Selina Skies

November 25, 2019 4:09 AM
In the centre of the Quidditch pitch stood the makings of a fire. Not yet lit, Selina supposed a more accurate description was ‘a large formation of wood.’ And yet, everyone knew its purpose, the thing it was about to become. It was a fire-in-waiting. To one side of it were gathered tents where the students would spend the nights in groups of three or more. That was up to them to choose and arrange, and the tents would sort themselves out accordingly. There was a dividing line down the middle to stop boys crossing into girls’ tents and vice versa, and a rule of three minimum because the staff were not naïve enough to think that such a line ruled out the possibility of couples sharing.



The headmaster stood, officially opening the end of term event and announcing the house cup winners. For the first time that she could remember, it was a dead heat, with Teppenpaw and Pecari tying. After that, as the midsummer event required more lengthy explanation, and one with feelings at its centre, the actual ceremony around the fire had been handed over to Selina.



“Thank you headmaster, and congratulations to Teppenpaw and Pecari,” she smiled. “I have quite a lot of talking to do this evening, so I have enlisted some help.” She waved her wand, and from behind the stage three portraits came forward and floated down to the ground, leaning back against the stage. This had been an idea she had got courtesy of one student in particular during the challenges, and the familiar face of Professor Schmitt was amongst the portraits now lined up. Normally, the international students had to get along as best they could – they had come to an English medium school after all – but given some of the themes of her speech, and its complexity, she had wanted to make sure she was including them.



“Miss Barres speaks Russian,” she gestured to the portrait of a slender ballerina in the centre – she had been more challenging to find, as – although her English was somewhat accented – she had clearly anglicised her name, besides which the number of Russian-speakers was overall far fewer, and “Mr. Le Croix speaks French,” French-speakers were easier, as there were any number of Pureblood paintings who had studied languages, but Mr. Le Croix had the benefit of being a native speaker, and had seemed amicable. She had not included a Chinese-speaking picture owing to the fact that Dorian would not need to be listening to two portraits at once (in reality, he probably needed to listen to none at all, but there were other French-speaking students in the school, and it seemed rude not to include it). “If anyone would like to come closer to hear them, you are welcome to.



“For our bonfire this year, we have looked into traditions surrounding fire. Many cultures use fire in celebrations and in ceremonies. First and foremost, fire drives out the dark. In some cases, this is literal. Where winters are cold and dark, fire is often celebrated as the force that will drive out the cold and bring light in the new year. In Fukoka, Japan, the Oniyo ceremony is used to drive away evil spirits, and many other similar traditions exist worldwide. In other places, fire cleanses – it gets rid of the old and allows space for the new. In Hindu practise, fire ceremonies called yajna clear obstacles that would prevent us achieving a spiritual balance.



“We did not want to mimic a ritual that belongs to someone else, but we did want to take the idea of celebrating fire. We have a diverse number of cultures interacting here, making up our own Sonora culture, and that in itself is worth celebrating. We also saw the same ideas recurring again and again in the fire ceremonies of the world – burning away the bad, inviting in the good, cleansing and making offerings.



“It has probably been a difficult year for all of you, at some points,” there were some cases, of course, where they knew that to be true. It felt like it had been a heavy year. But even without that, there were the many cases of every day suffering that made up life in general, and adolescence in particular. “It may not seem like it from where each of you is standing. It may seem like almost everyone around you is so much more certain, so much surer and so much happier than you. However, this time of your lives is filled with uncertainty for all of you, as you discover who you are, where your place is in the world, what your voice and your magic mean to you, and what you want to use them to say and do.



“We hope we can help you with those problems. Not with the kind of magic that flashes and transforms the world in an instant, but with the more old-fashioned kinds. Listening. Patience. Love. And we wanted to take our fire tonight as a chance to let go of some of those feelings, some of the things that may have weighed you down. We are going to light the fire at the end of this speech. After that, you will have an hour to mingle, to spend time with your friends and get some food. All good things that help the soul. You will also have the choice of adding something to this box,” she held up a simple looking black wooden box. “Something that has weighed you down, something you’re afraid of – something you would rather was off your mind. After an hour, we will be pouring those parchments onto the fire. The smoke has been enchanted to spell out what is written on the papers. You can watch your fears, and the things you’ve been holding onto, drift up and break apart as the smoke dissipates. And maybe that will leave you feeling a little lighter. Try to imagine what you would say if a friend came to you with the same problem." The technique was page one of the psychology textbook, but it had stayed that way for a long time for good reason. "We often find it easier to be kind to others than to ourselves, and to see solutions as meaningful if we were giving rather than hearing them.



