Mortimer Brockert

December 06, 2019 1:29 PM
Another year was beginning and it was time for another Opening Feast. 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 receieved 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 Connor Priory and Ivy Brockert please come up and get your Head Student badges." He continued. "In addition I'd like to call up Heinrich Hexenmeister, Nathaniel Mordue, Caitlin Pierce and Michael DiCaprio to receive their prefect badges. Congratulations." Mortimer really really hoped that Mr. Tate's mother and Uncle Clifford did not give him a hard time about the Pecari not getting prefect. And that Mr. Mordue was over his mental breakdown.

Once the new prefects and Head Students had returned to their tables, Mortimer continued, "Our Midsummer even this year will be a ball. Prefects and Head Students will be required to lead it." This might take away from the joy and accomplishment some felt at receiving their badges, but he thought that he'd give them fair warning.

"Now we will sing the school song." Or they would, rather. Lyric sheets were passed around and the song began.


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.


That done, he dug into his steak and bourbon.
Subthreads:

Aladren

Teppenpaw

Crotalus

Pecari
11 Mortimer Brockert Opening Feast 6 1 5

Dorian Montoir

December 13, 2019 9:00 PM
Dorian had not had his usual pre-feast catch up with Professor Brooding, in spite of having an awful lot to tell. The night before returning to school had not been a particularly restful one, and he had barely stayed awake on the wagon, only the creeping sensation of other people watching him, and it not being a safe and private place keeping him from nodding off. On arrival, he had headed straight up to Teppenpaw and crashed out on his bed, napping solidly until the alarm he’d set to make sure he got himself put together in time for the feast.

He had showered and dressed, wondering whether he’d slept too long, or whether it was a different feeling weighing him down as he dragged himself through the motions getting ready to go downstairs. The first thing to really register, other than the press of people around him – people he felt vaguely disconnected from – was the sight of Professor Brooding. That snapped him out of his funk slightly. He managed to mouth ‘your hair’ at her, looking vaguely stunned, before he had to pay attention to where he was going again, and by the time he looked around again, she was otherwise occupied. He settled into his seat, still looking whatever it was he was right now… tired, out of it, distracted… He felt bad at not being more cheerful at returning to school. Sometimes, he had come back a little dented and bruised, had needed the reassurance of his friends to shed off the knocks of the summer, but this was different. He almost wished he wasn’t here. How could he want to be when his heart was still in Canada?

He took a seat at the Teppenpaw table, mired in misery. It was going to be literal months until he saw his boyfriend again. How was he supposed to cope? Summer had been a happy, hazy bubble of make-out sessions and sweet words. It really hadn’t been that hard to get time together. As Jean-Loup had said, no one felt the need to chaperone two boys. Dorian’s parents were more than happy for him to have made a friend back home and to hang out with him. Jean-Loup had also passed his apparition test shortly after his birthday. As he was a friend, and on the approved list of people who could appear inside the Montoir house, that didn’t limit their visits to the times their parents knew about. A boyfriend who could appear at will in your bedroom, and cast a few privacy charms to mask any noise you might be making was all kinds of convenient. Hence the under-rested state he’d arrived at school in.

In short, summer had been all the things he wanted his life to be. And now he had to put that on pause, and come back here, and he felt the strange crushing weight of putting on a show that he usually associated with being back home. He planned to be more open with his friends, but there still felt like limits to how much he could say in general, and he was, frankly, getting sick of them. Still, he had someone else to protect now as well… Jean-Loup had agreed that Dorian could talk to his closest friends about them, but it wasn’t like ‘I have a boyfriend’ was about to be open, public information. And Dorian was fine with that, it was where he was at too, but he resented the world for pushing that onto them.

The announcement of the head students broke through his melancholy, as he was genuinely delighted for Ivy. Okay, admittedly, he might not have cared especially either way, but Vlad was so obviously happy and that made him happy too. He didn’t know Ivy particularly well, but they were housemates, and he’d been to her literal home house a few times as well. Of his friends’ older siblings, she was probably the one who scared him the least. It probably helped that she was both a girl and a Teppenpaw. She did not look like she could break his legs, like Grisha. He had not secretly fantasised about making out with her brother, like he had with Victor’s. So, as well as her being a generally less scary person, he had fewer actual reasons to be scared of her. He smiled and clapped, throwing a grin over at Vlad for his bubbling enthusiasm.
And then it all came back down with a bump as the headmaster mentioned the ball. His face visibly fell for a moment. How had he forgotten about that? Dorian suppressed a sigh, trying not to imagine dancing with Jean-Loup. It was impossible for several reasons. He focussed on the very practical ‘he does not attend school here and outside dates are not allowed’ element, as that was the same for everyone, and not the myriad unfair reasons why it was different and not allowed for specifically them. He supposed that Tatya would partner him for a dance if needed, but it wasn’t what he wanted… He was also alarmingly aware of how his behaviour to Tatya was being misread by others, following the summer. He had written to her about that. Her reply had assured him that ‘Grisha is an idiot’ which meant she definitely had no intentions to present them as a couple to her family, but he wasn’t sure whether it meant Grisha had just been teasing or whether he really thought that. Dorian was not sure he wanted to further any rumours, either way. He wasn’t sure he wanted to pretend to be something he wasn’t. He wasn’t sure Tatya would be an option, if he told her the truth and she hated him…

