Professor Lilac Crosby

April 22, 2011 12:00 AM
It had come to Lilac’s attention, in a roundabout way, that her lessons were reportedly too difficult for the younger years. Now, the brunette had expected some of them not to accomplish the spell on the first try, maybe not even on the first day. Eventually, however, even a first year could, with practice, accomplish everything she had assigned. That was called pushing themselves. That was her goal.

Apparently, however, that wasn’t good for some students. Maybe they were becoming discouraged. In any case, Lilac was going to have to decrease her difficulty level for the beginner’s class. At least, that was, for the first years. Maybe she would do different things for the different levels.

Perhaps a usual Lilac would have been disheveled by her classes needing change--which she often hated, especially if it wasn’t change by her own accord--but she was still metaphorically walking on air. As happy as the perky professor usually was, she radiated joy nowadays.

In any case, she decided to make her lesson a bit more traditional. As usual the spell wouldn’t be expected and possibly not understood, but not for difficulty reasons this time. All of the desks were lined in perfectly straight rows. The door was open welcomingly, awaiting them hospitably. Even Lilac herself looked more… normal. She had muted her normally outrageously bright appearance. Instead of slippers that she tended to wear for comfort, she wore black dress shoes. A pencil skirt to her knee, a white blouse, and a pull-over sweater finished her teacher-y look. For the first time, she wasn’t wearing a speck of orange.

Rising from behind her desk and walking to the door when she was pretty much certain everyone who was coming was already seated, Lilac ran a hand through her brown hair, which was also looking more normal than its usually explosive mess of curls and tangled. Just as she had for the Sinclair party, she had straightened it, but now that shoulder-length hair was pulled up in a professional ponytail. Gently shutting the door, she turned her attention to the students.

“Welcome to class, students,” she began. “As many of you have noticed, my classes have been less than typical for a while, maybe too difficult. Since that is the case, I apologize. Please know I was only trying to push you all towards your best.”

“Today we will be going a bit backwards,” explained the Russian. “Inanimate to inanimate transfiguration.” She pulled her wand from her pocket and traced letters through the air, which left readable words behind it. Second years: “Usorlibrum” First years: “Ignis Acu”

“First years, your spell is one of the simplest Transfigurations spells out there. You will turn matches into needles,” she elaborated. Picking up a match from the counter, Lilac demonstrated. “There is no wand motion other than pointing. Ignis Acu. What was once a match in her hand was now a pointy needle. “Simple. Please do your best not to hurt yourselves. If you find this spell too easy, after you accomplish it, you may take a crack at this other spell.”

“Second years, your spell is a bit unconventional,” Lilac confessed. “You will need a shoe. You can either practice on your own shoe, or there are shoes on the counter as well. These shoes have never been worn, so don’t fret about hygiene.”

Removing her own shoe from her foot and holding it up, the twenty-seven year old continued, “Now, watch. Your wand should flick left, then back to the right before going straight down.” In demonstration, she performed said movement and incanted, “Usorlibrum.” Where her shoe had been was now something else.

“If you correctly performed the spell,” she said with a smile, “you should be holding a book. Which book it becomes will generally depend on what sort of thoughts you are having while incanting or what you thought last before using the spell. You may begin.” With that, she sat down at her desk and began to read her shoe book. It was one of her favorites.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Lilac Crosby Pointy things and shoe-books. [First and second years!] 0 Professor Lilac Crosby 1 5

David Wilkes, Aladren

April 23, 2011 1:12 PM
Midterm had been good to David. Not only was his older sister, Annabeth, still even less in favor with their relatives than he was since she had left home willingly to go to college while he hadn’t really had a choice and was now point-blank refusing requests to come back to a local school instead of dodging the question the way she used to, but she had finally kind of, sort of, gotten over him putting his books in her old closet, so they had gotten along well. He’d gotten plenty of presents, too. His little sister Selena had thrown an epic fit when, as bad luck would have it, he and Annabeth had needed to go back to school on the same day, but she’d gotten over it as soon as she realized it wasn’t going to get her what she wanted, so even leaving hadn’t been too bad.

