Professor Light

November 19, 2011 12:00 AM
“... okay, seriously, where is my wand?” Tipping precariously over the cliff of Frantic, Caesar dropped to his knees, palms pressed against the floor, his fingers curling, bending to peer anxiously beneath his desk. “Come on... don’t do this to me!” Anora’s letter, like all of Anora’s letters, had come at a bad time for him. ‘Yes, fantastic. You had another baby. Yes, fantastic. Your husband is amazing. Yes, fantastic. Your life has turned out exactly the way you wanted it to.’ He had spent all night last night outlining a lesson that centered on how to make letters implode once the desired recipient held the envelope in their hand. After a few drinks his temper was calmed and his sanity had been restored, but while he wasn’t quite drunk, he was tipsy enough that he had struggled to remember exactly how the Sobering Charm was pronounced. Too afraid of oversleeping (again) he had made his way to his classroom late last night, and spent the entire morning planning an appropriate lesson, grateful that he hadn’t had a first period class.

Checking the clock, Caesar gave up on searching for his wand and decided to use the remaining twenty minutes of agonized freedom re-outlining his lesson so that he wouldn’t have to demonstrate the appropriate wandwork. Rising to his feet, Caesar straightened only to slump back into his chair. “Oy!” Springing up a second later, Caesar turned to stare at the seat that had burned him. “For merlinssake...” He was wearing his robes backwards, and had sat on the pocket holding his wand. Caesar paused, straightening fully, his back stiff, his shoulders tensed and raised. Taking a deep breath through his nostrils, he filled his thoughts with anger. ‘HateAnorahateAnorahateAnorahatehatehateAnora!’ He let out the breath through his mouth, his lips parting just slightly, and all the hate, anxiety, and nervousness were drained. ‘Got nothin’ but love.’ “Alrighty then,” Turning his silver robes around, Caesar pulled out his wand (undamaged) and began cleaning up the traces of fatigue on his face, the wrinkles on his robes, and neatened his desk. “Okay, okay, okay...”

Muttering senseless, semi-positive words, Caesar got ready for his Intermediate students. He’d had them for a week, but wasn’t really sure what he thought of them yet. He’d gone to a slightly bigger school when he was a kid, so he was used to classes that were divided between each and every year. At Sonora he had to evaluate the difference in education that the third, fourth, and fifth years had. After going over the spells they’d each already learned, looking for overlapping gaps, overlapping connections, Caesar figured hoped was guessing that his lesson for today would satisfy all three years.

“Hey, afternoon!” Caesar welcomed the incoming students as the clock finally caught up to where his mind had been for the past ten minutes. “Drop your essays on my desk before you take a seat, por favor.” Having been a victim of a love potion once - ‘HateAnorahateAnorahatehatehateAnora!’ - Caesar was wary of any and all potions and charms that manipulated the emotions of another human being in any way. He’d had the Intermediate class study Cheering Charms, taught them the incantation Laetissimus because he didn’t believe in withholding information out of fear, and then gave them an excerpt of his dissertation to read where he outlined how simple magic commonly perceived as harmless could potentially lead to the three Unforgivable Curses. For example, Cheering Charms leading to the Imperius Curse. Using his own dissertation as a resource, as well as three other text resources where one supported and the other two contradicted his opinion, he asked them all to write an essay on where they thought the line should be drawn in teaching magic, if any.

Waiting for everyone to settle down in their seats, Caesar glanced over at one of the full length mirrors he had propped up against the wall, pleased to see that the previous blood shot pupils, circles under his hazel almond shaped eyes, and the lifeless character of his honeyed brown hair was all gone, his midnight spells and energizing potion proving successful. “As you know, these two terms we’ll be focusing on the practical applications of charm work in the most frequently occurring scenarios. For example,” There was an indiscernible twitch of his wand, and on several desks life sized mannequins of various appearance fell with hard thumps and convincing shrieks of pain emitting from their unmoving mouths. “Having to heal yourself, or another.” Each mannequin was damaged in some way; a few had broken noses, split lips, legs twisted at odd angles, fingers spread out further than what was normal, hanging limply from their tiny sockets, what looked like blood running from infected ears, and gashes across a thigh and a chest.

“The first spell I want you all to practice is Tergeo.” Caesar pronounced it, Tur - jee - oh. He repeated the spell, this time moving his wand in a half crescent shape, watching the blood on a mannequin clear away. “Point it wherever you see blood. You have to clean the wound before you can properly treat it.” He kept his wand pointed steady at the same mannequin, fixing on the nose that the blood had gushed from. “Episkey is the second spell I want you all to practice.” He repeated the spell Eh - pis - kee without wand movement, just holding his wand-arm steady. With an audible snap! the mannequin's nose fell back into place. Caesar waited for any questions to pop up while waving his wand and letting the mannequin be restored to its previous horrific grandeur, sprawled over a student’s desk.

