Professor Fawcett

June 17, 2011 10:40 PM
Feeling not unlike an over-tall, angular nanny, John didn’t so much lead the first and second years to the corridor outside of the Cascade Hall as he shepherded them. Walking behind them was not, after all, precisely an option when he wasn’t sure if even the second years knew where they were going, but walking in front of a group of eleven and twelve year olds, especially when the former were likely to be in an exploratory mood, was suicide, so he was forced to move much more than they did to keep everyone in his sights and moving in the same direction at the same time.

Finally, however, they reached the portrait of another old professor, this one with a quill in hand and a large book open in front of him, in which he kept up with the points. John nodded to him. “Good afternoon, Professor Mims,” he said. Even if he had been inclined to call the painting, which had been old when he was a student, ‘Tavarius,’ there were the students and their perceptions to consider. “I believe we have an appointment.”

Behind the portrait was a colorful vortex, normally hidden from student view. “Do not be alarmed by this,” he said. “Simply walk through it as though it were a door.”

Another complication of this was wondering whether he should lead the students in, to ensure they did not get into trouble on the other side, or hang back to make sure they all went through. “Take it in groups,” he added, to hurry them up, and, today, waited a bit, as there was no actual danger. Muggle teachers he knew would have sold him pieces of their souls to have a way to simulate reality without any danger so well. “Please gather quietly in the clearing, and don’t wander.”

He followed on the heels of the last ones and did a quick head count. “Very good,” he said once he was done and had called back one boy who hadn’t been quite in line. It was possible, however, that some of the students agreed about just how good it was.

They were all standing in the middle of a clearing in the woods – or so it seemed. He gestured to the environment and said, “We are not, despite what your eyes tell you, outside the school. This is the Mirage Chamber. Nothing here is real, and you cannot be harmed. Not even by the poison ivy.” He thought it might be possible to tweak the charms a bit and make them feel something if they touched it, at least within the duration of the spell, but had seen no need for that; it was a purely academic interest that made him ponder the point. He held out another set of papers to one student. “Take one and pass the stack,” he instructed.

On each sheet was a row of pictures, mostly of plants – asphodel, several varieties of tree, rosemary, and so on – but also of flobberworms and glumbumbles. “Your assignment for the day is a sort of scavenger hunt,” he said. “You will travel this area and locate an example of each item on your lists, identify it, and note where you found it. Your homework is to look up and write down the names of at least three potions which use the item or a derivive of it. Feel free to work together. A tone will sound when I wish for you to come back together here before the end of class, and a path will light up for you to follow back. You may begin.”

OOC: And now you have Part II. Feel free to fill in the ‘varieties of tree’ and ‘so on’ spaces in addition to what I gave you. The site posting rules – a post length of at least two hundred words, with good spelling and grammar – must be followed for posts to receive credit. Have fun!
Subthreads:
0 Professor Fawcett Beginners Lesson I, Part II 0 Professor Fawcett 1 5


David Kim [Aladren]

June 18, 2011 10:08 AM
David picked at the mixed vegetables on his plate, having not quite mastered the revealing charm he'd been introduced to earlier in the week. The charm, a quite convenient one found in a thin book labeled The Charming Cookbook: A Magical Guide to Culinary Mastery had contained a chapter dedicated to various spells that would reveal the ingredients used in a final product. The spells had been crafted with a purpose differing from David's own, but the end result would serve him just fine. The last thing he wanted was to have to spend his post-mealtimes with a swollen face and itchy mouth.

Especially when those post-mealtimes meant classtime, in particular his next class: Potions.

David had eased some of his general discomfort with the class titles at Sonora by attempting to equate them to subjects he was more familiar with. His attempts had met with almost immediate failure, but at the very least, Potions sounded enough like a mixture of chemistry and cooking that he felt that surely there he would not make a mistake or blunder that would so obviously show off his ignorance. He was slowly learning that there was yet another thing to mark him as different from his peers, that his lack of magical parentage was a trait that some of his classmates found as a fault in his person.

