Challenge Staff

March 22, 2013 12:50 PM
The day of the second challenge dawned bright and sunny. Though it was only late January, the weather was unseasonably warm in the high sixties. Certainly warm enough to spend the afternoon outdoors in relative comfort as long as one dressed appropriately. This was most fortunate as most of the higher numbered teams probably would spend a fair portion of the day just outside the Gardens, waiting for their turn into the challenge.

Unlike the first one, this challenge would be completed all at one time, then the staff would have to go in and fix any damage that had been inflicted on the course, and only then could the next team begin. The slight advantage to going later, of course, was that those groups would have some idea how long most teams had taken to complete it previously, and would therefore be able to gauge how well they were doing in comparison.

As one o'clock approached, Coach Pierce arrived on the scene and stood on top of the bench that blocked the entrance into the Gardens. "Hello," she greeted the gathered students with the assistance of a sonorus charm so they could all hear her. "Your second challenge is an obstacle course through the Gardens. May I please have the overseers gather near Professor Meade, please." She indicated where the COMC professor was standing and waited for the students elected for that role to divide out of the main crowd.

"This challenge will be scored by how quickly your team gets all of its members, excluding the overseer, through the obstacle course. If you find you cannot get through an obstacle, there is an opt-out path. However, be advised, a significant time penalty, which varies depending upon on the difficulty of the obstacle being skipped, will be applied against your team's final time for every team member who opts out."

The Coach inclined her head toward the group of overseers. "You will not be going in completely blind. Your overseer will be able to communicate with you as you go through the course, telling you the safest path between obstacles." Rock throwing prairie elves, Devil's Snare traps, and other blockages and annoyances populated the paths that were not the 'safe' route through the maze. Between most obstacles, team overseers could choose to send their teams through to the next one by way of a longer but safer route, or through a shorter but booby-trapped route. The quickest shortcuts had the nastiest obstructions.

"Overseers, you have the choice of using a surveillance circle to track your team's progress and look ahead for your best route through the labyrinth, or you can scout ahead and offer advice from a broom. You cannot directly assist your team through a challenge or you will incur the obstacle's opt-out penalty, but you can offer advice if you see something they can't."

"All right, folks. Team One starts it off, once your overseer is ready. They will have a few minutes to get an idea of what lies ahead of you. We'll start the clock when the first team member enters the course, so I advise waiting until your overseer tells you to begin."

Coach Pierce got down off the bench then used her wand to push it aside, clearing the Garden entrance for the first team. Meanwhile, the first overseer was lead through another opening in the hedge, bringing them into a secluded clearing with a nice quality broom and a table with a model of the Obstacle Course upon it.

“Overseers, you have two options to do your job, one is flying above and assessing the best route for your team or, two, you can scry for them using the model placed in the table,” Adrian pointed to the model of the gardens with the obstacles that was near him. Professor Meade gave them the option to chose their preferred method of scouting. Broom riders would fly above the Course and talk directly to their teams. They could point out relevant points of interest, lead the way through the labyrinth, and even poke and prod at the actual obstacles to provide information about them, so long as they didn't actually do anything to physically or magically help their team.

Scryers would follow their team through the enchanted model. The Obstacles were clearly marked and labeled and glowed yellow for easy identification. Safe routes between them were colored a reassuring green. Hazardous routes were colored either in orange or red to mark the severity of the danger. Finally, blue indicators would help them easily find their team's location. A simple tap of their wand against any part of the model would allow the scryer to zoom in for a better look in real time. A second tap against the edge of the table would bring them back to the overview. Not being physically present would limit the overseer's ability to communicate with their teammates to only verbal instructions, but these would be relayed clearly to their location and the model, when zoomed in, would allow him or her to see and hear everything the team did.


