Professor Mary Brooding

October 04, 2019 2:15 PM
The goal of the challenge was straightforward: survival. Of course, students would not be allowed to perish, nor really in any threat of doing so, but it did make for an exciting event.

The sprawling deserts of the Mirage Chamber were warm and inviting in many ways, despite the sand that picked up on a magical wind, and the creatures that burrowed beneath the dunes. It was far from a barren desert, but not an oasis either. It was the sort of place that someone might settle were they traveling a great distance across this place and needed to camp out for the night, or for a few days while they took time to reflect. In fact, that was the most common reason for anyone to spend such time in the Mirage Chamber, and precisely the inspiration for the challenge.

With brilliant blue days, fiery dawns and dusks, and cool black nights where every star could be seen above, even the chirping of wildlife amidst the scrubby plants indicated a certain level of tranquility. A weary traveler was as likely to find a glittering hummingbird or a lumbering tortoise as they were to find themselves.

It was also a desert full of opportunity, and there was plenty of material to be collected and used for shelter, food and water, clothes, and potions. The students were asked to do just that. Although they hadn't known exactly where or what environment they would be doing this challenge in, they had been given enough information to know that they would be facing a natural environment with only their wands and each other. The beauty of it all was that students already had it in them to tackle this sort of thing.

Herbology had long since taught them how to find and handle the flora and fauna of the desert, while Care of Magical Creatures had taught them about any other living things they might encounter. Defense Against the Dark Arts had them readied for any less pleasant engagements of either type. Potions meant they were ready to brew for themselves whatever was required for such basic survival - wound care, health care, and even some nutritional care would be possible here. Transfiguration and Charms were ceaselessly helpful in any of these sorts of tasks.

This was an opportunity for every student, whatever their skills or interests, whether they enjoyed the physical activities that went into a challenge like this or the more quiet activities that would be important for any team to work together effectively, to prove themselves. What had they learned so far? What were their abilities? What was their potential? Everyone had something they could do here, and everyone's contribution was critical.

With three hours on the clock and only their wands to help them, students were tasked with collecting materials for and producing a stable shelter of some sort, and enough food (or the means to acquire it) and drink for their entire team, as well as brewing whatever potions they felt would be helpful. Although the students would not be staying overnight or for any extended duration in their fortifications, they had been asked to prepare as if they would be and their scores would come partially from their success in that regard. It was a perfectly feasible task with teams of this size, and the goal was more about how they did it and what they did than whether they could do it at all. With the Mirage Chamber charmed to ensure that multiple teams could enter at the same time but not find each other within or alter anything for the other teams, all of the students were released at the same time.

OOC - Welcome to the challenges! These will be marked in accordance with the guidelines above. As per class posts, each team member’s best post will be scored from 1-5, with each of their other contributions receiving a point - so, getting as many members in as possible is important, but being active and vocal within your team will help too.

As per Quidditch, you do not have to stick to a given posting order.

Bonus points may be given for being extra brilliant, or if a team shows particular use of a subject area over and above what other teams do.
Subthreads:
22 Professor Mary Brooding The Second Challenge 1424 Professor Mary Brooding 1 5

Professor Mary Brooding

October 04, 2019 2:19 PM
Victor Callahan
Sylvia Mordue
Katerina Vorontsov
Sophia Priory
Martin Crosby V
22 Professor Mary Brooding Team 9 1424 Professor Mary Brooding 0 5

Katerina Vorontsov

October 10, 2019 7:06 PM
OOC: Information about Sylvia's appearance provided by her author. BIC:

Katerina was a little worried about Sylvia. Ever since they had come back to school, the other girl had looked sad and unwell - or at least as though she might become unwell at any time. Her cousin with the camera, Nathaniel Nikolaevich, looked even worse than she did, and she had noticed, too, that one did not see Sylvia with him as much as was usual.

Katya was not sure if she should observe anything about this out loud. Her best guess was that they had had a death in the family over Christmas break - the dedushka or babushka, maybe, since they didn't have the same parents. Not for the first time, she cursed her relative lack of detailed information about American society. If she knew what was what, then she would know what the right thing to say was, but she didn't, and it seemed rude to point out to another girl that she looked sick and sad....

