Grayson Wright

February 21, 2020 6:58 PM
Grayson Wright had made an error.

A serious, serious error.

An error which he was not entirely sure there even was a way to fix, much less a way he could figure out.

He had assumed he knew how people would behave, and now it was backfiring on him.

He had known, of course, that some people would read the book. It was the purpose of publishing a book. If it had been likely that no-one at all would read the book, then nobody would have agreed to publish it for him, dooming him either to the knowledge that he had written an unreadable book or to the even grimmer prospect of self-publishing. He had not, however, expected very many people to read the book, and certainly not for anyone he knew to read the book, which was why it had come as a nasty shock when he had gone home over the winter to visit his parents and had found his mother halfway through a copy, looking up over her reading glasses to ask him if that was what going to boarding school was really like.

It was, of course, a fluke, that his mother had read the book. His mother was a Squib, with no magical talent to speak of and only so much contact with the magical world despite her husband and only child both being wizards of reasonable ability. What was not a fluke was no less than three separate people he knew to one degree or another turning out to have read the book.

Three. Separate. People.

Thankfully, they were all blissfully unaware that Gray had written the book, but still. If he did the math comparing how many people he knew to the percentage of those people he now knew had read the book and then extrapolated that into general consumption, even without factoring in that a lot of people had wider social circles than he, then that was a lot of people. Enough that he was apparently actually pretty close to earning money from the thing. This was getting entirely out of hand, and somehow, he was sure, something could possibly go wrong and then people would found out he’d written the book and then –

Well, he didn’t know what ‘then,’ but it seemed like a bad idea.

He tried not to think about this as he got ready to teach the first years, newly back from their midterm holiday. “Welcome back everyone,” he said. “Now that your parents are done hiding presents for the year, it seems like a good time to teach you how to lock and unlock doors.”

The comment about parents was mostly a joke, of course, as the parents would need to hide Christmas presents again next year, and surely the students wouldn’t forget a whole spell – especially such a useful one – in just one year. Surely. Of course. So it was a joke. Good joke.

“These two spells are easy to learn, but the locking charm is one you can build up strength in casting. Today, you might be able to lock a door for five minutes before the spell fades. By the time you leave Sonora, a first year’s unlocking charm shouldn’t work against a door you lock.”

He raised his wand and drew a shape, like a rectangle with the side pointing left still open. Instead of rising to meet his first line, the end dropped sharply downward. This same shape appeared on the blackboard. “This is Colloportus,” he said. “The locking charm. Everyone say that together with no wands in three – two – one. Col-lo-por-tus.” Inability to clearly articulate words had caused Gray more than his fair share of difficulties in class when he’d been a student. “Its counter-charm is alohomora. Three-two-one - alow – ho – more – ah. Good. This counter-charm has a very easy wand movement, easier than Colloportus - it’s just like you’re drawing a backwards ‘s’ in the air.” He demonstrated and a drawing of this appeared on the board, too.

“Which is good to know, but you need practice if you’re going to be able to use these spells for anything. Since it’s probably not good for the doors and windows for twenty people to charm them in one day, you’ll be working with these padlocks,” he said, holding up an example from a box of them which began to make its way around to the students, stopping long enough at each place for the students to select from among the nearly identical collection of cheap, poor-quality locks. “Each of you should try colloportus on the locks, then switch and see if you can successfully use alohomora on each other’s locks. Repeat at least three times and make notes on your observations. Those and a theory – at least one sentence – about why we teach you colloportus when it’s counter-charm is so widely known are your homework assignments for this class. If you finish them by the end of class, though, hold on to them until next class so you can study your notes. I think that’s it, so, raise your hands if you have any questions and I’ll come answer them, but otherwise, get started,” he invited them, already starting himself on worrying about the outside possibility of becoming famous again.

OOC: Welcome to Charms! All site rules (minimum word count 200 words, or about eight sentences, good spelling and grammar, no writing for each other’s characters without permission, keep it PG, and keep it realistic) need to be followed for points. Tag Professor Wright in your post title if you need to ask him something in character and ask on the OOC board or in Chatzy (I’m usually Tatiana Vorontsova these days) if you have any questions out of character. Have fun!
Subthreads:
16 Grayson Wright Lock it down, Beginners. 113 Grayson Wright 1 5

Ellie Alperton

February 28, 2020 7:34 PM
Ellie took a seat in Charms, feeling happy to be back. She got so used to seeing magic in every day life that it was odd when it wasn’t there any more. Except… now, when she went home, she thought of the things she missed at school as their own kind of magic. Sure, school had MARS, but it didn’t have Spotify – an infinite ability to access basically all the music ever, and definitely all Disney songs, in the palm of her hand. When her dad reached into his pocket, and her brain said he was reaching for a wand, but then he pulled out his zappy button car key instead… how different, really, were those two things? Both worlds were full of magic, and one of the nicest things about Sonora was that it made her see that, back in the non-magical world.

