Professor Olivers

August 03, 2013 1:19 AM
This winter break was the beginning of Florence's full recovery after her husband had passed away four years ago. Well, as full of a recovery as she could ever muster. She had spent Christmas with her brother and his family and spent the New Year with her fellow thespians. It reminded her of the years before she had married, back when she had been carefree and the theatre had been her life. Now she was a professor and teaching was her life, but she still looked back on those days fondly. Now she was looking forward to overseeing the development of the Drama Club. Though her lifestyle had changed drastically from seventeen years ago, the theatre was still close to her heart.

It was only a week since her students had returned from the break and she was sure she could feel the post-holiday mood lingering. It was always difficult to break through that the first couple of weeks, but Florence herself was feeling a little more lighthearted today. She supposed it had something to do with getting a letter from her grandniece at breakfast and having no extra grading to do.

The door closed at eight o'clock sharp and she stood at her desk with a smile. "Good morning everyone and happy Monday." The winter sun was shining through the windows today and she was grateful. Hopefully the extra light would wake her especially sleepy students up. "Today we're going to learn how to turn invisible ink visible. There is a quill on your desk already filled with invisible ink and you may use it to take your notes, if you wish." She smiled. It would make messy notes, but if her students preferred, she didn't mind it. "The Revealing Charm reveals invisible ink and basic concealing charms. Depending on a person's skill, this charm could even make other invisible things reveal themselves. However, we are only going to be working on revealing invisible ink for today.

"The incantation for this charm is Aparecium. You simply tap the parchment three times and the words should appear. However, you must stay focused on the incantation and pronounce the spell correctly. It is pronounced AH-par-EH-see-um." She waved her hand and the chalk wrote the incantation on the blackboard and the pronunciation underneath. Pronunciation was always the first step in the beginner classes. Florence didn't think her second-years would have too much trouble with this one, but the first-years might.

"On a scrap of paper I want you to write a message with the quill provided, something you wouldn't be embarrassed to have your professor read. You will exchange your parchment with your neighbor then practice the charm on your neighbor's invisible message until you can clearly read what your partner wrote. Then I want you and your partner to come up to my desk and show me the parchment and I will mark you on how clear the ink is. Don't forget the essay on the Color-Changing Charm I assigned last week. It's due this Friday. Once you have completed the spell, you may work on your essay quietly." She gave them all a serious look. "And I expect you all to be above cheating." It didn't matter if they did cheat. She would know by the charm she had placed on the quills carrying the invisible ink on their desk. "You may begin."

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Subthreads:
0 Professor Olivers What will you reveal...? [I & II years] 0 Professor Olivers 1 5


Analea Thornton, Aladren

August 17, 2013 1:42 PM
Analea wasn’t ready to leave England and home when Midterm was over. There was something about dressing up like a princess (and spending time with her best friend over New Years) that made the second year not want to stop. The only thing she was looking forward to was spending more time with her best friend and roommate when they got back to school. Arista’s wedding had been fun, but New Years was much more fun! She got to spend it with Rory and her family and they even got to see both sides of Rory’s family. Ana thought Rory had a fun family to begin with, but the fact that they included her in all their fun made it even better. Both Kris and Al were more like fathers to her than her own had been and she loved that especially. All Rory’s siblings loved their scarves and Ana had gotten presents for everyone and loved giving them.

But all that being over along with Winter Break, it was time to get back to the grindstone. Charms class was one that she generally wasn’t fond of, but it wasn’t because of the professor, she adored Professor Olivers and the idea of the class. It was just that she’d have to speak aloud for it to get the charm to work. Ana hated her lisp more than anything in the world and she was very self conscious about it. Annette knew it, so did Rory and any of her sisters or cousins but she wasn’t sure if anyone else did. Now, the second year knew that it wasn’t going to be possible to work with her roommate and best friend every class through seven years, but she could hope, right?

Walking into Charms class, she looked around the room for her best friend. When she didn’t see her right away, Ana chose a seat with two open next to her so that Rory could come sit with her and set her bag down on one of the chairs in the hopes that if someone took the other, they wouldn’t take the one with her bag on it. Rory had done that before for her and she hoped it worked this time too. Especially in classes that she’d have to talk in, she wanted either a sister, cousin or Rory next to her (until perhaps she could work with Annette again).

