Headmaster Brockert

December 30, 2017 5:12 PM
Today was the Midsummer Event. This year they were having the bonfire and...well, that was about the extent of it. The festivities this year more or less included a barbecue-though there was food there for any vegetarians amongst them , including barbecued tofu which sounded quite distgusting, along with the gluten-free and allergy crowd, if there were any students falling into those categories-and some circus performers for entertainment. The choir and the orchestra would also perform and then the students would be camping out in tents and generally hanging out around the fire, roasting s'mores.

So it wasn't the most organized event ever. But then, it was bloody hard to come up with ways to make every event different each time. As it was, Mortimer didn't know why they couldn't repeat the way something was done if all the students who'd done it the first time around had graduated. It would still be new to the current batch.

At least next year was just the Ball. As much as Mortimer did not enjoy them, he had to admit it was nice that they didn't have to come up with a way to make them different every time.

Now the students were gathered out on the Pitch. He placed the Sonorus Charm on himself and spoke. "Welcome to the Bonfire. Have a good time." There were no announcements to make so Mortimer stepped down and got in line for the barbecue. It wasn't steak but admittedly, he would enjoy it.

OOC- Please do not cause any serious incidents with the fire as the staff will be watching to prevent such things. Tents are any number you want with a minimum of two. Have fun!
Subthreads:
11 Headmaster Brockert Bonfire! 6 Headmaster Brockert 1 5

Dorian Montoir

January 13, 2018 12:17 PM
Dorian was rather looking forward to the fire. It sounded like quite a lot of fun, and they got to camp out and share tents with people who weren’t their room-mates - though he had no objections to including his, as Vlad was very nice, but he was excited about the possibility of sharing with Jehan. He was trying to focus on that and not the fact that it hailed the start of a long summer of separation. He was looking forward to seeing his parents and his sister again, but he was not looking forward to sharing a roof with his brother and losing his best-friend.

Still, tonight was not the time to dwell on that. Tonight was a night of celebration. He had dug through the poetry books in the library until he’d found something suitable for the occasion.

Most charming bluebell flames that fall from wands,
With gentle warmth that widely doth appeal,
Might warm my hands but leaves my spirit cold,
Played like a toy; so safe, so tame, unreal.

But not to fiendfyre's excess do I tend,
The raging, thrashing chaos that can sprout
And spread like lovers' quarrels, far too hot
'Til all's consumed and ev'rything burnt out

Just take the time to build a real fire.
It can be worth the risk of getting burnt
And spending time to keep the spark alive.
For anything worth having must be earnt.

Too placid or too fervent, you're undone,
But a steady burning fire makes a home.


He didn’t fully understand the poem, but it was very demonstrably and clearly about fire, and he was looking forward to getting Jehan’s help in deciphering some of the phrases where he felt he was losing the meaning. He had taken care to copy it out exactly, so that he could furiously annotate a copy, but had also checked out the original book just in case he’d made any mistakes in his copy.

He had parted from Jehan earlier in the day with a promise of ‘see you at the fire,’ and only when he got there did he realise that this wasn’t going to be quite as easy as he’d anticipated. Sonora seemed like a small school, but when all of it was squashed into a small area of the pitch, with added circus performers, and when you were one of the smallest people there, and were looking for another of the smallest it actually got decidedly tricky. Dorian decided that being quite literally at the bonfire was the best way to try to help Jehan find him, so moved over to stand next to it… Although he hadn’t meant that, he had just meant at the event of the fire… And now, doing this, he was technically beside the fire instead. But at least if one of them stayed still, the other one might find them more easily. Unless Jehan had thought the same thing, of course… He would give him ten minutes before he allowed that worry to take over, he decided.

He was planning to keep an eye out, but he couldn’t help but glance admiringly at the fire as well. At the flames as they…. vacillé. Scintillé. Sauté He frowned, realising how deeply he lacked the right vocabulary to describe this. The only word similar enough that he knew it in English was dansé. There was ‘jump’ for ‘sauté’ but it was more than that… It was a big jump. A magnificent jump. He pulled a notebook and quill from his satchel, which also contained the poetry book from the library, his copy of it, and the things he’d need for the night. He began scribbling down the words as they occurred to him, hoping Jehan would be able to help him find English equivalents, or at least give him some suitable English fire vocabulary. He might not know the exact words. As someone’s shadow fell across his page, he reflectively snapped the book shut, glancing up to see who had interrupted him.
13 Dorian Montoir Waiting for poetry 1401 Dorian Montoir 0 5

Tatiana Vorontsova

January 18, 2018 8:53 PM
Midsummer and Bonfire were new words for Tatiana, but she recognized parts of them – particularly summer, and mid, that was the first part of the word middle; noticing these little things was much of what made English even marginally comprehensible when people actually spoke it outside a book – and recognized the occasion pretty well. It was like Ivan Kupala, St. John’s Day. In Petersburg, they would have the festival of the White Nights, which Mama always talked about and which Tatiana longed to attend someday, and at home, there would, as now, be a fire.