Today, they would be practising locking and unlocking, which were sort of familiar from last year, although Professor Wright also threw them one of those curve ball questions of making them work out what the point was. Ellie would have possibly accepted at face value that this was useful (open things needed locking, locked things needed unlocking) at least for a while but now she wasn’t so sure.

The spell would, presumably, keep out non-magical people, unless they were deft at lock-picking. But then, she thought, as she took a little pink padlock, and twirled the curly metal bit between her fingers, so would just locking it. They couldn’t use magic. That was the whole point. And, even amongst people who could, that didn’t make locking things pointless, more for the symbolism than anything else. Ellie had often questioned the integrity of the lock on her journal, for example, whose key was a practically paper thin cut out of brassy-gold metal with a single prong. It did not look complex. However, she had never questioned the integrity of her family members, who she trusted would not trespass into something she had clearly marked as private. She trusted Emily with that too. Even though Emily was learning these spells too, and would be able to easily break into Ellie’s diary didn’t mean that Ellie thought it was likely. Admittedly, she didn’t flaunt her diary in front of her roommate, but she didn’t think Emily would use it for homework practise or casual browsing. It was like bathroom doors. That little groove in the locking mechanism was so that you could open it from the outside with a quarter in case of an emergency. Outside of that though, people didn’t. Not that it had stopped her from having a bunch of horrifying dreams about people opening bathroom doors on her, but just because they could didn’t mean they would. It was just rude.

So then, what was the point? If she could clip a padlock shut the usual way and trust other people to respect the message of that, what was the point of the spell? In situations where you had to open something, for like… the police or customs, it wasn’t going to help if it was Magic Locked because you had to do it anyway. In fact, whipping a wand out was probably going to make it worse. That meant she couldn’t really think of any reason other than what Professor Wright had said about strengthening their muscles, and that was not a very satisfying answer, nor was it going to earn her a good grade.

You didn’t have to keep track of keys, she supposed. That was handy. Her dad was always misplacing his car keys. And you could lock or unlock something from further away. Again, the number of scenarios where you suddenly needed to lock a door from across a room rather than just saying ‘Don’t open that please!’ seemed minimal. Losing keys seemed the most sensible thing she’d come up with, though it sounded sort of lame, and anyway there was probably some kind of key finding spell… Right? Maybe. She didn’t know for sure. She often came across little limitations like that in her knowledge, and that made her wonder whether the problem was that she still didn’t think enough like a witch.

“I feel like I’m missing something,” she admitted to her neighbour, deciding that two heads might be better than one. “I’m struggling to come up with many reasons why this would be useful, beyond just… practising.”
13 Ellie Alperton But why? 1456 0 5

Alexander Pierce-Beales

March 04, 2020 12:27 PM
It was nice to be back in classes. Nice to be in the swing of things again. Nice to have people around and things to talk about, even if they were basically forced together. Alexander had underestimated how much he really did enjoy talking with other people. Just because most of the people in his life had proven themselves to be basically useless didn't mean that everyone was like that, and he was pretty happy about getting back to it. Of course, that also meant getting back into the insanity of this entire school. Entire world, really.

He'd mostly accepted that this was reality now. If nothing else, it didn't do him any good to worry. He told himself this every class the first few weeks of school and now only once or twice a day. Progress.

The subject of locking and unlocking interested Alexander for a number of reasons. How nice would it have been to be able to lock his door at the orphanage, or his trunk. If he could just know for sure that no one could get in, then he would've been able to sleep that much better. He wondered whether the locking spell only worked on locks. Could it "lock" his book to the table so no one could take it when he wasn't looking? Could a non-magically unlocked lock be locked magically? That way people wouldn't be able to tell that it was locked, or figure out how to unlock it. That would be handy.

Ellie Alperton was in the year above him, which was probably good. He was pretty sure she was the prettiest girl he'd ever seen in his life, and he'd seen a lot of girls. Between the orphanage and non-magical school, he had met hundreds of girls his age. He also knew that "his age" was way too young to be worrying about these things. That was how half the kids he met got to be there in the first place; when "babies have babies," those babies get put up for adoption. It was crappy.

But Ellie really was very pretty and now she was talking to him. She was asking him a question! Alexander was sure there was an answer to it, but his internal ramblings about locking locks so they didn't look locked and no one knew they needed to be unlocked suddenly seemed way too boring - or revealing - to be worth sharing with his classmate. But she was still looking at him and he had to say something. Since he wasn't going to be so good at coming up with anything new at this point, he just went for it.