Now, though, it was over, and he was back at Sonora. He wasn’t too sorry about that. While he did miss having his own room, and sometimes his sisters, he also got to wave a magic wand and break the rules of physics on a regular basis. He was living the fantasy. That was cool.

He came into the Transfiguration classroom, grabbed his usual seat on the end of an aisle about halfway between the front and back of the room, and began doodling on his notebook, not really noticing the teacher’s sudden change in clothing and demeanor until she began to speak. He wasn’t upset about it, though, when he realized she was going to go easier on him. That meant easier As – or, since they didn’t follow the grading scale he was used to here, Os – for him since he’d gotten sort of used to the other stuff, and an easy O was still an O in his book. He didn’t feel as good about it as he would about one he’d really worked for, but he wasn’t going to refuse to take it, either.

He borrowed a shoe from the professor, since he thought it was weird to take his shoe off in public and put it on a desk in front of him and sit with one foot in a sock for the rest of class even if he was right about his shoes usually not smelling weird on top of all that. “Usorlibrum,” he tried, and got a…book, he guessed, but not a quite right one. The front of the cover still had a shoe tongue sticking pointlessly off the top of it, and the pages were all melded solidly together.

Not bad for a first try, though, especially when he’d gone for all of midterm without doing any magic or being around any magic at all. Next time, he’d nail it. Right now, though, he had a feeling his masterpiece was being looked at. “I think I might not make the bestseller list with this one,” he joked. “Maybe some points for originality, though.”
16 David Wilkes, Aladren Taking it all in stride. 169 David Wilkes, Aladren 0 5


Valentina Bentancourt, Teppenpaw

April 24, 2011 4:49 PM
Valentina was back at school, and she was sort of happy about it. She loved her family, but they could be overbearing, especially since she was the youngest and only girl. Most of the time, those particular characteristics brought her a lot of perks, like being spoiled rotten by her mother. It was nice. However, part of her missed her family, even Alex and his annoying love-sick puppy face. The Spaniard found that to be incredibly hilarious, the way he acted around Emmy was beyond funny. She had never seen him so solicitous and nice. Alex could be nice when he wanted to, but he usually annoyed her, it was his brotherly duty, he had said. Valentina didn’t buy that explanation, he was just annoying. Period.

It had been a nice Christmas, she had received lots of presents and she even got to meet Emmy’s family. They were nice, and her mother had loved them to pieces. Her mother and Emmy’s mother had been plotting something in the sidelines, and no matter how hard she tried to know what that was, her numerous attempts had been thwarted by her mother and sometimes by her grandmother. The twelve-year old stopped trying after the fifth time, if she hadn’t been able to do it by then, she wasn’t going to succeed.

Like last year, she had been having a little bit of trouble getting used to the school life, since she had gotten used to being at home, on her own room, spoiled by her mother’s cooking and presence. There was nothing wrong about the school’s cooking, but it wasn’t the same. The feeling usually lingered for one or two days, after that she was once again in the middle of everything. Valentina liked the school.

It was time for the Transfiguration lesson, a class she rather enjoyed. Prof. Crosby was sort of crazy, but she enjoyed the older woman’s antics. She had to admit that her previous lessons had been more complicated and she had some trouble grasping them, but as she listened to the explanation, she smiled. The lesson seemed simple enough. Still, the second-year was sure she wouldn’t be able to transfigure the shoe into a book at her first try, the subject was more complicated than it sounded.

Following her instructions, she went to get a shoe out of the ones provided. The blue-eyed girl didn’t think being barefoot was very ladylike or hygienic. Anyways, the Teppenpaw pointed her wand to the shoe and said the incantation. The final result made her giggle, instead of a normal shoe, she had produced a flat shoe. She grabbed it and analysed it, it was completely flat! And it didn’t resemble a book, at all.

