Coach Amelia Pierce

February 11, 2011 9:09 AM
Coach Amelia Pierce had enjoyed - nearly - every game she'd ever referred at Sonora. There'd been one or two that the weather had made unpleasant or that had become somewhat stressful when a player fell off her broom or crashed into the ground chasing a snitch, but by and large this was a good and fun job. She planned to be here a while.

Now, maybe if some professional Quidditch team asked her to play with them in the World Championships, yeah, she'd probably drop it as quick as Amy Fox had, but that was seriously unlikely. About as unlikely as the chance that anybody in the stands or on the Pitch might stay dry today.

It wasn't raining yet, but the clouds were dark and menacing, and she expected they could open up with deluges of water at any time. So far, she hadn't heard any rumblings of thunder though, so the game was still on.

So she didn't allow the captains quite as much time as she normally did to give their pregame speeches and called them over as soon as it it looked like they were winding down. She did, however, take a few seconds while Tobar Brishen was talking to study his team's only Pierce. Derry Four caught her looking and she quickly turned to look over at the Aladren team, pretending like she hadn't just been watching her cousin. She needed to at least pretend impartiality here, with the eyes of the school on her.

"Welcome to the first Quidditch Game of the Season," she called out to the crowd as well as the captains with the help of a sonorus charm. "With any luck, we'll beat the rain, so let's get started quickly. Captain Nash of Aladren, shake the hand of Captain Brishen of Teppenpaw." The two boys did, and she sent them back to their teams and released the snitch and bludgers.

"On three," she said, skipping over pretty much every formality beyond the handshake. "One, two, three," she blew her whistle to signal the game's start and threw the Quaffle high up into the air.


OOC: Please refer to the instructions on the OOC page if you haven't participated in a Quidditch game before. Everyone else, remember to write detailed posts and have fun!
Subthreads:
1 Coach Amelia Pierce Game I: Aladren vs Teppenpaw! 20 Coach Amelia Pierce 1 5


<font color=blue>Preston, Aladren Beater</font>

February 22, 2011 2:00 PM
Everything was chaos, well in Preston’s perspective. Arnold was falling, the Quaffe was flying about, and Coach Pierce was saving the day. The redhead was feeling like a failure, their Seeker had been injured while his job had been to protect his teammates. This whole Quidditch affair was beginning to affect him in more ways than one. Damn Daniel and his eloquent speech, but there was nothing he could do now, he was part of the team, and he would not renounce it. Just imagining the look of disappointment on Daniel’s face made him consider never ever leaving the team. He would help Aladren reach some well deserved glory.

Suddenly one drop hit his face, seconds after the first one another one fell down, but this time on his arm. Great. It had started to rain, and he was soaked in seconds. Not the ideal setting for a game. Rain tended to make everything slippery, and hard to see. During the brief seconds that the rain took to soak everything, the game was still going on, and Arthur had flown besides him and gave him some specific instructions about sending a Bludger towards the Teppenpaw Keeper. Part of him wanted to be annoyed about the tone used by his fellow Aladren, but his other side rationalized that is was a very good suggestion. Considering Teppenpaw had just scored. The redhead growled under his breath, and decided to bury his mild annoyance at Arthur and looked for a Bludger to send to their Keeper. It was a good plan, and he would carry it out. Even when he hadn’t come up with it, this was the end of Preston Stratford slacking in the Quidditch department; he was going to dedicate as much time to the sport, as he did to his studies.

Preston saw a Bludger pass nearby (more like heard, because the rain was making it difficult to see anything, or hear for that matter), and went after it. Once he was in hitting range, he used all of his might and sent the murderous ball to the Teppenpaw Keeper. With a loud crack, the ball soared towards the Keeper.
0 <font color=blue>Preston, Aladren Beater</font> Well, you are part of a 7 players team.. 0 <font color=blue>Preston, Aladren Beater</font> 0 5


<font color=blue>Edmond Carey, Beater</font>

February 23, 2011 12:39 PM
It all happened so fast that, for a moment, Edmond wondered if he’d really seen what he thought he saw. Then he decided his eyes had not, in fact, failed him, and his usual loquaciousness gave way to a much more concise expression of his feelings.

