Haunted School

February 15, 2013 8:13 AM
The Haunted School began in the DADA classroom, a place many of the students should have been familiar with. It looked the same as it always did, only with more ghosts peeking in than usual. One each group of students entered the classroom, they would see that there was a large arrow pointing straight forward from the doorway. Though there was no visible disturbance to the classroom, once one got closer to the professor’s desk, a boggart would come around from behind, it already in the shape of the closest person’s greatest fear. It was only after one encountered the boggart that a soft, painful-sounding moan would begin. The moaning would get louder and louder until it reached a banshee-like screeching the longer the group took to identify the boggart and overcome it, preferably by using the traditional spell, but any other way of successfully subduing the creature would bring about the same result.

Once the boggart was dealt with, the moaning screeches would stop and a large piece of parchment would appear on the professor’s desk. The parchment was black and the note was written in crimson ink. It read:

Trust not the looks of friends,
Nor the reflections you see,
But continue on this frightful trend,
And move to the library.


Several seconds after the parchment note had appeared, allowing time for it to be read either aloud or by each member of the group, the classroom door would creak open again of its own accord and there would be a great screech to usher the students out if they did not move fast enough. The note could be discarded; with each group, the room would reset itself ready for the next, and there would be another note appearing on the desk after their respective boggart was conquered.

Subthreads:
0 Haunted School Part 1 0 Haunted School 1 5


Henny B-F-R

February 16, 2013 2:41 PM
Henny was feeling very well prepared but also rather exhausted from Alicia's training regime. And definitely more bruised than she had ever been in her life. She wasn't really sure whether the training was going to be of benefit, as she thought any skills she had gained might have been cancelled out by being tired and battered. Still, she felt good for being prepared. Besides which, she liked the social aspect of Alicia's team alliance, so even if the work didn't benefit her one jot in the challenges, that didn't matter.

She tried not to get nervous as they gathered for the first challenge. Yes, this was going to involve unexpected things which tested her abilities. It was a challenge. It was supposed to be challenging. But it was important to keep some perspective. The school was not going to put them in actual danger. The challenges also needed to be accessible to a range of ages and abilities. She was a highly capable fourth year. There was actually a lot that she was capable of dealing with. In fact, she considered, holding back might cause her more difficulties than dealing with the actual problems. If there was a threat and she knew how to easily take it out, her tendency would be to do that as fast as possible. However, some of the easier elements of the tasks were probably supposed to be aimed at the lower years. She needed to ensure she gave them a chance to contribute rather than letting her own slight tendency towards panic spoil it for them.

This was only part of the reason why she hung back as they were shown into the defence classroom. Her naturally cautious tendency also held her back. Her wand was drawn and she eyed the arrow on the floor with suspicion. It wasn't going to be as straightforward as following it, of that she was certain. She was expecting the unexpected. She scanned the room, searching for any other more subtle clues.

“Do we get clues from you? Or have to... solve something to do with you?” she asked a ghost. She doubted they were just going to come and out and tell them the answer but she felt that they must be in there for a reason. The ghost merely drifted past her. That left a few options... They had to approach them in some way but not the way in which she had done. She was sure there were spells one could use on ghosts but she doubted that any of them were very pleasant, and they would therefore not be in the average student's studies, nor were the ghosts likely to have signed up for such treatment. If the ghosts were the key, then it must be something that they were supposed to say to them. The other option was the arrow. Following it to trigger something, either a further aspect of the challenge or some punishment if they had not successfully completed the room. She would prefer to exhaust the option of the ghosts before that, even if she rather suspected that booby traps and quick thinking were more in line with both the challenge's theme and location. In addition to which, she couldn't think of anything logical to engage the ghosts with...
13 Henny B-F-R Team one, part one, post one... 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5


Sara Raines

February 18, 2013 4:12 PM
Sara knew, of course, what appropriate gear for a physical challenge would be, but since she didn’t know for sure that what they would face was going to be physical and, more importantly, didn’t own any, she had not dressed accordingly. It had been a knee-length dress or a leotard, and she was not about to wear a leotard around in school. What if the boys saw her? That would be indecent. She had made a little more effort with her shoes, but since running wasn’t something she did much of, she didn’t think wearing flats was really going to accomplish anything other than making it obvious she was probably the shortest person in the group except the first years. She thought Fae, not a big girl herself at all, looked substantive next to her as the team gathered together before the challenge.
 
