Professor Olivers

November 08, 2014 2:29 AM
It was nearing the end of the term and Florence was aware of the buzz of the Midsummer ball. She herself hadn’t attended a real ball in years. She didn’t count Sonora balls since she was only a chaperone and not an attendee. She enjoyed everything about a ball: the dress robes, the potential for romance, the food, the dancing—all of it. As a half-blood, she didn’t have many opportunities to attend fancy balls like her pure-blood colleagues and friends. But it wasn’t something she regretted or was bitter about. She was glad to be on the sidelines for these students and watch them have a good time. Florence was eager to get back to Chicago and be reunited with her loved ones, particularly Nick.

Before the ball, however, CATS and exams were approaching and Florence had done her best to cover all that she could. In the Charms classroom today, there were lanterns floating high, some at a very high altitude, others floating relatively low. The lowest lantern, however, was a few inches above her head and she stood at 5’8”. Her taller intermediate students would still have to reach if they wanted to pluck it out of the air with their hand. The floating lanterns added a gentle aura to the classroom with the candles flickering within their confines. It made the room look a little more magical than usual.

Once everyone arrived, she shut the door and began handing out a pop quiz. “Put away your books and your wands. I’m allowing you to use your own quill for this quiz, but if I see any cheating you will be penalized severely. When you are finished, come up here and put it on my desk.” By now her students should know she was not to be taken lightly. Though she could be flamboyant and outlandish with her clothes, she was strict and didn’t tolerate nonsense. Hardly any of the professors here at Sonora tolerated nonsense, and for that she was glad.

There were five questions on the quiz about Charms. She hoped they didn’t take too long over it, especially her fifth-years. Once everyone had turned in their quiz, she smiled at them. “That wasn’t too bad, was it? We’re going to be reviewing one of the first charms we learned this term: the Descending Charm. Who can tell me what the incantation is for that?” Once she heard the correct answer, she nodded.

“Yes, Descendo. Easy enough to remember. There isn’t much theoretical work to do for this charm, but I will expect you to know how it works. Let’s put the spell to use. As you can see, there are floating lanterns all over the room at different heights. Fifth-years, work on bringing down the highest ones. Fourth years, the second-highest, and third years the lowest, though you can, of course, challenge yourself. Once you have brought down your lantern, extinguish it and bring it to me. Afterwards you can study with a partner or two for your upcoming exams.”

Florence went to her desk and picked up the quizzes. She hoped to hand them back graded to her students by the end of the class period, and she would as long as no catastrophes distracted her.

OOC: Any questions, tag Professor Olivers. Little fires from crashing lanterns is OK, but no enormous flames as Florence would have put out the fires quickly.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Olivers Time to extinguish the lights. [III, IV, V years] 0 Professor Olivers 1 5


Leo Princeton, Crotalus

November 11, 2014 1:24 PM
All around him, individuals were finding their match for the ball, going either as friends or as dates. There was something about school balls that suggested romance, but Leo found it all disgusting. It was all particularly disgusting because he still did not have a date. He had found out that his room-mate had asked Nellie to the ball, the one witch whom he had counted on to wait for him. Worse yet, she hadn’t refused him; in fact, from what he’d heard, she’d been more than happy to go with Tristan. That meant leaving Leo out in the cold. Lately he had been feeling very lonely, more so than usual. He had tried to put it aside as a stupid feeling, but it was difficult to do so for too long.

Now that Nellie had abandoned him, Leo had no friends left and it was all very irritating. He couldn’t understand why that was so; he wasn’t rude to anyone except muggle-borns, was good-looking, intelligent and could talk his way out of anything. His cousins all had dates, putting Leo to shame and leaving him alone as well: Rupert had that blasted muggle-born – a bad move, in his opinion – Adam had a fellow Quidditch team-mate – an interesting development – and Charlotte had Emrys, though nobody was surprised at that. His oldest brother had once gone to the ball with two dates, and Leo had imagined himself living that sort of lifestyle once he had arrived at Sonora. It was not to be, however, much to his disappointment. Instead, Leo had decided not to attend the ball, or at least go if he was expected to and leave early. He didn’t even enjoy balls very much anyway.