“Oh, bother,” he muttered, already making plans to have a very long discussion with Preston before the next training session, beginning with the concept that Giving Opposing Beaters A Bludger To Hit Our Seeker With Is Either A Desperation Move Or An Overly-Emotional Person’s One. It was a classic beginner mistake, thinking to take out the other Beaters, and it had even worked a little, but the potential for success was limited and the potential cost far outweighed the potential benefit, as Arnold’s unceremonious fall demonstrated. Edmond was in training to be head of a pureblood family which had found itself in a delicate financial situation due to his birth parents’ long illnesses; economics was a subject he’d been given lessons in since the moment Julia thought he was old enough to understand even the most basic concepts.

Leaving his cousin to the coach, Edmond swept after the Bludger, intending to make sure that Miss Bauer had as little time to look for the Snitch on her own as possible. At the very least, he could keep her on edge, distracted. That was when things got really complicated, though, because the Teppenpaw Keeper fell making a save, and the whole game ground to a halt as the rain began pouring down.

This time, Edmond found it possible to express his feelings in an even more concise manner, but they were not words he spoke aloud, so he just thought them instead.

The Seekers were marking each other, making it nearly impossible to threaten one without risking the other, and – oh, bother, how had that happened? Mr. Brishen was acting like a crazy person and no one was even attempting to just snatch it out of his hands, and Preston was off at completely the opposite end of the Pitch trying to take out Kirstenna Melcher - good move, bad timing. And no – Tobar really wasn’t going to pass –

“Damn it,” Edmond said, vehemently but very quietly even though no one was in a position to hear him, then raised his voice. “Preston, cover Arnold!” He went pelting down the Pitch as fast as possible, but too late – Teppenpaw had just scored. Edmond considered cursing again, but decided there were really only so many times in a day he could resort to that kind of thing, and he had already had his moment of frustration and anger. He was the riverbank, controlling the river of his emotions, now. At least enough to vent his feelings by aiming a Bludger at the back of the Teppenpaw captain’s head, which was also a good strategic move, instead of resorting to further profanity, which served no purpose.
0 <font color=blue>Edmond Carey, Beater</font> Oh, bother 0 <font color=blue>Edmond Carey, Beater</font> 0 5

<font color=yellow>Kirstenna, Tepp Keeper</font>

February 24, 2011 6:17 PM
As the game restarted, Kirstenna found her way back up to her spot in front of the Teppenpaw goals. She was a bit dazed...and confused. The Impostor had saved her. Why? Because there were a lot of people watching? That seemed too easy. There had to be a better, more sinister reason.

Or maybe that actually was the reason, uninteresting as that was. The Impostor did not want to get caught. If she let Kirstenna die in front of a good portion of the school, people besides Kirstenna and Derry would be on to her. She'd just kill everyone, except maybe the Careys and assume another identity. That would attract too much attention, a mass murder on that scale.

Besides, she probably would rather get Kirstenna alone and kill her. Or kidnap her and put her in that hotel room in Gallup, New Mexico with Brian and the rotting corpse of Jannette Wolfe. Granted, the Teppenpaw would have been glad to see her friend again, but she still didn't really want to be locked up in a room for the rest of her life. Especially not with a stinky rotting corpse (or several of them) under the floor.

Maybe the Impostor even planned to assume Kirstenna's identity. That would be quite a cover as who would ever suspect at thirteen year old girl, a Teppenpaw no less, of the atrocities that the Impostor was capable of.

Of course, no self-respecting Carey, even one that probably wasn't part of the family anymore, would pretend to be a halfblood. Except, that would make being Kirstenna an even better cover. It was even possible that the Impostor didn't know that the Keeper was a halfblood, as she did have a pureblood last name, and one of a non-extinct family, unlike Nic Sawyer.

The rain pounded harder and the third year was glad to have done water repellent charms before the game. She wished Kate would catch the Snitch and the game would end. Kirstenna didn't feel safe between the weather and the Impostor and the general dangerousness of Quidditch-

And the bludger hurtling at her. Kirstenna gasped and pulled her broom up and avoided a collision. Falling off her broom had been bad enough, the last thing she needed was a bludger slamming into her.

11 <font color=yellow>Kirstenna, Tepp Keeper</font> Eep! 161 <font color=yellow>Kirstenna, Tepp Keeper</font> 0 5