her wand on the book and spoke forcefully, imitating Soledad instinctively, and her coolly controlled voice; the one that knew it was already going to be obeyed. "Usorlibrum." There was a pause, and then the entire book seemed to ripple, the color red changing to burgundy, the title Una niña de la máscara changing to Las mujeres sabias which was printed in script. It looked much more like her abuela's handwriting.

Renée blinked, and then broke into a wide smile, remembering the French comedy Marianna had taken her to when visiting Arlette in Paris, as well as showcasing the newest Marianna designs. "Finally." She spoke quietly, opening the book and looked on as the script filled out words that weren't Molière's but that summed up in a bilingual mixture of Spanish and English what Renée could remember of the simple plot. She flipped the pages, starting to read now that she had a better handle on the spell.
0 Renée Your social skills <i>do</i> seem to be lacking. 0 Renée 0 5


Sara

May 05, 2011 11:46 PM
Sara bit the inside of her mouth and reminded herself that it would be improper to point out how very thin, in light of what Professor Crosby had said, Miss Errant’s excuse was. She had to have been thinking of something along those lines, or it wouldn’t have appeared in the book. That was all. But since there was nothing to be gained from doing that, she didn’t do it.

“Whatever you say,” she said instead, her tone mildly skeptical, as she opened her book, curious to see how the spell had worked. She had learned a great deal of social history over the years – the cover looked very like one of the books her tutor had taught her from, actually, and was most likely using right now with her brother Alan – but she didn’t know if what was inside would be all of it, or just what she could consciously remember, or even all correct. The limits of magic, as she’d sort of admitted in front of Mr. Stratford at the Sinclairs’, interested her, however little relevance they really had to her future life.

She was interrupted by Miss Errant beginning to read aloud again, and bit the inside of her mouth again to ask how strange the girl’s family was if they could afford ugly monogrammed gloves but couldn’t even hire a tutor good enough to teach her to read inside her head instead of bothering everyone around her. Perhaps they were that sort of New Rich, the ones who didn’t make any effort at blending and marrying into the society they had forced to recognize them by virtue of money. Oh, dear, she needed to be more careful where she sat. Being seen with one of that sort, when her family dedicated so much of its energies to making themselves acceptable to the truly old money, could be disastrous for her.

Instead, she glanced at Miss Errant’s new work, which appeared to be some kind of sensationalistic novel. Perhaps the girl liked silly romances. Then the work changed again. “You read Spanish,” she noted. “How did you learn it?”
0 Sara ...I beg your <i>pardon</i>? 0 Sara 0 5


Renée

May 06, 2011 1:06 AM
Here's where the problem lied: Renée was an honest person. She wasn't excessively kind, studious, or a constant pleasure to be round. But she had been born honest; a face that exposed and showcased the million emotions she felt in a day, a mind that was attunely connected to her honest desires, warping reality around just for her, and a privileged mouth that professed any thought that flitted across, always needing to be expressed. And yet, a large part of her identity had been taken away from her, and she had begun to act with subtle differences to her character. She felt like an apple that had been bitten without permission; sweet juice dripping down the culprit's chin, turning away from her after that one bite, leaving her exposed and allowed only the anxiety of the inevitable taint that would hit her, turning the white-green flesh of the apple into patches of brown.

Sara asked a question that was perfectly innocent, and yet something within Renée thought she knew the truth behind it. Just as she had sensed with Daisy Thorpe, just as she had sensed from a (in the end) blatant Arthur Carey and Fae Sinclair. And the truth was, that there was no honesty in the interaction. Frustration passed across her eyes, hidden only by the book that she was still facing, and she found herself yearning to snap, 'Well, being Spanish certainly helps.' But the frustration didn't linger. Strong emotions like that never did for her, and she was back to realizing that someone was paying her attention. Honest feelings demanded that she bask in whatever form of attentiveness she could get.

"I'm the only one on my mother's side who was born in America." She answered her, continuing to idly turn the pages of the script, enjoying the inconsistencies of plot her mind had conjured up. Somehow, Gabriel had landed in her story. "My mother spoke Spanish to me as a baby, my... step-father spoke to me in English. My brother writes me in Spanish. Mis abuelos sólo hablan español para mí." She smiled, turning another page where her old dog, Marinero, had suddenly appeared, now being petted by one of Moliere's characters, Armande. "If I want to be able to talk to them, then I have to keep constantly practicing. Otherwise..." She paused, imagining what it would be like. Gabriel only really spoke English to her when they had company. David was fluent in Spanish (in his line of work he was required to be fluent in several languages) so they could talk Spanish in front of him. Their Brooklyn home was bilingual. But if she stopped speaking Spanish constantly, she would be stuck with just the basic vocabulary she had gathered as a child. She wouldn't be able to communicate in sophisticated terms that she strained for now. Conversations with Marianna, with Gabriel... in a foreign tongue. Unnatural for them, and so unnatural for her. Dishonest.