This was the main thing on Katya's mind as team nine gathered for the second task. She half-smiled at Sylvia, not thinking it appropriate even by American standards to be too enthusiastic when Sylvia had been looking less than her best lately, but also thinking it would be rude by American standards to greet her with a straight Russian face.

She did not think much about the task, because she did not have enough information to think about it in any meaningful way. This time, they had been told they could only have their wands, so what was she supposed to think about? She knew the spells she knew, and there was no point just listing spells in her mind when she didn't even know what it was they were going to face. There was also no point in fretting about her clothing, as she still didn't own a pair of trousers and therefore would, once again, just have to do the best she could in a light skirt meant for more physical activities. Her blonde hair was in a single braid down her back and the fringe over her forehead was pinned back with a pair of bobby pins. She was as ready as she could be.

She looked around curiously as they entered the Mirage Chamber. When she thought of challenges and survival in terms of the outdoors, the first thing she thought about was Siberia. She had never had to do anything like that, of course, but she had heard tales from her family about the Difficult Times after the magly began their Great War - after Tsar Nikolai's starets adviser had been murdered, things had gotten so bad for a while that even their people had been forced to flee into remote, secret places where they couldn't be found by the rampaging magly, and even some of their own - mostly half-bloods and lower - who had joined in the rebellion against the tsar, and against all order. Times had been very difficult for some of Mama's ancestors; Papa's had been among those who left altogether and ended up in Volshebnaya Derevnya.

Siberia, however, was hard to survive because it was very cold there. There was a lot of snow, trees exploded when the very sap inside them froze, and so on. This was not like that. There was stuff on the wind, but it was sand. The plants were low and scrubby. The weather was warm. She did not think that what she remembered from the old stories would be of much use here...

...Or maybe it would, she realized. Survival was, to a point, survival. She had always preferred reading stories about ladies and gentlemen to Tatiana's adventure novels, but Tatiana had made her play Adventurers In The Wild enough that she remembered a few things there too. Maybe.

"I can make the fire," she volunteered. "We need the fire if we make all the potion. I make some of potions, too, if we find right things."
16 Katerina Vorontsov This is not something my mama would approve of. 1418 Katerina Vorontsov 0 5

Sophia Priory

October 12, 2019 3:42 PM
Sophia honestly didn't understand the point of having a survival challenge. Well,okay, she generally didn't understand the point of the Challenges period, but she had no general qualms about doing them,other than them eating into her free time, now that she knew who her teammates were and found them rather non-objectionable.

The thing about a survival challenge in particular was that it was highly unlikely that anyone was an experienced survivalist. At best, there were people who had camped or hunted. Why would they have a challenge that basically nobody was good at? Because it was technically fair given that almost everyone was inexperienced as opposed to the obstacle course which involved athleticism when some people were athletic and others weren't? Yes, they could get through using magic and got bonus points for using a subject particularly well, but the thing was, if you were unathletic, and let on that you had to use magic, for example blasting through the wall instead of climbing because someone physically couldn't, that person who couldn't, was automatically made vulnerable to bullying due to not being athletic.

Honestly, Sophia did not understand-and never would- why people placed so much blasted value on something as unimportant as sports and athletic ability. There was an entire subset of people who thought themselves special and superior and entitled and could break easy to follow rules-it had been extremely satisfying to see Anya Delachene called out at the Returning Feast for not wearing her robes, even if the Headmaster, to his credit, did not use her name- because they were good at sports while people who sucked at them were more likely to be bullied.

And people bought into it too, feeding the egos of athletes. For Merlin's sake, Sophia had figured enough about the Muggles in her city to realize that they basically built a cult around their college's sports teams and even her own brother liked watching Quidditch some.

So the fact that the Challenges so far had been largely physically based-survival, while not exactly the same as an obstacle course still used an awful lot of physical skills-was sort of, well, obnoxious. Like the school was favoring the athletes even though there wasn't even enough interest in Quidditch for every house to have their own team and basically pandering to them because of it. They were contributing to these people's sense of self-importance at the expense of the self-esteem of the non-athletes and putting them in a position for humilation, failure and bullying.

