Warlock Patron - The Mirror
Otherworldly Patron - the Mirror
You have made or created a pact with your reflection, or possibly with some manner of entity or society of which your reflection is merely representative; lore on the Mirror is frustratingly unclear, and the seeming inability of its embodiments (or citizens, or agents, or…) to clarify the matter is a source of ongoing frustration to researcher and warlock alike. Regardless, the power of your pact grants you a constant companion, as well as power over reflections.
Warlocks of the Mirror have a high incidence of being unclear about their pacts. Many don’t remember consciously making one, and often their reflections claim to not remember either. Compared to their driven peers they often come across as lost or adrift in the wider world, willing to use their newfound power to attain their goals but unable to fully set aside the nagging question of what happened, why, and who is benefitting from their status as free agents. More than one suffers from the ongoing belief that they are not the original person and are instead a reflection that traded places with a mortal from the Material Plane who must now serve as the reflection in their stead. Those few that have tried to test this through the use of reflective magics and powerful divinations have left behind accounts that could best be described as…
Interesting.
Mirror Features
Expanded Spell List:
The Mirror lets you choose from an expanded list of spells when you learn a warlock spells. The following spells are added to the warlock spell list for you.
Mirror Expanded Spells
1st - Disguise self, identify
2nd - Alter self, enlarge/reduce
3rd - Clairvoyance, slow
4th - Confusion, phantasmal killer
5th - Mislead, wall of force
Pale Imitation: At 1st level you gain the ability to reflect the techniques and results of magic used near you. When a spell with a level no greater than 1/2 your warlock level (rounded up) and a casting time of 1 action or less is cast by something other than you within 60 feet of you, you can spend your reaction to snare its reflection. You can then cast that spell as an action any time within the next minute, except that you do not expend a spell slot, and its duration is a number of rounds equal to your Charisma modifier (minimum 1) or the spell’s normal duration, whichever is lower. Instantaneous spells remain instantaneous, and you can maintain concentration on a spell that requires concentration for up to a number of rounds equal to your Charisma modifier (minimum 1).
Once you use this feature, you can’t use it again until you finish a short or long rest.
Living Reflection: Starting at 1st level, your reflection is sapient, opinionated, and somewhat free-willed. It has to stay in at least one reflective surface near you (if there are any), and while it does not have to agree with or even like you, it is seemingly bound to help you. You can ask your reflection’s advice to gain advantage on an Intelligence check. Once you gain advantage on an Intelligence check in this way, you can’t do so again until you finish a short or long rest, during which you must be in the presence of a reflective surface at least the size of hand mirror. In addition, you gain advantage on Wisdom (Perception) checks in environments where there is a large reflective surface (such as a floor-length mirror) or many smaller ones (such as a city street full of glass windows).
Breaking Mirror: Starting at 6th level you can draw on your pact with the Mirror to avenge harm against yourself. You can spend your reaction when you would suffer any amount of damage. If the source of that damage is a creature, that creature can rescind the damage; it is not dealt to you and no other effects of the damaging ability occur (such as damage to other creatures in its area of effect or poison). Otherwise, the source suffers damage equal to the amount dealt to you.
Once you use this feature, you can’t use it again until you finish a short or long rest.
Restrain In Silver: Starting at 10th level, you have a subtle but powerful connection to the realms inside of mirrors at all times. As an action, you can dump unwanted sorceries from a creature or object within 30 feet onto its reflection instead. When you make this action, you gain understanding of all spells affecting that creature or object, as if you had identified their nature with an appropriate skill check. Choose any number of those spells with a duration shorter than permanent; they end, just as if they had reached the end of their duration.
You can take this action when you are paralyzed or otherwise unable to take actions, but if you do, you must target yourself with it. You cannot take this action again until you complete a short rest.