The food had appeared, and he was sixteen and therefore starving, but it was very limited enthusiasm that he began loading up his plate.
13 Dorian Montoir Is term over yet? 1401 0 5

Joanna Rose-Turner

December 21, 2019 9:26 PM
Entering the banquet hall had given Jo a big rush of adrenaline. The noise of everyone eating and chatting drowned out her own thoughts of doubt and anxiety. The food looked delicious! And the room felt so warm! Clinking glasses, music, and merriment made this whole situation feel a bit more real. Magic was real, and it was apart of her life now.

Only when plunging her badge into the cauldron did everything seem to go quiet. This was a moment she would remember forever, Jo thought. When she lifted out the yellow square, she thought back. The houses had been one of the couple things Jo remembered from her conversations with her parents about Sonora. Each house seemed to have their benefits, but she hadn’t really imagined herself in Teppenpaw. Firstly, she didn’t really like the color yellow, and secondly, how was she ever diplomatic?

She thought back to the times she was given detention, or a grounding, without being able to talk her way out of it. Being able to make friends also seemed to be something a diplomat should be able to do. She did however, believe strongly that she was a caring person, maybe that’s what led to the mistake?

She took a deep breath to calm herself a little, she had just been standing amongst the crowded tables like a weirdo, lost in her thoughts. She quickly looked around for an empty seat. There was a seat open by one kind of sad looking teen who wasn’t talking to anyone. Maybe he felt a little like an outcast like her.

She sat down, immediately filling her plate with a bit of everything. She took her first spoonful. It was as tasty as it looked! After a few more bites, she looked over at the boy next to her. She was a little nervous to talk to a kid much older than her, but maybe he would know what things were like at this school, and in this house.

“Hey” she said very quietly.

That definitely wasn’t loud enough, her dad had always told her she mumbled too much.

“Hey!” she said a little too loudly. Whoops, too late now.

“Um, what’s it like being a Teppenpaw?”
43 Joanna Rose-Turner Mumbler 1478 0 5

Dorian Montoir

December 22, 2019 4:10 AM
The ‘hey’ that came from the seat next to Dorian sounded somewhat loud and he turned abruptly.

“Sorry,” he apologised, assuming the girl must have tried getting his attention multiple times for her to have raised her volume like that. “I was… not concentrating,” he admitted, sure there was a more natural turn of phrase or English idiom that would be appropriate there. Entering his sixth year with English as his day to day language, and having had considerable (if somewhat agrammatical) exposure to it at home prior to starting, he struggled very little. His grammar was almost always accurate these days, and he rarely lacked vocabulary. Sometimes though, the nuance of which words fitted best to a situation, or how to express things in a more casual way still escaped him. On that front, he was somewhat glad he hadn’t totally lost his accent. His sister teased him when he returned home, saying that to her he sounded American, but he knew that to Americans he still had a slightly Francophone lilt, and this was at its strongest after spending the summer back in Québec. At times, being ‘clearly a foreigner’ had its downsides, but he suspected that it also made certain people, especially the type to be sorted into Teppenpaw, more forgiving and understanding of the times when he did not quite sound native. There was, after all, a good reason for that.

“Teppenpaw is very lovely,” he assured her with a smile, “Sonora is all very lovely,” he enthused. He was aware that he maybe wouldn’t have come across as the best ambassador for that five minutes ago, and resolved to try not to sulk in front of the first year. He owed an enormous amount to the school that had shaped him, offered him friends and role-models, and helped turn him into the person he was right now. A person he was surprisingly happy with. He definitely did not want to give an impression at all that this was a place to be unhappy about being. “Teppenpaw is nicknamed ‘the friendly house,’ and this is very true. It is a very comfortable and reassuring place to be. Professor Xavier is very gentle and nice,” he pointed out the Professor at the staff table. “Do you have any questions about the school? I am Dorian, by the way,” he added.
13 Dorian Montoir That's alright 1401 0 5

Joanna Rose-Turner

December 27, 2019 7:30 AM
“Hi Dorian, I’m Jo.”

She stuck her hand out, as if to shake his hand, but thought about how lame that would be and put it down. It was so hard not to be awkward in front of big kids. Full adults were always the easiest to befriend. They were always asking how she was doing at school, and what she thought she wanted to be when she grew up, she never had to think too much about what to say.

Big kids were so much harder. Most never seemed to want to talk to Jo anyway. She couldn’t blame them. She was a dork, through and through. It didn’t make her happy to think about it, but it was the way of the world. Whoever she could find to like her dumb jokes and silly performances would just have to do.

Hearing Dorian’s slight accent made him seem all the more cool to Jo, which kept her a little nervous despite how kind and friendly he seemed. He actually did kind of remind her of her cousin Michael, her nicest cousin, who almost felt like a brother to her.

She hoped she wouldn’t screw this up in anyway.

