Professor Wolfe

July 09, 2010 2:00 AM
Janette closed her eyes, soothing the migraine that currently resided in her brain. She sighed. Migraines were terrible, and she didn't have a potion on hand to help her so she would just have to deal with it. She turned to her students, who were sitting in their desks waiting, and smiled.

"As you may have noticed, we've been working with animals mostly. For this lesson I would like you to change the animals before you," she said, gesturing to the caged animals, "into an inanimate object. Like so."

She took out her wand, pointing to the bird on her desk, and moved it in a clockwise motion, saying, "Victus ut Non." The bird changed into a goblet, which clattered to the ground. The woman winced. Smiling sheepishly, Janette picked it up again and placed it away from the edge. "The key is to think of what you want to turn it into. I made the bird into a goblet, but there really is no limit to what you can change them into."

"When you change it back," she continued, "move it into a counterclockwise motion and say, 'Non ut Victus'. Understand?" She waited for someone to raise their hand. After a moment she said, "Good. Now, you may begin, third years."

She then changed her attention to the fourth years. "No doubt something like this has already been taught to you, so I want you to make the animals disappear, with a vanishing spell. If you ask one of the older years, they will tell you that their old professor had taught them this. There really isn't a spell to say, no fancy wand work. What you must do is believe nothing is there. Tap the cage, with the thought of it being empty in your mind. Tap it again, and it, the animal, will reappear. Hopefully. If it doesn't.... well I feel bad for the animals, but let me know and I'll help you out." She paused for a second, and then turned to the Transfiguration books she didn't plan on using.

"If some of you are uncomfortable with vanishing the animals, you may use these books instead." She smiled. "You may begin!"
Subthreads:
0 Professor Wolfe Intermediate Transfiguration Part 2 0 Professor Wolfe 1 5


Cassy

July 09, 2010 2:30 AM
Vanishing spells. Ugh. Cassy groaned, wondering why in the hell Proff. J had to pick vanishing spells for the fourth years. They were so easy! She could be doing something more... productive, like playing quidditch, or, Merlin's beard, go fish would be better than this. Well, she did have a pack of cards with her. She looked at the poor animal in the cage, a rabbit, which she dubbed 'Bugs' the minute she saw it, and said,

"Just for a second, Bugs." She tapped the cage, imagining Bugs gone, and he vanished before her eyes. She taped the cage with her wand again, and he reappeared, frightened. "I wonder where you went...." She shrugged to herself, not really caring, before taking the cards out of her bag and shuffling them. She spoke to the person next to her, staring down at the cards,

"Wanna play 'go fish'? Or poker? Or bullshi- BS? Wait, no, scratch BS, impossible to play with two people. I'm open for suggestions," she said, shrugging. She looked up.
0 Cassy Wishing I could make myself disappear 0 Cassy 0 5


Alison Sinclair

July 21, 2010 7:50 PM
She didn’t like to brag – well, she didn’t like to brag much - but Alison thought she was rather good at Transfiguration. Not prodigy level, maybe not even potential master-level, but pretty good just the same. The spells involved came to her easily most of the time, making sense on a level it took more work to make her other subjects reach; if she had the choice of getting more or less the same effect by a Charm or a Transfiguration, she would, nine times out of ten, pick the Transfiguration.

Vanishing was one of the last things Greta had introduced her to before she went home for that cursed visit to her parents last summer, and she had not been enthusiastic about it. Perhaps her old teacher had been envisioning an endless succession of useful objects disappearing into the nothing whenever she irked her charges, or just for a joke; Alison didn’t know. What she did know was a fair bit of the theory behind what Wolfe wanted them to try, and a little bit of the practice, though – and she had no intentions of admitting this to anyone, not after she’d spent the entire year sailing through lessons and no doubt creating an impression based on that – she had never successfully managed to Vanish anything, and what little she had been taught, she had been taught another way.

She had run into little inconveniences like this before, of course, where the way she’d learned something had not been exactly the way Sonora teachers wanted her to learn it. Greta was, for all her status as a housewife before her husband’s death impelled her to first work as a secretary and then to take in students, a very smart woman, and it wasn’t unlike her to devise a version of a simple spell that she thought worked better than the standard one, or to add or remove steps from a potion. Before, though, Alison had known enough to quickly make up the difference. This time, she suspected she was going to run into a little bit of trouble.

At least she’d never had trouble concentrating when she needed to. It was a point of discipline, begun with staring contests and carried on through doing large amounts of work at one sitting and standing still in heels for extended periods of time, enough that she could now wear them all day without really noticing. It also made magic easier, having that focus, which was why, with all her mind focused on what she was doing, she was able to make first the tail and then the back legs of the rat in front of her Vanish before her concentration was broken by a voice next to her.

Turning, a little irritated, to see what it was, Alison found herself looking at her roommate, Cassy. As the loud and dramatic one of her former group, Alison had never found herself particularly enamored of someone she perceived to be even louder and more dramatic than she was, and they had not gotten to know each other well thus far. “I don’t know those games,” she said, bringing back the missing appendages of the rat so she could start over and ignoring the fact that she’d technically just told a lie. Her brothers, bored, had taught her to play poker one night just before she turned thirteen. Since Greta considered cards something for older girls, though, she wasn’t very good at it. “Or any, really. Are you done already?” she added, looking at the full cage. If she was, Alison thought she might have just gained some new respect for Cassy.
16 Alison Sinclair That doesn't seem very healthy. 140 Alison Sinclair 0 5