Privately, she wondered if Fae was as uncomfortable with the idea of competing against their future husbands as she was. What, after all, if they beat them? Maybe not in the big scheme of things, maybe not to the point where they landed in the top three, but if they just came in ahead of them? She hadn’t said anything because she knew how Fae felt about Preston and his…insecurities, and also how Fae might not like the implied suggestion that Arnold, though admittedly a more laid-back personality than Preston, might take it badly, too, and also because she knew it wasn’t very likely to come up anyway, but what if it did? She liked the girls she had been assigned to work with well enough, and was glad for the excuse to spend extra time with her best friend her last year here, but it might have been better if they’d been paired with their boys.
 
There was, thankfully, not much time to think about it before they were summoned, though, so she smiled at everyone and wished them luck before they were led to the Defense room. Sara hadn’t been in it for a long time – since, unlike Catherine and probably Isabel, in time, she wasn’t at any particular risk for kidnapping, both because she had a brother and because her father was not quite that wealthy, not to mention not being associated with as many people of questionable morals, she had dropped the class after RATS – and she looked around curiously for a moment to see what had changed in a year and a half for a moment before she spotted the arrow on the floor.
 
Well. That was not exactly what she had hoped for. They were being asked to go toward…whatever they were supposed to fight; it was invisible, and that didn’t bode well. She looked hopefully at the ghosts when Henny questioned them, but they didn’t seem to want to give anything away.
 
“Oh, I don’t like this,” Sara sighed, adjusting her grip on her wand a little. She really did not like this. She knew they weren’t going to be hurt, but she was afraid of being made to look like a complete and utter fool by something as she stepped, a little off the side of the arrow, a little closer to Professor Levy’s desk and –
 
A flash of gold caught her eye, and she didn’t hear the moaning start as she screamed and ducked at the sight of a chimaera, its goat’s head just beginning to breathe fire. Her heart began flying in her chest, unable to believe that had really just happened.
 
There was a chimaera in the school. Those things had killed heroes. What on earth were the professors thinking, putting it here, with a group of girls, most of them not even through their CATS -
 
The others. Oh, no. Sara looked up again, raising her wand to try to do - something, she didn't even know what, her mind was completely blank except for the awareness that she had to try something before all five of the others were eaten. But the chimaera was gone.
0 Sara Raines Not off to the best start 179 Sara Raines 0 5


Henny B-F-R

February 19, 2013 11:56 AM
Henny was still cautiously bringing up the rear or the group when there was a flash of rapid movement near to Sara, up at the front, accompanied by an ear-piercing scream. It wasn't. It couldn't... For a moment she stood rooted to the spot, a icy sensation running down her spine. And then, without even really knowing her feet had done it, she had covered the short distance back to the door. It was locked. Keeping on eye on the room and her wand drawn, although it would be of little use, she shook the doorknob, banging frantically against the wood.

“Help! Help, let us out, let us out!” she screamed, with the approximate fear and intensity of someone who was imminently to be murdered.

Logic dictated that it could not possibly be a chimaera. They were one of the most dangerous beasts in the world. Her parents, a fully grown witch and wizard, had not been a sufficient match for them and thus the likelihood of the school putting one in a room with a group of students, some as young as first year, was not especially high. However, all logic had been pushed away in the face of blind panic on seeing her worst possible fear.

