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


Michael Grosvenor

February 25, 2013 9:53 AM
Michael was fairly ambivalent about the challenges. He saw them as something which would take up a few hours of his life during their actual completion but saw no real reason to get worked up about them, or invest any more time than that in preparing for them. He enjoyed speculating wildly along with everyone else about what they might be but that didn't really spur him on to change his habits in any way. He had enough work to do for CATS, and figured that that stuff was as likely to come up in the challenges as anything else. The one thing that concerned him slightly was his hearing. Most of his team mates didn't really know him very well. Many of them probably knew about his impairment – it was a pretty small school and people tended to be in other people's business (even imagined or fictional news travelled fast). But knowing about it and knowing how to deal with it were two different things. Little tricks like making sure he could see their face, being close when they wanted to talk to him, understanding how even a small amount of background noise was really going to compromise him... They hadn't had a team meeting, not that he was sure he would have discussed it there unless pushed, and now they were about to face the first challenge. He didn't really feel like giving them a quick run down of basic deaf awareness as they made their way through the corridors. He was relieved to have Mellie on the team. She knew how to handle him. Even if it was a step up from that to understanding what he might or might not have heard from someone else, he trusted her to have his back. She'd pick up quickly enough if he was out of the loop and bring him back in.

At first, the room they stepped into was silent. That was perfect and he was initially relieved that they seemed to be in some fairly straightforward classroom setting, where he was confident he could manage the situation. Then the wailing started. It was soft at first. An irritating edge-of-hearing sound. One that, with effort, he could ignore.

Michael had two main fears. The first had come very close to coming true last year. He had never thought his friends would end up with such a distorted view of him as Brianna had – he'd never had cause to think he was a bad guy. But he did worry that they'd realise he was kinda lame. Or that their kindness had been a kind of charity that he had massively misinterpreted. His boggart might well have been his friends explaining this and turning their backs on him, had it not been for the fact that he had recently had strong reassurances from Laurie, Eris and Mellie that they really valued him for who he was. That meant his other fear was currently closer to the surface. He stopped in his tracks as a tall ginger man stepped into his field of view. It looked kind of like Preston, if he was a grown up. In his imagination, it was more or less what Mr. Stratford looked like.

“We told Laurence not to associate with the likes of you,” it sneered. Whilst Michael was fairly sure this couldn't be real he was pretty perplexed as to what it actually was. “But he persisted. You persisted. Thinking that you were both so clever. Thinking that we wouldn't find out.” Michael's mouth went dry. This thing, whatever was, was about to blurt out his biggest secret, if what it had said already wasn't enough information for everyone to figure it out.

“Silencio!” he cast, a beam of light emanating from his wand and striking the figure in the face. He seemed to struggle for a moment against it. Michael had barely breathed a sigh of relief when the figure's voice returned.

“Do you understand what you have done?” the figure asked him. It wasn't shouting but its tone shook with barely suppressed rage. “We made it clear to Laurence that we would have no choice if he continued to disobey. But you did – you had a choice. And this is what you chose for him. Whilst calling yourself his friend. Well, he won't be subject to your poisonous influence any more. He won't be coming back. In fact, I don't suppose he'll be doing much of anything any more..” the figure said, with a cruel glint in his eye that left Michael in no doubt as to what that was supposed to mean. “I hope you're happy with the decision you made.”

Michael's stomach twisted. He didn't really think Laurie's family would kill him if they found out they were still friends. Laurie had never hinted at anything so sinister. But he was fairly sure they would chuck him out, and do their best to make his life pretty miserable. For every happy moment he spent with Laurie, he spent at least twice as many agonising over the possible consequences. That something could happen to Laurie, and that it might be his fault, was his worst fear.

Worst fear.

Dimly, that rang a bell.

Worst fear... Obviously not the real Mr. Stratford..... That meant it was a...

“Guys, it's one of those Worst Fear Monsters,” he informed the group. “And nothing it says is true,” he added. He wasn't sure that was really enough to save his and Laurie's backs but the thought of what this thing had said getting out and ruining his friend's life... And it really would be his fault for thinking it. What did you do with Worst Fear Monsters? He wracked his brains, although the wailing had now got to the point where it was really intrusive. Laughter... something to do with laughter.

“HA!” he shouted at the monster, “Hahaha!”

The laughter sounded every bit as forced as it was and the monster merely smirked at him. Right. There was more to it than that... Something to do with magic. Making magical laughter? And there was a specific spell for that that he didn't know.....