Erupt From Silver: Starting at 14th level you can release reflections of magic from the realm inside of mirrors that are as deadly and real as the originals. As an action, you crack open the subtle access you maintain to the realm inside mirrors for 1 minute. During this time, you automatically become aware of and identify all spells cast within 100 feet of you, though this ability gives you no special knowledge of their casters (including their location). Also during this time you can, ss a bonus action, cast any spell that has already been cast this round, without using a spell slot or expending material components. This spell is cast at your highest available spell level unless you choose to cast it at a lower valid level. You can only cast up to 1 spell this way during the duration of this ability.
Once you use this ability, you cannot do so again until you complete a long rest.
Cracks In The World - The Mirror In Your Campaign
“It is not unheard of, in this line of scholarship, for a researcher to act so. Certainly I was surprised when the learned Mister Narrows burned his notes and announced his retirement from the world of academia, and certainly I was let down to now be bereft of such pleasurable and well-paying employment. But...no. The detail that haunts me a-nights is when I fix, in my mind’s eye, the image of him hurling his tomes of planar lore onto the pyre.
Mister Narrows is not right-handed.”
- Journal of Ashlynn Monroe, research assistant (deceased)
Archaic texts that refer to it, infrequent as they are, call it the Plane of Mirrors, or perhaps the Demi-Plane of Mirrors. The warlocks that enter into strange and ill-understood bargains with it (or its denizens, or their own reflections, to name just a few potential candidates holding the other side of a leash they can’t see) often simply call it the Mirror. Adventuring scholars, having learned caution in their speech and writing, circle around the question with ‘the realm inside mirrors’, a description with neither name nor insult.
When you can pin down one of its inhabitants and force them to talk, they call it Silver.
Answers about the realm inside mirrors are elusive. Accounts of travel to it are rare enough - it is not every day one meets a spellcaster who can travel the Astral Plane, and rarer still that you can convince one to go wandering into an unknown plane - and contain such wildly varied information that they are either contradictory or indicate that the realm inside mirrors is vast indeed. If it is a demiplane then logically it should be located inside of the Ethereal Plane, but that can’t be quite right: mirror-magic has been observed to work in the Outer Planes, where the Ethereal does not touch or hold sway. Does it connect to mirrors and reflective surfaces? There’s an argument that says yes and points to the sway of mirrors in spells like scrying and the prevalence of magical reflective surfaces. More cynical scholars point out that the average humanoid eyeball is reflective and express doubt that the endless hordes of the living carry planar portals wedged into their skulls.
What is known is that the realm inside mirrors is inhabited. These inhabitants sometimes have traffic with the Prime Material Plane - with increasing frequency, in the form of being bound up in pacts with warlocks. What, precisely, they get out of these relationships is not always clear. Certainly a few steal the lives of Material denizens, replacing them and generally attempting to destroy all evidence that they are not the original. These are the citizens of Silver who get caught. Others simply slip away, becoming the seeming twin of an ‘original’ who now no longer appears in reflective surfaces.
Magic travels into and out of Silver very easily. Spells cast in places that have access to the realm inside mirrors seemingly ‘echo’ there, where mirror-warlocks - and its natives - can take advantage of them. They conform to the local rules of magic - using the Weave or Shadow Weave on Toril, being subject to antimagic fields or altered by planar traits, and the like - even when re-cast or reflected, but their users do display odd traits. They might speak verbal components in someone else’s voice, perform somatic components ‘backwards’ or in different orders; their spellcasting might display hallmarks of teachers they never had, or cultures to which they do not belong. Raw mirror-magic often manifests as cracks, rents in reality through which a terrible light shines. Little is written about this light; journal entries that mention it tend to be followed by suicide notes, though for all of that its appearances are rarely associated with great acts of devastation or catastrophe. Often it is little more, or less, than that someone pushed a student of Silver too far.
If you are a player looking to create a warlock whose patron is the Mirror, consider the following questions:
What Do You Remember? Many warlocks of the Mirror have no idea how they forged their pact, and quite a few are fuzzy even on the details. What do you know? Why were you seeking magical power? Do you still want to accomplish that goal now that you have it?
