Professor Perrault

December 15, 2016 3:49 PM
Upon walking into the Charms classroom, the Intermediate students would see a number of occupied frog tanks and bird cages. Edward smiled in greeting as they sauntered into his class, waiting a moment for them to take their seats before promptly getting on with roll call.

“Thank you,” he said when he had finished calling everyone’s names. “Good morning class. You will have noticed that I have obtained a number of bullfrogs and songbirds for you to work on for this lesson.” If any of his students had failed to noticed this, they seriously needed to get their heads in the game and be more aware of the world around them.

“You might also have picked up on the fact that they are not making any sound. Can anyone hazard a guess as to why that is?” Edward glanced around the classroom at the familiar faces. They’d been back a week now since the midterm break and he was aware that CATS were getting closer for his fifth years. He expected all of them to be paying more attention than ever in class time and making use of his available service outside of class hours, which he would often remind them of.

“That’s correct, well done,” Edward nodded upon receiving the answer he was looking for, but he wasn’t dismissive of any potential incorrect answers because there were other plausible reasons for the quiet besides the Silencing Charm and he liked to see his students contributing and not being afraid to share ideas. “These creatures are currently under the Silencing Charm, which temporarily mutes them.”

“So there you have the focus of today’s lesson,” Edward informed the class. “The older years I am sure will agree that this is a very difficult charm, so please don’t be put off by not getting immediate results.” This was the first time the third years would have been taught the particular charm so he wasn’t expecting any of them to accomplish it within the first practical lesson on it. Edward knew that even some of the fourth and fifth years wouldn’t have much success today. But so long as they were taught exactly what to do, practising the charm was something he could set the class for homework.

“Someone shout out the incantation,” he said before turning to the blackboard with his wand so that it could reveal the word. “Good,” he added to the student who had supplied it correctly. “The incantation for the Silencing Charming is Silencio,” Edward repeated to the class. “It’s pronounced si-LEN-see-oh. Now you say it, si-LEN-see-oh. Good.”

His wand hand flicked towards the blackboard again and the wand pattern appeared. “This is the wand movement,” he explained. “Like this,” Edward added, slowly tracing the wand movement in the air.

Next he took one of the bird cages from the side of the room and placed it on his desk in front of the class. In the process he had subtly performed the counter charm so that the bird was singing. “Please pay attention as I demonstrate. Silencio,” he spoke the incantation and did the wand movement clearly so that his class could see exactly what he was doing. The bird instantly stopped singing again.

“You will find the frogs easier than the birds,” he told the Intermediate students. “So I’d suggest only selecting a bird if you feel confident with the charm already. If you are successful with a frog, you are very welcome to go and swap it for a bird but I won’t those who have never tried this before to start with the frogs. Please remember that this charm won’t come easily so your homework is going to be to practise.”

“Get practising,” he instructed, flicking his wand one last time and subsequently sounds of frogs ribbiting and birds chirping filled the room.


OOC: Normal class rules apply. Tag Edward if necessary. You may claim that your character supplied a wrong or right answer at the appropriate points but if you are doing this just check that no one has already claimed the same thing before you.
Subthreads:
8 Professor Perrault Silence! [III, IV & V] 0 Professor Perrault 1 5


Jax Donovan (Aladren)

December 24, 2016 3:02 PM
Jax sat in the row closest to the windows with his striking blue eyes staring out them. He might have looked like someone who wasn’t paying attention to the class but that would be incorrect. He was listening intently to the Professor and his classmates while they answered the question and the lecture began. His mood just wasn’t in it dealing with anyone though. The moon would be full in just a couple of days and his energy levels had dropped dramatically. He was quite lethargic, but that was normal during this time of month. It would last a couple days longer after the full moon before he was back to feeling human again (and there was no pun intended on that). He just wanted to work by himself and be left alone, but rarely does that occur because Professors always wanted people to work in pairs.

This time of the month always made him nervous, especially with sharing a room with John. Barnaby at least kept his mouth shut so that he could hold it over his head and if Jack ever figured it out, he never said anything, but John was a completely unknown entity for Jax. Even living with him for the past year did little to change that. If anything, Jax just found him more of an enigma than he had previously.

