Professor Kijewski

June 30, 2011 9:22 PM
Kiva remembered how much she had enjoyed teaching, but out of all the years that she had taught, the first and second years usually held a special spot for her. This was mainly because they were still young and opened to the idea of Care of Magical Creatures. The older students had already at this point in their educational careers decided on their thoughts and opinions of this class. No matter what Kiva did from their fourth year or on, their minds were formed. It was a bit sad, but she had accepted it a long time ago. But with the first and second years (and maybe even the third years), Kiva still had time to convince them that these creatures could actually be fun and amazing. Sure they had to first learn of the docile creatures before they can learn of the large terrifying ones, but she didn’t find that to be so bad. Sometimes. Well, she’s definitely learned her lesson from past experience. No boring creatures allowed.

She smiled at her students as they made their way down to her clearing. “Hello everyone! Good to see you all, I hope your week is going well.” Kiva greeted. Behind her on the table were two crates, each covered by different blankets. The beginners were a little difficult to select proper animals. She never knew if third years should still be with the beginners or with the intermediates. It was a rough age to be at and really the maturity level varied so greatly between each of them. For now, she’d keep them at the beginner level, but it was possible that in future years (if she was still around since this was only a temporary thing currently) she might decide it was better to move them into intermediate level.

“Today we will be having a practical day instead of just lecture.” Her last time teaching, Kiva had just sort of thrown them into studying the creatures, but this time around, she was having them do research on creatures and then supply the creatures if possible. These two they had already done some reading on, but Kiva wanted them to see them up front so that they can understand that not all magical creatures were totally noticeable.

With a wave of her wand, the blankets were lifted from the crates to reveal a crup in one crate and a kneazle in the other. Neither animal looked at one another, but that was because they were raised together and didn’t give an inkling for each other. Fighting would not occur. “In front of you, you will a crup and a kneazle. These two creatures resemble non-magical creatures so much that often muggles mistake them for non-magical creatures.” Kiva explained to them, releasing the crup first and holding him gently to show him off to the students.

“Crups, like Noedi here, look just like Jack Russell terriers except for one minor little thing…” Kiva turned him so that the students could see his tail. “He has a fork tail. Once witches and wizards obtain a Crup for pets, they must remove the fork tail. This is to protect the Crup as much as it is to protect the secrecy of our society.” Kiva advised them. “Don’t worry, it doesn’t hurt them. Now, a very important fact about Crups is that they hate Muggles. They will attack if they are near any. So, if you ever plan on having one for your pet, you cannot live near muggles.” She wanted to make that very clear to them. Her first spell with a Crup and a student ended terribly, she was not going to let that happen again. “Other than that, Crups are loyal to their owners and eat pretty much anything you give to them.”

Next, she pulled out the kneazle and held it. “Cinder is a pure kneazle, so the variations to a cat are more noticeable, but mixed kneazles are able to blend in perfectly.” Kiva pointed out the ears, “Kneazles have larger ears than normal cats – think of bobcats- spotted fur much like leopards, and tails that look like lion tails.” It was very much like a kneazle might have been creature from mating those three cats together. “But aside from their physical appearance, kneazles are incredible creatures. They are extremely intelligent and can detect suspicious persons. If they do detect someone who is insalubrious, kneazles will react poorly to them. If you see a kneazle reacting, trust them. Also like a crup, if a kneazle takes a liking to a witch or wizard, they are loyal and make excellent pets.”

Now that she had completed the lecture portion of the class, it was time for the students to have some fun. “Okay, everyone now that you know how amazing these creatures are, have some fun with them. They are young and enjoy playing with people. Their crates have toys in them that they favor, so go ahead and grab them.” Before releasing them completely though, Kiva added, “Do not harm these creatures. If any of you poke, pull, or injury them, you will fail this class.” She didn’t think any of them would, but she wanted them to know that she would not stand for cruelty.