And this was coming from someone who was herself a good flyer and generally considered "tough" by her family. (Probably because she was being compared to Lydia.)

Anyway, not only was this particular challenge ridiculous because probably nobody had the requisite survival skills but also....it wasn't a real survival challenge, even though that was generally a good thing given the aforementioned lack of skills and experience and the potential for lawsuits and ruining people's lives if their children got hurt and well...people actually getting hurt. Still, why search for food when they could presumably go three hours without eating and why build a shelter when they weren't going to be sleeping here? As for water and fire surely the older students could do that simply with magic.

As they entered the Mirage Chamber, Sophia noted that Sylvia did not....look well. The Aladren was unsure if the fourth year was sick-which would not be good either for their score or for Sylvia herself-or just plain was uneasy about this sort of Challenge. Either way, Sophia felt bad for her.

Katerina offered to make the fire and Sophia nodded. "Maybe a couple of us could go looking for food and materials for the shelter? I'm willing to do that if that's what everyone thinks is best." She felt lucky once again to have team of people she could tolerate going on a mission with.
11 Sophia Priory That is understandable 1447 Sophia Priory 0 5

Katerina

October 17, 2019 4:53 PM
Katya had to admit that Sophia's ideas, what she understood of them, were more immediately practical than building a fire. Now that she had laid claim to the idea, though, she hoped that would hold until it was time to build a fire, so there would be one thing Katya could do to ensure she got her checkmark for appropriate participation.

Unfortunately, the other thing about Sophia's (ah, how nice to have someone who had a name that was totally normal in Katya's ears!) ideas was that they did not sound very much fun at all. Katya did not really want to move in this heat, never mind go search for something. However, reason said that it must be done. They had nothing here to work with, and if they didn't find a way to get things about them, then they would get a bad report from the teachers.

"I will help you," she agreed. "Do we think summon charm would work? Or do we must know what is here before we can put summon charm on it?" She grimaced, hating her mangled English sometimes. She thought she had made the point in a way that could be understood, but the Americans might have to stop and think for a moment, and this was not something Americans were known, as a culture, for doing. "My thought is, the teachers, they know all of what is out here," she tried to clarify a bit.
16 Katerina Still, necessity is the mama of invention. 1418 Katerina 0 5

Sylvia Mordue

October 19, 2019 6:55 AM
It had been weeks. Sylvia had never, never gone that long without spending time with Nathaniel. Not even when they’d had dragon pox, seeing as they’d passed it from one to the other and been ill at more or less the same time. She didn’t know what to do. She had always thought that descriptions in books seemed melodramatic, when people talked about it being like they’d lost a part of themselves, but it was true. She and Nate had grown up, separate little seedling but twisting and twining together their whole lives. When you ripped one of those up by the roots, how could the other one survive?

She kept telling herself that it wasn’t over yet. They had killed off Aunt Cynthia but they hadn’t mentioned Nate. That meant there was still time. Father had warned her that she ought to distance herself from him. Sylvia had no idea how to react. She didn’t particularly want to speak to Nate. He had rejected her. He had betrayed her. Sylvia couldn’t fathom how both the people she had always loved and trusted the most could both have let her down so badly. Father couldn’t make Nate change his mind, and he shouldn’t have had to, because why had Nate not chosen her in the first place? But equally, any suggestion that he was lost to them was met with fierce rebellion and denial on her part.

Unfortunately, she had no idea what to do. She had cried. She had refused her food. And it wasn’t even pretend, she genuinely didn’t feel like eating. She had been utterly distraught and no one had been able to fix it. By the end of the holidays, she looked like she’d been ill with the flu, or something similar. Her cheeks looked a little sunken and her hair was losing its shine. At first, she considered trying to make it up with make-up but she found she had little motivation. In fact, when she considered it, why shouldn’t she look every bit as dreadful as she felt? Father had said that the obituary for Aunt Cynthia was a passbale reason for her not being herself if anyone asked. She would haunt Nate. She would make him sorry he had hurt her, and he needed to know it and to suffer the guilt of what he had done. He should have chosen her.