OOC: Like in the last one, all teams can post simultaneously. Fuzzy time allows you to move on to the next obstacle before finishing the previous one, as long as you don't contradict anything that might still happen earlier. Please keep your characters' age, physical limitations and abilities in mind and have them progress realistically. Your four foot nine beginner student cannot reach the top of the Wall, or the short rope dangling down from it, even if they jump.
Subthreads:
0 Challenge Staff The Obstacle Course Challenge 0 Challenge Staff 1 5


Malcolm Carey

March 24, 2013 9:24 PM
By the time he got to the team meeting, Mal was considering whether or not a jury would convict a cute first year who just happened to have murdered his mother if he made sure to cry while he told them about the mirror. The mirror was from Hell, and since he could not smash it without just getting another one sent to him along with an admonishment, clearly the only answer was to take out the supplier of mirrors. It was just how it was.

Normally, he and his mirror got along well enough, not least because they spent very little time together – in theory, she had just had it charmed to tell him whether or not he was allowed to go out of his room looking the way he did, but he was pretty sure Mother was somehow watching him through it, which was why he did all his homework in the common room or library – but he had evidently made the mistake of mentioning Arthur had told him to be the team overseer in the room when it was only pretending to be asleep, as it did sometimes, or maybe he had just been too excited to remember to check. Either way, it had bided its time, kept its mouth shut, and only this morning let him know it knew it was a “very important day, Malcolm!” He had had to get dressed five times before the mirror announced that he looked presentable enough to be the brain of the team, declining to tell him where, exactly, it had seen a brain in a sweater vest that brought out its eyes before – or, indeed, where it had seen a brain with eyes before.

On the bright side, the prospect of dealing with it instead gave him a little perspective as team seventeen waited to be called for the challenge and he tried not to tear up and shred more chunks of grass than the staff would let him get away with. It could have been worse; they could have given them all enchanted mirrors to talk to during the long wait. He hated enchanted mirrors.

At last, it was time. Feeling grubbier and less poised all around, after all this time, than he would have liked, Mal followed his guide to the space set aside for his use, where he had the options of a broom or a model. He guessed that Francesca would be disappointed in him, but the latter was much more his type of toy than the other, and he examined it almost as long as he thought he could before a voice surprised him: “Malcolm?”

He jumped, but recovered, turning red and being glad they could only hear him. He zoomed in on the team and said, “I’m here,” and started to follow it up with ‘in a way’ before he decided humor would not be appreciated. “Start now and go left.” He looked over the model again, checking himself even as he tried not to grin as he realized he knew all about what was to come and they did not. This was a feeling he could get used to. “Quickly, there’s nothing in the way.”

There was nothing in the way when he told them to go right, either, until…Mal did grin to himself then, wondering how well they were going to take to a mud pit. He was just thinking he would lay money that Amira would take it better than Arthur did when his cousin began very casually mutilating his clothing, so Mal amused himself instead with the image of them all gradually destroying their personal possessions as the course progressed until they emerged on the other side robeless, in the filthy rags of their other clothes, after going completely savage in the maze and becoming convinced Mal was a deity controlling their every move. He didn’t think it would end well for anyone in real life, but he made a note of the idea; maybe he could sell it to a novelist sometime. He decided Arthur’s wristwatch would be a key plot element, though he didn’t know how exactly, since that was what novelists were for.

“Transfigure it into water and swim?” Mal suggested when he was asked for advice. Nomally, he might have bitten his tongue, but the others all seemed far away, harmless, pawns he could direct to whatever squares he wanted and they’d have to go there before, at the end of the game, they went back in their box. They could talk back, but that was all. He zoomed in closer on the mud, looking for anything that looked promising….

“I think the closest dry space is the one on the far right,” he said. “It’s about…” Mal was not that great at estimating distance even when he was physically on site, and he wasn’t totally sure of what he was seeing here. “Maybe a foot from the edge? So maybe it’s not too hard to get to. It’s worth a try, anyway.”

At least since he was not the one wading out into the mud to get to it. The mirror would have come alive and murdered him if he’d ever done such a thing, he was sure. “Unless one of you can conjure a bridge,” he added, thinking of the old story. Mother was more of a Warlock's Hairy Heart type, and Lucille enjoyed the Fountain of Fair Fortune, with the handsome heir to the fountain garden revealing himself at the end and banishing the wicked Muggle about to kill the three ladies and revealing he had been guiding them all the time and then marrying Amata, but Mal liked the Three Brothers best.

