Grayson Wright

September 04, 2020 7:59 PM
To an extent, Gray had his reservations about the usefulness of the Charms RATS. Many of the most advanced bits of charmswork were, after all, next to impossible to evaluate under exam conditions – how, for example, were they to tell exactly how much range a student’s charms could cover? An undetectable extension charm could allow the space to put the student a mile away from an object, but this was still different than actually operating from a mile away in natural space. Perhaps a student could correct artificial weather conditions on a scale model, but this – though difficult enough – was much different from working with weather even on the scale of a complete room, never mind outside. He vividly recalled one of his university exams, where he had been sitting on a hill with one examiner, under directions to make it start raining in a town several miles away, which he had never visited before and only knew about because of a map. Another examiner had been in that town to see what happened, so he hadn’t even known if he passed or failed for hours afterward….

Of course, it made more sense if one simply regarded the RATS exam as an indicator that one had the aptitude to pursue further training, rather than as an indicator of mastery. A passing CATS score indicated a student could live comfortably in their world, had enough practical skills to get by with. RATS indicated talent. It was the world beyond where the ones with the RATS would really find out what they could do, if they had the need, or were even just so inclined.

Most likely, of course, few ever would. He had hardly used most of the things he’d learned to do, after all, in the years since, and certainly hadn’t advanced many of those skills. He used charms and charms theory to make a living now, more or less, and still was not entirely sure of the exact extent of his abilities – something that did sometimes jab at the pride of one corner of the Aladren in him, though he had never been one of the ambitious ones. There was something about being in some company, though, that made it curiously easy to forget that, and a number of members of such company had been at Anne’s birthday party. Seeing how some of them had turned out, seeing how he was seen, stacking that beside the other time he had left campus this semester…It was like having a lash in one’s eye, the thought of things could be much better, if.

That, however, was a dangerous thought. Very dangerous. There were some people who only wanted power for its own sake, but far more who set out to do some good and it all just…came unstuck, somewhere along the way. He had read enough history, both for pleasure and as background research for his various lines of work, to know that, and while he didn’t think he was capable of anything like that…better, far better, to immerse himself in his work. It was not as if he lacked for it, after all, or if there was no reason why he had gone into noveling under a pseudonym. There were advantages of invisibility.

“Invisibility,” he announced to the class. “You should all know a basic invisibility charm, aufugio, though some of you may not have been able to complete it by the end of your fifth years. Today, we’re going to incorporate it into our ongoing unit on magical fields.”

Recently, their lessons had revolved around the theme of magical fields – the sphere of influence a spell could have. They would only study the theory of truly massive spells, like the Trace, or whole areas concealed against Muggle penetration, but there were some spells where it should be possible for them to apply the magic on a small scale, one that affected very little in the end.

“Each of you should have a small board on your desk,” he said, holding up an example. These were simple straight pieces of wood, each a little more than a foot long, with three figures not unlike inanimate chess pawns positioned on each end and one in the middle. The spaces between them were marked off in one-inch intervals. “By the time we’re done, I want you to be able to cast the charm sepio aufugus - which has the same right-facing crescent moon wand movement as aufugio - on any of the three tall markers and have the field cover all three items. If you aren’t successful by the end of class, practice more for homework - you'll need the practice to reach a RATS-standard perimeter anyway - and, ah, so, do that along with finishing those books assigned last week, just a reminder that your reports on those are due Friday, thank you…”

That, he thought, covered the essential points. Now to watch their attempts, correct any blatant errors, ignore anything he was reasonably sure was a string of profanities in another language. Simple, satisfying, honest, uncomplicated (well, for the most part) work.
Subthreads:
16 Grayson Wright Making Use of Invisibility (Advanced) 113 1 5

Gary Harper

September 04, 2020 8:48 PM
Gary found his seat early once again. It was an old habit by this point, get to class early, work on game until the Professor started talking, then quickly switch over to class notes. There was only one problem with that right now. He didn't have a game to work on. He had some adventures he could tweak and such, but his plan was sort of working. For the most he wasn't running all of the games now. He had a 'grande finale' planned and put together for the last few weeks of the term, but that was it. Then he was done. That thought left a very odd hollow spot in his stomach.