Do You Get On With Your Reflection? Like it or not - and quite a few warlocks don’t like it at all - you now have a permanent companion in the form of your own reflection. What is that relationship like? Why? Would you trade places with your reflection if you could? How would you react to them asking for that same favor?
Do You Have Any Theories? Are you invested in the mystery of Silver? Do you wonder at why mirrors are such expensive and sought-after status symbols, and try to draw connections to the battered tools adventurers learn to obsessively use? Do you wonder at why it seems the books you surely learned your pact from are now gone, or have you decided you’d rather not know? How much do you talk about what you think your patron is?
If you are a dungeon master looking to incorporate the Mirror into your campaign’s story, you have some decisions to make. Here’s some things to consider:
What Is The Mirror? Older editions of Dungeons & Dragons have a Plane of Mirrors, which may have even been the retreat of the original exemplars of neutrality whose names have passed into obscurity. Is Silver that plane, changed with the times? Is it perhaps a demiplane on the edge of the Plane of Shadow, where the light of the Positive Energy Plane streaks through like water on the side of a pitcher, picking up some of Shadow’s nature on the way? Could it be something that is not real, yet yearns to be? Or is Silver the wrong way of thinking about it entirely, and the mirrors connect to something stranger; a house with no walls that contains leaking Glory, perhaps, or a prison-world left over from the last cycle of creation that houses souls that no longer remember how to have bodies?
Warped Reflections. No mirror reflects the world as it truly, perfectly is. When using themes of mirrors and reflections in your campaigns, think about how they can be wrong. Items like the mirror of opposition provide one example, reflecting an equal and opposite version of a person, but there are other ways to make something wrong. The town drunk goes clean overnight; he was a demon in his cups, quick with his fists, and now it’s like he’d never touched a bottle. A book written backwards is held up to a mirror, but the text in the reflection is in another language entirely. The warlock’s hand mirror shows her with subtly different features - later, she realizes they’re similar to the woman her father almost married, but never did. Find ways to emphasize, then distort, the reflections in your game.
What Are The Stakes? Silver does not have to be a grand mystery, though it could be. It can be as small as one escaped denizen who won’t go back, and it could be as large as an imminent shift in the nature of this Prime Material Plane. Once you set your stakes, stick to them. One advantage to starting with smaller stakes is that if your players develop an interest in the realm inside mirrors, you can always tell a new story about it; consider starting small if you want to introduce this concept to your campaign.