OOC: Mal's mother may or may not have, um, edited the Fountain of Fair Fortune fairy tale in several ways when trying to teach her children about morals.
0 Malcolm Carey Directing from on high 256 Malcolm Carey 0 5


Keme RunningBear

March 26, 2013 6:29 PM
Keme had felt that he had done a fairly decent job of coping since coming to Sonora. The place was strange and the people stranger, but he had done what he could to fit in and did his best to show everyone that his people were just as important. The challenges were a bit of a rough patch for him. It forced him to get to know more people other than his roommate, Rajid, who was equally as quiet as he was. Malcolm and Adam were okay. Neither of them had offended him in any way at the very least. Arthur and Laurie were too old to make a difference to Keme and Amira was a girl who he didn’t find all that intelligent.

All things considered though, Keme didn’t mind working with them. They managed the first challenge alright, he was sure they would make it through the rest just fine too. Although, he wasn’t delusional to believe that they would be the winning team. With three first years, himself included, Keme was aware of their limitations. Even so, he knew that these challenges were making him better at his abilities and, in the end, he would have these memories and could share them with his friends and family back home.

When they finally entered the maze, Keme allowed his mind to briefly wonder what was ahead of them. It was a school and they already did the scary things in the last challenge, so he felt these ones would likely be more practical. They were outside after all. He wondered if it would be like the games he played back home. Like hide and seek, or track the animal. He could do those well. However, they were informed of the mud pit and Keme’s heart sank a little bit. What was so bad about a mud pit? This wasn’t a challenge at all.

“Why do we have to do anything to the mud?” Keme asked them. “We can trek across it easily enough and then use a cleaning spell to get rid of it all once we’re on the other side.” He suggested. Wouldn’t that be easier than trying to figure out the best way to transfigure a pond of mud? “Unless you all have a problem with getting a little dirty.” He thought, giving them all a look of boredom as he said it. They were from different worlds even if they were all the same status of blood.
6 Keme RunningBear Reacting from on low 249 Keme RunningBear 0 5


Arthur Carey

March 26, 2013 11:29 PM
“Ha,” Arthur said, half under his breath, at the idea of conjuring a bridge across the whole thing. By himself, he didn’t think he was quite up to the feat, at least not without better materials around to work with. If they could have cut down a portion of the hedge, he could have done it easily, but he suspected the hedges would be enchanted to be unusually durable.

As always, when he was facing a challenge, he thought of Jane. She could have done it easily, he was sure, but she wasn’t here now. Pity, that; together, he thought he and Jane could have been invincible. They could have taken out every other team that promised to be a contender without effort, Jane simply destroying or circumventing any obstacle that Arthur couldn’t. He was convinced that he had seen her holding back before, pretending to be less able than she was, which made him wonder – what could she do, if she had a mind to? He had never deluded himself that she told him everything, even if he did extend that courtesy to her; if she saw anyone as an equal, it was Edmond, and Edmond was not interested in knowing what they could. Edmond was, in Arthur’s mind, even worse than his sister: a person of remarkable gifts who seemed to have no interest in using them the way he could have, the way he should have. How strange that the same household had produced them both; he thought the fact that they didn’t share real parents made it even stranger.

He had gotten another letter yesterday, but it had mostly been a note wishing him luck, no cipher, no Latin, and just the title of a fairly innocuous book to look at when he had time. He had wanted to see her over midterm, but she had refused, claiming overcommitment with her father and Edmond, which was at least understandable, and Jethro, which Arthur found less sympathetic. Arthur liked to think he was smart, but what Jane saw in that guy was beyond him. If she married someone with a tithe of her brains and skill, perhaps a bit more status to start with, then they could…who knew, really, what they would be capable of? But she was content to be thrown away on some minor Smythe boy.

He was distracted by Mr. RunningBear’s question. “I wouldn’t say I’m afraid of anything here,” he said mildly, “but I am somewhat concerned that the mud could have something in it we can’t see from here.” He gestured to his enlarged rock and what was now effectively a cord tied to it. “We also don’t know how deep it is, unless someone is neglecting to share all of his – or her – information.”

