Professor Skies

April 12, 2013 6:59 PM
The final challenge was taking place in the Cascade Hall. The usual furniture had been removed and the room divided into twenty small booths, created by deep velvet curtains hanging from poles. The poles themselves appeared to hang from nothing. The students would find, once ensconced with their teams, that the heavy velvet was surprisingly effective as blocking conversations from the neighbouring teams... They were also spellproof and flameproof. These were usually sensible precautions at the best of times around students, and when emotions were running high it was just asking for trouble not to do so.

“Welcome to this, our final challenge,” Professor Skies greeted the teams as they assembled in the entrance hall. “When you enter, you will find a booth with your team's number and a box of odd and ends. The first part of your challenge this morning is to charm or transfigure everything on your table. Each team member must take responsibility for one item. Your task will therefore be to decide how best to show your range of talents, not to show me five or six pieces of advanced work, all done by your oldest student. There is a sheet for you to note whom has started with each object and what their aim was. I and my assistants,” she nodded to any other staff members and prairie elves whom she had been able to rope in for the morning, “will be wandering around during the tasks. We also have ways of verifying those things which we have not seen so, once again, do not pile all the work onto your advanced students. One piece each please.”

A reminder of these rules was displayed in each booth. There were also several chairs and a table, on which was resting a box of ill assorted objects. Each box contained a button, a pin cushion, a feather, a lemon and a medium sized stick. Those with six members in their team would have to think slightly laterally to work out what their sixth item was.

“You will have an hour from when I blow my whistle to make your decisions and complete all your spell-work. The whistle will sound again at the end of the time period and you will step out of your booths. You may go and make yourselves at home. Do not open your box until the whistle sounds,” she cautioned. She waited until all of the teams had settled in their places and then blew the whistle, which had been charmed to penetrate the otherwise muffling effects of the curtains. As she did this, a luminous clock face appeared, glowing on one of the walls of each team's work area. As the time ticked by, segments of the clock went out, showing the teams how much time remained to them.

After an hour, a second blast of the whistle sounded.

“Well done,” Professor Skies smiled when the students had all stepped out of their booths. “You now have a twenty minute break, during which you may get a drink, run around outside or whatever it is you wish to do to let off steam. After that, you will be back here to face the second and final part of today's challenge. Thank you,” she smiled.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Skies Challenge Three - Part One 26 Professor Skies 1 5


Fae Sinclair

April 21, 2013 8:51 PM
Fae was growing tired of the challenges and was glad that this was the final one. The first one had been nerve-wracking but exciting because it was different and new. They had no idea what they were expecting. The second one, they had sort of been given a hint at it, so they were better prepared, but it had been so exhausting, phyisically, mentally, and emotionally for Fae that by the end of it, she didn’t even want to stay at the party, she just wanted to go back to her dorm room and rest awhile. But, she couldn’t do that. It would have looked poor on her. It had been her entire strength to not raise her voice or hex Analea, a feeling that had never come over her before that moment, and the entire team had seen what had transpired between them. Fae had felt obligated to show that she was above all of that. She still didn’t understand the younger girl’s sudden attitude and rage and could only allude to it being that there was a personality flaw in how the girl functioned. But, it was because of her that Fae was not looking forward to this challenge and would be rather happy when it was finally over.

Fae waited with the rest of the team by the booth with their number on it. She could only guess what this challenge would be about and it worried it. Even more so when it was Professor Skies who addressed them. Listening to the instructions lessoned her worries a bit, Fae was pretty decent when it came to Charms and on occasion, Transfiguration. As long as it wasn’t Defense Against the Dark Arts or Care of Magical Creatures, she thought she’d be alright. She had never been very good at defensive spells or protecting herself and she had animals tended to frighten her. She was better about them now, but she didn’t necessarily enjoy being around anything more than a cat, dog, or riding horse.

When they were set free to work on their assignment, Fae looked at the box full of items. She knew each lesson, both for Charms and for Transfiguration, where these types of items were used. The problem was, how would they divvy them up between levels so that someone who was a beginner didn’t get stuck with an item they may not know what to use. “Alright, there are only five items, so we will have to figure out what the sixth item is supposed to be before we can even get started.” Fae commented after she did an assessment. “But we also have to be fair with the type of item each person gets so that someone from a certain level doesn’t end up with an item that they might not be able to work with.” Fae figured that this would mean the Beginners would choose first and her and Sara would choose last, but she’d wait a little bit for that suggestion.

“First things first. Can anyone see an item that would be used for the sixth one?” She asked the group as a whole.
6 Fae Sinclair Let's be charming, Team 1 194 Fae Sinclair 0 5


Henny B-F-R

April 24, 2013 4:25 PM
OOC – first part was consulted on and given permission for by the Thornton's author.

IC
Henny had been more nervous about this challenge than any other, mostly because of what had happened on the last one. She hadn't told Andri any details of Ana's behaviour but she had asked her room-mate's advice. She had said that she had noticed Ana lisped and seemed a bit self-conscious within the group (a statement that was, perhaps, stretching understatement to the limits of truthfulness) and whether she had any advice for making her comfortable. Andri had just said to be a friend to the younger girl. Henny had tried to be friendly anyway and, given Ana's behaviour last time, the first year obviously still felt insecure. Henny also didn't want Fae to think that, if Henny started being extra nice to Ana, it was any kind of judgement on her. That she was sticking up for Ana against her or something. Henny hoped that Fae was better than that – better than thinking that niceness to one person had to mean something against another – but people could be ridiculous when it came to things like this. Henny was doing her best to act like nothing was different to when they had started their last challenge. She was being just as nice and just as friendly to all of them as she ever had been, and was just mentally crossing her fingers that this would all go smoothly.