Thankfully Professor Wright started the class. Nice, invisibility fields. This could get fun. He examined the game board that sat before him as Professor Wright explained the task before them for today. It was just a matter of making a large enough field to cover all the pieces, right? While keeping it stable as well, but there wasn't anything more to it? Perhaps that would be enough to start with though. He wondered if was possible to create a field to include the two outer figures while missing the one in the middle. As far as he'd learned, the fields were spheres, but... did they have to be? Or, could a smaller field be placed withing a larger field to null out the effects? He'd have to experiment, once he'd accomplished the lesson.

Gary took up his wand and started off simply, casting the base level invisibility on each of the pieces independently, just to make sure that worked first. No problems. Alright, next was to expand things out a bit. "sepio aufugus!" Just the center one vanished. Hmm... this may be trickier than he'd originally thought...
2 Gary Harper I see... 1404 0 5

Beau Tate

September 05, 2020 5:09 PM
CW-Mentions alcohol and nudity. Some age and weight shaming.

Beau was at that point in the year where he was so incredibly sick of school as a whole. He was tired of seeing the same people day in and day out. Nothing personal against any of them, he just liked variety and his year group was particularly small. This summer he would get to attend parties and socialize with people he didn't see very often.

He'd also get to, well, have fun . One last summer before people tried to force responsibilities on him....athough he might have to listen to his father lecture him about careers and future plans and all that other stuff that Beau could not be more sick of hearing about. Father was just not getting the message. Still, he'd get to go visit the nude beach-although unfortunately, not everyone who went to that should be there, honestly, the Pecari felt like there should be a maximum age and weight allowed as well as the minimum one - and get drunk and stuff.

Honestly, Beau could not have been more bored at the moment. Things just got so monotonous at Sonora. He just wished something would happen to liven things up a bit. Even the midsummer event sounded dull this year. Beau had had a great time the last time the fair had happened. It had coincided with the Magical State Fair with rides and games and fun food. This time they were stuck with some charity fair. Yawn. Not that he didn't care about people, but the Pecari had no interest in like, sitting around learning about how much people were suffering. That sounded depressing, not festive. Not to mention that Beau was sure that some charities were going to try to make people like him feel guilty for being who he was, because there were people who wanted him to feel that way.

Plus they didn't even get to leave school grounds for the event like last time!

Midsummer events were supposed to be fun. They were supposed to be like, a celebration of the end of the school year. In reality, that wasn't the case. Beau could really only see the enjoyment in two of them, the fair and the bonfire, in theory and then it depended on what one was doing at them. School balls were not that fun, because while one didn't have to behave quite so properly as with society balls, it was still the same people one saw all the time. The concert wasn't fun because it was basically students putting on a show for their families rather than say, a music festival or something. The sixth year saw no real enjoyment in watching his classmates perform and he certainly wasn't going to be putting in the work of perfoming himself.

Obviously though, the thing Beau was the most tired of and bored with was classes. He was simply not the studious type. It was hard enough to deal with theory work at the beginning of the year when his mind was more fresh, it was nearly impossible towards the end of the year when Beau had had to deal with this uninteresting crap for several months, with only a short midterm break.

And why did professors think they all cared how magic worked? They could learn a whole bunch more practical spells and be all around better wizards and witches if they just cut out all of the theoretical lessons.

Thank Merlin that today's Charms lesson was a practical one! Beau had never really had a desire to be invisible himself-why would he?-but it wasn't some dry theory lesson and that was what mattered though he groaned inwardly at the mention of the report that was due. Those were another thing he would like to have seen done away with.