A thought occurred to him. “Though it’s possible we could solve part of the problem by freezing the water in it,” he thought aloud. “The spell’s not difficult, Glacius…Might be a bit slippery, though.” He dropped his rock into the mud near the edge and found it was not deceptively deep right away. “Well, we’ll get to Malcolm’s dry patch, anyway, and if it is too slippery, we’ll try something else from there,” he decided to himself. He’d prefer something else, but freezing might kill anything which was lurking beneath the surface, and the charm would be simpler than transfiguration. “I’ll go first – Glacius.

There was a crackling sound, and the ground before him appeared to freeze. Arthur tested it and it creaked again, louder this time, under his weight, but he was, he thought, heavier than the others. "Duro," he added, and then, to the others, "should hold, but step lightly, quickly, once - " he tossed his now-muddy rock toward the dry patch to test if it was solid before he performed a more exating test with his foot - "we see if it's going to crumble underneath us."
0 Arthur Carey Being paranoid 182 Arthur Carey 0 5


Adam Spencer

March 27, 2013 8:58 PM
The evening before the second challenge, Adam had received a letter from his younger sister wishing him luck. His youngest sibling was just starting to use a quill and she had scribbled something on the bottom. It looked a bit like a snitch, but he couldn't be perfectly sure. It had warmed his little heart and he had slept well though he missed his family terribly. Being the eldest, it was difficult being away from home. He was responsible for taking care of them and that wasn't easy to do when he was away.

His room-mate had been chosen by Arthur to be the Overseer and Adam was glad for him. He wouldn't want the responsibility of leading a group of his peers as well as his older team-mates. It was a huge responsibility Adam wasn't willing to take. Arthur and Malcolm, as far as Adam knew, were related, so perhaps Arthur would be less critical of his relative. Or more critical, depending on their relationship. The fact that their team was most likely not going to win helped Adam relax a bit. Arthur had to be aware that with three somewhat uneducated first years he wasn't going to get very far.

Nevertheless, Adam was determined to work hard so he wouldn't let his team down. Being a weak link was bad enough, but giving up was just unacceptable.

When he heard they were going in numerical order, Adam almost groaned. It took ages until they were called, and by then Adam had a good idea of how long a team should take. He followed the rest of his team-mates to the labyrinth and walked behind them until they reached the mud pit. It was absolutely filthy and Adam did not want to get anywhere near that thing. He was unused to so much greenery and dirt unless it was in a controlled area, like a park. He rarely ventured out of London and he hardly ever played in the mud like this. His parents had taught him to be clean and respectable and stepping into mud was not respectable. Unless he was playing Quidditch or something.

Arthur began doing something that Adam couldn't understand, and then Malcolm appalled him by suggesting they swim through this mud. Adam was by no means a prissy lad, but he certainly did not want to splash around in mud puddles any more than he had to. Conjuring a bridge was loads better, but Adam kept silent, listening to the comments going on already.

It was clear Arthur and Malcolm didn't have the strong familial ties Adam had previously assumed. Their comments and glances directed at one another had made it obvious, but it was clearer now that Arthur couldn't even trust Malcolm fully. It was understandable; Adam would have a difficult time trusting anyone he couldn't see completely. He stood on the brink of the mud pit, wondering how horrified his mum would be if she found out he'd dirtied his old loafers with mud. He had rain shoes, but they were ugly and he hadn't thought to bring them to a physical challenge.

As these thoughts ran through Adam's head, Arthur had tested his ice spell and had started walking across. Adam was hesitant, but he followed their leader cautiously. He was, or at least he assumed he was, much lighter than Arthur Carey, making it seem less likely to crumble under his feet. Still, Adam went slowly and carefully, hoping not to lose one of his shoes to a mud creature or something of the sort. "How long do you think it'll hold for?" he asked, watching his feet. His foot slipped once and he wobbled dangerously for a moment before regaining his balance. It was an uncomfortable walk, trying his hardest not to fall in. "I didn't know there was enough water in mud to freeze it."
40 Adam Spencer There's always room for paranoia. 257 Adam Spencer 0 5


Malcolm Carey

April 04, 2013 12:55 AM
Mal’s mouth twisted into something close to a smile when Keme pointed out that it was just mud, though even alone, almost sure that the team couldn’t see his face, he didn’t let the expression develop completely. He reserved smirking for when he was completely alone, especially when it was at Arthur’s expense. It had taken him three days to be sure Arthur resented him, after all, which gave Mal a powerful incentive not to annoy him too much, at least not while he was a first year and Arthur was a month away from being able to do any magic he pleased at the Reunion this summer. Being Confunded right before he was presented to the Fourth and George and the rest would not be pleasant.