“Guys, what's the laughter spell?” he asked the nearest person, moving in closer to try to catch their response above the now prominent screeching.
13 Michael Grosvenor Team 19 - Guess someone should get the ball rolling 199 Michael Grosvenor 0 5


Mellie Goodwin

February 27, 2013 2:22 PM
When Mellie had seen the team assignments, she had been excited and pleased by the names on hers, but still nervous about the prospect of going into the challenges themselves. She thought it was worse because she had just been named prefect. Before, she would have just cheerfully accepted that she would be, at best, the team cheerleader, maybe an extra pair of hands to move something heavy or throw half-effective Stunners at something attacking, stuff like that. Now, she felt like she had to really perform well because the school had basically put a vote of confidence in for her, one she still didn’t feel like she was entirely deserving of.

She didn’t tell anyone about any of that, though. Instead, she met up with the team with a cheerful smile, even though she was privately dealing with the paradox of feeling completely uncomfortable around everyone because she was wearing her most comfortable clothes, with her long hair – which she was kind of worried might be more of a liability today than it was even in Quidditch – pulled up in a basic ponytail. She had wanted to put on a hat to keep it further out of the way, but was worried that might interfere with Michael’s lip-reading, if they ended up needing that. So she just hoped for the best in that department, and that something interesting happened soon so she could be distracted from basically dressing like a boy around the boys.

That did happen soon enough; it was hard to worry about feeling too self-conscious in a dark, gloomy room full of ghosts and a mysterious arrow on the floor. Mellie followed it curiously until the wailing started, when she looked up to see – some adult talking to Michael?

For a second, she was confused, pretty sure that was a little anticlimacti...il she really listened to what the adult was saying to Michael and pressed her hands over her mouth, horrified. Oh, this was weird. Surely this was some kind of trick. They wouldn’t let random adults wander around talking about killing people, would they? That wasn’t a challenge for a bunch of students to deal with, that was something to call the Aurors over. And that noise in the background was just getting louder and making it harder and harder to think –

“Um – “ she said when Michael, realizing it wasn’t real, asked what the laughter spell was but just made her more flustered because of the urgency of the request. “Um – I don’t – “ She covered her ears, trying to think, and came up with a great solution to her problem. “Russell, get rid of it!” she demanded, flushing as soon as she did because she sounded about six years old but still looking to the sixth year as a fount of authority, magical knowledge, and…well, hopefully chivalrous instincts that extended to her even though they had grown up together, or maybe the Aladren obsessive need to win had rubbed off on him, or something, just so the noise stopped and the evil redheaded adult went away.
16 Mellie Goodwin Rolling in another direction would be good. 206 Mellie Goodwin 0 5


Abigail Thornton

March 10, 2013 11:11 PM
Abigail wasn’t too sure about what she thought about the Challenges. She wasn’t really upset about them, or excited either. Abi was more interested in learning as much about all the animals there were in the world than anything else. She shrugged it all off and she sort of kept quiet. She was the youngest there with the exception of the new first year, but as a second year she was pretty sure she would still be considered of least amount of help to the others. Even though their team was one short, they were pretty much heavy on the older kids. Russell, Michael, Mellie and Avalon were nice, they hadn’t said or done anything wrong to her, so she wanted to prove that she was worth something.

The theme sort of scared her a little bit and she hoped that there wouldn’t be things that were really scary in the Challenges! Abi was almost sure that the staff and the Headmistress wouldn’t allow anything too scary, especially since the first and second years were involved, but there was a small piece of her that wasn’t too sure they would care so much.

The DADA room had become familiar to her in the last year or two, so when Team 19 walked into the room as a group, it didn’t look too different. Sure, there were ghosts around, more than usually anyway, that was kinda weird. But the random arrow on the floor was what was creeping her out a little bit. They walked closer to the Professor’s desk and a tall red-headed man appeared into their view. Abi stopped still in her tracks. He didn’t look too nice by the first glance, and when he started to talk, she knew that he wasn’t… Michael silenced the red-headed man, but seconds later he was talking again, surely worse than before as well. “What…” she whispered in the direction of another one of their teammates before Michael spoke again.

“A worst fear monster?” she asked, backing away, further behind the older kids as the moaning got even louder than before. Abi wanted to cover her ears, but she didn’t want to miss out on anything, or not know what was about to happen. She didn’t want to be left behind in any way, shape or form… Abi had no idea what the laughter spell was, but she wasn’t too sure she’d be able to laugh after what the man had said to Michael. Mellie shouted for Russell to get rid of it and her shouting made Abi jump. In her jump, she moved a little bit, and somehow ended up nearer to the man than the others.

And the man disappeared from in front of them only to be replaced with a pair of bunny slippers. Abi’s eyes widened and she clapped her hands over her eyes. She didn’t want to see the outcome of some poor animal’s killing by a human who didn’t understand how beautiful the creature was. Get me out of here! she screamed inside her own mind, as she shook in angst and fear.

The poor bunny’s eyes and tail was still there!! she thought as she really hoped that someone could get rid of it!
0 Abigail Thornton Another direction... please.... 242 Abigail Thornton 0 5