He looked at the piece of wood and figures in front of him. "Sepio Aufugus " . Beau said. The middle and far left pieces vanished. The sixth year turned to Gary Harper, who was sitting next to him, "How's yours going?" The lesson would go faster if he talked to someone while working.
11 Beau Tate I think that means you're doing it wrong 1416 0 5

Gary Harper

September 06, 2020 2:12 PM
Gary was trying to figure the best way to analyze the AoE range of his Sepio Afugus, and the most efficient way to increase it when Beau decided to talk to him. "Huh? Umm.. Alright I guess." He responded. Beau was not one of the people he talked to regularly, since he was a year behind Gary, Beau had oscillated in and out of his classes for the most part. To be fair, so had Heinrich, but Heinrich had joined the gaming club. Gary knew next to nothing about Beau, other than he had a rather lackadaisical approach to his classes.

Or... maybe not. Glancing at Beau's setup, two of the figures were gone. He'd gotten his field big enough to include the middle and left piece. "I'm not quite as far along as you are though." He considered the younger boy's work. "How did you overcome the inherent instability in the magical field with the increase in power necessary for the field's expansion?" He looked back to his own pieces, furrowed his brow and continued rambling, "The extra power necessitates that some of it go to field stabilization while the rest goes to expansion, but those two factors are not linear with one another, so that ratio changes with the input of power. If the field becomes unstable, it collapses and the spell fails, however if to much is put toward the stabilization the field becomes rigid and can't expand. A certain level of instability is necessary for the field to reach the correct size, right?" The question was only somewhat aimed in Beau's direction.

He cast the spell again, aiming for the midpoint between the center and left figures. Both seemed to become transparent before snapping back solid as the spell collapsed again. "Still to unstable for a field that size, but better." He turned back to Beau, "How much did you channel into expansion versus stability for your spell?"
2 Gary Harper You might be on to something there 1404 0 5

Beau Tate

September 13, 2020 7:23 PM
Beau nodded at Gary's response. The older boy was not someone he'd really spoken to much before. They didn't really seem to have much in common. Not that that meant that the Pecari disliked the other boy. Beau tended to be fairly accepting of most types of people, contrary to what most people would have assumed about him. Okay, yeah, he wasn't going to be marrying a non-pureblood but other than that, he really only took issue with bossy control freaks like his older sister. People who were critical of him or told others how to live their lives. He did not really see Gary doing this, even though they were very different people.

However, Beau realized quickly the reason why he'd possibly never talked to the seventh year much as Gary started to spout off in some language that the sixth year was not entirely sure was English. Or at least not any dialect that he was personally familiar with. Maybe this was some subtype of English known as "Aladren." And he definitely did not speak it.

This did not , however, mean that Arianna was at all right when she said Beau was stupid. Not speaking a language did not mean one was stupid even if that language was someone talking in a person's native tongue on a subject one was unfamiliar with. Like if someone was talking about Muggle things, Beau would not understand it. In fact, there were theory things-which was what he really assumed the Aladren was talking about as they were the sort that actually found that sort of thing interesting. Which was fine but it didn't mean he liked when professors inflicted it on him-that sounded like a foreign tongue to him.

However, lack of ability was not the same as lack of interest. Granted, sometimes the two went hand in hand. Like someone who was bad at something probably was not going to feel encouraged to do it. Who wanted to keep doing something if they weren't going to be successful?

At the same time, Beau was sure he was capable of getting these higher thought concepts. But they were a lot of effort and he really didn't care. He had never been a fan of doing things that weren't easy. He was an underachiever, and perfectly fine with that regardless of what Father, Arianna or society at large thought. He almost wished Father would see him as less capable. Maybe then he'd leave Beau alone to do what he wanted.

And then Gary asked him a question. Oh crap . Expansion vs stability....what? Was he asking Beau how he'd managed to get the results he'd gotten? "I....did not put that much thought into it." Which he was certain would not shock the older boy. Surely, while the Pecari wasn't stupid, he was hardly going to be thought of as one of Sonora's great thinkers.