Jax had practiced this spell in the past when they had done the lesson prior, so he was quite adverse to it. Whenever they were assigned a new spell, Gia and him would spend several days working it until they had both perfected it. Their practice time had been greatly diminished due to all her extra work and their studies for the CATS exams, but they still made sure to work on their spells. This spell they had conquered the previous year. Still, this could just be practice for him for the CATS exams.

He was relieved that they would not have to work with partners, so Jax quickly got up from his seat and grabbed a song bird. He listened to the bird for a couple of minutes, finding himself enjoying the song that it was singing. Sometimes birds could be annoying, but after the silence that the birds had recently sat in, it was nice to have the sounds fill the air and sort of block out everything else. “Sorry bird, you’ll have to be silenced again.” Jax commented, looking sorrowfully at the small thing in the catch. Jax didn’t normally get on with animals as they sensed something off about it (they all weren’t terrible, but they often took time to warm up to him), but birds never really bothered him.

Lifting his wand up, Jax spoke clearly and confidentaly, “Silencio”, moving his wrist correctly as he spoke. The bird’s song was cut off, but not completely silent. It was almost as if someone turned the volume on really low. It had been awhile since he had to practice this spell, so it wasn’t a terrible surprise that it hadn’t worked completely. It felt like a pretty good start though.
6 Jax Donovan (Aladren) Silence is Golden 296 Jax Donovan (Aladren) 0 5

Raine Collindale, Teppenpaw

January 02, 2017 9:10 AM
They were sitting in Charms class, and Professor Perrault was asking about the unlocking Charm, asking what else it was called. They’d covered this last year. She raised her hand - something she never did in class, even when she was sure of the answer.

“Yes Raine?” the teacher asked her.

“Theif’s friend,” she replied brightly, happy to know she had the right answer and excited that she might finally win some points for her house. She rarely lost them because she didn’t deliberately do things wrong but she was usually a bit mixed when it came to class performance.

“AHA!” Professor Perrault pounced. “And how might you know that, I wonder?”

“I-I…. You-” Raine stammered. He had told them this, last year. Why was he looking at her like that now?

“I thought you might fall for that. Not exactly the brightest girl in your year. Things have been going missing lately, and now I think we know who to blame…”


Raine stifled a yawn as she entered Charms class. In her dream, she’d been dragged up to the front and Professor Perrault had made the class yell insults at her, calling her ‘theif’ and ‘gypsy trash,’ until she’d woken with a jerk. After that, she hadn’t been able to get back to sleep. It was just a stupid dream, she knew that. Professor Perrault had never seemed like a mean teacher, nor did Raine think she’d done anything in particular to incur his displeasure. She doubted she was his favourite student because she doubted she was anyone’s. She wasn’t altogether stupid. She understood some ideas quite well. But even when it was something she was familiar with, she never could quite get her thoughts down right on the page, added to which, the shaky, misspelt words and the blotches that inevitably ended up on her homework made her feel like she never did a good job.

She took her seat, keeping her head down, and avoiding the teacher’s gaze as he called on her classmates to answer questions. Questions she knew the answers to, for the most part, but she never liked drawing attention to herself, and especially didn’t feel like it today. She took a bullfrog, placing its cage down on her desk.

“Hello there, Mr. Frog,” she greeted it, “I’m sorry to be taking your voice away. It’ll just be for a moment, if I manage it at all. I promise you’ll be right as rain again by the end of class.” Raine wasn’t particularly squeamish about practising magic on animals - having grown up around magic, it was just a fact of life to her - but she did still feel one ought to be polite and appreciative. It probably wasn’t very nice for the frog to be kept in a cage and have students firing spells at it. She noticed Jax, who she’d sat next to, apologising to his bird too, and smiled to herself. She’d always liked the older boy, and was pleased to see this further evidence that she’d been right in thinking he had a kind and gentle soul. She chose not to strike up a conversation for now, feeling content with just working side by side. After her bad dream, it was calming to be next to someone who she could be confident wouldn’t make fun of her.