Rather than covering up the changes to her face, she had contoured to emphasise them. It had a double benefit of improving her complexion so that to untrained eyes she looked less pallid and sickly - she really didn’t want to be unpleasant to look at, after all - but to Nate, it would show. Nate who knew her face almost as well as his own. Nate who had been her shadow, her reflection. Who had been by her side since she was born. Nate who had abandoned her. He would look on her face and know how she was altered and what he had done. She was not sure if this punishment was working. He looked worse than she did. Her vanity wanted to say she was doing it to him, that it proved he did care, but it just made everything worse. Nate was suffering, clearly, but he wasn’t relenting, and she was also being given no opportunity to help him. There was a danger that people were going to start feeling more sorry for him if he continued to look so awful.

She was vastly unimpressed by the second challenge, which was going to involve scrubbing about in the desert for several hours. She rather wanted to snap at Katerina that a fire was the last blasted thing they needed right now until she pointed out a perfectly logical reason for having one. She was quite confident she could do any of the things required. Building a den was quite literally child’s play (something she had done many a time, she recalled with a painful stab, with Nate until they’d had their treehouse - and something they had from time to time done when it needed fortifying, or when weather made it wiser to stay inside). Making potions etc, that was all a reasonable part of being a competent witch. However, Sylvia expected to do any of her brewing in a classroom or, later in life, on a fine marble topped counter in her nice country house. She did not need to scrub about in a desert, foraging for ingredients and cooking over an open fire. Almost all types of magic were required of proper young ladies, but the circumstances under which they were executed made the biggest of differences.

“If I understand you correctly,” she replied to Katerina, “we must have the ideas clearly in our mind before we try to summon things.” She did not particularly care to contribute to a nuanced definition of what this meant, and what the limitations of a summoning charm were. She was concerned for her standing with the other girls, and was more interested in how much Katerina would still quell and be biddable to this diminished version of herself. Katerina had always seemed slightly less domineering, less like she was fighting for a place to be top dog and more like she was waiting to be told that the rest of them liked and accepted her. Over the years, Sylvia had delivered a careful blend of sweetness and friendship with clear backhanded compliments and implications that Katerina should never take her position as someone liked for granted. This had partly been intentional and calculated, in as much as she could see that the tactic was likely to work, although its origin was organic in her assumption that Katerina, as an outsider, should be grateful, and should have her fate hinge on whether the rest of them deemed her acceptable or not.

“I don’t think it’s wise to split up,” she added, she was sure there was an inherent logic to that statement, so much so that she didn’t need to explain it, even if she was mostly concerned about giving them a chance to pair off and gossip about her.

“The heat is unpleasant though. And the sooner somebody does something about it the better.” A few fans and hats, she thought, would not go amiss, and she hoped Victor would conjure them up something useful along those lines, or even provide a decent-ish shelter because she was certainly not going to go trekking off and hauling bits of this and that into something house-shaped.
13 Sylvia Mordue Why is any of this necessary though? 1413 Sylvia Mordue 0 5

Katerina

October 19, 2019 5:18 PM
"Yes," said Katya, relieved, when Sylvia accurately summarized what she was trying to say. "I have never used this without knowing exactly what I aim for."

Sylvia did have another valid point, talking about the heat, but Katya was less sure how to respond to that one. She could probably transfigure a leaf into a simple fan - probably; they had learned a little about adapting spells to situations already in classes, but Katya was still unsure enough about the concept that she was also unsure how far past the exact things she had memorized she could go - but should she do so? That remark had not been addressed to her, after all, and if she tried and succeeded anyway....

It was a bit unfair to Sylvia to assume that the other girl would expect Katya to fan her, but Sylvia did seem to see other girls as less than herself. She seemed to see herself as a grand princess and them as ladies-in-waiting. Katya was content enough as a rule to go along with that - Sylvia seemed to be a person of importance among Americans, or at least expert at convincing other people to believe it, and Katerina was an outsider - but there were limits. She was a Vorontsov, for goodness' sake. There were very few women in the world she would defer so far to. An American girl was not one of them.

"This would be very good," she agreed. "Is there the Advanced spell, to make clouds?"
16 Katerina *shrugs* 1418 Katerina 0 5