I hope you enjoyed this small addition to your game! Comments and critique are welcome.
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President’s List Spring 2017
NATCHITOCHES – Five hundred and seventy-three students were named to the Spring 2017 President’s List at Northwestern State University. Students on the list earned a grade point average of 4.0. Those named to the President’s List listed by hometown are as follows.
Abbeville – Jabain August, Kayla Marceaux;
Abita Springs – Harold Simmons;
Alexandria – Lewis Davis, Dalan Dorsey, Teresa Foshee, William Griffin, Martha Hopewell, Jaliyah Jasper, Micaelee Jeansonne, Spencer Jones, Luke Laborde, Rachel Lavergne, Allyson McCowan, Ashley Mitchell, Katherine Mitchell, Wade Morris, Benjamin Murphy, Emilye Netherland, Ryan Ware, Eric Weinzettle, Elaina Williams;
Alto, Texas – Cody Birdwell;
Anacoco – Kristen Eusay, Benjamin Jackson, Haley Jett, Kayli O’Toole, Cassandra Osborne, Lindsay Plummer;
Athens – Alejandra Monjardin;
Baldwin – Gerianna Lyons;
Ball – Sarah Morgan, Payton Pilgrim, Megan Wakefield;
Barksdale AFB – Heather McGurn, Tova Volcheck;
Basile – Betsi Smith;
Bastrop – Emily Carson, Katie Stanley;
Baton Rouge – Ramya Koritala, Stephanie Leger, Madalyn Mullins, Dakota Newman, Markeisha Patterson, Colleen Reese, Maria Rome;
Bayside, Nova Scotia, Canada – April Trowbridge;
Baytown, Texas – Abby Gardea;
Beaumont, Texas – Dustin Burns;
Belgorod, Russia – Elizaveta Gerasimova
Belle Chasse – Alexandria Hughes, Megan Jenkins;
Belmont – Cade Cramer;
Benton – Nicholas Clay, Elizabeth Jones, Jessica O’Neal, Maegan Ross, Jenna Smith;
Bossier City – Shelby Ansley, Sara Blankenship, Alexander Butler, Austin Coffey, Amanda Davis, Taylor Freeman, Joshua Greer, Ashlynn Henderson, Oai Lee Huynh, Nourain Jamhour, Tiffany Johnson, Emily Juarez, Chelsea Laverdiere, Mary Katheryn Lummus, Hang Lian, Myra Martinez, Alexa McKnight, Madison Morris, Yadira Ocanas, Shelby Peebles, Taylor Powell, Jerdine Robinson, Madison Rowland, Kevin Smithey, James Taylor, Kellie Toms, Gennadiy Vavrenyuk, Jordan Wilcox;
Boyce – Curtis Fennell, Carlie Gauthier, Hannah Miller, Lachan Misner;
Breaux Bridge – Shayla James;
Broussard – Amber Potier, Amelia Soileau;
Buda, Texas – Kathryn Wristen;
Bunkie – Emily Arnaud;
Burleson, Texas – Addison Pellegrino, Donato Susca;
Bush – Ashleigh Ranatza;
Campti – Bridget DaGama, Floyd Turner;
Cartagena, Colombia – Jorge Ojeda Munoz, Paula Martinez Marrugo;
Catagena Bolivar, Colombia – Aura Hernandez Canedo;
Centreville, Miss. – Taylor Priest;
Cheneyville – Katelyn Baronne;
Chopin – Daisy Delrie, Mary Guimaraes;
Church Point – Kristian Burrow, Jennifer Thibodeaux;
Citrus Springs, Florida – Megan McDonald;
Colfax – Angela McCann, Katie Woodard;
Converse – Heather Bryson, Ashley Forgues Brock, Wade Hicks, Elaina Richardson, Triston Waldon;
Cottonport – Christopher Juneau;
Coushatta – Sydney Anderson, Caroline Doughty, Jon Hester, Baley McAlexander, Shalondria Rainey, Jacob Shaver, Macie Wood;
Covington – Kelsey Cassidy, Andrea Mier, Kenneth Sears, Crystal Tucker;
Creole – Brooklyn Frerks;