Out of curiosity, she looked at the work of the boy beside her. He had sort of a book! Valentina smiled, “You never know, you might make it,” she commented on her accented voice. No matter how hard she tried, she couldn’t get rid of her Spanish accent when she spoke in English. Her father hated that. “At least it’s better than mine,” she said and pointed at her flat shoe. She giggled again, it was just funny.
0 Valentina Bentancourt, Teppenpaw Somebody once said that the world was flat! 171 Valentina Bentancourt, Teppenpaw 0 5

David

April 24, 2011 7:11 PM
David smiled when his neighbor – in his year, Teppenpaw, foreign, Valentina; names were always the last thing that occurred to him – went along with his joke. “Anything’s possible,” he agreed. “But less is likely.”

He looked at her very flat shoe. “Well, it’s on the right track,” he offered, never quite sure how to handle it when someone arguably or clearly didn’t do as well as he did in a lesson, then poked the not-pages of his and discovered them to be made of something soft, kind of squishy, and definitely part of a shoe, not something that would normally be read off of. “It can’t be too much worse than having the pages still be, er, a solid block of foam.” He held out his hand. “We haven’t officially met before,” he said. “I’m David.”

It occurred to him that it might seem a little weird to shake hands with people when they were twelve and bother formally introducing himself to someone he’d been in classes with for a year and a half, but that was one of the things that had stuck somewhere along the line – one of the things, in fact, that made his father’s cousin Sheila tell his mother that he shouldn’t be allowed to read what he wanted, because it made him do things like think it was proper to go through the formal introduction process. Since Sheila fancied herself an expert on kids despite not having any and got more involved in her attempts at relationships with them than was probably normal or healthy, she and David had floated freely between degrees of strong hostility to each other for most of his life.

He didn’t see why his family insisted on all living close together. His father and his father’s sister got along okay, but that was it. Everyone hated Grandmother and Uncle Harv, they didn’t even like each other, there were bad feelings about Grandfather because, even though he didn’t like Grandmother either, he was weirdly obsessed with her and would always take her side over their kids, his aunt had declared her parents dead to her at least twice and had been refusing to speak to Uncle Harv for four years, now, because of something Harv had said about her son, and if he stayed anywhere near them, and maybe even if he didn’t, David thoroughly expected Annabeth to turn on him as quickly as their cousins turned on them both the minute they got old enough to have anything to try to steal from each other, and would count himself incredibly lucky if Selena didn’t do the same.

That was why he was planning, once he was done at Sonora, to move far, far away from his family. Then, he could not only introduce himself to whomever he pleased however he pleased without getting to hear comments, he could even use his credit cards in the reasonable expectation that someone with his last name and coloring wasn’t going to steal them.
16 David No matter how flat the pancake, it still has two sides. 169 David 0 5


Valentina

April 26, 2011 2:34 AM
Valentina was not really disappointed about her flat-shoe. In fact, it amused her, it really did. Learning was a process and it took time, and the second-year enjoyed the process of it all. It gave her something to work for. She didn’t think that not getting it the first time meant that she was stupid or anything like that, everyone started on more or less the same level, some grasped the basics quicker than others, but it didn’t matter. She would eventually get it and be proud of it. Also, Transfiguration wasn’t one of her best subjects, she preferred potions, anyways.

She smiled at David, and shook his offered hand, “I am Valetina Bentacourt. Pleasure to officially meet you,” she finished with a curtsy. She had seen him around, they were in the same classes, but it was the first time they had actually spoken. He seemed nice, with a sense of humor. Curiosity took over and her fingers poked the not-pages in his book. They felt just like he had described them, a foamy texture, sort of squishy to the touch.

“Hope is the last thing to die, or that was what my mother always says.” In her very short years, she had come to trust everything her mother said, and she doubted that that would change. For Valentina, he mother was the most beautiful and intelligent person she knew. When she had voiced those thoughts, Emiliana Bentancourt had smiled and patted her head lovingly, to finally tell her that it would eventually change once she started to grow-up into a teenager. The Spaniard didn’t know what to make of that. How could she stop trusting her advice? In her twelve-year old mind, her mother would never cease to be exceptional, and it sort of scared her to change her mind over that. Her mother had enough of a headache with Alex and their father. Only time would tell, of that she was certain.