When the door closed and Professor Olivers started talking, Ana didn’t look to see if someone had sat next to her, she was sort of hoping that if someone had done so that it was either a cousin or Rory, but she wouldn’t hold her breath to it. She knew they were going to have to talk, she just hoped that there was no ‘s’ or ’s’ sound involved in the word. No luck… she thought when their professor told them what the charm was. Oh bother… she added to herself with a small sigh. She took her notes in her real ink, knowing that she wasn’t going to be able to reveal it right if she used the invisible ink in its place.

Tapping the parchment three times wasn’t going to be a problem, saying the charm would be and Analea knew it. She even said it had to be pronounced right… I’m going to fail… she thought to herself as she listened to the rest of the directions, heart thumping inside her chest.

Analea swallowed a lump of saliva and coughed just briefly as she tried to decide what to write on her slip of paper. She’d be able to get hers read, but her partner wouldn’t… She couldn’t say the spell right as hard as she tried. She wrote, What did you do for New Years Eve? it was a question that perhaps could get a fun answer, and she wouldn’t be able to ask it out loud. But there was the chance that they would answer her question on paper.

Only when her slip was finished she turned to see who had sat next to her. “Ready?” she said, practically in a whispered tone.
0 Analea Thornton, Aladren Back to the grindthtone 0 Analea Thornton, Aladren 0 5


Chloe Jareau, Pecari

August 17, 2013 2:42 PM
Chloe was happy to be back in school. She hadn’t necessarily made a lot of friends, but she had met a lot of new people and that was super fun. She was even able to spend more time with Ayita since they were in the same house! Plus, with the fair happening at the end of term and Chloe being determined to be a part of it, she knew it was going to be the best second half of her first year ever! Now, if only she could get Ji-Eun to like her just a little bit. She didn’t think her roommate liked her at all. They didn’t have much in common, Ji-Eun seemed really quiet and liked her books, while Chloe jumped around a lot and had so much to say and ask questions about that it seemed endless. Ji-Eun reminded Chloe of her brother, who was also super quiet and very studious. Chloe thought they should become the best of friends. But, Chloe and Emery got on just fine, so she didn’t know why they couldn’t too.

Not that this mattered currently. Ji-Eun was already sitting with people and Emery was too. She would just have to sit next to someone else and hope that they could get on just fine. Chloe had managed to get along okay with Viktor and Malcolm, she would do perfectly well with someone knew. Besides, she didn’t want to interfere with her brother making some new friends.

Picking a random seat, Chloe waited for the class to begin. Professor Olivers was okay. Her mother said that she used to be an actress or something, but other than being a little dramatic from time to time, Chloe hadn’t seen anything too spectacular to really like or dislike the professor. She wanted to see a show, but figured, in this atmosphere, that wasn’t going to happen. None of these Professors seemed to be any fun and that was causing Chloe a great misfortune on her studies. She needed to be interested. They were not interesting.

Sometimes the lessons were okay or fun, like the Potions first lesson, but then sometimes they were just dull and boring. This lesson, with invisible ink was average. Chloe and her dad played with invisible ink when she was a kid and her dad would reveal the secret messages for her at the very end. It was fun when she was six and didn’t know what was happening. Now, she didn’t really need to have secret messages. It would be nice to know the spell though so that she could someday play the same game with someone else.

She took out a scrap of parchment and thought long and hard with what she wanted to say. This was a test to the person beside her to see what they thought about everything in general. But Chloe was not good with thinking on her feet and so, she couldn’t think of anything fun to say. So, instead she wrote, This charm is only useful when unwanted people do not know the spell to reveal it.

Chloe slipped the parchment towards the girl beside her once the girl had indicated she was ready and took ahold of the one being offered. Chloe stretched out her arms and picked up her wand. With a deep, excited breath, Chloe stated firmly, “Aparecium” and tapped the parchment three times as advised by the professor. She frowned when nothing appeared immediately.

