Professor Lilac Brockert

June 16, 2012 12:33 AM
Without ever really announcing, it was still fairly obvious that Lilac and her husband Seth were expecting. By now, it would have been impossible to hide, not that she wanted to. She was quite proud of her new, growing family, even at the cost of her waistline. She’d find her way back to her old wardrobe eventually, and for now, she tried her best to enjoy the ride, as difficult as it was sometimes; it seemed like a professional soccer team was trapped in her womb.

Speaking of soccer, a collection of soccer balls took residence in the Transfiguration classroom on this fine day, one per student. The balls were of course inflated, and it had taken some effort to make sure none were about to roll off. The brown-haired professor pulled open the door, what with class a few minutes away, before returning to her seat. Her students knew how to enter without her hovering there, plus any minute off of her feet was appreciated.

The patter of feet stole the thirty-year-old professor’s attention, and soon enough, it quieted down, with every pair beneath a desk. “Welcome, everyone,” grinned Lilac. “Today, there are soccer balls on your desks. In case any of you don’t know, soccer is a Muggle sport.” She kicked one out from underneath her personal desk and into the air, bouncing it on her knee gently for a moment before grasping it with her left hand.

Her right hand aimed her wand. “Listen closely,” she instructed. “Amadgio.” A purple jet shot from the tip of her wand, and what was formerly a soccer ball was now a small armadillo, squirming nervously about in her hand. On the board behind her were—as usual—the basic notes, giving the pronunciation (ahm-ah-GEE-oh) and its function.

“Work on getting your soccer balls to become armadillos,” Lilac continued, “and then, if you have time, you might want to begin brainstorming.” Pause for dramatic effect. “I’m giving you an extended assignment, but you’ll have the rest of the year to complete it. I want three feet of parchment on what you’ve learned this year and what the practicality of it all was. I assure you; even my ‘silliest’ lessons have had purpose.” A mischievous something flickered in her grey eyes. “On the essays, you may work together so long as each of you turns in a copy.”

“If no one has any questions on Amadgio, you may go ahead and begin. On the essays, I will be accepting questions one-on-one at basically any time during the school day, so come see me.” She nodded mostly to herself, mentally confirming she had covered everything. Remembering one thing, she added, “Oh, and please, do be gentle with the armadillos. They frighten rather easily.” On that note, she set them lose to work.


OOC: I’m sure by now, you big kids know all the rules. Long, descriptive posts get points for your House. Godmodding and grammatical errors—not so much. If you could, please put your character’s House in your author box. It’s super handy for me when giving out points. Tag Lilac if she’s needed, and try to enjoy yourselves. Happy posting!
Subthreads:
0 Professor Lilac Brockert Prairie appropriate athletics [Third, fourth, and fifth year 0 Professor Lilac Brockert 1 5


Sullivan Quincy, Pecari

June 16, 2012 12:13 PM
There were a number of things Sullivan Quincy was not good at. Transfiguration was one of them. Sports was another one of them. Walking into the Transfiguration classroom and seeing soccer balls was not a promising start to the lesson. He settled into a chair, picking one that was neither too far forward so the Professor wouldn't be able to see how badly he was doing too easily, and not too far back because his eyeglasses prescription was probably a year out of date and he sometimes had trouble reading the board or seeing the professor's spell demonstrations if he sat too far in the back, and not just because he was suddenly among the youngest, and therefore shortest, students in his grade level again.

The third year Pecari got out his wand, parchment for notes (parchment was cool), and pen (quills were cool, too, but ball-point pens generally did not result in great globs of ink everywhere like quills did for him). He knocked the soccer ball off his desk twice but managed to recover it both times without serious embarrassment.

The third time was somewhat more mortifying because it happened during the lecture, and while he was trying to trap it with his feet and roll it back to him, he managed to kick it into the leg of the person sitting next to him, but he eventually got it back under his control and just held it in his lap after that so it didn't roll away again.

And then things got worse. There would be a semester-long essay to write. The only thing Sully was worse at than transfiguration or sports was essay-writing. Well, essay writing and telling the difference between white rat's fur and unicorn hair in potions, never mind all the different leaves or feathers. But that, fortunately, was not something he was going to have to deal with this lesson.

Just soccer balls, armadillos and essays.

With a sigh of resigned defeat, Sully put his soccer ball back on his desk (holding it with one hand so it didn't try to run away for a fourth time) and picked up his wand. "Ama Geo," he cast, pointing his ten inches of elder wood at the ball.

There was a weak pulse of a kind of pale lavendar energy that shot from his wand to the ball, but if it had any effect, Sully couldn't see it.

Looking over at his neighbor, he started with an apology. "Sorry about kicking the ball into you earlier." Then he addressed the more immediate lesson, "Are you having any luck?"





0 Sullivan Quincy, Pecari I'm doomed 0 Sullivan Quincy, Pecari 0 5

Jhonice Trevear, Pecari

June 25, 2012 10:59 PM
This was not going to be a good term. Jhonice was back, but she was not focusing on class. She had missed the opening feast and only had arrived late last night. She didn't want to be here, but her parents thought it would be best for her to try and get some sort of normalcy again. So, she trudged her way to transfigurations. The fact that it was not her favorite class was not helping. She was one of the last ones into the classroom, found an empty seat and pulled out her notebook and stuff.