Arriving in many fewer jewels than usual, however – just her diamond studs in her ears – and a light dress, she quickly concluded that this was about where the similarities were going to end. There was no water, beyond the quantities and presentations that could be drunk, and no flowers. At home, everyone would wear flowers in their hair, and older girls would use theirs to tell their fortunes in flowing water. Bathing in such was encouraged as well, either in light clothes (such as the dress Tatiana was wearing) or nothing at all. None of that was in evidence, nor couples trying to sneak off into the woods, not least because they weren’t any woods, just the stands. There was at least music – these people weren’t total barbarians, then, or very dull and sad – and some fire-dancers, which was some consolation, but the overall effect was still a bit…foreign.

Trying to focus on the bits that were not peculiar and disappointing, and ignoring how nobody was jumping over the fire, she wandered around smiling at people and wishing them a happy Midsummer in English until she saw one she knew. Her shadow preceded her to Dorian, though, and he snapped his book – presumably his English word-book – closed all of a sudden, which made Tatiana grin at him when he looked at her.

“You with secrets?” she joked, pointing to the book.
16 Tatiana Vorontsova Firebird of old, give us your apples of gold. 1396 Tatiana Vorontsova 0 5

Dorian

January 19, 2018 6:20 AM
Ah. It was Tatya. Dorian had been ready to squirrel the book away into his pocket, far too used to his things being snatched by his brother for a game of keep-away. He had not had any such experiences at Sonora but he was wary of being in grabbing range of anyone older than him. But it was Tatya - his Tatya - and he relaxed.

"Oh yes, very big secret," he nodded seriously. Leaning in with an air of confidentiality he stage whispered, "I cannot speak the English good," his accent exaggerated and his grammar deliberately off. "Please, not tell anyone."

“I write down the fire words. The light… the movement. All very exact words, and I do not know,” he explained, holding the page out to her. His serious air had quickly melted into a broad grin. It felt good to be able to joke around. He felt a surge of affection for Tatya, at having a friend who understood how it felt to struggle to find your words. He wanted to reach out and twirl her around in a twirl that said 'I am so happy to be here with you. I am so happy that we had this year together.' He settled for an arm across her shoulders instead, giving her a squeeze. Sometimes it was hard to know the rules about touching. You weren't supposed to touch girls because it was inappropriate - indelicate. You weren't supposed to touch boys because that was inappropriate in a whole other set of ways - that was chochotte. Luckily, his own group of friends seemed just as tactile as he was, although it sometimes felt like they had to keep it out of sight of other people. Hopefully Tatya’s reputation wouldn’t be ruined by a simple hug. She’d embraced him in a hall full of people afterall. And she didn’t have any older brothers looming about the place to disapprove… Perhaps it would be more complicated as they got older but for now it seemed safe. He was so happy and so comfortable with the people around him, and his heart felt so grateful and so light.

"Ma chère Tatya," he smiled. Chère really was the perfect word for her, because he imagined that keeping her happy definitely would be. "You have extra nickname for when I am even more happy to see you?" he asked. He knew there were several thousand variations of her name but he was never sure about the various rules or connotations for using them - whether some were just for family. He didn’t want to overstep any boundaries. Luckily, he had two other languages at his disposal if there wasn’t anything he could use, but he liked trying to use Russian with her, and making her feel at home.

OOC - chère means ‘dear’ but has the same double meaning as in English, also meaning expensive.
13 Dorian I have no real need for gold, for I have a friend to hold 1401 Dorian 0 5

Tatiana

January 22, 2018 5:08 PM
Tatiana leaned forward to hear as Dorian whispered about his great ‘secret.’ Upon the revelation, she stood back, covering her mouth with her hand in mock surprise.

“Never tell,” she said, just as seriously. “Our secret.”

She looked politely over the page of words, though the French was in places beyond hers (wasn’t ‘sauté’ something one did to food? Did Dorian want to cook on the bonfire?) and put an arm around him in turn as she did. It had seemed odd, being familiar with people here, earlier in the year, but at home, she was so used to walking around holding hands with Katya when she wasn’t hair-pulling with Katya or hugging Papa that she was now pleased she and Dorian were not so formal together now.

“We have many words, too, po-russkii,” she told him. “This – maybe ogon’, maybe pozhar, not kamin. I think plamya best.” Plamya had the sense of ‘blaze,’ where kamin was a more controlled fire, like in a fireplace. Ogon’ and pozhar were less specific.