Thinking back on it, she was certain she had said the first part of the word incorrectly. Instead of AH, she had said AA. A hard ‘A’ instead of a soft one. Trying again, she was more successful than before and found faint words scrawled across the parchment. Feeling confident, it only took her a couple more before the entire question was fully visible. “I celebrated with my family, of course.” Chloe said, answering the question. “How’s your work coming along?” She asked the girl with her parchment.
6 Chloe Jareau, Pecari Grindstone. Unless Grindthtone is a thing. 0 Chloe Jareau, Pecari 0 5


Analea

August 19, 2013 2:56 AM
Analea had whispered to her neighbor one word. It didn’t have a dratted ‘s’ in it, thankfully, but that didn’t mean that the twelve year old wasn’t going to be anything but quiet about it. Ana was very self conscious about her lisp and she hated it with every fiber of her being. It wasn’t that she hadn’t been trying to get rid of it. They’d tried many different speech teachers, many sayings with the most hated letter in the alphabet to the girl and other things to boot. None of which had any luck. Analea was beginning to wonder if her stupid lisp would ever be gone from her life. She’d known other people who’s lisps had disappeared mostly with practice and speech therapy and stuff like that, but she just couldn’t seem to do the same thing.

The problem she was having as well though was that with all the therapies that had to go on within her family, she just felt wrong having to do it herself. Aislynn’s health, Addison’s Health, Audi and Ashling’s ability to communicate; those were things that were much more important. So Ana had a little lisp, it wasn’t something that could kill her, or even get her hurt. She may be laughed at, like she had been at her other school, but it wasn’t going to kill her. It was as her mother had always said, “Whatever doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger.”. She hated the fact that some of the family’s money was being used to try to rid her of the lisped beast inside of her instead of trying to help cure Aislynn or Addison, or helping to find ways for Audi to hear and Ashling to see, but her mother wouldn’t hear anything of it.

It seemed that her mother wanted to find something to help Analea get rid of her lisp and she’d been trying for years to find the one thing that would work. The one thing that Ana knew though, was that her mother would never give up. That was one of the things Analea loved about her mother.

The girl, a first year who she thought was named Chloe, but Ana could be wrong, was sitting next to her and the girls swapped papers. Ana watched as her partner tried the first time. Nothing happened. Did I write it correctly? she asked herself as Chloe tried again. The words started to faintly pop up on the page and Ana smiled at the progress. She tried a few more times and all of Analea’s words were right there in black and white. The Aladren gave her partner the thumbs up with both her hands and hoped that she wouldn’t have to do it herself now.

Chloe answered Analea’s written question and Ana smiled back at her with a nod of her head. Her wand was in her hand and her heart thumped against her chest, knowing both that she’d have to talk, both to the girl and to say a charm that she couldn’t’ pronounce right if she had both hands tied behind her back. She whispered, “That sounds wonderful…” she said, cheeks blushing a bright shade of red, brighter than her red hair. “And my work… could be better…” she swallowed a large lump of saliva and looked at Chloe. “I have a lisp and I’ll never get that charm out right…” Everything was so quiet that she wasn’t even sure if Chloe, who was sitting next to her, could even hear her. But her cheeks reddened just the same both with the embarrassment and the hope that Chloe wouldn’t laugh at her.
0 Analea Grindthtone is how I’d say it… 0 Analea 0 5


Chloe Jareau

August 24, 2013 4:35 PM
Chloe had worked hard on the Charm like she was supposed to. Her parents would be proud of her. She hadn’t been able to do it on the first try, but at least she had done it and she thought she would get a decent grade out of it. Academically, Chloe was not going to be at the top and she knew it. Her parents knew it too. But they supported her and expected her to try her best. If she had to, she could ask for help from any one of her siblings. Angel was amazing with spells. Not so good with Theory. Emery was great at Theory but only semi-above average for spells (Chloe felt he spent more time studying because of his mother’s position more so than the love for learning, but she would never testify to that thought), and Ayita was perfect at being an older sister. Chloe had a lot of people to turn too, but she also wasn’t going to allow herself to become upset if she didn’t get something right.