She was very conscious of her own breathing. It didn't sound right any more. It was too quick and gaspy. She tried to tell herself to breathe normally but her brain seemed to interpret that as an instruction to rapidly draw as much air in as possible. She was hyperventilating. She knew that she was and that there was supposed to be something she could do to to stop it but all she could think of was how her breathing wasn't coming right any more, and how her fingers tingled and how that meant that she was even less able to do anything to defend herself and how she was going to die, all of which made all of it worse. She sniffed slightly, alerting herself to the fact that she appeared to be crying. This did not surprise her particularly. She'd cried before during panic attacks, or when she'd worked herself up into a state over what it might be like to come face to face with a chimaera.

Her own breathing was so loud in her head that it took a moment for her to realise that it wasn't drowning out the sounds of a rampaging chimaera, ripping people from limb to limb. There were no such sounds. She rapidly and fearfully cast her eyes around the room. A chimaera wasn't that small. There were a limited number of places it could hide and yet she eyed every desk and every chair – everything that obscured any of her view of the room – with the utmost suspicion, terrified of what might lurk behind it.

“Where...... is.... it?” she asked, struggling to form words around the still uneven pattern of her breathing. She lent back a little on the door. Her head was starting to swim and what she really needed was to sit down and put it between her knees but she couldn't possibly place herself in such a vulnerable position. She guessed that was some stubborn old survival instinct. Really, it made no difference whether the chimaera ate her standing up or sitting down but people, even pessimists and panickers like her, did have this silly tendency not to be able to accept the inevitable.
13 Henny B-F-R Snap... 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5


Alex Devereux

February 19, 2013 10:36 PM
As she’d watched the whole school clumping together in strangely-mixed groups of five or six, Alex had had the strong feeling that this was going to be an interesting day. All the couples she knew of had been split up, along with most family members, and friends were scattered through teams, making a lot of the natural teamwork which might have occurred counterproductive and forcing them to go for the difficult kind instead. David Wilkes had a pretty good team while Sara had one which was probably close to what she would prefer on a basis of simple companionship, so they might have gotten some perks out of being Head Boy and Head Girl, but by and large, Alex expected a good few people to become...stressed.

She was just determined to get through it all as best she could, to patiently sit through all the talk about it which was sure to take up any time she spent around people in general and her family members specifically for the next few weeks and likely a good chunk of midterm, and then to be done with it. Alex understood that people were going to get emotional about the challenges, but she didn’t understand exactly why. Groups would win, not individuals, and since not many people were going to feel particularly close to their group and there wouldn’t be much year left for them to have privileges or other awards in after the third task, that wouldn’t really mean much. The only thing she could come up with was that the Quidditch players needed something else to focus on, and since the distribution of friends and relatives through other groups made it hard to hate the other little clumps of five or six the way the teams seemed to hate each other, that couldn’t work too well.

She politely greeted the other girls when she joined them, then quietly walked with the group down to the classroom where they usually met with Professor Levy. The decorations could, she decide, use some work; for one thing, the mass of ghosts just looking at them wasn’t the most comforting sight, at least for someone who didn’t like a lot of people looking at her at once, and for another, there was something sinister-looking about the arrow on the floor, too. Alex just didn’t like anything about this, even if she did know they weren’t really going to get hurt. That didn’t mean she liked the idea of having something unexpectedly sprung on her.

She started to follow Henny when the other fourth year addressed the ghosts, thinking this was a smart strategy. “What do you think?” she asked the other girl when they didn’t answer. “Are we supposed to – “

She was cut off, though, by a scream, and she turned and froze when she saw Sara ducking a chimera. Instinctively, she raised her wand and cast a shield charm, though what possible use that could be against such a strong magical creature, she wasn’t quite sure, even as she blinked and found herself instead looking at a vast, hulking creature, somewhere between humanoid and bearlike as it stood on two feet, covered in slime and vines –

Alex shuddered. When she had been small, in an attempt to keep her alive if all the other measures used to keep small children in magical families from Louisiana from drowning themselves or falling into quicksand or succumbing to any of a thousand other ways to die presented by the landscape, her mother and grandparents had told her stories about swamp monsters which ate little girls as well as about the real dangers. Her grandfather in particular, when he wanted to and felt comfortable enough to temporarily abandon the persona of the Louisiana Carey patriarch, was a brilliant storyteller; she had had nightmares a few times about the descriptions he came up with. She had known for years, of course, that none of it was real, but that didn’t make it less scary to see one now. If anything, it made it worse.