The blue-eyed girl poked her flat-shoe with her wand, she needed to continue trying, otherwise her grades would be affected, and that was something she didn’t want, because her father would be upset. It wasn’t on anyone’s best interests to have an upset Alec. She returned her attention to David, “I think we should try again, and see if we can come up with best-sellers, or at least something interesting to read.” Class was for that, to learn and practice.
0 Valentina and every story has two versions 0 Valentina 0 5

David

April 26, 2011 1:39 PM
When Valentina curtsied, David stopped worrying that maybe he’d been too formal. If anything, he might not have been formal enough, though she didn’t seem bothered by it. That was one of the things about Sonora that caused him some stress, never quite knowing how people were going to react to things based on their backgrounds. He guessed it might be a downside of coming from a place where he could barely mention that someone was in his preschool class without Grandmother offering a detailed explanation of when the last time a relative of theirs had married into her family or Grandfather’s had been and how that had worked out.

Of course, he also guessed it might be easier for other Houses to guess just by looking at what someone was wearing than it was in Aladren. He was pretty sure, given the number of people with that name he’d met, that the Careys were a magic family, but in the House he shared with most of them, it wouldn’t have been past belief to think that the assistant captain of the Quidditch team routinely went out in public dressed like he had just time traveled from 1915 just because he felt like it. Last year, the Head Boy had looked like a representative for FBLA, and his roommate had…not, just not. Aladren was fun like that. Teppenpaw, Valentina’s House, looked occasionally like it might be fun, too, but in a slightly…quieter way, except for maybe the current first years, than Aladren was.

In any case, David was happy with his House placement, and also with just going along with stuff that didn’t hurt him, so he bowed back, not worrying too much about looking ridiculous. “You, too,” he said.

“Yeah, your mom sounds more inspirational than mine,” he said, thinking of his mother. She wasn’t big on what Annabeth called the Dr. Phil routine – optimism, sharing feelings, that kind of stuff. “Mine just says life’s tough, get a helmet.” He nodded to her suggestion that they try again. David refused to be one of those people who acted perpetually wound up about their grades, but he did care, and try his best; not going on until the period ended or he had the spell down wasn’t really an option. “Interesting’s better,” he asserted. “It’s crazy how boring a lot of the bestsellers are.” He concentrated on his transfiguration. “Usorilibrum,” he said.

It started to melt. “Finite,” he said hastily. “Finite incantatem. Reparo.” He wasn’t sure which one did the trick, but he did get an only slightly warped shoe sitting back in front of him afterwards. “Yeah, I think this is one to pay attention to the incantation on,” he said.
16 David Or more. 169 David 0 5


Valentina

April 26, 2011 7:53 PM
Valentina chuckled at David’s comment on his mother. She knew that life was tough, but one always had to have hope. Otherwise, you ended up in a big dark hole without anything nice to get you through stuff. Her mother always said that even when life was tough, you had to have some kind of positive thing to cling on, and that was what she did. Not that the twelve-year old was in a dark big hole. Her life was nice, she couldn’t really complain about it, since she had a loving family, with the exception of her father, but that was another story completely.

David was sort of fun to hang-out with, she refrained from asking about his blood status, because it was just rude, and quite frankly, she didn’t mind it all. Her father was not here to lecture her on her superiority, something she wasn’t so sure about. She smiled at him, “Interesting is better,” she agreed with him.

The Spaniard looked at David working once again on the spell they were practicing. She found the spell quite handy, you could transfigure something into a book when you were bored and didn’t have a real one at hand. David’s shoe began to melt, her blue-eyes widened and she gasped. Thankfully, he was able to stop the shoe from completely turning into goo.

“My turn,” she declared happily. She did the movement and said the incantation, but the only thing that she could manage was to transfigure the shoe into a cube that was the color of the shoe she was using. She prodded it curiously with her finger to find that it was squishy, just like the not-pages of David’s earlier book. She grabbed it and began squishing it, it felt weird, but a good weird. “I think we are far from producing an interesting book,” she laughed. She was still playing with her new toy. How knew you could make something so amusing out of a shoe?

