Professor Lilac Crosby

January 24, 2011 12:08 AM
Eager to begin, Lilac sat grinning at her desk. Each of the students’ desks had a dark box, the contents currently known to only the professor herself, sitting atop them, whereas Lilac’s was a mess of papers. She wasn’t even sure how that happened; the year had just begun! At least it seemed to her to be an organized mess. She knew where everything was that she could possibly need.

Another year meant new first years--she had already, of course, met those of her House, Teppenpaw--so she was looking forward to the new faces in her beginner lesson. Some of the old faces--the upperclassmen of the group--would be moved up to the intermediate, so it would feel strange to see them not present, but that was just going to happen every year, and the twenty-seven year old knew she ought to get used to it.

Believing she was beginning to hear footsteps, Lilac retracted from her comforted position and hurried over to open the door. “Welcome to Transfigurations!” she announced loudly as the flow of students steadied when they began to pour in. It seemed like most of them had arrived at just about the same time. Funny how kids’ minds worked together like clockwork sometimes.

“Find a seat, everybody!” she called cheerfully. “Anywhere is fine!” Last year’s seating chart had not gone over well, and she had to switch some seats around for particular students anyway--hemhem, Nova Wynn and Marcus Williams--so she was just going to trust the students this year to be responsible. “Just sit where ever you want.”

Once everyone seemed to be seating, the brunette professor smiled. “For those of you who know me, hello again! For those of you who don’t, it’s nice to meet you! I’m Professor Lilac Crosby; welcome to my classroom.” Her grey eyes scanned over the faces, most being familiar but some unrecognizable. Some seemed eager, and she pretended not to notice the ones that didn’t.

“I know you first years may be unprepared, but we’re going to jump into this course with both feet,” Lilac informed her students. “Please note that in my class, I am trying to push you to and even beyond your limits. It is highly likely that your spells will take plural attempts before succeeding, and that’s okay. Just remember not to get discouraged, and never give up on yourselves.”

“Please open your boxes,” she instructed. “Don’t just put your hand in unless you’re in the mood for a--probably unpleasant--surprise.” Within the boxes she knew, of course, were snails. After drawing her wand from her pocket, she strolled over to the closet desk in the front, asking, “May I borrow one of those?” before gently picking up a snail by its shell in her non-wand hand.

“The spell we are going to use is Domiporta Thea.” As she spoke the incantation, she directed her wand--waving it thrice--at the snail, which then took the form of a teapot in her hand. “For the spell to work, you have to wave your wand three times. Also, rest assured, the snails are not harmed, and I will un-transfigure and release them.”

“Get into partners--preferably an older student with a younger student, just in case assistance is required. After all, I can’t give one-on-one with everyone at once.” She looked to see if anyone seemed terribly confused, and if any of the kids were, it wasn’t very obvious. Then again, Lilac was often somewhat oblivious. “Go ahead and get going. If you need me, I’ll be at my desk. If I’m not looking up to see your hand, just call my name.”

OOC: Welcome--and to some of you, welcome back--to Transfiguration! Standard posting rules apply, two hundred words, et cetera. Be creative in your posts--more creativity and detail means more points for your House. Also, it’s super-helpful to me if you could include your House in the author’s box. (Example: Sophie Jamison [Pecari] ) Thank you, and happy posting! !
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0 Professor Lilac Crosby I'm a little tea pot, short and stout... [Beginner lesson!] 0 Professor Lilac Crosby 1 5


Fae Sinclair (Crotalus)

January 25, 2011 8:09 PM
Fae still wasn’t sure what to think of Sonora. She knew that she was supposed to send a letter home over the weekend to her parents to let them know her first thoughts regarding the school and if it was a good enough to continue the family education there or if it was best to just home school the children for the remaining lives of all Sinclairs.

Fae just loved how this was all on her shoulders.

But, she had met some interesting people thus far. Her roommate was… different, but she knew coming into this that the people she met would not be like her family back home or like the other girls at some of the meet and greets she had attended with her mother. She just wished her parents had explained that a little bit better so that she wasn’t taken completely by surprise. Topher had been nice though. She wasn’t sure of the Calhoun name, but perhaps her family could look into that for her. They had wanted names, after all. Names were everything.