“It’s here,” she answered Henny’s question. “Boggart.” She squeezed her eyes shut, trying to imagine it in a ballet outfit. “Riddikulus!

The image she opened her eyes to was ridiculous enough that she couldn’t help a nervous giggle, which turned into a laugh. She registered the end of the awful moaning before she did the absence of the boggart. “Does anyone know where we go from here?” she asked, thinking the ghosts might make themselves useful now.
0 Alex Devereux That was fun! 0 Alex Devereux 0 5


Henny B-F-R

February 20, 2013 4:53 PM
It being a boggart should have made things better. It did, in the sense that they weren't about to be killed but it didn't mean she could just stop feeling awful about it. The thing may not have been real but her feelings about it definitely were. It was a little like when you came out of an exam and you were still buzzing with all that nervous energy, only you didn't have anywhere to direct it any more. It hung about making you feel twitchy and ill at ease, and there was very little to be done because the source of said feelings was already dealt with. You just had to wait until you didn't feel on edge any more. The fact that Alex, a student her own age, was able to deal with it so calmly and effectively only made everything worse. On top of the panic she'd felt at the sight of the chimaera, she felt humiliated over the strength of her own reaction.

She didn't yet dare to sink down to the floor, afraid that the room would throw something else at them. That made it hard to try to collect herself, as she didn't absolutely know that there was nothing to panic about any more. Not that such straightforward cause and effect logic worked like an off-switch but it was an important first step. But the thing she feared above all others was gone. And, even if the room had more boggarts in, she knew now that was all they were. She could be rational. And with other things she had been anxious about, she had learnt to get the feeling under control. The same principles applied here, only it was bigger. The one thing that her brain failed to tell her was, that for the size of shock she had received, her reaction was entirely understandable. She berated herself for not having held it together better, after all the work she'd done. She tried to pull together her remaining shreds of dignity, some sense of calm and enough of a regular breathing pattern to translate into legs that functioned again. She could only hope that it would take her team mates a few minutes to figure out what to do next, as she wasn't sure she could promise a turn around that quickly.

The first thing had to be the breathing. It was always the first stage, to breathe. Besides which hyperventilating was a very noisy thing to do in a now relatively silent classroom. Everyone would notice, if they hadn't already. She tried to push that thought aside. It mattered if they knew – it mattered very greatly to her but she couldn't start thinking about that potential humiliation as it would only exacerbate her current problems – she would start panicking over what people would think if they saw her panicking. She breathed steadily, counting the breaths in and out. It felt more normal but the normality currently felt like a very conscious process and a very fragile one. She had to make herself keep breathing regularly. She had to not entertain the possibility that she would slip up and let it get out of her control. If she could just keep breathing, then the rest would follow.
13 Henny B-F-R I think we have different dictionaries 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5


Fae Sinclair

February 20, 2013 8:47 PM
The days that lead up to the challenge were stressful ones for Fae. She had a hard time dealing with changes and she often let her anxiety get the better of her. She had been doing better about it these last couple of years, but she figured that was mostly due to the fact that she wasn’t so anxious about Arnold any more. She knew he liked her and that had left such a great relief in her. She also had less anxiety because of her reduced class schedule and no important life altering examinations at the end of the year. The only thing she had to get through was these challenges and then a ball would be waiting at the end of it.

As anxious as she was, she was also a little excited. She had never been involved in anything like this. She had been involved in the concert because it had been mandatory, but she had been behind the scenes creating costumes and helping with makeup. She never thought she would have to be involved in something like this, but now that she was, she was a little bit enthused about it. Fae wasn’t sure how Arnold was feeling about it, but she figured he was looking forward to it since he didn’t have Quidditch games to look forward too. It was a little strange to be competing against him, but she felt no hostility or threat. That was probably because no one really expected a team full of girls to win. At least, maybe not their team. Sara was small and fragile and Fae was pretty much terrified and useless of everything. But maybe Henny and Alex would be able to push them through things? Or maybe they could simply manage to get through it and be happy for just being able to finish without the need for the boys? She thought that would be nice. She relied on Arnold to get her through the scary things, this would force her to rely on herself to get through them.