As a result of his lacking social life, his marks had been improving. It was funny how well he could do in school if he only applied himself. Charms was one of the easier courses and Leo found today to be an easy class. The pop quiz was uncalled for on Professor Olivers’s part, but he filled it out quickly, stumbling over only one of the questions. After the quiz was finished, Professor Olivers mentioned the charm they were going to review. It was a remedial lesson today, but Leo didn’t mind it; that meant easy points.

Olivers was daring to light real fires for her Intermediate class to put out. He had heard a rumour that she’d made her Advanced students walk through real fire once. She was a dangerous professor and as soon as Leo was old enough, he was going to drop this class. He didn’t want to get caught in the Hospital Wing because of her and he was certain that was going to happen in Advanced. For the practical work, Leo chose a relatively high lantern. He wielded his wand and pointed it at the specific floating lantern, wondering if there was a way to bring all the lanterns down at once or to levitate them like this all at the same time. “Descendo.”

Easy. The lantern floated down a little faster than he’d meant it, but Leo was able to catch it before it hit the desk and he put out the flame. “That was quick,” he said to no one in particular. He then handed the lantern to Professor Olivers and made his way back to his desk.

He pulled out his stack of notes which were in a couple different languages. Languages came easy to Leo, having been raised bilingual with an English father and a French mother, and over the years he had learnt Italian and was on his way to learn Spanish. The particular notes he had taken for Charms were in a mix of English, French and Italian with doodles of Latin phrases here and there which he scribbled when he was bored in class. He spread these notes out in front of them to review and sighed as he leant his chin against his hand, his blue eyes scanning them, bored. He began to doodle a dragon on the corner of his parchment, a cartoon with soft edges and loads of fire coming out of its mouth.
0 Leo Princeton, Crotalus Bored, but what else is new? 0 Leo Princeton, Crotalus 0 5

Isaac Douglas, Crotalus

November 18, 2014 12:00 PM
As he took a seat in Charms, Isaac craned his neck to look at the tiers of floating lanterns overhead, wondering what, exactly, Professor Olivers had in mind for those. After almost three years of her classes, he had come to believe that while Professor Olivers enjoyed performance and appearances for their own sakes, she was much like his sister in that there was seldom only one reason for anything she did. Their type always had to make everything serve two purposes – he could never decide if that was efficient or just a desire to be deliberately, ostentatiously, excessively clever – and so everything was itself and also a performance at the same time.

With Alicia, this was usually relatively harmless – to him, anyway. His sister had probably ruined poor old Pierce’s life already and no doubt made substantial progress on Princeton’s, but Isaac assumed that everything she said was, at best, a truth so severely slanted that it might as well have been a lie, didn’t see that she had anything he wanted enough to bother trying to get it from her, and thought he had lived with her long enough that she would have to up her game by untold orders of magnitude to use her favorite manipulation tactic (pretending she really cared about the other person and just wanted to help them) on him successfully, and therefore didn’t bother doing things like trying to read much into the impressions conveyed by the style of her dress or how she wore her make-up. In fact, he found the whole business boring, enough that he even felt something closer to mild disgust toward the pretty girls of Crotalus when he noticed their efforts in those directions than it was to being impressed by or interested in them. With Professor Olivers, though, the game was at least moderately interesting and possibly, when fire was involved, perilous. What were they going to do with those lanterns? Long-range fire extinguishing charms? Making them fly without the air putting out the candles or the candles themselves setting anything else on fire? It might have made more sense to use paper lanterns for the fifth years if that was the case, but she could be playing it a tiny bit safe there. Those options were both also just fine-tunings of spells they already knew, but while he was new to Intermediates, that seemed like the kind of thing they might do so close to the end of the year, both to increase the skill of the third and fourth years and to review for the fifth years….

When Professor Olivers began talking after the pop quiz, it turned out that he’d been right about the general idea, wrong in all his guesses about the specifics, or very nearly – he suspected that not setting things on fire on the way down was an unspoken part of the assignment, but it wasn’t the primary objective. He was actually a little disappointed by how simple the defined task actually was. Reaching for objects and bringing them down was a useful skill to expand his range on, but it wasn’t as…finessed…as the other options he had imagined.