OOC: Site rules apply. Please provide at least 200 word posts. Remember that the more detailed and lengthy posts get more posts. Be creative and have fun with the creatures! If you need Kiva, just tag her in the subject line.
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0 Professor Kijewski Beginner's Lesson 1 0 Professor Kijewski 1 5


Eliza Bennett, Crotalus

July 13, 2011 5:22 PM
Care of Magical Creatures wasn’t one of Eliza’s favorite lessons because of the problem of how loosely structured it was a lot of the time and the danger to her wardrobe, but she showed up at every class promptly, her hair and nails and dress and robes all immaculate regardless of what they’d look like at the end of the period and her smile for the professor firmly in place.

All of these things, along with maintaining a pleasant expression during the lesson, were more important in Care of Magical Creatures right now than they usually were, because the professor was still new. New to Eliza, anyway; she’d heard that Professor Kijewski actually predated her at Sonora by a really long time, but she had left or something for years, most of which had happened before Eliza started school. Because of that, the teacher’s previous residency didn’t matter. Impressing her was just as if she’d just walked in off the street and hadn’t been in a school since she was seventeen. And Eliza needed to impress her. Another adult on her side was a good thing.

So, even though cats were more her thing insofar as animals at all were, Eliza went toward the crup once it opened up. That would help with the image of Crotalus girls and their prissiness and affinity for cats. She was hoping That Female would get herself scratched to pieces by the kneazle – would its claws count as magical damage, and scar permanently? Life would be so much easier if That was disfigured and looked on the outside like she did on the inside – but she couldn’t shove That Female in its direction without drawing attention, so she just had to worry about her own image first.

“Hello,” she said to Noedi in the high voice she’d heard relatives use on babies and pets before. “Hello there. I’m Eliza. I’m going to pet you now, okay?” She did so, and did not get a negative response. “You’re a nice thingy, aren’t you? Nice puppy. You like Eliza, yes you do, you want to be nice to me….”
0 Eliza Bennett, Crotalus Nice puppy... 174 Eliza Bennett, Crotalus 0 5


James Owen

July 20, 2011 8:27 AM
Jmes didn't have much love for Care of magical creatures classes. He liked animals, but he didn't really want to study them, and he had lots of animals at home, anyway. They weren't as interesting as those the professors could produce from time to time, and James did enjoy those classes, but again there was homework and assignment and research about the animals, which the Aladren could happily live without. Today's class wasn't all that exciting, it turned out, because crups and kneazles were boring animals in the grand scheme of things. His family had given shelted to plenty of dogs and cats in James' lifetime, including a couple of crups and the occasional kneazle. He didn't need to study the creatures; he'd lived with them.

As the option wasn't available to just skip the class, James took the most out of it that he could - he was outside for a class and could throw off the uniform robes that had a habit of getting in his way. Admittedly the heavily-worn brown trousers and slightly-too-small green t-shirt he wore beneath were then concealed, but this didn't concern the third year while he was outdoors anyway. He thought he might even enjoy playing with the crup if it was friendly. He joined his classmates in wandering towards the creature, and met up with the puppy as it met up with Eliza Bennett, who was cooing to it like a songbird.

"Why are you talking like that?" James was lauging as he asked. Girls were so funny when they got near cute animals. He reached towards the creature and ruffled the crup's head between its ears.
0 James Owen Soft puppy 168 James Owen 0 5


Eliza

July 22, 2011 11:36 PM
Eliza smiled automatically at James Owen, moving her hand aside so he could pet the crup. They had met last year, and while there had been some initial misunderstandings, he had proved he could be a reasonable person and they had gotten it settled. She wasn’t sure she considered him an ally yet, but he wasn’t an enemy, so that was better than nothing, and left room for developing things.

“I want it to not bite me,” she replied through the smile, looking back at the crup. He was touching it much more naturally than she had. She had been only just barely stroking it, being careful of her hands, not sure whether or not to trust it. Was he used to them, or not cautious, or just really sure of himself? They all meant different things. “So I thought maybe if I talked to it like a baby, maybe it would think oh, she’s nice, I shouldn’t bite her.”