Cut Off – Zachary Breaux;
Cypress, Texas – Alexis Warren, Mercedes Wiles;
DeRidder – Brandy Bryant, Sara Bishop, Lauren Callis, Karli Chambers, Jennifer Jarell-Bell; John Pearce, Kristina Pfantz, Claudia Rouleau, Jacqueline Rushford;
Delhi – Shelly Godard;
Denham Springs – Tiffany Duval, Lyndsey Girlinghouse, Stacy McClendon, Amy Thomas;
Des Allemands – Brooke Verda;
Desoto, Texas – Janet Jackson;
Destrehan – Hannah Boquet, Patrick Juneau, Shannon Walsh, Stephanie Webre;
Deville – Aaron Belgard, Dana Davis, Candice Dryden, Kenedy Lampert, Alyssa Roberts;
Dodson – Josie Greer;
Duncanville, Texas – Fernando Zuniga;
Duson – Desmond Prejean;
East Windsor, N.J. – Andreia Martins;
El-Rehab, Cairo, Egypt – Arwa Hezzah;
Endicott, N.Y. – Tonya Rackett;
Eros – Alecia Smith;
Eunice – Victoria Hebert, Victoria McGee;
Ferriday – Elizabeth Guerrero, Deyon White;
Florence, Miss. – Stephanie Bailey;
Florien – Cullen Hopkins, Caroline Matthews, Megan Wilmore;
Forest – David Stephens;
Forest Hill – Leslie Chavez, Charli Stanley;
Forney, Texas – Jayden Wheeler;
Fort Polk – Jamie Curtis, Robyn Foxworth, Shaunda Gordon, Kelsey Hart, Kenisha Smith, Sandra Valdez;
Franklin – Mariah Pellerin;
French Settlement – Tommie Espy;
Frierson – Brittany Furrow;
Garland, Texas – Alec Horton;
Geismar – Emilee Hawkins;
Georgetown – Brittany Farris;
Glen Burnie, Md. – Kathern Speicher;
Goldana – MacKenzie Johnson, Harley Godwin;
Gonzales – Katelyn Marchand, Molly Moran;
Grand Cane – Emily Miller;
Gray -- Tevyn Johnson;
Grayson -- Alicia Foy;
Greer, S.C. – Carola Colon;
Gretna – Brandi Bealer;
Hallsville, Texas – Emma Hawthorne;
Hammond – Blaike Peters;
Harleton, Texas – Madalyn Evers;
Hartselle, Ala. – Teresa Smith;
Harvey – Taylor Bourgeois, Jessica Love, Jessica Rousset;
Hassik – Vasquez Narvaez;
Haughton – Jordge Cardenas Nunez, Michelle Feaster, Connor Geer, Aly Hesson, Alexis Hoeltje, Lucas Moncla, Jamie Phillips, Logan Turner, Bridgette Wilson, Hunter Woods;
Heath, Texas – Megan Lohmiller;
Hermon, Maine – Allessa Oakes;
Hineston – Tylee Busby; Madison Morrison;
Houma – Shelby Glynn, Blair Kramer, Sarah Lajaunie, Chelsea Thibodeaux;
Houston, Texas – Kendall Westfall,
Huntington, Texas – Travis Carrell;
Huntsville, Ala. – Elizabeth Gilliam;
Independence – Kaylan Showers;
Iota – Katie Latiola;
Iowa – Nicholas Fisher;
Jena – Dustin Decker, Haley Decker, Tyler Thomas;
Jennings – Janee Charles, Wesley Simien;
Jonesboro, Ark. – Alanna Benoit;
Jonesville – Coleen Cagle, Shana Jefferson, Kameron Stevenson;
Kentwood – Jenna Morris;
Kings Mountain, N.C. – Ashley Counts;
Kaplan – Gabriel LeMoine;
Keithville – Alexis Britt, Rachel Opbroek;
Kendrick, Okla. – Chelsey Goldsmith;
Kenner – Christina Arrechavala, Brooke Petkovich;
Kiev, Ukraine – Kateryna Avram;
Kinder – Stewart Wheeler;
Kingwood, Texas – Eric Piccione;
Lafayette – Taylor Aucoin, Anjelique Duplechin, Emile Lege, Jacklyn Marr;
Lake Arthur – Layne Watkins;
Lake Charles – Laura Cornish, Krista Dixon, Karley Hebert, Alyce Jimney, Rebekah Keller, Jordan Reich;
Larose – Eric Bourg, Nicholas Hebert;
Lawtell – Karoline Guidry;