“No yeah, um, I’ve never been diplomatic, like ever. Do you think I could have been put into the wrong house?”
43 Joanna Rose-Turner A dork through and through 1478 0 5

Dorian Montoir

December 29, 2019 3:04 AM
"Nice to meet you, Jo," he smiled when she introduced herself, noticing that she lifted and then dropped her hand as if she had been about to do something. He didn't read too much into it, nothing personal anyway, having had his own fair share of being awkward and unsure what to do with himself.

"I think not," Dorian assured her, when she asked if she might have been put in the wrong house. "I think you belong where you end up," he supposed that might not be too comforting, seeing as he was essentially saying it could not be a mistake because it was what had happened, although with the sorting potion, he did tend to take that view. As someone who worried a lot over right or wrong decisions, he could understand that there might need to be more to it than that though.

"'Diplomatic' is a big word, and maybe not a skill most of us feel we use often. But it can be something that shows itself in many ways - being the peacemaker of your group, being one who does not snap easily at others... We can all have many small acts of diplomacy without realising it deserves such a fancy name. Or if this still does not sound like you, maybe one of the other house traits - 'friendly, co-operative, interested to develop yourself or others' is why you are here. They can all sound a bit grand when put like that, but that is the nature of writing a house description - it must sound a certain way," he elaborated with a twirl of his hand which suggested 'a certain way' in this case could equate to slightly pretentious. "Each house has many traits, and each trait has many ways of looking at it. After all, there are more than four types of people. It is also okay if you do not yet know why you came here. You can have a fun time working it out," he assured her, "And it does not mean that, in the remaining time, you do not yet belong.

"Have you any other questions about Teppenpaw or the school?" he asked.
13 Dorian Montoir I can relate 1401 0 5

Joanna Rose-Turner

January 03, 2020 11:16 PM
Jo thought Dorian gave a super adult answer, and it made a lot of sense. Of course you couldn’t fit the whole world perfectly into four boxes, so somethings in Teppenpaw would fit her, and others wouldn’t. How she’d have a fun time figuring out which would be which was a bit lost on her, but Dorian’s answer did make her feel a bit better.

What also helped her believe Dorian was that he didn’t seem to talk to her how a lot of other big kids seemed to usually, as if she was still a baby. She thought he could think of her like another big kid maybe, so they could talk better that way. Whatever it was just made her feel a lot more comfortable talking to him than other big kids, and she liked that a lot.

Since she had missed so much of the orientation speech, Jo certainly had a lot of questions, but it felt embarrassing to ask such a cool person like Dorian. He probably wouldn’t think too well of her if he knew she just hadn’t been paying attention when she should have been. Maybe now they could start to become friends.

“Well… I was wondering what people usually do their spare time here. I couldn’t bring my Pokemon game with me here, which is what I’d usually do, and reading gets boring after a little while. What do you usually do for fun?”
43 Joanna Rose-Turner What do you do for fun? 1478 0 5

Dorian Montoir

January 04, 2020 6:19 PM
Dorian wondered whether that was ‘you’ specifically him or ‘you’ as people in general. He had spent a lot of his free time over the last two years mired in the despair of having an unreciprocated crush on his best friend. He would not exactly call that ‘fun’ or recommend it to others. He tried to think back to when he’d been a first year and life had been less complicated. Well, less full of hormones. It had, at the time, still seemed full of other problems, such as whether anyone would like him at all or whether he’d end up being bullied by all the Quidditch players. The answers had turned out to be very much yes and very much no respectively and he wished he could somehow write to past him and let him know that he really was worrying over nothing. Same with himself from a couple of years ago, or even this time last year… He couldn’t, of course, but he hoped he could look after others and make sure they weren’t as worried as he’d been, even if Jo already seemed like a far more confident eleven year old than he’d been. He’d been nervous speaking to his peers. He wasn’t sure he’d had ever talked to a student so much older than himself.

“Personally, I spend time learning languages and reading, but I am… maybe not quite so typical?” he suggested, “There are many things to do. The MARS rooms are fun - maybe you saw them on your school tour? There is one each for music, arts, water and sports,” he summarised, in case she hadn’t managed to stick together the odd name with the rooms, “They are fun, and even if you don’t have a skill in those things, they are good places to just hang out - you can make the music room bring you things to listen to, or the art room look like a gallery.

“I am sorry, but I do not know what this game is,” he offered, unable to offer her the closest match activity-wise without understanding, “But I know there is a game that some people play. I think it is a Muggle game, and they roll dice and talk with each other,” he summarised. He was a frequent enough visitor to the library that he had observed occasional activities of Gary’s group from a distance, but he’d never heard much about it. Parker had mentioned the name once, but it escaped him now. He supposed he could get Jo to ask Gary or Parker, though it was hard to point them out. He glanced around the table, noticing someone closer at hand, “The girl over there, Lyssa, her brother plays, so she can probably explain to you some more about it. She will be on your corridor, and now is a… fourth year?” he added, sounding slightly surprised as he said it.
13 Dorian Montoir Kiss boys and learn Russian 1401 0 5