Valentina scratched her nose, “What do you think we are doing wrong?” as far as she could tell, they were swishing and saying the incantation correctly. They were obviously doing something wrong. Otherwise, they would have been reading something by now. “Maybe we should focus on the incantation, like you suggested,” she asserted hopefully. Incantations were always the tricky part of magic, you had to say it correctly and all.
0 Valentina Which just makes it more interesting 0 Valentina 0 5

David

April 28, 2011 10:39 AM
Valentina’s second attempt went better than David’s had. “Not bad compared to goo, though,” he said, looking at her cube. “At least you could use it as a stress ball or something.” Annabeth had one of those yellow ones with a smiley face on it, a going-away-to-college present from some high school friend of hers. David found the thing creepy to look at, but since she claimed squeezing it all the time helped her thwart the desire to dramatically throw things at the wall that she’d usually given in to before Frank got her Smiley, he wasn’t going to complain too much. He could just not look at the thing and let her get on with it.

He had fewer helpful comments to offer about what, exactly, they were doing wrong. “Well, I got the incantation wrong when I nearly made Flubber,” he admitted. “I realized it as soon as I said it, man. I hate it when that happens. But I’m not sure what I was doing wrong before.” He looked at his shoe. “’Course, it usually takes me a while to work up to a new spell in here. Transfig’s not my best class.”

Though, really, he wasn’t sure what was his best class at Sonora. He pulled out good grades in all of them, with enough effort, but there was nothing that just clicked with him the way science and social studies had in his old school. He guessed Potions came closer than anything, but even there, it wasn’t total. He guessed he was just going to have to wait until next year, when electives became an option, and shop around some then and see what worked for him.

Though, now that he thought of it, he didn’t even know what was on the table. He should definitely try looking into that before they had to sign up for whatever they were going to add for next year, which he guessed would be before the end of this year so they could get books over the summer. And he knew he’d heard some of the older students talk about independent studies, but he didn’t know if that was third year and up or just for the people who’d taken their big-standardized-exams. He looked over at Valentina again. “Do you have a favorite already, or are you holding out for electives and independents to give you something, too?”
16 David Yeah, I'm not a fan of the one-sided narrative (WotW). 169 David 0 5


Valentina

May 03, 2011 9:08 PM
“A stress ball?” the second-year inquired. She had never heard about them before. She looked at what she had in her hand and tilted her head. It was a cube, but she wasn’t going to point out that obvious difference, since it would be rude, and she didn’t want to be rude to David. He seemed like a very nice person, so she just smiled at him. The little square thingy helped her while she was thinking, and she began to ponder what she was doing wrong. It had to be in the swishing of the wand, because she was fairly certain that she was saying the incantation correctly.

Valentina chuckled, “Yes, I prefer potions, to be honest.” The smile on her lips never faltering. She preferred to have to see the positive in everything. She would eventually get it, maybe not today at class, but after practicing it. Transfiguration was sort of hard, but challenging. “But I know we will eventually get it. I can’t be that difficult, can it?” she asked hopefully.

The Spaniard left his cube on top of the desk and looked at it curiously, as it began to transform once again into a shoe. She knew her magic wasn’t strong enough to fully transfigure the show into something else. Potions was easier to understand, everything had their place and why. It was direct and to the point. You added that to get this and so on. It was like cooking, and Valentina loved to cook. She usually did so with her mother, sweets were favorite thing to bake. Yes, Potions was definitely her favorite subject.

David asked her about exactly what she had been thinking, “Potions, because it is simple and every ingredient has its why and how. It is direct and you can see immediately what you did wrong, because you didn’t follow instructions through,” her blue eyes glanced back at the shoe she was using, and she wrinkled her nose, looking back at David. “How about you? Do you have a favorite class, or are you waiting for electives?” To be honest, she hadn’t thought about electives or even considered them for her near future.
0 Valentina Understandable 0 Valentina 0 5

David

May 04, 2011 6:01 PM
"Yeah," David said about stress balls, then remembered that Valentina, with the accent, was most likely one of the international students. And, with the curtsy, probably one of the pureblood ones, too, though he found it hard to believe that, as complicated as their lives seemed to be, that the purebloods didn't have stress balls. Maybe he had just found out how to make his fortune. "Those squishy things, they come in lots of different shapes, some of them have faces or words on them, and you squeeze them when you want to hit somebody. My older sister carries this one she calls Smiley everywhere with her." Family opinion was that this was because Annabeth was secretly in love with Frank, but she insisted that nothing had ever happened.