She laughed, then, realizing how silly she sounded. “I really haven’t spent much time around animals before, except in classes,” she excused herself. “A few cats, and not really long. I thought I would have gotten used to them, here at school so much, in all these classes, but I guess I never really have.” She was, now that she’d thought of it, going to have to think about that more. They had to touch things in here all the time, or at least be near them. She should have totally adjusted by now, shouldn’t she? “Do you have any at home?” she asked, since it wasn’t polite to let the topic dwell on her.
0 Eliza Is it actually a puppy? 0 Eliza 0 5


James

July 28, 2011 9:52 AM
Eliza's answer didn't really resemble logic. He thought if he were a bad-tempered crup, he would be more likely to bite someone if they were crooning at him in a crazy, high-pitched voice that sounded to him a lot like baby talk. This crup obviously wasn't the bad tempered kind, though - you could tell that just by looking at it - so it really didn't matter how Eliza talked to it. She wasn't alone, though - James was sure the females in his family all talked to the animals in high-pitched voices. It was nonsensical and it irked him, but if it made the girls feel better, then whatever, they could talk like morons. "I'm pretty sure this one's friendly," he assured her.

Eliza then elaborated that she hadn't had much contact with animals, which James supposed explained her bizarre behaviour (but not that of his sisters). He didn't know whether this was traditional of families like Eliza's, to not have animals around. It certainly wasn't traditional for his family - the opposite was true, in fact. "We have hundreds at home," James exaggerated. "Five cats and three dogs at the moment," he said more accurately, "and a load of chickens. We've had crups and kneazles before, and Jade has a guinea pig." It didn't occur to him to give any further label to Jade - in fact if he'd really given any thought to it then he probably wouldn't have mentioned Jade at all. She'd be starting Sonora next year, and he didn't exactly want people to associate her with him if he could help it.

James sat down to better reach the crup, which rolled easily as the third year gently pushed the creature over onto its back. "You're pathetic," he told it, grinning. He liked looking at animals when their heads were upset side, particularly dogs - it made their eyes look comically insane. "Do you like animals then?" he asked Eliza. She said she hadn't been around them much, but she'd been petting the crup, so he figured she couldn't be oposed to them.
0 James Not sure - you started it. 0 James 0 5


Eliza

July 29, 2011 5:46 PM
Eliza still felt a little uncertain even after James’ recommendation of the crup in front of them, but she smiled anyway. “That’s good,” she said. “Thanks for telling me. I thought it didn’t look too…vicious right now, but I wasn’t totally sure.” It did make her feel a little better, and it never hurt to make people feel like they had really done something good. At least Father said it didn’t, and she was prepared to take his word for it.

Her eyebrows lifted slightly when she heard that he had hundreds of animals at home, but this was quickly clarified with more specific numbers, except for the chickens. For all she knew, he really did have hundreds of chickens, if his family…did whatever people did for chicken to end up on the table periodically. Agriculture was not a subject her father or mother or great-grandfather had yet deemed it essential for her to study.

“I suppose you are used to them, then,” she said, sounding more impressed than anything. Just taking care of children, she could clearly see at home, took a lot of effort, so she could only imagine it took that much more with things that couldn’t talk and tell you what was wrong with them. Even Richard, the baby, was big enough now to give a general idea of what his problem was when he had one. Unless she was seriously missing the mark about animals, though, she didn’t think many of the ones you were allowed to have in a house ever learned even basic speech.

She didn’t know who Jade was, either, but decided it was safe to assume she was someone in his family. Generally, people didn’t live with people who weren’t family, and he had been listing animals which were at his home. She watched as he rolled the crup over and petted it that way, and momentarily stiffened with offense at the comment about being pathetic before she realized he was talking to the creature, not her. Still, why was he calling it pathetic? She had thought he liked it and was partial to animals in general.

“They seem all right in this class usually,” she said when he asked her if she liked animals. “I think I might like a cat someday, when I’m not living with Mother.” There were any number of things Eliza expected she’d do as an adult just because her mother wouldn’t like them. She didn’t think she would break any of the major strictures, she wasn’t that perpetually irritated with Nicole, but there would be some deviations from her mother’s patterns and preferences. She half blamed being one of Mother’s children instead of one of Father’s for why Gemma was sometimes decidedly odd, when she wasn’t just being an infuriating little kid who got into Eliza’s good clothes and shoes and make-up and had completely ruined at least one example of all three before now and would undoubtedly do so again before she grew up. “Do you think you’ll want to work with creatures somehow after school?”
0 Eliza But you're an Aladren 0 Eliza 0 5


James

August 03, 2011 11:16 AM
"You look like a cat person," James commented. He more meant that she seemed the sort of person who would be more drawn to cats - quieter, more content to be sitting relaxed than running around madly - than dogs, but his way fo expressing this was quicker. He didn't even really address the comment to Eliza as such, occupied as he was by playing with the crup, but it was obvious he was talking to her, considering there was no-one else to whom he would be replying. He ignored her reference to her mom as 'Mother' - it was just one of those snobby class things he tried to ignore wherever possible.

