Professor Light

April 07, 2012 11:11 AM
Caesar spread his arms, azure robes rippling down his tall frame, smiling brightly through his thin hazel beard at the incoming third, fourth, and fifth years. “Welcome back from summer!” He walked around the large turkish prayer rug he’d gotten from his journey to Istanbul, visiting Italian cousins who’d settled there. “Please hand me your essays,” Over the summer they’d been instructed to write a fifteen hundred word essay on parchment comparing the various forms of magical transportation and taking a stance on which they believed was the most efficient method, the safest, and which was easiest to perform or create. “and your extra credit if you did it.” A simple creative piece or memoir about the summer they’d spent. “Good to see you all.” He continued smiling, past tortures flooding his memory, delighting his mind.

“Now we’re going to get right into work, a project that will consume most of the semester.” Caesar dumped the essays handed to him on his desk, briefly counting them to see if he’d gathered everyone’s. Sometimes it almost disappointed him that everyone at Sonora seemed like such good students. No one to do battle with, argue against, a fallen student he as the shining professor could lift up and save. And no detentions to serve, that was the biggest bummer of all. “Over the summer you should have all included magic carpets as a form of transportation. Can anybody list for me some of the types of charms needed to create one?” He waited for his students to list Levitation charms, Navigation charms, and Weight Capacity before nodding and moving on. “Okay, good. Everyone, gather around the carpet. There’s enough room for us all.”

The classroom had always been sizeable, but seemed nearly endless with the adjustments made specifically for the intermediate class. The posters of favored Italian Quidditch and California Quodpot players had remained, flying in and out of neighboring scenery, as well as the picture of Caesar parents in one photograph and his sister Ava Marie in another. The book shelves had been raised off the floor, however, lining most of the classroom walls, stretched out to compensate for the levels of shelf missing underneath. The semi-circle of wooden stairs and seats made to look like a seminar had also been temporarily removed, leaving the classroom with light streaming through the windows, and posters of his favorite wizard bands nodding to the beat of music only they could hear. The floor was now free to breathe, save for the shoes covering the students’ feet, Caesar’s desk, and the nine by thirteen turkish prayer rug laid to rest on the ground.

“This course will cover all methods of transportation. By the end of the year I hope to have you all making portkeys. We’re going to be starting with carpets, which remains the preferred method of flying in the East despite the increasing westernization there with the European companies attempting to export their brooms.” He looked fondly on the carpet he’d bought. Besides the vivid vision of red and gold patterns that twisted, curved, curled to paint a picture, tell a story, it also held the hands of the women who’d made it, and the bright smile and exuberant hand motions of the man who’d sold it, and it held the hot mediterranean sun that Caesar had hid from, leaning against cold stone and drinking apple tea with newfound Turkish friends and merchants who were patient with him, patting his shoulder and helping him to enjoy the process of finding the perfect carpet.

“Third years, you’re going to be responsible for casting one of the levitation charms. This is more than a simple wingardium leviosa.” He flicked his wand at one of the shelves, a silent Accio bringing a small empty dish into his free hand. “Proficiscor!” He made the shape of a crescent moon, starting with the top and then curving down and then a sharp drag down the air as if the moon had a string pulling it at the bottom. There was a flash of violet light and then Caesar pulled his hand away. The dish began to fall. Inches before crashing, Caesar parted his lips. “Ascend!” The dish ceased its fall, rotating above the ground, as if caught in space. “The carpet will not lift off the ground until you proclaim the key word. To cast the spell correctly - fourth and fifth years step away for a moment - to cast the spell correctly, I want the third years to group around each corner of the carpet. Good.” He repeated the crescent motion with a sharp downward drag, and then the pronunciation of the charm, Pro - fik - is - core. “You must keep in your mind the code we will use. It is important that you all keep the same code, Ascend. It could be any word of course, it could be beans or chocolate or something completely nonsensical. As long as the word is connected to the spell. We shall use Ascend.”

“Fourth years, you shall work on weight capacity. We need the carpet to be able to hold all of us without collapsing. Today you will learn Fulcit vestis which is a spell specific to carpets or rugs, blankets, or any garment.” Caesar stepped between students and pointed his wand at the rug. “Simply point, your arm must be straight and locked, very stiff. You will feel something akin to... I’d say a shudder. Maybe a ripple going through your body. Very mild, nothing dangerous, it shouldn’t hurt although it is common for inexperienced wizards to feel a little drained after casting the spell a few times.” He indicated dishes of candy squeezed comfortably between books on his shelves. “Take a break, take a chocolate if you need to. It will help immensely.” He resumed his position. “Spread your feet apart, take a strong stance, bend your legs. This charm borrows our strength, mimics it, gives it to the rug, and then returns what it has copied back to our bodies. It is an odd sensation. Fulcit vestis!” Blue light streamed from his wand tip, a ripple of invisible energy passing from Caesar into the wood, through the light, into the rug. Something like a black bruise appeared on the rug where Caesar’s spell had hit it, appeared visible for a few seconds, and then disappeared. “If that bruise doesn’t appear then the spell hasn’t worked, hasn’t strengthened the rug. Go around, mindful of your neighboring third years, and practice the spell on your own spots of carpet.”