“I couldn’t spring for dummies for each and every one of you, but I’m glad because when applying these skills in the real world, it will be important to know how to work as a team, in a team, and to split the necessary duties. Start when you’re ready. I will be walking around the class, correcting your form.” He walked through the classroom as his students partnered up, fingers running through the thick volume of hair he had, falling to pull idly at his earlobe. 'I'm a teacher... huh. Who saw this coming?'
Subthreads:
0 Professor Light Sticks and Stones {3-5} 0 Professor Light 1 5


Marcus Williams (Pecari)

November 20, 2011 12:16 AM
Marcus was happy to be back at Sonora. He knew he’d miss his home once he was settled here, but he needed the break from all of that chaos. His friends were all into girls now, which was fine with Marcus because he liked to look at girls as much as possible, but they were into girls on a level that Marcus was fairly certain never crossed the minds of any of the females at his school. It was just improper. Marcus knew that the girls from his hood behaved in this way, so he probably shouldn’t have been so surprised by it, but he was. It was so night and day with Sonora and Rochester that Marcus couldn’t keep a handle on it all the time and sometimes he felt that his roots showed too much when he was at a school where everyone seemed to come from money.

Over the summer, Marcus had rid himself of his braids. He had had braids since he was seven, so this was a new adventure for him. Now without braids, Marcus had a clean cut look to him with a wicked design that his mother allowed him to have edged into his hair. He wouldn’t be able to keep it up normally, but his mom taught him how to use the clippers so that he could keep his hair even and within control. Along with the change in his hair style, Marcus obtained a summer girlfriend. She was the best friend of his best friend’s girlfriend. Although Marcus didn’t really care to date her, she insisted and so did everyone else. So, he spent days of hanging out with her, going to the movies with her, eating ice cream with her, and going to the beach with her. It wasn’t so bad but by the end of summer, Marcus had been happy to break it off with her too. She was needy and loud and not at all what he was used to anymore.

But now he was back at Sonora, a couple of inches taller (he now hit six feet!), a little leaner thanks to his basketball work, which he planned on continuing in MARS (he honestly missed the good old muggle sports), and feeling all the more ‘grown up’. He could only hope that the others in his class were a little more relaxed than they had been in their previous years. He was getting tired of everyone needing to be perfect because marriage would happen for them as soon as they graduated. He didn’t think that was much of a future.

That was neither here nor there.

Marcus took a seat in Charms. It was a new professor this year, so Marcus was still figuring him out. He seemed alright though. Definitely seemed to know what he was doing and he wasn’t giving them work that was either too easy for them or too difficult. Today’s lesson seemed to still be following that logic. With the drop of the dummies (Marcus felt like they were taking First Aid), Marcus copied the movements of the wand as the Professor showed them and also opened his book to the spells themselves so that he couldn’t mess it up too terribly. Once they were set free, Marcus turned to his partner, “Do you want to do the bleeders or the broken bones?”
6 Marcus Williams (Pecari) May break my bones. 180 Marcus Williams (Pecari) 0 5

Sophie Jamison [Pecari]

November 20, 2011 9:49 PM
Admittedly, focusing on school work was a bit harder nowadays for Sophie. Her mind kept wandering to her father and the woman she was completely convinced existed and was busy trying to whisk him away in some whirlwind love affair. Over the summer she hadn’t actually met any such woman, but the way Jacob Jamison behaved… it was obvious he was in love and perpetually caught up in his own thoughts.

The blonde wondered what the woman looked like. Was she tall? Her mother had been a considerably short woman, which was where she herself got it. Was she dark-haired? Sophie had her mother’s light hair and blue eyes. In the department of physical attributes, actually, she got very little from her father. She liked to think she behaved more like him than Sara Jamison if only because being compared to her mother was something she was unsure of how to take it, as an insult or a compliment.

She did try her best to pay attention, especially in classes she liked. Charms, for example, was one such class. She very much missed Professor McKindy; he’d been her favorite staff member. However, she thus far liked Professor Light well enough. The lesson seemed fairly intriguing to the fourteen year, so she was considerably excited. She wasn’t intending on becoming a Healer, so it wouldn’t be something she would use terribly often later in life, but it was still probably going to come in handy.