Still, easy tasks now meant the possibility of easy exams, which was what he wanted to see in a few weeks. Any momentary differences in opinion he held were obviously products of the library books being enchanted by Aladrens to imprint some of their mental patterns onto other people who dared to use the books too much, as he had this term in his attempt to Show Dad. He shook his head and looked for a lantern at a reasonable distance, once he could bridge without too much trouble but without looking as though he were deliberately underachieving.

His efforts with his grades had worked, for the most part, but Isaac was still almost surprised by it himself, and doubted that, if his parents had spoken with his teachers, a single one of them would have noted it. He felt like he was invisible, which was not always a bad thing, not at all – the person who wasn’t seen was the person who didn’t have a wand pointed at his head, after all – but…still. Sometimes, he was seized by the temptation to do something outrageous and loud just to see if anyone would notice. It hit as he felt his spell connect with a lantern, tempting him to try to enchant the lantern to do a silly dance as it came down, but he restrained himself, reminding himself that holding the one charm while performing the other would probably just make the lantern fall and hit him in the head.

When he got it down, he burned his finger grabbing it too quickly as the candle turned over inside it, but he got it upright again quickly and extinguished it. Just about then, his neighbor spoke.

He recognized the fellow. Princeton’s…brother, he thought. Though that was a bad way to think of him; if they had shared a surname, Isaac thought he would have hated people who just thought of him as Bauer’s brother far more than he had ever thought about disliking his sister. Princeton the Younger had a name of his own and was no doubt a much more interesting person than his brother, considering that Princeton Senior’s association with Alicia indicated he was very much lacking in both brains and character….

"Well done," Isaac complimented him, then went to to Professor Olivers with his lantern, too, made sure to mention his full name when having it checked off just in case, and went back to his seat to open up his notes, wondering where to start.

On a whim, once he had everything spread out, Isaac dropped a set of notes (neatly, of course, tied together with string; he wasn’t interested enough in testing his visibility and the theory that Princeton the Younger was interesting to gather up papers from all over the floor and then spend time putting them back in order, even if it would be a way to kill some time between now and the end of class, which seemed a long way away when he was faced with the prospect of studying in a room full of chatting, friend-possessing, idiot other people) from the side of his desk which had an arm rest, meaning he had to get out of his chair to get them back from near Princeton's desk. “Sorry,” he said as he straightened back up, then glanced at the other boy's array of notes. “Oh, those are good,” he observed of the sketches, then began his retreat back around toward the open side of his own desk.
16 Isaac Douglas, Crotalus Not much does change around here. 273 Isaac Douglas, Crotalus 0 5


Leo Princeton

November 29, 2014 1:18 PM
Leo was surprised to receive a response to his statement. He hadn’t expected to be complimented by anyone for such a simple task, and the wizard, Isaac Douglas, if he remembered correctly, moved on as if he hadn’t said anything. Was this an attempt to make conversation? Leo wasn’t entirely certain, so he continued with his own business. He highly doubted Douglas meant anything by it and it would be silly to assume he was attempting to be friends.

Once his notes were spread out, Leo doodled and was surprised once again by Douglas dropped his pile of notes conveniently near his desk. Did this lad fancy him or something? If so, Leo’s good looks were attracting the wrong sort for his liking. Leo was slightly confused, and began to try and imagine some ulterior motive for Douglas to show interest in him. Did he have some sort of vendetta against him because of Cepheus? Leo was aware that Isaac was somehow related to Alicia, his brother’s best mate. Or perhaps Douglas wanted to copy off of him, which would be quite odd seeing as Leo usually liked to pretend he was dumber than he actually was. It also wouldn’t help in this case as his notes were in different languages.

Perhaps he’d heard about his interest and extensive knowledge of hexes and jinxes and wanted to learn from him. That, however, was probably unlikely as well since Leo had only hexed two people during his entire career here at Sonora, and both times he had done it in secret. Unless Douglas somehow knew Leo checked out DADA textbooks for upper years and books on curses by chatting up the librarian.

“Do you sketch yourself?” he asked, attempting to stop Douglas before he went any further. Clearly the wizard wanted to say something to him, and Leo thought it best to try and figure out what he wanted before he was hexed behind his back or the like.
40 Leo Princeton Except the staff. 263 Leo Princeton 0 5