Lecompte – Hannah Glaze;
Leesville – Destin Bennett, Kelly Bishop, Alexis Bynog, Charlotte Cassin, Caitlin Deon, Brianna Easterling, Ovina Forque, Jessica Gabor, Emily Jackson, Zachary Keeton, Jessica Mango, Miranda Mize, Brooke Perkins, Victoria Perkins, Danielle Smyth, Haley Tucker, Jacob Underwood, Lakyn Ward, Matthew Ward, Jessica Taylor;
Lena – Tracy Benjamin, Nathaniel Dubois;
Logansport – Trenton Timmons;
Longview, Texas – Samantha Morris;
Luling – Alexis Rice;
Lutcher – Rebekah Taylor;
Madisonville – Ashley Johansen. Christopher Snow, Jensen Volz;
Mandeville – Nina DeSmith, Michelle Price;
Mangham – Rebekah Aultman;
Mangilao, Guam – Maria Magdalena Bansil;
Mansfield – Hannah Hughes;
Mansura – Renada Jenkins;
Many – Hannah Allen, Chelsea Beasley, Jacob Ellis, Nicholas Ezernack, Angelica Galban, Sarah Heard, Abby Hinds, Heidi Knight, Emily Leone, Chastity McCrory, Jonathan Pilcher, Sabrina Ross, Samantha Simmons, John Sullivan;
Marble Falls, Texas – Sarah Lewis;
Marksville – Emily Ryan;
Marthaville – Kelsey Claspill, Hanna Pardee, Lirette Thomas;
McKinney, Texas – Beatrice Attura, Anne Repp;
Melrose – Molly Dickerson;
Meraux – Dana Methvin;
Metairie – Kaitlyn Arena, Ariel Landry, Shawn Lawler, Cameron Mayfield, Lisa Roberson;
Midland, Texas – Channing Burleson;
Midlothian, Va. – Tatijana Rangel-Ribiero;
Minden – Amanda Curry, Aubry Dennis, Ryan Harmon;
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada – Kayla Bomben;
Monroe – Kianisha Dillard, Anna Rogers, Savanna Whitten, Gail Wilson;
Montgomery, Texas – Jake Rice, Kyle Swanson;
Mooringsport – Jacklyn Dublin;
Morgan City – Jeremy Orgeron;
Morse – Kylan Poullard;
Mt. Albert, Canada – Erin Sitarz;
Muleshoe, Texas – Caitlyn Barber;
Murrieta, Calif. – LaQuitta Wilkins;
Natchitoches – Tyler Anderson, Francisco Ballestas-Sayas, Kayla Bordelon, Harvey Briggs, Deasia Burrell, Daniel Coffey, Fabian Correa Guette, Jessica Cross, Mazie Dubois, Kirsten Fontenot, Carlos Gomez Garcia, Angel Greer, Hannah Haigh, Ashytn Hare, Zachary Heard, Ashlyn Hogan, Jennifer Johnson, Shayla Johnson, Jeremy Jones, Emilie King, Florence Kilgore, James Lake, Lindsay Lee, Robert Lee, Heather Lockwood, Alba Maloff, Thomas Matuschka, Marissa Oster, Abigail Poe, Jonah Poe, Kaytie Proctor, Brandy Ranel, Amelia Ryland, Emily Salter, Josie Stamey, Faith Stanfield, Nicholas Swank, Madeline Taylor, Eva Venzant, Barbara Vercher-Smith, Richard Walks, Madysen Watts, Ryan Wright;
New Iberia – Kristine Trahan;
New Llano – Reaz Khan, Matreena Sablan;
Newark, Del. – Sabri Thompson;
Noble – James Connella, James Curtis, Harlee Possoit, Breana Remedes;
Oak Grove – Heather Allen;
Oakdale – Katelyn Johnson, Kirstin Richard, Mary Wharton;
Oconomowoc, Wisc. – Natalie Jaeger;
Opelousas – Tracey Antee, Toria Smith, Erika Stanford;
Pelican – Justin Cooper, Mary Myers;
Pioneer – Moesha Smith;
Pineville – Raegan Brocato, Snow Buckley, Mason Caubarreaux, Kaylee Chronister, Raymond Fletcher, Lacey Hebron, Morgan Humphries, Michael Martin, Ashlee Mitchell, Stacey Ramsey, Katie Rayburn, Jodie Roberts, Candice Smith, Allison Williams;