Walking into Transfiguration, Fae wasn’t sure what to expect. She took an available seat, adjusting her skirt and blonde waves as she did so. Her mother said she needed to dress and act like a lady at all times. It was exhausting to act like one all the time. Fae didn’t know how people did it. How they were composed all of the time! She was eleven, all she wanted to do was wake up in the morning and just sit there. She didn’t want to do her hair, she didn’t want to pick out dresses or skirts, and she didn’t want to put on makeup. She just wanted to sit there. But, that wasn’t the case for Fae. Fae had to be perfect every moment of every day in order to make her family happy. So, that’s what she did. That was her routine.

The professor was… enthusiastic. Fae wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or not. Her tutors at home actually really bland and boring. Fae had been under the impression that all professors and intellectuals were that way. She should have known better the moment she took the goblet from the giant man in the Hall and the one professor with the weird top hat, she should have guessed that the Professors here were vastly different than life as she knew it.

Fae had opened the box when the professor had given them the okay and was immediately revolted. Inside the box was a slug with a shell. Also known as a snail. Fae hated, absolutely hated, nature. Everything about it was disgusting. The bugs were the worst of it though. Some animals too. Why did Fae have to work with a snail? Why couldn’t she have started on something more simple, like a quill? The book used a quill. The book said it was more difficult to transform something from one mass to a completely different mass, and having that be an animate to inanimate object to top it off was absolutely ridiculous. This was definitely negative marks in her book to be sending home to her mother and father.

She sat quietly, writing down the spell that the Professor indicated and looking up the spell in her book so that she could mark it. Fae wasn’t an Aladren. She wasn’t necessarily smart, but her parents expected the best out of her, so she’d go out of her way to get it. Even if it meant turning a snail into a teapot.

Picking up her wonderfully beautiful wand, Fae used her free hand to tip the snail from the box (she had to shake it a bit to get it to drop out) and then took a breath. She could do this. She was born with magic running through her veins. This should just be natural to her. Yes, she would do this. “Domiporta Thea” She commanded, waving her wand as the professor had done. Expecting to see a teapot transformed in front of her, Fae was more than a little disappointed to still see the snail just as it had been when she shook it from the box.

The corner of her mouth turned downward in a frown as she looked at the snail. She tried the spell once again, but received the same response. Absolutely nothing. Fae looked to the person beside her. “I don’t understand why it isn’t working. How are you doing with yours?”
0 Fae Sinclair (Crotalus) I better not get all steamed up! 0 Fae Sinclair (Crotalus) 0 5


Sara Raines, Pecari

January 27, 2011 8:13 PM
Professor Crosby, in their mutual first year, had been irrational and irritating, and Sara did not expect anything better from her in their second. She entered the Transfiguration classroom with grim determination, sitting down in the same seat she’d been roped into last year – not that she didn’t like Jordan, of course, she thought they actually got along nicely, but still, they should have been told they’d be in those seats for the year before they sat down – and taking out her things.

She had been small for an eleven-year-old when she was in first year, and now, twelve and in second, she still would have been considered small for an eleven-year-old. That wasn’t something Sara liked, but, like Professor Crosby, it was something she had yet to find a way to do something about, so she’d done her best to try to look older in the hopes that she wouldn’t be too easily confused for one of the first years. In addition to the low heels she was permitted to wear at school, she was wearing a straight, narrow knee-length dress instead of a blouse and skirt, had her dark brown hair hanging straight down over her shoulders instead of in waves or curls, and had worn a little make-up. Not much, because Mother thought that looked cheap and it would ruin her complexion later if she started wearing heavy foundation and powders now, but just enough to bring out her brown eyes and so she thought she could perhaps pass for a short thirteen instead of a mature eleven. Twelve continued to elude her; it wasn’t much of an age, anyway.

She was also sitting on top of a textbook covered with a scarf charmed to make it feel like a cushion, but she hoped no one would comment on that.