“Some practicalities. Firstly, what you write will be visible to others in the smoke. Participating is a choice – you do not have to,” these two points had been made already but were worth reiterating. “You do not have to admit who you are in what you write. If there are any things, such as your use of English or your spelling, that would give you away, and if you would like corrected, please note it on your paper. The staff will read the papers before they go into the fire, in order to check for anything inappropriate,” she stated. Sonora students were, on the whole, well behaved, but they were teenagers. Given the recent contributions to the bathroom décor, she could not rule out the idea of this exercise being used to spread gossip. Or, for the more childish amongst them, to simply try to create giant smoke letters spelling out obscenities. The thought of a litany of swearing drifting into the ether was almost amusing enough, almost a good enough break to the tension that had been pervading the year, that she would have been quite tempted to let it pass.



“Please sign your paper with an ‘x’ using the quill provided. This allows us to trace the papers back to their writers. We will only do this in two circumstances. Firstly, if we think that someone is trying to write hurtful things or start rumours about other people. Secondly, if what you write makes us fear for your or someone else’s safety.



“The box is going to be placed behind a variation of the disillusionment charm. Whilst you will all be able to see the box, your attention will have a tendency to wander away from it. Thus anyone who chooses to place something in the box can do so knowing that their classmates will not really notice them doing so,” she explained. The one complication with this that she had not thought to address was if two people crossed that line at the same time. If they found themselves inside the enchantment together, perhaps it would not be quite so effective.



“If anyone has questions or concerns about this, please come to see me. We hope this activity will be a chance for you to get things off your mind, and to clear your thoughts before the summer.”



OOC – welcome to the fire! I hope the above is clear. If you have questions, you can ask me in chatzy. There will not be a separate post of the papers going on the fire. You may post your character engaging in any of the fire activities - spending time with friends, putting their paper in the box, watching theirs or others’ words in the smoke, or settling down in their tent for the night.



Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies The Bonfire - Let it All Drift Away 26 1 5

Winston Pierce

November 26, 2019 7:51 AM
Winston was mildly irritable about his wedding ceremony not ranking higher than it did, but he supposed that was what wedding planners were for, and why people normally had months to plan instead of one day. What they had come up with was not awful, but it certainly wasn’t how he expected his actual wedding to look. For all of that, they had still claimed fourth place overall, which would have been perfectly respectable if That Teppenpaw hadn’t ranked second.

But that didn’t matter anymore. It was the bonfire and, with luck, just about the last he’ll ever see of both Sonora and certain people who do not even exist. The box of worries to burn away was as good a way to get past it as any. As he wrote “Past disappointments,” he realized it applied to more than just being the first loser in the challenges, but also included losing the prefect position to Victor, and Quidditch being cancelled for the year he stood a chance of becoming the school wide Quidditch Captain.

These things had bothered him, but outside the context of Sonora they were really quite meaningless. He could grow past them, and be very happy in his life as Emerald’s future husband. He dropped the slip of paper into the box and went to find his fiancé. He smiled outwardly just thinking the word. Fiancé.

Yeah, he could get past a lot of old disappointments just thinking of the promises in that word. No burning smoke words necessary. But it would be nice to see them burn to ash anyway.

“Emerald!” he called out when he caught sight of her. He smiled as they got close enough to hold hands, and reached his out, inviting her to take it. “It’s our last midsummer event,” he commented. He himself wasn’t sure if the thought was a welcome relief or bittersweet. He did have good memories of the past ones, many of them spent right here, at Emerald’s side. He decided his answer would depend on hers. “Are you going to miss them?”
1 Winston Pierce Looking forward, not back 370 0 5

Emerald Brockert

November 27, 2019 1:52 AM
So this was it. Emerald was done with her time at Sonora more or less and she wasn't all that sentimental about it either. She had a lot to look forward to, mostly marrying Winston. She wasn't looking forward to having babies any time soon, as she'd had enough of them growing up, and besides child birth was painful. Nobody looked forward to that. Not even Ruby who adored babies.

Of course, Emerald was going to have children some day but right now she just wasn't ready. When the time came, they'd have a small, well spaced out family. Not six or more, every two years. She really hoped she had a boy quickly when the time came but even so she and Winston were a good deal more sensible than her parents.

The other thing she was looking forward to was getting away from Topaz. Whereas her other sisters and Allegra could get away from the younger Aladren when at school, Emerald had the misfortune of being in the same house as her.Of course, she was the one who tended to fight back and it was better that it was her than the others. As it was, the soon to be alumna was a bit worried for Ruby. Usually Topaz preferred terrorizing Sapphire and Allegra-and to a lesser degree Jasper and Amethyst -but the Teppenpaw had beaten her at the Challenges and while the rest of them were going to be subject to gloating, Emerald sort of feared for Ruby's safety. And Ruby was too sweet and kind to fight back.

