Haunted School

February 15, 2013 8:13 AM
The Haunted School began in the DADA classroom, a place many of the students should have been familiar with. It looked the same as it always did, only with more ghosts peeking in than usual. One each group of students entered the classroom, they would see that there was a large arrow pointing straight forward from the doorway. Though there was no visible disturbance to the classroom, once one got closer to the professor’s desk, a boggart would come around from behind, it already in the shape of the closest person’s greatest fear. It was only after one encountered the boggart that a soft, painful-sounding moan would begin. The moaning would get louder and louder until it reached a banshee-like screeching the longer the group took to identify the boggart and overcome it, preferably by using the traditional spell, but any other way of successfully subduing the creature would bring about the same result.

Once the boggart was dealt with, the moaning screeches would stop and a large piece of parchment would appear on the professor’s desk. The parchment was black and the note was written in crimson ink. It read:

Trust not the looks of friends,
Nor the reflections you see,
But continue on this frightful trend,
And move to the library.


Several seconds after the parchment note had appeared, allowing time for it to be read either aloud or by each member of the group, the classroom door would creak open again of its own accord and there would be a great screech to usher the students out if they did not move fast enough. The note could be discarded; with each group, the room would reset itself ready for the next, and there would be another note appearing on the desk after their respective boggart was conquered.

Subthreads:
0 Haunted School Part 1 0 Haunted School 1 5

Derry Four

February 15, 2013 4:40 PM
Maybe it was due to his years on Teppenpaw's Quidditch team, when it became time for Team Eighteen to begin the first challenge, Derry felt he was obligated to make some kind of rallying speech before they entered the DADA classroom. However, knowing nothing at all about what they were about to face made suggesting obvious strategies impossible and it being indoors meant he couldn't even fall back on advice about how to deal with the weather.

Still, a rallying cry of some form felt neccessary, so he just settled for general encouragement. "Guys," he began, then added belatedly because he didn't really consider the term a gendered noun but then he remembered some people did and took offence if they thought the female portion of the group was being neglected, "and girls, whatever is in there, we can handle. We just have to work together and help each other out. We are going to beat this challenge." After five years of losing every Quidditch game he ever played, the one thing, he knew the most important aspect of a pep talk was the leader's blind but heartfelt optimism even if there was absolutely no evidence to back it up. Besides, it wasn't like he was declaring that they would win, - just that they would finish. Derry had optimism for that in spades. "Go team!"

Thus motivated, Derry led the way into the classroom. He waved cheerfully to some of the ghosts he had talked to before, then noticed the arrow on the ground. "I guess we go this way," he reasoned and followed the arrow toward the professor's desk. As he got nearer, the room darkened, strange rustling noises began to sound, and a terrible moaning noise arose. Dread filled Derry and he began to sweat in fear.

"Um, guys," said nervously, drawing his wand, and pointing it toward the room's shadows, though, of course he couldn't see anything. Nobody ever saw a Nothing, not even after it was too late. "They didn't cover Nothings before I dropped out of DADA."

This was likely because there was no such creature, but Derry didn't know that. He just knew that when he was out in the woods with Mom after dark, she would become frightened and tell him it was Nothing and that there was no way to defend themselves because it was Nothing. This thing, in this challenge, Derry was sure, was a Nothing, too. You could recognize it by the quiet, barely there, rustling noises. And there was no way that he knew of to defend themselves from a Nothing.

This was very very bad.
1 Derry Four Team 18 pep and doom 189 Derry Four 0 5


Brianna Japos

February 15, 2013 7:42 PM
Brianna had prepared herself for this day as best as she could. Although she did not have pants to necessarily wear since she never required them in the past and they were too difficult for her to bother struggling into now, she did have sneakers and a skort. She felt like this was the best she could do clothes wise and at least a skort wasn’t going to get caught on anything the way a long skirt might have. Along with her crutches, that she had grown accustomed to over the last couple of months while struggling through the halls, Brianna had a muscle relaxer potion and a small vial of pain relieving potion. She had taken some earlier in the day just to keep her relaxed and on par with everything and to hopefully prevent any flare ups, but she kept extra just in case. She had been doing better with taking things slowly and adjusting to her new life, but there were still moments when the pain overwhelmed her and she couldn’t handle it or she stressed her body out too much and she had back spasms, but thankfully the spasms were few and far between.