“Do you want to do the bleeders or the broken bones?” asked a voice beside her. The blue-eyed girl glanced over to see her fellow Pecari fourth year, Marcus. She’d been kind of oblivious not to notice him before that moment, really. Truthfully, she didn’t know him entirely thoroughly, but he’d seemed nice enough to her. She did notice he had gotten taller though, or perhaps she had just gotten even shorter. Considering her age, she was definitely minute. There were probably second years taller than her, which tended to bug her greatly.

“I’ll do the bones,” Sophie returned honestly. “Less wand movement means I’m less likely to poke your eye out or something.” While she was actually good at Charms, she was still a hopeless klutz sometimes. “Hope you don’t mind my stealing the easier spell,” she added with a laugh. “Anyway, I think the blood thing has to be done first, so go ahead whenever you’re ready.” The mannequin’s bleeding, despite it being an inanimate object, was still kind of a sad sight. The only person she ever really wanted to see bleeding was, say, Carrie O’Malley.
12 Sophie Jamison [Pecari] But Charms will never hurt me? 34 Sophie Jamison [Pecari] 0 5


Marcus

November 23, 2011 10:47 PM
It took Marcus a moment to remember who the girl beside him was. He recognized her as the girl who Ryan was always with, but he couldn’t recall her name for the life of him. That didn’t mean anything against the girl. The girls Marcus was used to here in school were the Pureblood girls who made it known that they were proper and Pureblood and whatever else it was that they were aiming for. This was something he had grown accustomed too and sort of forgot about everyone else who might not show off these values too. Everyone else sort of shifted to the side and Marcus had begun to believe that every girl wanted to be engaged before they were even graduated.

A part of him truly believed that the magical world was nothing more than a slave house for breeding. If all they did was go to school to meet a proper future husband/wife, why waste all that money on the schooling at all? None of them seemed to have a plan after graduation. He couldn’t understand that. In the Muggle world, everyone needed a way out. College or Trade School was where they tried to go for. There were those who never made it that far and certainly some who only thought of getting married, but that was never the sole purpose of anything. The Magical world was twisted, but this was the only world where he truly had any sort of future.

“That’s very kind of you.” Marcus said with amusement. “I’d rather like to keep my eye.” He remembered her name, Sophie. Or Sophia. One of those. Still, he was certain that it began with Soph. “It’s fine. If I get the harder spell down first, than I know I can do the other spell without too much problem.” He commented lightly. Grabbing his notes from beneath the moaning mannequin and reviewed what he had written. “Tergeo” He said as he moved his wand in a half crescent shape like the Professor had done. He watched the blood disappear from the nose, but not completely. Still for the first try, he thought he had done a pretty good job. On his second try, the nose was completely blood free. “Not bad, not bad.” He commented lightly. “Want to try fixing the nose now, Sophie?” He was taking a chance at saying her name, but the worst that would happen was that she would correct him if he were wrong. He hoped anyway.

“How are you liking the new Professor?” Marcus asked for conversational purposes. He didn’t know this girl, so he had no idea what to talk about.
6 Marcus Actually, I'm pretty sure Charms can hurt you. 180 Marcus 0 5

Sophie

November 25, 2011 9:46 PM
She giggled at his return amusement. Keeping one’s eye was indeed a very good thing, Sophie felt. Not having one--especially if it was removed in some clumsy accident like this would have been--would not only upset the balance of one’s face but just be bad. It would impair vision and the like, not to mention pretty much suck in general.

“Want to try fixing the nose now, Sophie?” he asked. The tiny blonde nodded. “I guess so,” she replied. She pointed her wand at the dummy’s crooked nose. Marcus had done a good job on cleaning away the blood, so since that had to be done first, she hoped it would make her task easier. While she was quite good at Charms, she still was often nervous of messing it up. She found most of her Sonora classes to be pretty hard, although the title of challenging to her alluded Potions. That one she found as natural as breathing.

Episkey!” The dummy’s noise shifted, the snap ringing in the air. Sophie had known it was coming from the Professor’s doing it, but it still surprised her, and she leaped unconsciously from her position, hiding behind her partner. Blinking her blue eyes as she noticed that she was now in a different location, she returned to her spot. “Um, it startled me,” she tried to explain, blushing slightly.

“How are you liking the new professor?” Marcus inquired. The Pecari girl thought for a moment. “He seems all right,” she answered. “I miss McKindy though. I really liked him.” He’d been not only the Charms professor but their Head of House, and while she did like Professor Levy in the position, it wasn’t the same. “I don’t know,” added the Englishwoman with a shrug. “What do you think?”
12 Sophie Well, these ones won't. 34 Sophie 0 5