When they entered the Defense classroom, a room Fae hadn’t stepped in all year, she stuck by Omara and Analea while the others went forward. Fae had been looking around at the ghosts waiting for them to do something when she heard Sara scream. Surprise more than anything hit her when she saw her best friend act so very unlike herself. Fae didn’t even see what happened because just as suddenly as Sara’s scream was, Henny was screaming and pounding on the door to be let out. What happened? What had she missed? It must have been something!

Fae, never having a need to protect anyone, found her wand clamped tightly in her hand, raised high as she looked around for the source of the commotion while putting herself between the first years and the middle of the room where a seriously disgusting looking creature stood in front of Alex, who identified it as a boggart and vanquished it. “Oh… hold on.” Fae commented, reviving herself and moving towards the desk to read the riddle on it out loud. “So… the library?” She asked rhetorically since it made it pretty known.

Looking at Sara, Fae smiled at her and suppressed a giggle. Sara’s scream definitely gave her a human aspect about her, “We’ll keep that from the boys.” She teased, turning to the younger students and gesturing for them to move forward, only spotting Henny near the door. Heading that way anyway, Fae placed a hesitant hand on her arm, “You alright, Henny? We have to head to the library. The door’s open now, but do you need a moment? I don’t mind waiting.”
6 Fae Sinclair It was at least interesting. 194 Fae Sinclair 0 5


Henny B-F-R

February 21, 2013 12:26 PM
Breathe in. Breathe out. Think rational thoughts. Henny kept this up as Fae chirpily grabbed the note and announced the next stage of their adventures. They were to head on to the library, apparently. And should be wary when they got there... It did not exactly sound comforting but then she supposed the whole idea was to frighten them. To frighten but not really hurt, even if she felt that the one really came very close to the other in her case. The challenge setters were trying to put them on edge but things should actually be more moderate than described. It was only their own fear that really made them bad. Unfortunately, in her case, that was a very effective tactic. But if she just tried to be rational... She was good at being rational. Assess the actual situation, the level of threat, the things she could actively do about it, not just get overwhelmed. She had practised all of these things.

She shifted slightly as she felt someone pushing on the door, wondering if the next team was trying to get in now that they were done. She stepped aside a little and the door creaked open uninvitingly. She tried not to think how weird it might seem to her team mates that she let them file past her, rather than just going straight out of the door. Until Fae got to her. She tried to appreciate Fae's concern, as the other girl asked if she needed a moment and said she would be happy to wait. She did appreciate, in part. It was definitely nice of her to offer and to try to be being comforting but it meant that she had noticed, and was possibly drawing other people's attention to it to. The feeling that a spotlight was being shined on her problems made her feel worse about how she had reacted.

“No – I'm ok. Thanks though,” she said. Her words came out a bit strangled but she managed to smile at Fae. At least if she did panic, someone was willing to help. For all that she wished that wasn't necessary and they didn't have to know, it made a nice safety net. But now she just wanted to push on. Getting away from the scene of things would have helped had it not been the case that she knew something else unpleasant would be at the other end of the walk. Now that this room seemed safe again she would have much rather crawled under one of the desks and stayed put rather than face the unknown again but that wasn't an option. She pulled herself away from the wall, finding she'd managed to get enough air around her system to operate her legs again. Luckily she managed to get out of the room before it felt the need to prompt them audibly, as that would not have done her much good.
13 Henny B-F-R Us Aladrens do have a reputation for liking boring stuff... 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5


Sara

February 22, 2013 10:52 PM
 
0 Sara To the library, ladies! (nm) 0 Sara 0 5