"Otherwise it would just be hard." Her fingers turned another page, stroking the binding of the paper, testing how strong the parchment and stitches felt. "And you? Do you speak any other languages?" Mild curiosity flooded into her tone, though her excitement levels were back to low, because speaking another language would be interesting and she was sure that if Sara had been interesting, Renée would have felt it instantly the moment they had sat down, or spoken to each other. As instant as it had been with Sophia, or Neal. 'Then again, she is a Pecari. There's got to be something interesting about her.' If only her attention span wasn't so easily swayed. Her eyes flitted quickly around the room, and she managed to stifle a laugh when she thought she caught Eliza glaring in her direction. And was it her name that crossed her roommate's lips? 'Okay, now that's too self-involved. Even for you, mi querida.' She could hear Marianna's amused beratement, feel the comforting breath against her ear, chin pressed on her scalp, letting her know she was always there for her. Even through the countless weeks when she was gone, or the months Renée had to stay away at school. She focused now on Sara, giving it a moment before she decided whether or not this was worth her (admittedly) complete gap of empty time to squander.
0 Renée Well at least you've got the"begging your superiors"down pat 0 Renée 0 5


Sara

May 07, 2011 3:32 PM
Sara took the information she was given and filed it away for inclusion in that letter home, thanking all goodness that she had a strong set of international connections through Mother and Aunt Margaret. A fact which, now that it occurred to her, caused another thought to be filed away under another category, the one loosely titled ‘Socially Advancing Here Despite My House And Year.’

Uncle Charles had a catchphrase, one used only inside the family: onward and upward. Aunt Margaret used it sometimes, too. Sara thought, despite having its origins being directly related to her great-grandfather being a butcher and her family one of the newest monies of the old-blood-new-money set to wriggle a way into the level of society more or less directly below that of the true upper class, it was a good life philosophy. Improvement in all things was to be striven for constantly, with dedication and a willingness to sacrifice personal pleasures. There was no point in doing anything that didn’t lead to tangible improvements of some kind.

“I do,” she said when asked about her own knowledge of foreign languages. “Spanish and French are my strongest – Mother spoke French to me when I was small, and my father’s cousin is Margaret Mendoza.” She realized her voice was tinged with an immodest note of pride, and suppressed it, but wasn’t too sorry about it. “She married a retired Spanish ambassador to the Cabinet while he was active, and they’re still in Madrid. I tour Europe with her in the summers.” She flipped through a few pages of her book, noting the strength of the type, and the font face. It was curlier than she had expected, but still definitely print, not her handwriting. As she’d remembered. “I think she said something about Switzerland this year.”

She realized she was very nearly bragging and blushed slightly, focusing her eyes back on her work. What was wrong with her? That was not how you went on and played the game. Not when you were a Pecari girl with no close friends, anyway. A Pecari girl who felt secure enough to brag was either delusional or just utterly unpleasant and unfit for social success. This really was turning into a bad day.
0 Sara *Looks around* No, no superiors of mine are here. 0 Sara 0 5


Renée

May 08, 2011 1:15 PM
Renée’s eyes widened in surprise. “Tu tío debe haber conocido a mi abuelo.” She spoke quickly; her tongue seemed physically unable to move slowly when she was speaking Spanish. And while the words were rushed, they were easily enough discerned by a fluent speaker. “Fue un embajador también." In one of their unofficial “just-don’t-call-it-what-it-is” bonding moments, Oro had sat his little half-blood shame upon his lap, relating to her the proud history of what only half of her could truly enjoy. She had already known some of it from pestering Marianna, but Oro Errantez was a good story teller and Renée had dutifully listened to his tale. Among other details, Renée had clung to the stories of the many diplomats of the family, realizing with surprise that the passion for travel which she and Gabriel shared was nothing more than the product of countless generations after generations of diplomats serving Spain with the last name, or common ancestry, of “Errantez.”