She frowned darkly at the call to sit anywhere, seeing it as a trap. They hadn’t been told ahead of time that seats would be permanent last year, either, and the seating chart was going to change anyway because the old second years were now third years and in intermediate classes. It was only logical to assume that she was going to let them sort themselves out, then tell them they were locked in again. The second years should know better – if her classmates weren’t stupid, anyway; Sara wasn’t sure about some of them – but she hoped the first year class didn’t include any real crazies, the way her year did.

She had seen that something was going on at Crotalus on the first night, but had yet to find out exactly what it was, only that Eliza had moved seats looking all flushed and then left the room with Jordan a few minutes later. Sara couldn’t think of a reason why they would scheme against her, but if something was going on, she wanted to find out about it as soon as possible, in case it overlapped with an interest of hers. Hopefully, one of them would share her fear about the seating and sit with her, and she’d get a chance to try to pull it out of them. They were more likely to sit with each other, but still, hope was hope, and there would be other opportunities.

A first year took a seat on one side of her, and Sara smiled at the – Crotalus, according to the robe. “Good day,” she said. It was always best to be polite, Father said, because you never knew who anyone might become, and since no one but the Teppenpaws had a large group of people to become friends with built in, it was entirely possible that the other girl needed a friendly hello right now.

The lesson began, and – to Sara’s surprise – no strange tricks came of it. Professor Crosby acted almost like a normal, stable, responsible adult human being. The lesson was ridiculously advanced, and Sara thought she might be of more service offering a shoulder to cry on to the first years than friendly hellos by the end of it, but still, this was closer to a normal lesson than anything she could ever remember Professor Crosby giving them.

Trap. There was no other explanation available.

When they were sent to work, though, it was with nothing stranger than a request for her year to help the younger students, since Crosby wanted to whine a little. Sara knew, on some level, that she would have interpreted the “I can’t be everywhere” remark as just a little too casual instead of as an attempt to avoid work from any other professor, but she didn’t like this one and it would take more than one decent lesson to make her trust her on any level, or assume any of her motives were actually good.

She thought of offering her assistance to the first year beside her, but the other girl was already working, so Sara put on the gloves she carried everywhere, just in case, and took a try at Transfiguring her own snail. Between this class and Care of Magical Creatures and a little bit of Potions, she no longer had much of a problem with having creatures around, so long as they weren’t dangerous, and she didn’t think Professor Crosby would even tell them streelers were snails and allow them to be burned. That would be a firing offense.

She got something which was almost a teapot, if a wobbly, ill-formed, snail-shell-patterned one, just as her neighbor decided to speak up. “It's going well, thank you,” she said automatically. “I think I was better at the end of last year, but you lose a little over the summer.” She looked at the other girl’s attempt, only to find it still looked entirely snail-like. “I wouldn’t worry about yours yet, though. It usually takes a while to get the hang of it,” she added with another smile. “This is far more advanced than most things you’ll do in first year.” Unless the entire faculty had gone crazy, but she doubted it. “You have to concentrate very hard, and try to visualize the snail turning into a teapot.” She made a face. “I know it isn’t a pleasant visual. I’m Sara Raines, of the Illinois Raineses. Second year Pecari.”
0 Sara Raines, Pecari I really hope no one does 0 Sara Raines, Pecari 0 5


Fae

January 31, 2011 8:47 PM
Fae found herself looking at an unfamiliar face. That wasn’t very surprising. Fae had only spoken to the small group of first year crotali and to absolutely no one else. She had seen the other first years vaguely from her seat at the Opening Feast, but they were all so many different colors and each student looked happier than the last, the their faces were contorted in Fae’s mind. This girl could have very well been one of the many faces that Fae had seen, or she could be one of the many faces Fae’s mind hadn’t been able to register at the time.

Her blue eyes glanced at the girl’s work and discovered that it was much better than anything Fae was currently hoping to achieve. She gave an inward sigh. She had really hoped that the professor would have been able to provide more detail in how exactly they were supposed to transform a snail into teapot considering how very different the two objects were in comparison to one another. Clearly it was more than just a spell and a wave of the wand. Fae had perfected the wand movement and said the spell with perfect clarification and absolutely nothing happened. So what exactly was she missing that the professor had not said to do?