“Silencio,” she cast, trying to copy the wand movement and the pronunciation faithfully. The frog kept croaking. Raine tried a couple more times but still with no effect. Professor Perrault had said it was a tricky one, but she wasn’t sure that was the real reason for her lack of progress. She glanced at Jax. She normally wasn’t too chatty in class, if she wasn’t forced to be through pairs work, but he was someone she was comfortable making conversation with, and she was glad of the opportunity to talk to him.

“Charms tend not to work when your heart’s not in them, do they?” she sighed, “How are you getting on?”
13 Raine Collindale, Teppenpaw As the Tremolos said. Clever guys. 327 Raine Collindale, Teppenpaw 0 5


Jax

January 08, 2017 3:02 PM
Jax had putting all of his focus into the bird and not on anything else. It was easier for him to block other people out when he wasn’t feeling very good. When the full moon was coming, everything about Jax ached. His head, his body, his bones, his teeth, all of it. Anyone who was prejudice against Werewolves had no idea what sort of pain they went through every month. It wasn’t something he enjoyed. He hated it. He hated not being like everyone else. He hated the fact that people condemned him and his family because of something he could not control about himself.

This moon would be a hard one, he could tell. He started aching a few days ago and when it started earlier than just a day or so before the moon; it meant that he would have a difficult change. This made him even more upset. His potion helped keep his mind so that he didn’t hurt others, but sometimes he wished that it didn’t. Not because he wanted to hurt anyone, but because he didn’t want to remember it. He didn’t want to feel it. He wondered if he could ask Medic Eir to wipe his memory of his nights as a wolf so that he didn’t have to think about the pain of it all anymore. But he worried that she would get carried away with the charm and he’d lose half his memory in the process. As a person in the medical field, Medic Eir was a strange one. He sometimes thought she enjoyed the pain in others.

Jax heard a voice beside him and turned to find Raine sitting there looking at him. He hadn’t realized that she had sat beside him. Of course, he had been staring out the window when people were taking seats and throughout the lecture, so really, it shouldn’t have surprised him at all that he hadn’t noticed her. He liked her though. She was quiet, but polite. In a lot of ways, she reminded him of Wu. He wasn’t sure how to feel about that. On the one hand, things with Wu were apparently heading in the correct direction from what Gia had told him, but on the other, her past actions and confusing choices after that only made him wonder if she was someone he could ultimately trust.

Not that Raine was someone he thought in those terms with. He only knew her from their extra lessons with Professor Skies and from when they worked together in the challenges. That was about the extent of it. His opinion was simple but it was fitting based on their history together. “The bird is silenced.” He replied to her question. “But I’ve done this charm before, so it’s more of just a review for me.” He explained to her. “Why is your heart not in it?” He asked, although he didn’t actually expect her to tell him, but he offered an ear just the same.
6 Jax Talking is cheap... 296 Jax 0 5

Raine Collindale

January 16, 2017 7:56 AM
“Because I like his voice,” Raine replied, when Jax asked why her heart wasn’t in it. “Sure, he’s not a songbird, but it’s still beautiful in its own way.”

Taking his voice away seemed like something that would cause sadness. Sadness to her, to the frog… It would just make the world a slightly worse place overall. And Raine couldn’t help but feel there was enough sadness in the world without adding to it. Perhaps on another day, she wouldn’t have been in that state of mind. The dream had brought her down, but even if the dream had caused her low mood which had caused her feelings about taking away the frog’s voice, her answer was still true - it just didn’t perhaps go back to the ultimate root of the problem. But it had just been a silly dream. Besides which, she didn’t want to remind people what the outside world thought about them and called them, lest they got ideas…

“I know it’s not forever. Just for the lesson, but…” she trailed off with a shrug, stopping short of admitting to Jax that her brain didn’t work that way. Everyone else seemed to understand that lessons were a thing you just had to do because they were lessons and that was that, but Raine didn’t. She found it hard to get behind the spell and do it just for the sake of the credit - it wasn’t an intrinsic motivation, wasn’t enough. But a lot of people cared too much about their grades to understand that. She stopped short of assuming that Jax would because he was an Aladren, because she didn’t really like or believe in these little boxes the school had assigned them, but it just seemed to be a thing that a lot of other people felt - that you could dismiss your feelings easily if passing a class was what was at stake. She was different in not believing that. Just like she was different because her hair was wild and all over the place, and she was different because her family moved around instead of having a home. Most of the time the Sonorans were nice, and didn’t make her feel like those differences mattered, but she was still reluctant to advertise them too broadly, just in case.
13 Raine Collindale I'll keep my answer short then 327 Raine Collindale 0 5