Tatiana thought for a moment about her other names and their contexts – she had never really had friends outside the family before coming here, as Mama thought she and her sisters and brothers should be able to entertain themselves with the occasional assistance from her cousins. “You can say Tanushka,” she decided finally. Tatianochka was what Papa called her, when he didn’t call her malen’kii kolibri or umnaya doch’, it was very much a pet name, and only Mama and Grishka ever really called her ‘Tanya.’ Besides, ‘Tanya’ in particular was no more intimate than ‘Tatya.’ “French, Chinese – they really have no names like this?”

OOC: Tatiana’s Russian fire words courtesy of Google Translate. Malen’kii kolibri means ‘little hummingbird’ and umnaya doch’ means ‘clever daughter.’
16 Tatiana Having both makes one happy and bold. 1396 Tatiana 0 5

Dorian

January 25, 2018 9:10 PM
Dorian smiled as Tatya agreed to keep his secret. She hugged him back, which reassured him both in the sense that his hug was clearly not unwelcome, and also because it was always nice to be held. He wasn't sure whether she was talking about words for fire, or words for describing what the fire did, but he decided to let them just wash over him for now. He liked hearing her speak Russian even when he didn't understand, because it was just... right. She was being herself, and happy and comfortable, and that was reassuring because the world was a better place when people were able to be comfortable in their own skins. Which he was, here, with all of his friends.

“I think I like Sonora,” he decided. “Even they speak the wrong language and make my head hurt sometime. It have very good people. Have you, Tanushka, have Jehan...” he dropped his arm from Tatya, so he could turn from the fire, and keep an eye out. “I am supposed to meet him...” he explained, scanning the crowd.

“Hmm. We have some small names,” he explained, putting his book away, as he thought he might not need it for a while, “But sometimes it depend on the name. Some name have many ways of being shorter, but some it is more hard to make the nickname with. We all are calling Émilie 'Émi' very often, but no one is calling me 'Dori' – it not work, I not know why,” he forestalled any questioning from Tatya. “Chinese, we always have house name – the small affectionate way that our parents call us, but only one... Then, of course, when we visit there we use our Chinese name, but this is completely different name, not nickname. My parents will use more describing words or the sweet words like chèr... chèrie, mon lapinou... Before, I think I have a lot of names but then I meet you,” he grinned. “Maybe I need- JEHAN!” he began, deciding that he would have to start using more nicknames for all of them in order to properly demonstrate to Tatya the full rich affection of his home languages, but cutting himself off as he saw his best friend. Although Jehan was not alone. There was not one but two curly heads making their way towards them, as he seemed to have picked up Vlad along the way. It seemed slightly odd to see them together in a situation which he hadn't initiated, as he was usually the link between them (and when Jehan had been meant to be coming to meet him) but they would all be sharing a tent later anyway, and so he quickly brushed this aside in favour of just being happy at having almost everyone he loved (and/or liked – Vlad had been very gallant in saving him from the balloons without even laughing but he wasn't as close to him as he was to Tanushka and Jehan) in the same place at the same time.

Dorian quickly closed the remaining few paces between them, launching himself at Jehan with none of the hesitation or delicacy with which he'd hugged Tatya. He flung both arms round Jehan's skinny shoulders, and he squeezed him firmly, his nose squashing into Jehan's face close to his ear.

“Hey mec,” he murmured happily.

“Privet, Vladya” he greeted Vlad. He knew that in spite of his Russian name and family, Vlad didn't speak much, but Tatya seemed to think he needed all the encouragement possible in this regard, and it was a toss up between Russian and English, and being together with this many of them made it feel like a Club of Tongues meeting, which probably meant having as many languages flying about the place as possible. He put an arm around Vlad, giving him a quick side hug because meeting Vlad for about five minutes was long enough for anyone to get the fact that he was a huggy person too.

“I wait for you,” he explained, returning his attention to Jehan and leading them to the fire's edge and to Tatya. “I think it easier to find if one of us stays in the same place. But it is good you do not think the same,” he laughed. “And then while I am waiting, Tatya finds me, and you finded Vlad?” he added, slightly questioningly. “And now we can have un bonne fire,” he added with a wink, pretty sure Jehan's levels of French were up to getting that pun without explaining. They would have fire words, and fire poems, and roast marshmallows... But he found that all of that could wait. He didn't want to start peppering Jehan with questions, or filling his brain up. He just wanted to enjoy them all being here. He wanted to pull all of them into a huge hug and not have to let go again. He settled for draping an arm across Jehan's shoulders.

“I am just telling Tatya... Sonora is so nice. I have so nice friends,” he made a gesture that encompassed all of them and beyond, “Everything here... it is good.”

OOC 'mec' is literally 'guy' but is an affectionate/informal way to greet a good friend. I would assume it's either Tatya or Jehan's turn, as it was in each half of this thread before it merged, though I suspect there won't be too much more on this either way.
13 Dorian But I would not choose to be without- JEEEEEHAAAAAN 1401 Dorian 0 5