He turned to his oldest students. “Fifth years, you are in charge of navigation for today. Ideally we’ll all be able to take a ride, and when we do I want us to have the ability to steer. Before we can steer, the carpet needs to understand the concept of direction. So we must teach it.” He rolled back his sleeves, and summoned the still rotating dish to him again, stepping away from the third and fourth years gathered around the rug. “Cast Septentrionalis on the northern side,” He pointed, a portrait of his favorite philosopher Dalia Torrez grinning on the wall. “Austellus on the southern side,” He pointed, Arizona light pouring from the window. “Vesper on the west and Ortus on the east.” He directed them to both. “The wand motion is the same for all. A clockwise circle,” He demonstrated. “State the incantation and then counterclockwise circle. Septentrionalis!” The rotating dish stopped still in the air, blue light pulsing around it before seemingly absorbed. “Austellus!” Orange light pulsing, absorbing, done. “Vesper!” Purple light pulsing, absorbing, done. “Ortus!” Green light pulsing, absorbing, done. “Any questions?” He raised his voice for the class. “Alright, get to it!” He began to walk around the class, ready to offer his assistance to anybody who needed it. ‘Another fun year. Welcome back, all.

ooc: Since there are no assigned partnerships and everybody’s just walking around, feel free to post as if this were a quidditch thread, with everybody contributing and interacting with whom they would like so long as you are clear where you are and when. And without having to wait for posting order, just reply and post when you can. Any questions IC or OOC just tag Caesar, remember to write your house so I know whom to give points to, and have fun!
Subthreads:
0 Professor Light A Whole New World {Intermediate} 0 Professor Light 1 5

Ryan O'Malley, Crotalus

April 22, 2012 6:46 AM
The Crotalus yawned. Ever since he'd come back to school, Ryan was having a really hard time sleeping. Part of it was, of course, that the fifth year was not used to sleeping at night. He liked being up then, when nobody else was. It was just how Ryan was naturally wired. Besides, if she was asleep and he wasn't, it was safer. She couldn't bother him then.

Which was after all the main issue. The real reason that he couldn't sleep. What was once a safe haven for him was now no better than home had been, possibly less so. At least at home, his father tried to keep Carrie in line. It really didn't work very well, but still, Ryan had been at school most of the time. Now, so was she and he was back to being a prisoner in his own room, like before his parents had divorced.

That wasn't all there was to it either. It wasn't just the need to avoid the younger Crotalus like the plague-in fact Ryan would have much rather had the plague. His sister's sorting had also dredged up a lot of old memories and nightmares for him as well. Ones that her tormented him throughout his childhood. Plus, worries kept him up as well, worries about things like how to do basic things like eat and get to his classes without Carrie seeing and harassing him.

He knew that she was certain to bother others too and Ryan should really feel relieved about that, that all her effort wouldn't be focused on him. The truth was though that he wouldn't wish that on anyone. Still, the fifth year would be powerless to stop it-and truthfully, Ryan didn't like that either. He hated himself more and felt disgusted with himself but short of the Killing Curse or a restraining order, there was just no way to deal with someone like Carrie.

Furthermore, he doubted her bullying others-which would absolutely happen, there was no doubt about it-was going to prevent her from bothering him every chance she got anyway. He was just plain stuck and so was anybody else the younger girl chose to victimize. Maybe they'd be lucky and someone would step into help them, but Ryan knew that would never be the case for himself. Sophie probably was willing but he didn't want her to get in trouble or anything herself as he was worried she'd settle it with her fists. The idea of his best friend facing consequences-even possibly expulsion-because of him was downright unthinkable. Especially because the fifth year really didn't want to spend the rest of his time here without his best friend, one of the few people he felt that he could count on.

Ryan yawned again, trying to focus. He was truly exhausted and in need of a nap. The Crotalus was too tired to even worry anymore about his essay, which he'd had an extremely difficult time with, having to take a position and all. He'd never been comfortable expressing opinions or defending how he felt. Ryan had been taught to believe that such things were unimportant when they belonged to him. He just expected to be belittled. Whether his paper was factually correct or not, the fifth year was certain it would come back with nothing but criticism.

He stood with the rest of his class and looked warily at the rotating dish. Was it vesper on the east and ortus on the west? Were they supposed to cast the spells on the dish or the carpet? Ryan was confused and tired and he wasn't sure what to do. He hadn't really caught the correct pronounciation for the north side spell at all. He'd have to avoid that one all together.

Nervously, Ryan approached the rug, standing on what he thought was the west side. "Um, excuse me," he said, turning to one of his classmates. "Which spell was for over here again? Ortus or vesper ?" The Crotalus felt so stupid and embarrassed but he thought it would be far worse if he didn't know and used the wrong one. That might screw everything up completely and then everyone would be mad at him. Ryan really didn't need that right now.
11 Ryan O'Malley, Crotalus Fine with me. I need out of this one. 176 Ryan O'Malley, Crotalus 0 5