“’Course not,” David agreed loyally when Valentina proposed that this couldn’t be too hard for them to do. “We’ll sort it. Eventually.” Even if he did, while still not having that passion for it, agree that Potions was better. Either they were working with books and facts and ideas, which he liked, or they were following straightforward directions. He had picked up, reading around the library, that it got harder as one went along, but for now, that was great, at least for his GPA or Sonora equivalent.

He watched, too, as shoes began to reappear on their desks. It was always fun, if not a little strange and occasionally unnerving, to watch things revert to their original forms after a transfiguration, though he did look forward to the day he was able to transfigure things for a long time, maybe even permanently. That was gonna be cool, if he could score well enough on his standardized tests to get to continue on to that level. He just hoped they weren’t too like Muggle standardized tests, with all the little bubbles. He hated the bubbles, because he spent way too much time carefully filling in each one, then he always got confused at some point, answered twenty in the wrong bubbles before he realized he’d missed one, and then had to go back and erase. He was frankly surprised he’d never started a cheating scandal messing up like that and making it look like someone had erased the class dumb kid’s answers.

Though thinking about all that did make him rethink his own question before he answered it. “I don’t know if I’m waiting for electives or just for advanced classes,” he admitted. “All the stuff the older years can do, you know, you read about it and it sounds so darn cool…and we can’t do it.” He smiled and shrugged. “I’ve never been that good at waiting and building up to stuff. Mom says I went straight from nothing to walking. But yeah, those are reasons why Potions is awesome.” He put his wand flat on the desk and rolled it beneath his hand a few times. “I just don’t know, you know, how hard intermediates are going to be yet, and we have to add what we’re going to add right at the beginning or not even have a chance at it, right? I don’t like that. We need a shopping week or something. At least let us see Fawcett’s syllabus and talk to some of the new classmates before we make commitments.”
16 David Like you said - it's dull. 169 David 0 5


Valentina

May 09, 2011 6:03 PM
Valentina was curious about the ball squishy things, she assumed it was a Muggle thing, but what she had experienced with her squishy cube had been pretty great. Squishing it had been entertaining and distracting, maybe Muggles had a good idea there, and from what she had gathered from David, he was a Muggleborn or Half-blood. It didn’t matter to her, as long as her father didn’t know, which she doubted he would ever find out. So, Valentina was not worried about it. She was having a good time working with him, and she didn’t see a real valid reason to stop doing it just because of his blood status, that was nonsense to her. Then again, maybe it had to do with the fact that she hadn’t been raised under such strict ideals. Dwelling on such things was a waste of time, she was sure.

The Teppenpaw nodded vigorously at his agreeing remark. It was nice of him to do so. The second-year watched the shoe she was using for a few minutes, going through what she could be doing wrong. She was certain she would eventually get it, it couldn’t be that hard, but right now she was more interested in David than in transfiguring anything. So far, her grades were more or less decent, and her mother had not said anything about them. Valentina was glad about that.

The Spaniard listened to him talk, her mind threatening to wander away, not because she was bored of him, but because she usually daydreamed about ballet. Her mother always reprimanded her on that. “Oh!” she exclaimed excitedly. “Advanced classes seem to be interesting and hard. I think that I may be looking forward, but I am still a second-year. A lot to learn before that,” she finished with a smile. The blue-eyed second year nodded in agreement to his last statement. It was fair to give the students some time to take those decisions, it was better. That way they would be sure about what they wanted to do.

“Yes, I think that would be a good idea. Professor Fawcett’s classes are sort of hard,” she admitted. Even when she liked potions, the professor always made them work extra hard, and if his beginners classes were like that, she couldn’t even imagine what his advanced classes were like. It made her want to shudder. “I can’t imagine what his advanced classes would entail.” She was half afraid and half excited, she really liked that class.
0 Valentina *agrees* 0 Valentina 0 5