As the girl spoke, she made it clear that she had been through this before and was now in her second year. It was unspoken, but it seemed as though Crosby made it a habit to start off her students with the difficult transfigurations. Perhaps she thought if they mastered what was the most difficult to their level, than everything else would be cake. But what if they couldn’t master the most difficult and ended up failing the class because of it? That didn’t seem at all fair. How was she supposed to do this without any sort of guidance? Sure she could raise her hand and ask, but then she would look like a complete idiot to her classmates and that would bring embarrassment onto her family.

“Fae Sinclair of the Connecticut Branch, first year Crotalus.” Fae introduced herself with a slight bow of her head. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Sara.” Sara was the first person that Fae had met who had introduced themselves as she had been taught. Well, minus the addition of the house. Fae would just have to get used to that. Apparently this school was big on judging a person based on their house. From what Fae had read regarding Crotalus, this was the house that her family would be most proud of.

Fae took in what Sara was telling her. She found it incredibly hard to visualize a snail becoming a teapot because they were just so ridiculously different. Why would she even need to know how to do this? It wasn’t like she was going to go out in the backyard and start digging for snails so that she could go make a pot of tea. Besides, she never made anything. They had house-elves for that. “Oh, right, visualization…” Fae said, though her doubt was evident in her voice. Not doubt of what Sara had told her, but rather, doubt that she would succeed by visualizing the transformation.

Taking a moment to clear her thoughts, Fae closed her eyes and tried to picture a snail turning into a china teapot. Once she felt she had the visualization down, she opened her eyes, picked up her wand and repeated the spell. The snail twittered for a moment and then promptly ballooned out. It certainly didn’t take a shape of a teapot, but the color faded and turned white. Fae swore that she even saw small little pink flowers along the sides of it, but she didn’t want to venture close to verify.

“Er… it’s not really snail anymore, so that’s a plus.” Fae said, giving a hesitant smile. “Maybe the visualizing did help. I just wish I had a better understanding of all of this rather than just a wave of my wand and a spell. Clearly this means far more than just that.” Fae commented, already feeling exhausted. “Are all lessons like this? Maybe not the challenge in skills, but just so vague?”
0 Fae It's bound to happen at some point. 0 Fae 0 5


Sara

February 02, 2011 9:01 PM
“It’s a pleasure to meet you as well, Fae,” Sara said, trying to think if she knew anything about the Connecticut Sinclairs. The sixth year Pecari prefect was Alison Sinclair, but from what Sara had seen of her, she neither looked nor acted much like a pureblood lady. Plus, Sara was fairly sure she was from the Midwest, not the Northeast. She spoke a bit like the people Sara heard in shops when her parents took her to get her school things.

Asking was a perfectly legitimate way to get information, but Sara didn’t think she should. It might be a matter of a disownment in the previous generation, or a general estrangement for any number of reasons, and bringing it up could put a chill on her work with Fae. It was especially important with new acquaintances to do nothing that could cause someone to be embarrassed. Especially over something Sara didn’t really care about anyway, since she did not have a great deal to do with Alison Sinclair and didn’t anticipate needing to in the first place. It wasn’t even like she would be establishing a common acquaintance, since she was fairly sure Alison wouldn’t know who she was if Sara were shown to her. She certainly wouldn’t have known Alison as more than ‘that older girl with the necklace’ if she hadn’t been a prefect.

“You did very well,” Sara said, smiling, when Fae commented that her snail was no longer really a snail. “But I’m afraid that lessons usually are like this. The professors either expect us to catch on by instinct or research the theory ourselves.” She paused, biting her bottom lip in thought before she caught herself doing it and stopped. “Well, I’m exaggerating. Sometimes we do study what we’re doing for a day or so.” She cast Professor Crosby a dark look while she was sure the woman’s back was turned. “Unfortunately, the…woman who teaches this class is a vile, uncouth person who enjoys seeing us suffer, so I’m afraid we’re on our own for learning how things work in here.” She took a deep breath, releasing the hostility. It was always best to seem calm. Unaffected. “Professor McKindy is very good, though, and Professor Fawcett insists that we do research and write about it all the time, and Professor Levy at least explains the purpose behind our Defense exercises, so it’s not always this bad.”
0 Sara As long as it's not at me, then. 0 Sara 0 5


Fae

February 05, 2011 7:44 PM
The manners in which Sara produced sent a wave of relief and a sense of ease to Fae. She hadn’t realized how tense she had been since she came into the school. Having met her three house mates and knowing none of them had the same background (as far as she could tell) had set Fae in panic mode without her even realizing it. Her subconscious had put her on the defense because there was a fear in her about being alone in this school. But having met Sara, who had the same charms and clearly same background, gave Fae a little bit of hope about this school. But, only a little. She would still write home asking about the Raines family. Surely they would be approved by her parents.