"Because secrets," he blurted. His face turned red and he looked down at his own lock - a shiny silver one - before taking a breath and trying again. "Maybe you can lock stuff without anyone knowing that it's locked. Then they won't try to break in. Or you can set an alarm so it goes off if someone tries to unlock it with magic, and then you know if there are other magic people around?"

He felt very proud of himself for accomplishing three and a half sentences - okay, so they weren't really sentences, but close enough - without dying. "Maybe you can unlock a tongue-tie," he said a little more quietly, more to himself than Ellie.
22 Alexander Pierce-Beales It's a secret. 1475 0 5

Ellie Alperton

March 04, 2020 6:32 PM
"That's true, protecting secrets is important," Ellie said softly, when Alexander suggested this, and then seemed embarrassed or worried about what he had said. Mostly, she just wanted to reassure him that he hadn't said anything stupid, because she knew all too well the feeling of worrying about what came out of your mouth. But also, she really did understand that feeling.

"Those would be useful too," she nodded about his ideas. She was pretty sure he had just muttered something about a tongue-tie but, even if he had, she thought it wasn't really for her. And that the best way of unlocking that was going to be not to draw attention to it. "And, like Professor Wright said, we won't be able to do any of that unless we master basics." Maybe part of why the spell was useful was what built on it, rather than in and of itself. "I suppose I was thinking... Either I am around other magical people, who can undo it, or I am around non-magical people who I can just lock out with a lock," she explained her reasoning, "It does save keeping track of keys though, or risking losing them.

"I guess we should give it a go," she nodded to their locks. The theory was for homework, after all, but Ellie just found it so much easier when she could understand a bit about a spell before trying it. All that theory about needing will and a sense of purpose...

"Colloportus," she cast, watching the lock click almost into place. It took a couple if tries before tugging it with her finger did, indeed, reveal it to be fully locked.
13 Ellie Alperton I'll keep it then 1456 0 5

Alexander Pierce-Beales

March 09, 2020 1:21 PM
Alexander couldn't actually answer the question any better than Ellie had. He really wished he could, but that just wasn't in the cards for him. The idea of layering them up or something was an interesting to play with, but he just hoped he could do it at all first.

He followed Ellie's lead and attempted the spell on his own lock. It took him a few tries - a few more than it took Ellie, unfortunately - but he did manage to get his lock locked. He blinked at it, as surprised as he always was when he did something with his mind to shape the fabric of space and time.

"This is crazy, right?" he asked, relaxing some now that they'd been working next to each other for a minute. "We're just... Waving a stick and deciding we want this locked, so it happens? Does this feeling go away?" He added the last when he remembered she had been at Sonora over a year now, but was a bit worried to think that maybe she'd grown up with this. Was it rude to call that "crazy"? He hoped not.

His lock popped open again and he glared at it, feeling betrayed, and went about getting it locked again as he listened to Ellie's response, nodding to encourage her to go on while he did so.
22 Alexander Pierce-Beales Thank you very much. 1475 0 5

Ellie Alperton

March 21, 2020 8:22 PM
“So far... Yes and no," Ellie answered, with a smile which acknowledged that this was not a particularly helpful answer. It was, however, the honest overview, and the Aladren thought it was important to make that clear up front. Especially when the question was 'Are these funny feelings gonna go away?' It was important to acknowledge that they would change but without lying that it would just... feel normal at some point. She wasn't sure whether Alexander was experiencing crazy-bad, crazy-good or just... this is over-whelmingly unsusual. Ellie tended to find magic to be the good kind of surprising but it wasn’t necessarily the same for everyone. "When I go home, and this kind of magic isn't around any more, I realise I must have gotten kind of used to it," she explained, "Because it seems funny that it’s not there anymore. And when I go home, I start thinking of cellphones and movies as a different kind of magic," she added. "There’s so many things that I grew up with that just… work with me having no idea how they do it. Sometimes it seems less strange that magic here works when I think like that,” she offered.

“But then... I still don't know all the things I can do. And when we learn new things in class, it's often like 'Whoa, we can do that?' And sometimes it still seems incredible or strange.

"It's new to you too then?" she asked, deciding that was a safe enough guess based on what Alexander had said. He seemed a little daunted by it all, which she thought was fair enough, but waited for him to give his own reaction before jumping in to put words in his mouth. Hopefully she could be a voice of reassurance. It definitely felt like it was an adjustment for Muggleborn students, and she figured they had to look out for each other. Not that other people were incapable of being kind or sympathetic, but they just wouldn’t necessarily understand what it was like - a good ally was always welcome, but they served a different role to someone who had been what you had been through.

"Swap?" she added, gesturing at their successfully locked locks whilst she waited for his answer.
13 Ellie Alperton You're welcome 1456 0 5