"Do you think you’ll want to work with creatures somehow after school?" Eliza asked.

"No, I don't think so," James asked, leaving the crup a moment and sitting back, leaning on his hands behind him. "I might have pets eventually, but I want to work in an office somewhere," he said. He didn't mind doing what just now - accountant, lawyer and businessman all had their allures - but he just wanted four walls that created his own space, a boss to impress, clients to direct, and to wear a suit. He didn't even want to run anything for himself - he wanted to be Joe Slightly-Above-Average, the proof that hard work could pay off.

"Are you planning on working?" James asked Eliza. He was curious - he didn't know what these well-to-do women did after school. He knews that the men invariably ended up being politicians or each others' attorneys, but he'd never heard of a woman doing the same. He did know that those type of girls didn't play Quidditch, and Eliza didn't play Quidditch, but that wasn't an indicator of much, really - James himself didn't play Quidditch either, and it had nothing at all to do with appearances.
0 James I'm not omniscient 0 James 0 5


Eliza

August 04, 2011 11:37 AM
Eliza wasn’t sure what was meant by a cat person, and James’ focus was enough on the crup that she thought she could project almost any emotion she chose to onto the bit of his attention directed toward her, but she decided not to take it as an insult. Unless she could tell something was, beyond any shadow of a doubt, meant to be belittling and was serious enough that she absolutely could not just ignore it, she couldn’t go around making more enemies. It was horrible for business, as Father would say if it were something he dealt with instead of one of her less serious concerns in life.

She nodded when James said he’d like to work in an office. “My uncles have offices,” she said, which was about the extent of her knowledge on that subject. Uncle Matthias ran something in business, she wasn’t too sure what, mostly under Father’s direction, and Uncle Roger was away from his estate more often than not, though she personally thought that could be feelings about Aunt Helena and her cousins as much as anything else. Uncle Victor didn’t have an office, not anymore, but they didn’t talk about Uncle Victor. “Uncle Matthias’ is very nice.”

Did Father have one, she wondered? She knew he had one at home, but that wasn’t the same thing. As vague as she was about the world of work, she knew that much. Father traveled sometimes, and this was where some money came from, but most of his role seemed to be making the rest of the family make money. Maybe she could ask Paul, Father might have told him sometime, though she doubted it. There weren’t too many things Paul got to know about that Father didn’t tell Eliza about, too.

Though there were some differences. “I doubt it,” she said honestly when James asked if she was going to work. “My father thinks me being the firstborn is more important than me being a girl, but I don’t even think he would allow me to work in public. My mother….” Dear Merlin, Mother would never speak her name again. She was worse than the real Bennetts about wanting to seem above her station, as though she were in one of those families where that really would never even be thought of. She shook her head a little, dismissing the thought of Mother. She usually preferred, for one reason or another, not to think too much about her mother.

“I might go to college, if they don’t think I’m grown up enough to be married after seventh year – “ or if there was just no one available to marry her, which seemed more likely than them taking a chance on someone waiting on the likes of her for four more years – “but after that….” She shrugged philosophically. “Mother and my aunts make it seem like a real job just looking after kids and planning all the parties you need to support your husband’s job.”
0 Eliza Fair enough 0 Eliza 0 5


James

August 07, 2011 3:05 PM
James wasn't surprised when Eliza didn't indicate an expectation to work. james thought he would be bored if he did nothing after school. he could entertain himself adequately for short periods of time, but he inevitably got bored during the holidays. He would certainly need a job once he'd finished with education, whenever that might be. He would go to college if he could afford it, and Eliza might go to college if she wasn't married as soon as she finished school. He supposed they still had time to sort out those details; four years' worth.