Fae was rather pleased by the compliment that Sara gave her regarding her not-snail, not-teapot transfiguration. She knew it wasn’t actually good at all considering it didn’t look anything at all as it should, but since she had managed to transfigure it into something at all, she figured she deserved credit for at least that much. She knew that spells would be difficult, her brother had prepared her for that much, but she wanted to be good at it too. She needed to be good at it because her parents and her great grandfather expected her to be absolutely perfect. If she failed out of school or, in general, just did horribly, who would want to marry her and bring more American connections to the family name?

She almost felt the need to cry when Sara said that all the lessons would be like this. If she was expected to figure this all out on her own, there would be no way she’d ever pass anything! Did the professors just throw them under the Centaur and then watch as they were all trampled helplessly and then laugh about it after?

But then Sara continued and apparently, did not like the Transfiguration Professor one bit. Fae could only assume that terrible things had happened the year before and that was why Sara was showing such hostility towards the professor. Fae wasn’t completely surprised considering the woman started off with this lesson to a group of students who had never used their wands before. The rest of the professors seemed to be alright though, at least by Sara’s standards and considering Sara was the only older student that Fae had spoken too, she was going to take her word for it.

“Fantastic.” Fae muttered, looking over at the professor. “I’ll be writing to father about her. Maybe he’ll look into the hiring process or at least how the curriculum is discussed.” Fae returned to her foul project and tried again. It managed to somewhat resemble a teapot this time, but it still wasn’t perfect. She was definitely going to have to be studying this back in the common room. “Father will not be pleased by this.”
0 Fae I hope it's not me either. 0 Fae 0 5


Sara

February 12, 2011 10:18 PM
Sara smiled a little wryly at Fae’s insistence that she was going to have her father look into this. “I told mine about it when she punished my Housemate after he was attacked by another student and, I heard, tried to drop desks on the Intermediate students, but he says that’s just how things are at Sonora unless she hurts me,” she said. “Mother says it’s the last place in the world for the least employable teachers in the world, and that’s what makes it wonderful often enough that we have to overlook the...aberrations.” She bit her lip for a second before adding, “Uncle Charles says that the only reason it’s still open is because it’s the only school left that allows purebloods to behave the way our parents want us to without the staff being allowed to try to change our minds, but Uncle Charles isn’t very happy.”

This was generally true, though Sara imagined it was a little more true than usual lately. She had not spent much time in the country over the summer, but when she’d come home right in time to get ready to go back to school, Mother had told her all about how Uncle Charles’ real niece, Anna, had been disowned and how, though only the family had picked up on it and she mustn’t tell anyone, there was some kind of problem between Catherine and her husband. Sara had watched them very closely at Catherine’s twenty-second birthday party - everyone had to go to Catherine’s birthday parties; they were huge and tedious, got worse every year, and no one enjoyed them very much, but to not go would risk the wrath of Aunt Lila and the disfavor of Uncle Charles, and in their state and family, those were not good things to risk – and she’d seen it, too: there was something tense between them, not that much different from the way Uncle Charles and Aunt Lila had been when Sara was younger.

It occurred to her, sometimes, just how lucky she was. Her parents were very happy together. Sometimes they disagreed about things, but it never lasted very long, or disturbed the basic feeling of togetherness that Milton and Caroline Raines projected. They also stayed out of scandals all the time. Her parents were, as far as she knew, spotless, which was more than the things she was told suggested was the case for almost everyone.

“Still, you really are progressing quite well,” Sara assured her, making another attempt at her own snail. “Some people can’t get any results in their first lesson – no change at all, for days, sometimes. Have you had many theoretical tutors before?”
0 Sara I can't see why it would be. 0 Sara 0 5