Thinking about this brought her back to the graffiti she'd seen on the bathroom wall. It could have been about any of them or Tatiana Vorontsov. Generally speaking, it wasn't very...accurate. Acquiring might have pointed to her and Winston or the Pecari but neither she nor Tatiana was passive. Nor was Topaz. Topaz only thought it was about her because she was incredibly self-centered and looking for an excuse to torture her roommate. Sapphire was more passive but she wasn't being "acquired" yet. Ruby wasn't passive , she was good but maybe someone else knew Dean McLachlan and had a crush on him and was annoyed he liked Ruby instead.

Also, it wasn't something that was very insulting. There were so many better words one could use to insult someone. The intent behind it was worse than what was said but if it was about her, she really didn't care now. Aside from Winston and possibly a few others who wouldn't do such a thing-some of whom because they were male and couldn't enter the girls bathroom-Emerald wasn't going to see these people anyway and besides, she couldn't picture any of her classmates doing such a thing. Even Kir McLeod who didn't get on with Winston would probably not do that and even if he would, he would attack Winston rather than her. Plus, he was male, no matter what Uncle Eustace would think of him.

After Grandfather announced the House Cup, Professor Skies began talking about rituals surrounding fire and cleansing and mentioned they had the option to write things down and release them. Emerald really had nothing to share. Her life was good minus having too many siblings and one of them being Topaz. Still, she had no real secrets she needed to release and make her feel better.

And speaking of her good life, here was her fiance now. Emerald smiled and took his hand. She considered his question. "Maybe somewhat. They are generally fun but I'm really looking forward to our future."
11 Emerald Brockert Me too 358 0 5

Winston Pierce

November 27, 2019 7:24 AM
Winston smiled as her hand moved into his and he enclosed her fingers in a gentle squeeze of greeting and affection. It was too public here for a full-on affectionate hug to be proper, so the hand squeeze was going to have to suffice.

As they were engaged, he was allowed to stand closer than he would otherwise be permitted to, and he took advantage of that. Her answer to his question was accurate to his own opinion as well, and he smiled again at how well they understood each other. “I agree on all points. We can make our own midsummer celebrations in the future. You were always the best part of them anyway.” And that was horrendously corny. He knew it was horrendously corny as soon as the words left his mouth, and he winced a little, but they were to be married soon, so maybe she would forgive him and take them as the compliment he’d meant them as.

“Though, I expect our actual engagement party will be the first celebration on our agenda, followed by our real wedding.” As they had just finished planning faux versions of those parties not all that long ago, he felt the need to clarify he meant the real things now. “Do you have any thoughts on our timeframe? Was there anything you wanted to happen before we are wed?” Some couples waited until after their college schooling was complete, and while Winston did intend to further his education, he did not feel it necessarily precluded the possibility of being married before graduation. “Did you want to go to college at all or take some classes in art or literature or something else you enjoy?” He did not expect her to work, but if she wanted to learn for the sake of learning- she was an Aladren, after all- he did not intend to stand in the way of that.
1 Winston Pierce Glad we agree 370 0 5

Emerald Brockert

November 29, 2019 10:27 AM
Emerald smiled. Contrary to what was probably popular belief, she was not immune to affection, either giving it or appreciating it when she received it. She was simply a more reserved person than some. In some ways, Emerald felt she and Winston had this in common. He obviously had a kinder gentler side that he showed those he was fond of while showing the world a veneer of propriety and dignified masculinity. He was not the openly sensitive sort that Owen was but neither was he the, well, a boorish chauvinist without a kind bone in his body like Uncle Eustace. Of course, most men surely fell on a spectrum between the two.

"I'm sure we can work something out." She replied. Whether that meant some sort of ball for the members of society to attend or something more private and personal, Emerald wasn't sure. Part of her rather hoped for the latter but she knew she was going to have to throw parties sometimes. That was just part of the territory.

And speaking of which. "Well, I'd definitely like more than a day to plan the engagement party." Emerald joked. "And with the wedding itself, my cousin has been engaged to his fiance for a long time so I feel we should let them go first and not...steal their thunder more or less. I mean, I'd hate to take away from their nuptials." She went on. "I don't feel we need to finish school first like they did but I would like to take some college classes. Nothing in particular, just whatever looks interesting. "


Emerald thought for a moment. "And for our real wedding....I don't want Topaz anywhere near the planning."
11 Emerald Brockert Agreeing is a good way to start a future together 358 0 5