She was, however, miffed that the girl beside her hadn’t even attempted the spell while Chloe had worked diligently on hers. Chloe hoped that her grade wasn’t affected because the girl didn’t want to do the work too. It was clear that Chloe had at least attempted it. It wasn’t perfect, but it was done and she could be proud of it.

The girl, Ana something or other if Chloe remembered roll-call, started speaking, but she was so quiet that Chloe had to lean towards her just to hear what she said. It didn’t help all that much, so Chloe pulled away and shook her head at the other girl. “You talk funny, I have no idea what you just said.” She stated casually. There wasn’t any malice or teasing in her voice when she said it. She was just stating a fact just as she would state she had four siblings and two parents. Just facts.

“The charms isn’t as difficult as it may seem to be. Just go for it. At least trying it is better than not at all.” Maybe what she said would be motivating and maybe it wouldn’t be, but she felt that what she spoke was the honest truth and either the Ana girl would follow through with it or she wouldn’t. It was her choice. Chloe just did what she could to help.
6 Chloe Jareau Then just say 'Grind'. 267 Chloe Jareau 0 5


Ana

September 04, 2013 3:46 PM
Ana was terrified that she’d end up hurting someone. She was a second year now, sure, but she’d not been able to get anything right that had the dratted letter ‘s’ in it yet! Ana knew that until she lost her lisp she wouldn’t be able to do anything of the sort. Ana had learned last year that if you said a spell wrong it could mean something else, sometimes things like that could harm someone and that was the last thing she wanted to do!

It wasn’t that Analea didn’t want to do the work, in fact, she LOVED to learn. It was the speaking out loud that she didn’t like… When Chloe said that she talked funny, Ana’s face fell. Here it comes… She’s going to make fun of me… she thought to herself as she braced herself to be laughed at.

But Chloe didn’t have any malice in her voice when she added that charms wasn’t as difficult as it may seem. Analea let out the breath that she‘d been holding in for fear that she was going to be made fun of again. “It’s not that I think its hard… I just can’t say the letter ‘s’ sound…” she said softly to Chloe. She wasn’t sure if the first year understood her or not, but she glanced around the room for some help from her cousins or from Rory at her little problem.
0 Ana Okay... Then 'Back to the GRIND' 0 Ana 0 5


Chloe

September 07, 2013 8:56 PM
Chloe was not a stupid girl. Sometimes, okay most of the time, she was oblivious to things right away, but eventually they caught up to her and she understood them just fine. She knew that Ana had a lisp. By saying ‘she talked funny’ was acknowledging this to the other girl. Ana did not have to go and explain to her what a lisp was. Chloe knew a few kids from back home that had speech problems. One had it because he had too many ear infections as a baby/toddler had as a result, could not form words properly for the longest of times. The other just couldn’t figure out his ‘L’s and his ‘S’s. But they managed to get help and fix the problems before they got too far along in their tutoring. Chloe did not care that she had one. She did care, however, that she was using it as an excuse to not do the work.

“I’m not deaf.” Chloe told the girl, still without any sort of malice or annoyance in her words. The girl might of thought her daft enough to state the obvious, but that didn’t mean Chloe thought any less of her. “What I am saying that it’s all mind over matter. Your putting your tongue in the wrong spot when you say your ‘s’ sounds, which is causing your lisp.” She explained. “My friend back home told us that when he was having trouble with his lisp, his speech person told him to train his mind to rework his tongue. Seemed to help.” She shrugged. Maybe this girl’s family didn’t think there was a problem to get her help.

“But not doing the work isn’t going to solve your problem. There are a lot of spells that we have to learn and do that have ‘s’ in them. It’s one of the most popular letters of the alphabet.” She didn’t know if that statement was true, but it felt true and that was why she had said it. “Besides, I think as long as you attempt the spell, you’ll get credit. Better to have some sort of grade than no grade at all.” Chloe smiled at the girl. Her mother said she had too much in her head and no filter to understand when she might upset someone. Chloe didn’t really know what she meant by that. Most people figured her out right away and learned to adjust to her. If she ended up offended someone, it was completely by accident.
6 Chloe See? Much easier. 0 Chloe 0 5