It was some strange form of racism, but without the construct of race. David intended on researching the matter thoroughly-- on his own though. He wasn't about to go and turn to one of them for help. He lifted a frowning visage from his plate to consider the entirety of the Cascade Hall. The tables were emptying; he should go.

The journey from those places he was better familiar with now (Cascade Hall, the Aladren Common Room, and the Hospital Wing) to his classes was becoming easier to traverse. He had a feel for direction, an inner compass that somehow always found north. He was quietly pleased that he managed to find the Potions classroom without once considering his school map, a rectangular piece of parchment he kept tucked in his back pocket, hidden under his robes. He took his seat directly and listened guardedly as his Head of House and apparent Potions Professor John Fawcett began with his introduction. He was growing more accustomed to the presence of a syllabus; Professor Fawcett's wasn't David's first to receive. The syllabus contained a thorough guide of the term's assignments and topics of study; David's frown deepened.

He loathed homework. He never understood the point. He wished teachers would give two options when teaching a class: a grade built exclusively on the exams or a grade built on exams augmented by credits from homework assignments. David would opt for the former in a heartbeat.

He was surprised and a little suspicious when directed to leave his books and bag behind. His apprehension grew once his class arrived outside of a portrait (the fact that the many pieces of art that adorned the school were able to speak was still terribly disconcerting) that gave entrance to a kaleidoscopic array. Professor Fawcett identified the odd rectangular rainbow as a door, and, feeling very much like he was about to enter some story book alternate reality, David held his breath and crossed through, his elbows jostled by those who crowded beside him.

His feet landed on earth far more spongy than the solid terracotta of hallway. David's dark brown eyes widened as he put more distance between himself and the doorway: they had crossed into a wood, flush with trees and plants and an air humming with the sound of insects. David couldn't help but open his hand, the feel of sunlight on it both warm and puzzling. His fascination was at once overwhelming, a small bubble of genuine interest forcing him to drop his usual guise of defensiveness as he turned in a tight circle, his neck angled back so that he might consider the skyline that coasted over the treetops.

Someone handed him a pile of papers, a copy of which he took distractedly before passing it along, almost missing the out-stretched hand. David distantly took in the instructions; he was to survey the area and find the plants and bugs described on the paper. But his wonder was complete. This place was--

Intoned lowly and most certainly without conscious thought, David marveled out loud. "It's like a real life hologram. . ."
0 David Kim [Aladren] Virtual reality meet Magical reality. 0 David Kim [Aladren] 0 5


Valerie Lennox, Crotalus

June 18, 2011 9:46 PM
If there was anything about Valerie Lennox that could be considered healthy, it was her respect for those in the field of Potions. She didn't really care much to do them herself, Mother said it wasn't proper for young ladies, but she felt that if it weren't for the various medicinal potions out there, she would have died from infections a long time ago.

The Crotalus walked into Potions and sat down, tiredly. Valerie was used to napping after lunch. Her mother would insist upon it and a good portion of the time Valerie tended not to mind. She usually felt the need for one and today was no exception. If the first year didn't get enough rest, she would put stress on her already weak immune system, and end up very ill.

Instead she was attending Potions. Valerie wasn't too thrilled when Professor Fawcett instructed them to leave their stuff behind and follow him to another part of the school. The first year had barely had been able to rest at all.

After they entered through a doorway, they found themselves in a wooded area and Valerie began to tense up despite herself, it was not good for her to worry but she couldn't help it, they appeared to be outside . Valerie wasn't really allowed to be outside with the dirt and germs and other things that could make her sick. She could hear insects humming, what if one bit Valerie and she got an infection from it?

She sighed with relief when Professor Fawcett told them it was just an illusion. Nothing could hurt them there. It was safe, though the actual assignment seemed like it might be exhausting for Valerie. She was not meant to run about all over the place. It wasn't good for her.