Taking a breath, Brianna approached the rest of her teammates to wait out their time and listened politely as Derry decided to give them a speech. She wasn’t sure why he pluralized ‘girl’ considering everyone knew she was the only one and him not referring to her as anything other than ‘guy’ would have been okay by her. She already felt like an outcast two folds being the only girl and also crippled, but there was nothing any of them could do about either case. Still, she would have preferred for it to not be pointed out that she was the oddball out. She had enough of that for most of her life. But she said and did nothing to show her discomfort in his words. It wasn’t like he really knew any of it anyway.

Brianna entered the room after Derry, keeping her eyes up as she looked around to figure out what they were about to come face with when suddenly the room began to grow dark and strange noises started around them. She paused in her movement, perplexed by what was happening and by Derry’s assessment of it. She had no idea what the ‘Nothing’ was that he was saying, but she didn’t necessarily see anything to be afraid of. “What is a ‘Nothing’?” She asked, curiously. She hadn’t read anything about it in her books, so she found it strange to never have heard of it before.

Moving again, Brianna walked around Derry and was about to keep walking but the darkness and noises stopped (minus the weird moaning) and instead, Brianna found Harley staring at her. Surprise won first over her emotions because there was no logical reason for him to be at her school since he went to a magical school in the Northeast, but her surprise turned to fear when he came at her spewing hate-filled words. Some were the usual like ‘duck face’ or ‘Ugly’ while others were wishing her dead and blaming her for everything.

She had pointed her wand at some point, but she had forgotten what to do. Her hands went to her ears to block him out. “B-b-bo…ggart” she whimpered. She couldn’t think of anything to change Harley into that would make her laugh. She had figured it out after the thing had changed and Derry’s ‘Nothing’ became Brianna’s everything. At one time, her worst fear had been Attoria, but now it was the boy who has shoved her down the stairs, nearly killing her.
6 Brianna Japos Doom is accurate. 203 Brianna Japos 0 5


Anthony Carey

February 17, 2013 1:10 AM
Alan Raines wasn’t the person in his year Anthony had spent the most time with, but he had still been happy to see they were on the same team. Most of their year, being people who were from roughly the same social group and a lot of whom had older relatives who knew or in one case were romantically involved with each other and who all, except apparently the Pierce twins, had to see each other at social events over the summer anyway, seemed pretty close to Anthony, so he saw pretty much anyone else in second year as a friendly person by default and felt comfortable talking to Alan during team exercises. This had initially set Alan apart from the rest of the team in a big way, since Derry Pierce had long since acquired something like legendary status in Anthony’s mind for being the first person outside the family ever to knock Arnold off his broom, Linus Macaulay was an Assistant Captain and thus the next thing to being as old as Derry, and Brianna…was awkward, Anthony always felt like he should offer to help her but didn’t know what she would think of a second year doing that.

By the time of the first challenge, Alan was still the one he felt the most comfortable around, but he had gotten comfortable with saying a casual hello to the others in passing in the hallways, instead of forcing it the way he had at first. Well, the others except sometimes Linus. Anthony had the feeling sometimes that Linus was managing to think and behave more the way Anthony, as an Anthony rather than just Anthony, was most likely supposed to, and that wasn’t entirely comfortable. But he was okay with Brianna and Derry, with the first one reminding him a little of Henry and the other making him think of Arnold when he wasn’t playing Quidditch. More or less, anyway.

Sometimes, they made him think of his relatives more than others. Derry reminded him a lot of Arnold as he talked to them before they went into the DADA room. If he had ever thought of Arnold losing something – which he hadn’t really; Arnold not only had a nearly perfect Quidditch record, but he could also beat Arthur at some things, which pretty much made him invincible in Anthony’s eyes except when he lost stuff on purpose to their younger cousins – he would have thought his brother would have taken just about the same approach to being team leader, completely and cheerfully ignoring how very doomed their ranking among the other teams they had family members on was.

Anthony didn’t know much about tons of other people at Sonora generally, but he did know about his relatives, all of whom were on other teams. Henry was slower with magic than most of them, but would keep hacking away at a task long after Anthony gave it up, and he could remember non-practical aspects of their classes even better than Anthony could, and read lots outside of class. Jay wasn’t as quick with memorization as Anthony, but he was better with a wand. Theresa could beat anyone in the family in a foot race and hit any target she aimed at with, as far as Anthony knew, just about anything she picked up on top of sharing Henry’s refusal to quit once she started something. Arthur had spent the better part of his life learning everything he could about everything he heard about, and Arnold was still better at Defensive magic in some areas than Arthur was and even with him in the others. Mal was only a first year, but he was quick with puzzles, and thought quickly in general. They together didn’t make up the majority of the teams, but they were the people Anthony personally measured himself against, and in everything except maybe foreign languages and geography, neither of which he thought were going to be at all useful for the challenge, he could find ways in which he didn’t measure up, ways they would use to pull their teams toward the finish line with them if the teams didn’t keep up on their own.