Oro had been the Spanish diplomat to France, but had grown bored of seeing only one country and had requested to be switched to whatever country his finger landed on. It landed on Dakhla, and amidst the laughter of his peers Oro traveled there happily, though he had been aiming for a more exciting place to be sent. There he had met Soledad, who longed to see the world as well. He married her after only a summer of knowing her, brought her back to Spain with him, left to go back to being the French ambassador after a special request from the ministry there, and spent many happy years in that position before he appointed his nephew to the position. While it wasn't official, and certainly wasn't legal, may of the old pureblood families held positions in government that had been passed down to them for countless generations. Diplomacy happened to be one position that many of the male Errantez craved. Travel and exploration was something that all the men, women, and anybody who married into the family had to need with a passion.

"I've never been to Switzerland." Renée watched Sara with a bit more curiosity, interest reawakened at the knowledge that she was already fluent in three languages, traveled, and had a diplomat in her family too. "But I love Spain. We have a home in Seville, but my uncle works in Madrid. My brother, I think, loves Barcelona the best but my grandmother won't let me go there until I'm sixteen." It made her crave that unexplored portion of Spain all the more. "This past summer I went to Paris with friends, and that was my first time. Besides that," She thought for a moment, the summers and various countries rolling together in her mind. She couldn't quite discern from the fleeting images of color that captivated her. "I went to Montreal when I was only a baby really, and then we make trips to Belize and Mexico and Guatemala." Actually they had been to Ecuador and Venezuela but she often confused countries with one another.

She thought Sara had seemed a bit embarrassed for some reason, though couldn't imagine what would have caused the color to seep into her face. "Usorlibrum." She pointed at her book and laughed lightly in delight at the perfect cover she had achieved, good mood restored in full. An Errant Guide to the World. She picked up the book and admired the cover, running her hands over it in light touches. It was a picture of one of the many sights Marianna had taken her on David's request to see. The Torre del Oro. Not the prettiest landmark of Seville but it had amused her that there was a landmark in her abuelo's name and had forged a connection with it.

"Where else you have you been?" She asked, opening the book where sketches of maps filled a few pages. She glanced over them in pleasure. 'As usual, this class has amused me. Well done, Crosby.' "Or, where else do you want to go?"
0 Renée *hands over glasses* I think you could use these. 0 Renée 0 5


Sara

May 14, 2011 3:40 PM
Sara ‘s left eyebrow raised slightly as she processed what Miss Errant was saying. “Oh?” she said. “What was his name?” She was tempted to show off in Spanish, but the last thing she needed was for everyone to hear her jabbering away in a language they couldn’t understand and think they were plotting something. “I’ll write to Aunt Margaret and ask.” She wasn’t particularly close to Antonio. They got along, she thought he was fond of her, but when she needed something, it was to his wife that she turned. “Her husband is Antonio Mendoza,” she offered, in case Miss Errant wanted to communicate with her own contacts.

That was one side of the family Sara felt absolutely safe being associated with. True, former Minister Seda had gotten into it with Aunt Margaret a few years ago, because he’d disapproved of her thought that blood ties to powerful families in other countries could be to Spain’s (and her own) advantage, but since he was the one who’d been publicly disgraced, she wasn’t overly concerned about that coming out.

She listened to the spiel of locations without much reaction, nodding slightly at one point to show she was still listening. “I’ve never been to Mexico,” she said. “Which is strange, since it shares a border, but I am from Illinois.” She said this without shame. Her state was one of the major centers, culturally distinct enough from New England to not be lumped into it too often, and while smaller than New England or California, they were, she thought, culturally advanced enough to be held above Cali, at least. The South, she wasn’t even taking into consideration. It was too complicated to decide if the Careys should be considered southerners or a separate country. “I’ve been to Montreal, too, though not much. Most of Mother’s family is further north.”

That was one of the reasons Sara considered life inexplicable. The chances that her mother should have met her father weren’t as remote as some people’s stories, but it had been at least unlikely and had happened anyway, and as a result, Sara thought she might have the happiest immediate family in the larger family. There was a price for that, they weren’t as affluent and powerful as Uncle Charles and Aunt Margaret, but considering some of the things she’d seen, she thought she could live with expanding her immediate family’s influence a little more slowly than they had.

“We visited Scandinavia after my first year,” she said. “We spent the most time in Sweden, but I enjoyed Norway as well. It was really fascinating, some of the history of magic they have there. Italy was nearly the first place I went, and then Germany, Austria…I went to Spain for the first time when I was seven, then to England that fall for my cousin’s wedding. France with Mother and Father one time before that, though we didn’t stay long.” She glanced toward Mr. Stratford for a moment, then added, “And I’m hoping to go to Greece someday.” Her eyes made a brief stop at her work, then went back to Miss Errant. “And you?” she asked politely. “Where do you plan to go?”
0 Sara No, my vision is perfect. Yours is the problem. 0 Sara 0 5