The first year took one of the papers that was handed out and found herself next to a boy. He spoke and Valerie turned to him. "A what?" She asked, coughing slightly. She had been doing that more and more over the past few days, she probably needed to visit the Hospital Wing as soon as possible. Perhaps she should go directly after class. Valerie knew well enough that a cough was probably a sign of something.
11 Valerie Lennox, Crotalus Too exhausted to come up with a clever title. 204 Valerie Lennox, Crotalus 0 5


David Kim

June 19, 2011 12:14 AM
David's neck straightened immediately, his gaze returning to its normal pane of sight with a slight jar. He hadn't expected a response to his observation and found himself slightly unsettled. The fact that the question had come from a girl made the feeling doubly so; his experience with girls was rather limited. His private school had been exclusively for boys, and while his various music lessons had occasionally been held on a group level, they were hardly opportunities to socialize. There had been one nurse, a pretty woman with a slight over-bite who had been blindingly cheerful with him whenever his visits corresponded with her schedule. He supposed he might consider her a girl, kind of.

She seemed to find him humorous, calling him a grumble-bumble and other bits of odd gibberish. David would never admit it out loud, but he had found those doctors visits, when under her care, far more tolerable than the rest of the time.

But this girl was not a grown-up. She was like him, a first year. And she was certainly not bustling with the same sort of energy that his smiling nurse had always seemed to have in abundance. This girl was rather pale, and there was something oddly familiar about her. An air or impression that he couldn't quite place, yet still lingered in the field of the known. David mentally shrugged the thought away. He would revisit it later, if he still felt it interesting.

"A hologram," he repeated after a good patch of silence. His free hand knocked at his bangs, an unconscious gesture that belied some of his discomfort. "It's a type of virtual reality, where digital images are projected and can be interacted with in real time." The words sounded misplaced and terribly formal coming from an eleven-year-old's mouth. But he spoke from memory, some misplaced line of explanation having possibly been read ages ago in an unnamed book.

He seemed to realize the artificial quality of his explanation and so tried to clarify. "Like a 3-D movie, but without the glasses, yeah?" His fingers picked more nervously through the black strands of hair that covered his forehead, and he gripped his clipboard more tightly. "And I'm David Kim, just so you know. In Aladren."
0 David Kim There wasn't much room for expansion, was there? 0 David Kim 0 5


Valerie

June 21, 2011 5:40 PM
Valerie blinked. His explanation had only made her more confused. "I'm...sorry. What's a movie?" The Crotalus asked. Valerie was pretty sheltered, in order to keep her away from germs and such (though it never worked completely and she kept getting sick anyway) but she read a lot given she couldn't do much else and she had never read about movies before.

The first part of his explanation had made more sense to her though. From what Valerie gathered it was similar to when illusions were made through magic, like this room. Holograms must be a muggle thing, what they used instead, since they did not have magic. This boy must be a muggleborn.

This was confirmed when Valerie did not recognize his last name immediately. "It's nice to meet you, David." Her parents had never told her not to speak to muggleborns at all and really, Valerie just wanted to make friends with people and get along with them. Conflict was bad for her. She could make herself sick that way.

"I am Valerie Lennox, of the St. Louis Lennoxes." It was how she had always been taught to introduce herself, even though she never really got to do so much at home. "And I'm in Crotalus." She paused before asking. "Are movies a muggle thing?"

A coughing fit seized Valerie then and she covered her mouth. Oh, Merlin, she was definitely coming down with something. She'd been coughing for a few days now and trying to treat it with the potions she had for it and it only seemed to be getting worse. This was the second fit that Valerie had had like this today, the first one being at breakfast, not that she'd had much of an appetite.

She would go to the Hospital Wing and get checked out immediately after class. Valerie just hoped she could make it to the end.
11 Valerie I guess not 204 Valerie 0 5


David Kim

June 28, 2011 8:47 PM
David frowned, unsure of how to explain something so mundane as a film. He had yet to learn enough about the purely magical world to dream up an equivalent to relate it to. His dark eyes considered the ground first, and then toward the sky-- well, the simulated sky-- where mimicked clouds took on the easily interpreted shapes of various animals. His thoughts skipped twice, and then his gaze returned to consider his classmate.