Then again, their professors had this weird idea that theory was necessary and fascinating and Gary was an Aladren so he might assume everyone thought about this stuff. Which wasn't fair, because Beau didn't naturally assume everyone was into activity and danger just because he was a Pecari. "I just...pictured them disappearing.....and two of them....did. Maybe you're overthinking things?" Beau suggested, not as a way of insulting Gary but in a way that he hoped would help the seventh year. Sometimes you just needed to relax and do, even though those things were sometimes mutually exclusive.
11 Beau Tate Possibly 1416 0 5

Gary Harper

September 14, 2020 5:13 PM
Beau looked a little confused and Gary felt a little twinge of guilt. This wasn't Ness he was discussing theory with, they could go on for hours trying to balance out the equations. Beau did not strike Gary as that type of a person. Confirmation was soon verbally given and Gary nodded along semi-apologetically and gave the boy a sheepish grin.

As the sixth year explained, Gary was a little dumb-struck. "Overthinking..." the word came out as almost a quiet whisper. Was it that simple? Maybe? He looked at evidence before him. Gary had nothing against Beau at all. He wasn't the must studious of students, but everyone had their own way of doing things. He had accomplished something that Gary had not with all of his formulations and critical analysis. Beau had two missing from his board, he at best had one.

Gary smiled at the Pecari, "You're probably on to something there." He finite incantiumed his own spell clear. "So," he began talking out loud mostly to himself, but slightly to Beau as well. "The theory we have to practice here is to see if instead of trying to control the levels of force manually, we can simply guide the magic into doing what we want it to do by imagining it." It sounded crazy, but it was magic, it was a force of will, and he was pretty sure some of the professors had also included that in some of their lessons, so... allow that will to act instead of trying to control each aspect of it. He'd heard that programmers wished computers worked in such a way.

"Alright, let's give this a go." He gave his playing board a good look over to get a decent picture of it locked into his mind. Then he pictured what he wanted to happen, all of the pieces to vanish. Finally he waved his wand, said the words and allowed the spell to do whatever it wanted to do.

It turned out that was harder than it should have been. Gary discovered that he may have become something of a control freak on this front. He'd never really figured out where that magical power was coming from, how many spells slots were being used for any given spell and how many he actually had to work with, all of those things. He now had to will himself to allow the magic to draw what it wanted from wherever it came from and do whatever it wanted to do.

All three of the figures vanished. "Huh." was all he could say as he looked at his seemingly empty board.
2 Gary Harper So... I see nothing? 1404 0 5

Beau Tate

September 20, 2020 6:29 PM
"Well, yes, but, to be honest, I tend to ignore the theory and just cast ." Beau replied. This appeared to be a profound difference between himself and Gary that explained their respective sortings. Beau was a Pecari. They didn't look before they leaped. Gary, on the other hand, was an Aladren. Which meant he thought too much.

It was actually kind of weird when he thought about it because his mom was an Aladren too. She had been Professor Wright's year and housemate-and had sincerely resented him for getting prefect over her. The thing was, Mother was nothing like Gary or Professor Wright at all and it puzzled Beau that she'd been in Aladren when she was definitely not a nerd who over thought things. Though he supposed she was methodical, but that might have been more of a Crotalus thing.

Of course Aunt Holly-his mother's friend, not an actual biological aunt-had been in Pecari and she was....nothing like him or Aunt Nina-who was an actual biological aunt-or her daughter Anya. Mother was more like Arianna-minus the part where she didn't hate him like his sister did- and Aunt Holly was more like Jasmine, who were both Crotali. And Arianna and Jasmine weren't completely alike either because the latter was a lot nicer. Beau would swear his sister was the second most evil person he could think of after Bridget's grandpa.