Jax

January 20, 2017 6:53 PM
Her answer made him smile a little. It was such an innocent thing to say and for Jax, most people weren’t so innocent. He could appreciate her train of thought. Although he wasn’t one to open his mouth and talk just for the sake of hearing his voice the way he knew many people were guilty of doing, he would still feel resentment towards anyone who tried to silence his voice. It was his voice and his body. He already didn’t have control over it on full moons, he would hate for someone else to take another thing away from him.

Raine seemed genuine when she spoke as though taking the frog’s voice was taking something much more powerful than it was and that it did not sit well with her. It reminded him of the conversation he had with Sutton Nicholls in Potions where she was upset that they had to use animal products for their potions until he advised that she could ask for the vegan ingredient lists or other alternatives. Schools, just like everywhere else, had to provide alternatives in case the traditional way went against someone’s religious or moral beliefs. The school may not like it, but he didn’t think Professor O’Malley would say no anymore than Professor Skies would.

“If it bothers you, why not ask for a different assignment or object that will create the same affect using the spell?” Jax asked her. Raine took the extra lessons with Professor Skies, so she might have a more comfortable relationship with her to be a bit outspoken with than say Professor Pye. “It couldn’t hurt to at least try and that way, you don’t have to take his voice away.” She might not appreciate the suggestion or want to do it, but he was making an effort to try to make her feel a little bit better about it all.
6 Jax That is kind of you 296 Jax 0 5

Raine

January 28, 2017 12:45 AM
Raine was somewhat taken aback by Jax’s suggestion that she could just ask for something different. In her experience, class definitely didn’t work that way. You did what the teacher said, otherwise you got in trouble. The age gap between her and Jax was such that he hadn’t witnessed her disastrous first year, although she wouldn’t have been surprised if he had heard, if it had been snidely giggled about behind her back. There were just so many things that had seemed illogical to her but been perfectly common sense to everyone else, and which had caught her out. From small things, like needing to ask someone’s permission to go and use the bathroom, to big ones, where instead of working on the assigned Potions project for the day, she’d started making her mother’s cold remedy - Kyte had been looking peaky, and therefore his need was immediate and there was a practical reason for making it, instead of the common antidote to poisons they’d been supposed to be brewing. As far as she’d seen it, no one had been poisoned, so that could very much wait, whereas Kyte definitely looked under the weather. What was the point of making something no one needed? But apparently the point was this was school and you just did as you were told, however pointless it seemed or however much you disliked it. She’d quickly learnt all the senseless rules, but more importantly, she’d learnt to just keep her head down, do as she was told and try not to be noticed too much.

“I don’t think Professor Perrault would like that very much,” she said quietly, afraid that even discussing the subject might bring his wrath down upon them. Jax had said it couldn’t hurt, and she could see what he meant, in that she was quite likely to fail with her current rate of progress, so even if he said ‘no,’ she had nothing to lose. Except she did. She would take a stern rebuke at the end of the class, or better still a quiet little red ‘T’ in her grade book over the Professor lecturing her in front of everyone. That was a far worse punishment because it was so much more public and embarrassing. Jax’s strategy was high risk, high reward, to someone for whom public embarrassment was just about the worst thing imaginable. Especially whilst the names she’d heard chanted in her dream still echoed in her mind too. She definitely didn’t want to attract any negative attention right now.

“Thank you though,” she added, because she recognised that Jax was trying to be kind, and to help her, “Maybe I can do it like that for homework,” she added, so that he knew his advice was useful and appreciated. It wasn’t a bad idea, after all, and she would definitely need to practise the way this class was going.
13 Raine I do my best 327 Raine 0 5