"You know books, yeah? Imagine if instead of reading a story, it was acted out in front of you. Those are movies. Stories you can watch instead of reading." He decided not to go into the nitty-gritty of how movies were made, the film used, or how images were captured on said film. His ability to find analogies went only so far.

The girl introduced herself much as Preston had, and David felt a small part of himself pull away, his arms crossing over his chest. Valerie Lennox of the St. Louis Lennoxes. . . she would be another of those Purebloods. David still hadn't quite wrapped his mind around the fact that such thoughts still existed. That whole 'one-drop' mentality, he had thought, was no longer tolerated-- not to mention, generally found ignorant. At least that's what his fifth grade teacher had taught, a whole two weeks devoted to learning about different classmate's ethnic cultures. 'Celebration Diversity' his teacher had called the event; David hadn't much enjoyed it. Most of his classmates' presentations had involved placards about England or Germany, while his powerpoint presentation showcasing his Korean heritage had stood out like a sore thumb. Still, at least his classmates hadn't made disparaging comments, their ignorance simply due to lack of knowledge and not seeming racial superiority.

This whole Pureblood thing, though-- it positively stank of elitism, and David couldn't help but bristle when facing it. Every insecurity he had bubbled to the surface, and even now, despite recognizing that Valerie of the St. Louis Lennoxes hadn't been anything but friendly, he couldn't help but want to lash out.

"Yes," he said shortly. "They're a normal thing." He purposely avoided using 'Muggle' in his answer; he was rapidly coming to loathe the word. "And there's nothing--" but he was cut off, interrupted by a rush of coughing. David paused, unduly annoyed by the sound; his irritation faded, though, as the coughing persisted, and inspite of himself, he became slightly concerned. He opened his mouth to ask after her--

And then stopped. If Valerie of the St. Louis Lennoxes was so special and Pureblooded, surely she could manage a cough or two. Pointedly, he bent to consider his clipboard, one thin finger poised against the paper. "That's sneezewort," he said. "They're bright red, should be easy to spot. Think you can manage that, yeah?"



OOC- Sorry about that delay. Managed to finish my exams, though, so it should be good from here!
0 David Kim Scavenging ahead! 0 David Kim 0 5


Valerie

June 30, 2011 11:52 PM
"Wow, movies sound...nice." Valerie replied, smiling slightly. They really did. Like wireless programs with pictures instead. Sometimes Valerie felt way too tired and weak to even read and Melanie would read to her. If she had movies, she could just lie there and watch until she fell asleep. Not use up any energy at all. Valerie didn't have much in general and sometimes it took a lot of effort to do the slightest things.

The Crotalus looked at David in confusion. She didn't get how they could be a normal thing. Valerie had never heard of them before. Was he suggesting she was strange? She knew she was different, she couldn't really help that, but Melanie was normal and she doubted Melanie knew what one was either because Melanie would have told her, especially as they seemed like something Valerie would enjoy.

She felt a little hurt. The first year girl never thought anyone would flat out tell her she wasn't normal. And David seemed a little...angry at her. Valerie wasn't used to people being angry with her, but then she was only ever around her parents and sister who avoided trying to stress her out or upset her in any way.

Valerie had never really interacted socially before. What had she done wrong? All she had done was introduce herself exactly as she'd been taught and ask him a few questions about something she didn't understand. Did David think Valerie was stupid? The Crotalus knew she was incapable of an awful lot, but she had never thought herself dumb. Valerie read an awful lot so she knew quite a bit.

Maybe he didn't like being asked questions because he seemed annoyed. And his next question about asking Valerie if she could manage finding the bright red sneezewort suggested exactly that. That he did view her as weak, incapable and stupid. Valerie just wasn't sure if it was because of her questions about holograms and movies or because of her coughing fit. She was sort of used to the latter but hadn't really been judged harshly about it before.