There were, of course, four other people on his team, three of them older than him, but though he would never tell them so, Anthony didn’t rate them too highly compared to his family, either. It was inevitable that he was going to hear about being the heir with the least successful team in the whole family for the rest of his natural life. Anthony just hoped he could make them laugh with him instead of at him, and hoped Derry had the same luck with his cousins. Alan alone of them might come in ahead of his relative, since Sara Raines’ whole team was made up of girls, and if he did, Anthony thought he might be able to get away with thinking of Fae as sort of his sister, but since Sara was Head Girl and Alex, who was a distant cousin, was on that team, Anthony wasn’t hugely optimistic about that, either.

“That makes sense,” he agreed when, once they were inside the room, Derry suggested they should follow the arrow. He didn’t get nervous until things suddenly went dark and something started moaning, making him look around pointlessly and then take out his wand. “Lumos?” he tried.

He shared Brianna’s unfamiliarity with a Nothing, but since neither of them was to the point where Derry had dropped out of DADA, he didn’t think that meant much until Brianna went past Derry and suddenly, there was a boy standing there, one Anthony didn’t know. He took a step back in surprise, wondering where he had come from and if he was part of the challenge or someone from another team who’d been left behind, just before the boy started saying awful things to Brianna. That, too, made Anthony stare in shock for a second; you weren’t supposed to talk to girls that way. Not to anyone – Anthony would have gotten a short but pointed lesson from either of his parents if he had ever said anything like that to anyone – but especially not a girl. It was just wrong.

Apparently, Brianna thought it was, too, because she identified it as a boggart. Anthony knew what boggarts were, of course; it was hard to grow up in an old magical house and not see one. He still remembered the time he’d had a mythology lesson and then had a hydra come out from under his bed just as he was about to get into it that night; he had screamed the house down and hadn’t slept that night or the next one, either, even though Mother and Father had both explained that nothing was going to get him. Just thinking of that now made him nervous, since thinking of it might make it happen again if he got in the way, but –

He stepped in front of Brianna, and sure enough, the mean person twisted promptly into a many-headed snake, which was probably saying unfriendly things, too, but Parseltongue was an innate gift rather than a language the family could hire a tutor to instruct him in so Anthony didn’t know it and didn’t have to worry about what the thing’s opinion of him was. Not that whether or not it thought his haircut was stupid was really his worst problem, because he had just realized he didn’t remember what the spell Mother and Father had used to banish boggarts before was.

“I don’t – “ he started to say, then ducked as one of the heads swung toward him before finishing his sentence, not sure if a boggart-hydra could really bite him and not eager to find out – “know how to get rid of it!”
0 Anthony Carey Yes, it is 0 Anthony Carey 0 5

Derry Pierce

February 18, 2013 12:03 PM
As bad as Nothings were, their immediate threat value was lower than that of an attacking Hydra. Derry stepped ahead of Anthony, making the room darken again and the sounds of the moaning sound even louder with only the quiet rustling of the Nothing to compete with it, but at least the multi-headed serpent was no longer trying to claim Anthony's head.

Besides which, knowing it was a boggart and not a real Nothing meant Derry really did know a method to get rid of it now. He had taken DADA through his CATS last year, and boggarts had been emphasized in both the initial Intermediate lessons and the fifth year reviews. And the actual spell casting was his greatest strength in most subjects. Theory and trivia memorization had consistently been the banes that held his grades down in the Acceptable range. His understanding of magic had always been more instinctive than book learned.

Derry directed his wand toward the teacher's desk - the source of at least some of the rustling - and cast firmly, "Riddikulus!"

The room suddenly brightened, party streamers filled the air, and all of the Sixth Year Teppenpaws jumped out from behind the desk and the room's darkest shadows, shouting, "Surprise!" and "Happy birthday!"

Derry laughed in delight at this resolution of the noises and darkness, his illusionary friends vanished, and a piece of paper appeared on the desk. He picked it up, read it over, and said, "Looks like we go to the library next, folks." The rest of the note sounded like nonsense to him, but he passed it around in case anyone smarter than him could make heads or tails of what might be an important hint for the next stage.

"Everyone all right so far?" he asked his team, willing to give them a few moments before moving on to collect themselves if the boggart had shaken them too badly.


OOC: Onto part two, meet ya all over there!
1 Derry Pierce Because I'm the sixth year. 189 Derry Pierce 0 5