Maybe Arthur would resort to petty revenge, maybe he wouldn’t. Mal knew that, in the same position, he would. He could understand the resentment; one of the few things Mother had ever said to him which Mal believed was about how the others would always resent him because of his situation. It was why she made sure to whisper to him to always remember never to trust Andrew any time she saw him getting along with his brother.

It was, he thought, the strangest of the several strange things about the South Carolina boys. Arnold and Arthur were one thing, but shouldn’t Anthony have been thinking ahead to when Arnold was going to want to kill him? It was bad enough to have a brother at all, but at least Andrew was younger than him, born to be in second place. Anthony had taken Arnold’s place. He had thought about pointing it out, since he liked Anthony as well as he did anyone and actually better than most people, but since Anthony had looked at him funny one time when he was just a little confused by Anthony’s admiration for his older brother, he had never actually done it.

“Good luck, gentlemen,” he said as they started trying to cross frozen ground, glad he was safely here. Balance was not one of Mal’s outstanding characteristics.

Assuming the ground situation would take care of itself, he looked ahead to the barriers. The most hazardous one, he decided, simply looked like too much trouble; blasting a way through the thorns would take more time than just taking another route. That left him with two options to consider while they tried not to break their necks.
0 Malcolm Carey I agree completely 256 Malcolm Carey 0 5


Keme

April 04, 2013 9:51 PM
Keme was not entirely sure if Arthur wanted to avoid the mud because he didn’t want to get dirty and was using a life form as an excuse or if he really was concerned that there may be a life form in the mud. After a moment of contemplation, Keme decided he didn’t care enough to question it further. It would have been interesting to know if there were life forms in the mud and thought that the Overseer probably could actually tell that, but it was also possible that the mud was too thick for anyone to see anything in.

He shrugged to himself as Arthur decided their best option was to freeze the mud. Keme was from Montana where their winters were cold and long. He was fine with snow and ice. He had even tracked in both. Although he was too young to hunt himself, he had done with the elders and adult men from his tribe with some of his peers to watch. They could spend days camped out in the cold snow. He felt walking across a frozen pit of mud would be just fine. He didn’t even have to do any work either.

Keme followed after Adam onto the frozen mud, easily balancing himself on it. He half wondered what all the other teams had done or would do when they came to this obstacle and any of the others that will come. Did they find easier solutions? Or did they take the simple way out and just manage their way through the mud without magical assistance? Keme wasn’t friends with anyone really to ask, but he might have that conversation later with Rajid simply out of curiosity.

Having managed to make the trek with only a couple of moments of near slip ups on the icy ground, Keme watched Arthur with interest for a moment. He was a Sixth year and the eldest. Aside from Preston, who was a Fifth year, Keme couldn’t imagine that Arthur was happy with the assignment of his team. Keme had watched the other groups with interest. Some of them had members that were built for challenges while others (and although he knew this would make him seem like he was thinking less of girls, but in reality, the girls in these groups were small and wearing normal attire instead of being prepared) were set up to fail. Keme thought their group, although mainly male, were likely to fail, or at least, not be top five. Possibly top ten, but definitely not top five. His reasoning for that was because Malcolm, Adam, and himself had no real skill level for magic at this stage and Amira and Preston were only intermediates.

He half wondered why some of these people ended up together. Not that he would ask. One never questioned authority with the purpose of defying them. “What should we do?” Keme asked, looking beyond the pit towards the paths. They had solved the pit in his mind and just had to get all of them across. His mind was now on the next obstacle.
0 Keme Paranoid because of mud? 0 Keme 0 5