"I think so." Valerie assured the Aladren boy. She walked over to get the sneezewort but was struck once again by another terrible bout of coughing, as intensely painful as the last. She just hoped that nothing would come up. Valerie hated when that happened. It would be so embarassing. Especially when David already seemed irritated at her.
11 Valerie If I can manage 204 Valerie 0 5


David Kim

July 01, 2011 10:52 PM
The latest turn of coughing sounded painful enough-- and lasted long enough-- to give David pause. He had spent enough time in doctors' waiting rooms and outside of hospital exam rooms to have grown accustomed to the sounds that follow those sick or ailing. While his own symptoms had never been present enough for David to notice (although his mother assured him continuously of his weakness and frailty), he could recognize the signs in others. An unhealthy lack of color to the skin and a tentative way of walking, as if unsure of the Earth's gravity, were two such signs, and as David watched Valerie walk toward the sneezewort, he realized that she had that same air to her.

She was sick.

The coughing persisted.

Really sick.

David's frown lost some of its edge, his dark eyes softening as something in his posture seemed to unwind. He still felt that stone of dislike in his stomach from her introduction, but that dislike was tempered by a feeling of connection. He knew he ought to ask after her, after the coughing, but he kept silent. He could remember the many times when, after climbing a staircase or waking suddenly from a bad dream in the library, how he hated the worried questions that came his way. Are you all right, David? Is it your heart, David? Perhaps you should see the nurse. . . Adults always felt that they knew better; it was his heart and his body. If he needed help, he would ask.

If she needed help, surely she would ask.

"Good," he said, his voice still clipped but the anger absent. He checked off the plant from the paper, filling in the name with his slightly crooked script. "And I think," he crouched beside her, his eyes falling level with her knees. He reached out to the stems separating the sneezewort's red blossoms, pulling them apart to draw notice to the evenly stretched yellow arachnid nestled across them. "This must be a flower spider then. Do you figure?"
0 David Kim Uh, maybe you should have that cough looked at? 0 David Kim 0 5


Valerie

July 07, 2011 1:03 AM
She didn't know why, but David seemed less angry now. That was good because Valerie had no idea why he'd seemed so in the first place. The Crotalus didn't know what she'd done wrong and she was very concerned about it. Was he annoyed because she was coughing? Valerie couldn't help that.

It wasn't as if Valerie wanted to be sick. In fact, she wished she wasn't. She never really got to do anything. The only times she had ever left her house prior to attending Sonora were the times she'd been hospitalized. Valerie had been sick with one infection after another since pretty much the time she was born.

In fact, the first year had contracted an ear infection before her parents even brought her home from the hospital as a baby. Frequent ailments had eventually led to her being diagnosed with an immune deficiency. Now Valerie had to take potions every day to strengthen her immune system to the point where she wouldn't, well, die but she still got sick all the time.

Like right now.

But anyway, David didn't seem mad anymore. Maybe she had imagined it and he'd never been angry with Valerie to begin with. It was possible. Nobody had ever been angry at her before, at least they hadn't let her know that they were. Most people tended to be very patient with Valerie. Her parents and sisters and the house-elves treated her like she would break.

Valerie leaned down to look at the flower spider. "I...think so." She had never seen a spider up close before. Her room was kept free of things like that and this was as close to nature as she'd ever been. Spiders could bite and the bites could get infected. Not to mention the poisonous spiders that were lethal to everyone, not just her.

But this was safe, just an illusion. She would be just fine. Valerie stood back up, feeling slightly dizzy. She sneezed "Sorry." She apologized. If David was mad at her before, she didn't want him to get mad at him. Valerie rubbed her head, which was starting to ache. "Do you see anything else we need over here? " She asked, then covered her mouth as she coughed again.
11 Valerie I will 204 Valerie 0 5