As they received their instructions, she felt a smile breaking over her face. They were being told up front what to expect, which was her preferred way of doing things, and it was a task that she was confident that she could do. In fact, it was a task that she was confident everyone could do.

“This seems good,” she commented, as the team made their way along to their booth. “Everyone gets something at their level,” she added, with an encouraging smile at Ana. Her main insight into how the first years were getting on was from Charlie, who mostly seemed to jabber on about how Marcus was awesome. Whilst she was glad her brother was having a good time, and being well supported by his team captain, it didn't really sound like he had been doing a lot. He seemed perfectly happy with this, and with the minor contributions that he had made – he had told her at least twice about his accidental discovery of the Devil's Snare – but she wasn't sure all the first years would be feeling so happy about not having been able to do much to help. However, this challenge seemed to be geared towards everyone being able to show their best.

“Let's just check...” Henny suggested, when Fae asked if anyone could see what the sixth item was. There was always the chance it was very small or was underneath something else. Henny unpacked the contents of the box onto the table. When this didn't yield a miniscule sixth object, she picked up the box and turned it upside down, even though she was already sure nothing more was hiding. “Well...” she said, setting the box back down. Then it clicked. It was somewhat in her nature anyway to be a puzzle solver. Then there were all the additional ones she'd been doing with Alicia and Thad of an evening. Plus something about the box, now that it was empty and sat alongside the other things that just made it look more... object like. “The box,” she said, a little questioningly, looking to her team mates for verification, even though she was ninety-nine-point-nine-nine percent certain she was right.

She cast her eyes over the objects, trying to work out who would fit what best. There were so many permutations.... She supposed Ana had the fewest things in her arsenal of spells so it might make sense to get her to choose first. But she didn't want to put too much pressure on her by making her first to answer. Also lots of charms could be applied to any of the objects, whereas an impressive transfiguration might require a specific one.

“Why don't we try to think in general terms to start with? For example, what's the most complex type of transfiguration anyone can do? Like, I can manage inanimate to animate. Or think about what your best charm is. Then we can work out whether people need a specific object or whether any object would do. That strikes me as being the best way round to approach it in order to match everyone with a good object,” she ventured.
13 Henny B-F-R Or... Transfiguring? 211 Henny B-F-R 0 5


Analea Thornton

April 25, 2013 10:46 PM
Analea was walking into the third and thankfully last challenge and she was hating every second of that walk. The last person in the world she’d rather see right then was Fae. Fae had made her feel worse than her father had her whole life, and that wasn’t so pretty either. Fae had made her feel as if she was the smallest little peon in the whole world and that was the worst thing that she could feel. Ana already had a very bad self esteem and that certainly did not help her in the least.

She walked into the Hall and stopped right inside the door. Ana wasn’t expecting what she saw so she had to do a double take. It looked like the room had been made into a bunch of little voting booths. Maybe the challenge is to vote for something? she thought, without saying anything out loud. There were too many letters in that phrase for her lisp and that would only make things worse.

Professor Skies welcomed the students and explained what they were supposed to do in this challenge. Ana swallowed a bit of saliva and coughed from it having gone down the wrong pipe. Her cheeks turned bright red from a mix of the coughing and embarrassment and she just wanted to run away, but she knew better. She stood there, stock still, with the rest of her group, not saying a word to anyone about anything. Professor Skies told them they had an hour to work on this challenge and Ana turned to Henny, pale, terror in her eyes. Her sister’s roommate had been trying to help her, trying to be nice and she didn’t have anything against Henny. She never had, in all honesty, had anything against anyone from Sonora before Fae had spoken to her like that.

When Fae said there was only five items and they needed to figure out what the sixth item was, Ana kept her mouth shut. She wasn’t planning on saying anything until she had to and even then she didn’t want to… Fae asked if anyone saw anything they could use as their sixth item and Ana still said nothing. She had no suggestions, nothing she wanted to say, knowing it wouldn’t go over well, whatever it was. She had nothing to give her team, and even if she did, she was only a first year and they wouldn’t care.

Henny spoke about everyone getting something on their level and smiled at Analea. Ana tried to smile back to the older Aladren, but smiling seemed to be out of the question currently. Henny took every item out of the box, Analea was guessing the reason for that was to find the seemingly missing item, but there was nothing in there. The fourth year turned the box over to try something else and then when nothing was found she turned it back over onto the table again. Ana looked at Henny when she said something about the box and wondered if that was what their sixth item was supposed to be?

When Henny brought up the fact that they should think in general first and find out exactly what the group was capable of, Ana nodded in agreement with her but still stayed quiet. However, Analea knew better than to think that she’d be able to do anything with any of these items. If she remembered right, at least most if not all of the items would need the letter ‘s’ which she so desperately hated more than anything else in the world and she knew better than to think she’d be able to do anything about any of the items in front of them…
0 Analea Thornton Or standing stuck to the steps of the palace... 0 Analea Thornton 0 5