And then, neither Arianna or Jasmine was much like Uncle Adam, his mom's actual brother, either. His uncle was smarter and less....bubbly than Jasmine was and while he was sort of grouchy and bitter and well on his way to becoming a good family patriarch, he was also a good person, unlike Arianna. And his cousin, Connor was different than Arianna as well. He was definitely nicer, but then again, Beau didn't know anyone who was meaner than Arianna. However, Connor was a better person than Beau's sister was. Not that that took much, but Connor was going to be a Healer. And Connor's girlfriend, Peyton, was also a good person obviously, because she wanted to eradicate child abuse.

Actually, come to think of it, Uncle Evan, also his mom's brother, who'd also been an Aladren wasn't much like Mother either. And not exactly like Gary or Professor Wright either. Though he was probably more like them than like Mother. Of course, Beau didn't think anyone out there was much like his uncle. Uncle Evan was weird . And Sophia probably was closer to the Gary and Professor Wright side of things than she was Mother's. Because Mother was practically a Crotalus. Except that Crotalus had an extremely wide variety of personalities because Uncle Adam was on one side-quiet, shy, introverted-and Arianna was the other kind-evil and snotty. Jasmine and Connor were somewhere in between. Peyton was closer to Uncle Adam's kind of Crotalus.

And while he was at it, he might as well contemplate Tepps too. Beau supposed Aunt Kaylie and Aunt Hope were somewhat similar. They were both nice which was the defining feature of their house. Aunt Hope was probably less neurotic though. However, he didn't think that was a Tepp trait, though it seemed to fit Nathaniel Mordue. Actually, Beau would have attributed being neurotic more to some Crotali although not his sister or cousin. It fit his uncle however.

Anyway, it looked like Gary was giving it another shot. And all three pieces vanished. Beau smiled approvingly. "Good job." It looked like the Pecari's way had worked. He had to admit, he felt slightly smug, though that smugness wasn't directed at Gary. No, it was for his sister, who thought he was an idiot. All Gary's over thinking hadn't gotten very far, while Beau's way had succeeded.

"I suppose I should give mine another try." Beau turned back to his own board. "sepio aufugus" . He grinned, satisfied as they all disappeared.

11 Beau Tate Good job 1416 0 5

Gary Harper

September 21, 2020 4:32 PM
If Gary was being really, truly honest with himself, he'd have to admit that he was minorly annoyed with Beau. Well, not really Beau himself, but Beau's results despite his carefree, indifferent attitude towards the whole thing. He'd been diligently learning formulas, figuring equations, trying to match together conflicting theories and not getting anywhere. Beau on the other hand was just languishing in the first-year lesson of 'imagine it and wish' and getting better results!

Maybe Beau and his results weren't really what he was annoyed with, maybe he was just annoyed at his own incompetence. He'd dismissed the thought of allowing the magic, to act on it's own volition through his vision a few years ago. Once the teachers had really started getting into the theory, it felt more like the game had rules. Rules that could be used and exploited, ruled that would allow for better control and more deliberate magic. Maybe they did, maybe he just wasn't up to that level yet. Would he need to be to pass RATS?

Fortunately, Gary had put no ranks whatsoever into his 'being really, truly honest with himself' skill. "Nice," he grinned at Beau. "Now, what else do you think we can do with it?" He cleared away his own spell and the pieces reappeared. He contemplated them for a moment. "Before we got started here I was wondering if there was a way to cast the field to make the two outside pieces invisible, while not affecting the middle one."

"I'm going to try something…" Gary pulled up his mental image again of all three vanishing and cast the spell once more. This time however, he tried to do his best to 'observe' what the magical forces were doing, how they were acting, where they were going. It was weird and not easy, but he was pretty sure he got a vague sense of what they were doing. Whether or not he could do anything with that information yet... well, that was a different story. He gave Beau a grin while bringing his pieces back again, "Okay, let's try it your way first and we'll see what happens. The spherical nature of the fields should make this... interesting. Got any guesses as to how this'll work?"
2 Gary Harper Excellent, what next? 1404 0 5