Pitkin – Aimee Calmes, Mattie Stewart;
Plain Dealing – Jacob Horton;
Plaquemine – Ma Kayla Washington;
Pleasant Hill – Samatha Davis, Laura Spann;
Pollock – Zackary Phillips;
Pontchatoula – Brandon Dalon, Marisa Durand, Raley Pellittieri;
Prairieville – Jakalyn Hills, Caitlin Miller;
Provencal – Taylor Craft, Kara Gandy, Bailey Scarbrough;
Quitman – Katheryn Gaulden;
Raeford, N.C. – Brittney Carpenter;
Rayne – Meraiah Young;
Ringgold – Joseph Hays, Lauren Nelson;
River Ridge – Emily Digangi;
Robeline – Bergen Oge, Courtney Rachal, Fawn Slaughter, Jeffrey Watley, Caleb Wester;
Rocklin, Calif. – Madeline Mason
Rosepine – Summer Cooley
Rostov-on-Don, Russia – Vladislava Litvinova;
Ruston – Karenthia Crosby Onwudebe;
Sachse, Texas – Ryan Verloin DeGruy;
Saint Francisville – Jordan Bringedahl;
Saint Rose – Alexis Mancuso;
Sanford, N.C. – Joseph Tippit;
Saumur Maine et Loire, France – Yohann Yjjou
Schriever – Holly Cantrelle;
Scott – Katelyn Kidder
Seattle, Wash. – Lauren Agan;
Shelbyville, Texas – Sarah Ryder;
Shongaloo – Kayla Mouser;
Shreveport – Lindsey Adkins, Karianna Baker, Brittany Barnes, Angelica Bartlett, Ezar Bess, Hannah Bolton, Crystal Brown, Erin Brown, Brianna Burke, Nicollette Carswell, Phillip Clark, Crystal Claunch, Celeste Clifton, Hannah Crnkovic, Emily Dean, Kaitlyn Doyal, Jackson Driggers, Sarah Dunn, Reagan Escude, Lashayla Ester, Ronald Evans, Irishia Finister, Tyler Gardner, Nickolas Juneau, Adrianne Kelly, Emalee Kennon, Cole Laird, Bih-Lih Lau, Erin LeClair, Jaylon Lewis, Casey Long, Joycelyn McConnell, Rici McDonald, James McGrail, Rosemary McMaster, Madison Milligan, Hannah Nicholls, Hayden Pilcher, Taylor Poleman, Emily Rankin, Anna Richardson, Zachary Sanders, Jarred Sepulvado, Kathryn Shrader, Tyler Smith, Destini Sweet, Rachel Taylor, Michael Thrower, JeVannica Williams, Suzanne Williams Tiffani Williams, Jonathan Zavalydriga;
Simsboro – Autumn Smith;
Slaughter – Ciara Gibbs;
Slidell – Claire Harvey, Jourdan Waddell;
Spain – Judit Castillo Gargallo;
Spring, Texas – Victoria Harris;
St. Mars lo Briere – Marion Cormier;
St. Martinville – Alli Douet;
Stockbridge, Ga. – Alisa Newsome;
Stonewall – Brooke Meade;
Sulphur – Tina Honea, Elizabeth Perez;
Summerfield – Mackenzie Scriber;
Sunset – Emma Warren;
Tatum, Texas – Randall Sullivan;
Temple, Texas – Weston Scholten;
Texarkana, Texas – Karlie Purdy;
The Woodlands, Texas – Robyn Beatty;
Thibodaux – Nia Walker;
Tomball, Texas – Anthony Lucas;
Trout – Harley Lisenby;
Vinton – Emily Walter;
Waco, Texas – Haylie Hickman;
Waskom, Texas – Mary Alexander;
Waukomis, Okla. – Colby Koontz;
West Monroe – Abigail Beck, Brandy Chapman, Maggie Harris, Kayla Telano;
Winnfield – John Collins, Mia County, Andrew Harrel, Rebecca Hodnett, Anissa Jones, Kelsey Jordan, Brittany Parker;
Winnipeg, Canada – Tyra Duma;
Woodworth – Elizabeth Bonnette, Taylor Henry, Ashley Kennedy-Rowell;
Wylie, Texas – Kylie Nodorft, Grace Punch, Kali Roberts;
Zwolle – Cheyanne Ebarb, Holden Rivers;
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