Partway through the lecture the person next to her kicked her. That was all she needed on top of everything yet, she turned to glare at whoever it was and discovered Sullivan Quincy of the California Pierces next to her. She bit her tongue and attempted to focus back on the lecture, she failed. In the end she just pushed the ball around on the desk a bit with the tip of her wand.

Sullivan then addressed her. He was apologizing for something, oh yeah the kick. She just shrugged and pushed her ball around a bit more, it rolled off the desk. Finally she glanced in his direction, "Don't worry about it." Then she sighed, "I guess I should get to work..." looking around she tried to find her ball. "What exactly are we doing with them again?"
2 Jhonice Trevear, Pecari I don't think you are alone 209 Jhonice Trevear, Pecari 0 5


Sullivan Quincy

June 26, 2012 9:28 PM
At first, Sully didn't even realize the person sitting next to him was Jhonice. She wasn't acting Jhonice-like. She had shown little to no interest in him, the content of his notes, or his as-yet-unaltered soccer ball. This would ordinarily be dismissed as normal behavior but he was dealing with Jhonice Trevear. Jhonice Trevear analyzed everything he did, everything he wrote, everything he said, every breath he took for some kind of secret evidence that he was, in fact, Simon Tellerman's son.

That she currently had no interest in him whatsoever was baffling, shocking, wrong, and quite frankly a little terrifying and even a little disappointing. It wasn't that he wanted her to be stalking and hounding his every step, but . . . but . . . he was supposed to be more interesting to her than a lesson she clearly hadn't listened to the first time through.

"Turning it into an armadillo," he told her, answering the question of what they were supposed to be doing, but unable to leave it at that. "Are you okay? You seem . . . " he tried to figure out exactly what kind of mood she was in - detached, uninspired, unexcited, listless, depressed, disengaged, disinterested, dispirited, apathetic, everything that was not Jhonice - "off."

1 Sullivan Quincy Sharing the misery 207 Sullivan Quincy 0 5

Jhonice Trevear

June 27, 2012 10:30 PM
"An armadillo... yeah sure, why not." She sighed apathetically glancing around for her ball. She saw it, it was to far away, somewhere in Derwent Pierce IV's vicinity. "We'll have to use your ball, mine is gone." She pointed at the ball and muttered in a flat voice, "Abracadillo." Unsurprisingly nothing happened. She put down her quill, which was in fact not her wand, and sat back in her chair. She couldn't focus on class, she couldn't focus on school, she couldn't focus period. What was she doing here? She should be back home with her...

Then Sully went and opened his mouth again. "Are you okay?"

No. "No I am not 'okay'." she thought to herself, "Break had been nothing but a nightmare! It was stupid and senseless and horrible and..." she could feel the onset of tears and realized that she had been in fact not been thinking, she had said it all out loud. Not being able to hold back any longer, she buried her head in her arms and burst out in tears. She had spent so much time in just this position she had hoped she'd run out of tears by now. No such luck as they continued to pour out of her.
2 Jhonice Trevear It loves company, right? 209 Jhonice Trevear 0 5


Sully

July 11, 2012 12:30 PM
Sullivan was seriously starting to worry about Jhonice. Firstly, he had experienced greater enthusiasm for an orthodontist appointment than she was showing for the lesson. Secondly, and more tellingly, she was skipping a perfect opportunity to go stalk a numeral. Granted, Derry the Fourth seemed like a relatively mild, if somewhat less than sane if his wardrobe was anything to go by, member of a Pureblood Family, but even Sully had heard he was kind of half-disowned which had to be exciting for Jhonice. Today, though, Four could have been the dullest muggleborn in the school for all the attention she gave him.

Sully tried not to feel relieved by the knowledge that it wasn't just him she had lost interest in. He wanted her to realize he was a boring muggleborn, too, and that Simon was not his father. He did.

Then she answered his question with rather more spirit than she had displayed so far today and ended the outpouring of words with an outpouring of tears.

Terrified by this sudden development, Sullivan panicked and did the only thing that came to mind to deal with the situation. He raised his hand and called out for the teacher to help him. "Professor Brockert! Help! I didn't do anything! She just started crying!"






0 Sully I think that is how it works (tag Professor) 0 Sully 0 5

Jhonice Trevear

July 15, 2012 11:11 PM
Jhonice was upset, that much was fairly obvious. There had been a terrible accident over break, and Jhonice assumed that the teachers and staff here would have been told about it. When Sully called for Professor Brockert, she knew that the professor might already know. Despite what everyone kept telling her, it had all been her fault. Which she was muttering between sobs. "All my fault, all my fault..."

Uncle Marshall, Aunt Gwen, Andrew and the new baby Giselle had come up to visit for the holiday. Andrew was showing off his latest project to the adults when she had burst into the room and upset everything. Andrew's thing went out of control and exploded which triggered a terrible chain reaction that involved a few items around the house and some strange potions that Aunt Gwen had been experimenting with. The investigators said it was a one in a million type of thing. It may actually have been quite humorous if Uncle Marshall and Aunt Gwen hadn't died. Andrew had been severely injured as well as her father. Luckily her mother was mostly unscathed, and Giselle only had a few minor injuries. A fair part of their house had suffered considerable damage and the ones not in the hospital had to move into a hotel for a few days. It was not a good break.

Realizing she was making something of a scene, she turned to flee from the classroom.
2 Jhonice Trevear Good, then we are on the same page. 209 Jhonice Trevear 0 5