"My mother works very hard," James agreed. "She does a little freelance artwork when she has time, but mostly she looks after us and the animals and the house. She has a lot of mending to do when we break things, because we can't really aff- I mean, um, because she doesn't like to replace them," he quickly amended, his ears turning pink. He had dealt with the fact that his family didn't have a great deal of money, and most of the time it didn't bother him, unless it was pointed out, either by others or by himself accidentally. There was a difference between it being implied and being expressed openly. He did think, however, that his mother would have less work to do if they could buy new things when old things broke, or if she had house elves or hired help. Therefore the women that did have this extra help and still didn't work were probably lazy in comparison.

"Is there much to organizing parties, then?" James asked, curious about what could fill these ladies' time aside from gossip and grooming (though as far as he understood - which wasn't far at all - even girls his age could do these for hours). "I'd have thought it would be easy - just send out some invites, order extra food, and maybe get some help in cleaning up afterwards. I could do that much in a couple of hours."
0 James But I am pretty smart 0 James 0 5


Eliza

August 07, 2011 11:12 PM
Eliza managed not to react too much when James almost said his mother couldn’t afford to replace broken things – she thought she did, anyway; at least she didn’t cut her eyes away sharply, or start fidgeting with things – but she was sure she, too, looked a little uncomfortable. There were things people could talk about and things people could not, and talking about money was…was…Well, it wasn’t as rude or shocking as some things, but it was still impolite. It wasn’t really done. She was grateful that he’d thought to catch himself and say something more proper instead of that.

His ignorance of how parties worked, though, startled her enough to take her mind off of it. She knew she didn’t know everything yet, it would be another year at least before Mother really let her start helping over the summers and winters even though she was fourteen now, but she knew enough to know it wasn’t quick.

“It can take hours just to decide the date,” she said. “Especially at Christmas, because there’s so much competition, so if you have yours on the same night as someone else, they might get offended….And deciding guest lists is even worse. I think it’s very stressful.” She’d seen Mother get so nervous that she had to take a potion and go to bed over it, but that was definitely not the sort of thing a person talked about. Others might gossip about it, speculate, but her own daughter shouldn’t say it. “And you have to consider that while choosing the food. For really big parties, you might have to redo part of the house, but you’re always going to have to have everything cleaned and reorganized. Debating your clothes with a seamstress takes forever, too, and then there’s all the fittings, they usually drag it out so they can get paid for each, I don’t know how the people who always have really elaborate clothes can even do it.” She could no more than look at a social page in Illinois without turning green from envy of Catherine Gardiner for that reason. How was it fair for one woman to be the heir to so much money that it could be sort of talked about?

“Just setting up the rooms, too, takes effort. There’s help, but they have to be supervised. No one’s going to think the help messed up if something isn’t right, they’re going to think you did it wrong.” She felt a little horror at the thought, imagining herself in the shoes of a hostess who had that happen to her. “And with…costs and everything…it can take ages to get a party completely planned and ready to happen. Some have to be, because you have to get all your confirmations months ahead, because if you wait, then everyone except maybe your best friends will go to other parties instead of yours.” And her mother didn’t have close friends, which meant a party of hers that wasn’t prepared for would just fail, though that might not be as bad as one where only a few people who already liked you a lot showed up. That would be like tipping a bad waitress with a knut instead of just leaving nothing.

“It’s all really complicated. Mother never enjoys them after she plans them. I don’t know if anyone does. I’m…going to start helping next year, so I have no idea how that’s going to go.” She hoped it made it easier on both of them and she was a natural and really enjoyed it and could do it well, but she had to be practical and admit she was more likely to make loads of beginner’s mistakes.

“How many siblings do you have?” she asked, curious that taking care of them took up a large part of Mrs. Owen’s time. Mother always complained about having five, about how it wasn’t decent, but it seemed to be family tradition, so that someone worthy would rise up out of all their contending with each other to be the next person who was really in charge and the others got experience to help with their lives. His family didn’t sound much like hers, though.
0 Eliza Just not about crup physiology? 0 Eliza 0 5