<font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font>

December 16, 2011 12:16 PM
For the past three years, the Quidditch final had gone the same way. The same two teams, the same winner. It was almost getting boring. This year, Amelia was going to mix things up by putting the two against each other right off the bat. It would be an exciting start to the season, and the second game would give Teppenpaw and Pecari a chance to face each other for the first time in four years. Less than half of the current players had been around for that.

Today, though, was for the rematch between two teams who had met each other in the finals for three years running. Though it was only the first game of the season, in some ways, that made it even more critical than the finals had been. Before, winning had given the victorious team the Championship. The loser, though, had at least made it to the Finals and therefore took second place overall. Today, the loser would be tied for last place in the school, a position she was sure neither Aladren nor Crotalus had any desire to find themselves in.

The day was bright and sunny. Too sunny, in truth. There wasn't a cloud in the sky, the late autumn air was clear, and looking toward the East could blind a person this morning. Fortunately, the pitch was arranged on a North-South axis, so neither team had a severe scoring disadvantage.

With only a week until Thanksgiving, the mid-November temperature was cool compared to preceeding weeks, but it was still in the high fifties and not yet truly freezing. Still, Amelia had opted to wear one of her heavier robes and added a fashionable purple scarf for a little extra warmth around her neck.

"Welcome to the first Quidditch game of this year's season," she greeted the teams and the audience, her voice augmented by the use of a sonorus charm. She had waited unti the captains - both new to their positions - finished their pre-game speecheds, and now she called them over to her. "Representing Aladren this year is Edmond Carey. Newly leading Crotalus, we have Marissa Stephenson. Captains, please shake hands."

Once they did so, they were free to return to their teams. Amelia released the snitch, and the two bludgers, and picked up the Quaffle. Moving the point midway between the two teams, she held the red ball in one hand and her whistle in the other. Her broom waited beside her, ready for her to call it to her hand and follow the players into the air.

First though, "The game goes until a seeker catches the snitch. A goal is worth ten points, catching the snitch is worth a hundred and fifty. Keep the game clean, folks, and let's get started at my whistle. One. Two. Tweet." She tossed the Quaffle high into the air and the sharp whistle-blow split the air.

The game was on.


OOC:
Usual site rules apply. Longer, more detailed posts earn your team more points. First time players, welcome, and please read the post on the OOC board for more Quidditch specific rules. Have fun!
Subthreads:
1 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> Game One: Aladren vs Crotalus 20 <font color=silver>Coach Amelia Pierce</font> 1 5


<font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font>

December 20, 2011 1:27 PM
If Linus had been hoping for some inspirational speech from the captain in his first ever Quidditch game, he would have been supremely let down. As it happened, he had very few existing conceptions concerning wizarding sporting events, and so just blinked at the captain’s insinuation that he knew what he was supposed to do, and swung his leg over his broomstick. Theoretically, of course he knew what he was supposed to do – he’d watched Quidditch games last year, had been to team practises this year, and had even done some reading around history and technique in the library – he just hadn’t done it, as such, in these particular circumstances. The fact that most students at his school were under the impression that the Aladren team were all certifiably insane was neither here nor there.

Taking a deep breath, Linus closed his eyes for just a moment to center his thoughts, then opened them to take in his surroundings. He brushed his blond hair back from his face, and then gripped the handle of his broomstick tightly, while testing the give of the earth beneath his feet. When the whistle blew, he was ready, and he pushed off from the ground to rise into the air… apparently at a slower pace that his more experienced teammates. At least the Quaffle began its journey in possession of the Rattlesnakes, which felt like a small victory in and of itself. It was, however, short-lived; Katrina was so tiny – this was even more apparent when she was on a large pitch among players many years older than her – that Linus barely saw her intercept the ball and make attempts to take it in the wrong direction.

Somehow, the game didn’t improve from there. Linus had turned his broom around (he was okay at turning now, providing he still had both hands on the broom) and saw the Quaffle move further away, and between Aladrens as if the Crotalus players didn’t even exist. He made an attempt or two at Chasing the Quaffle (as his role name indicated), but then there were Bludgers around, too, and how did people manage to intercept at these speeds at this height, anyway? He knew it was only his first game, and he would get used to it within time, but for now it was all the second year could do to keep tabs on which ball was where.

By the time Linus managed to get himself in a position that he thought might be useful to the game without injuring him in the process (he didn’t need to have heard any of the rumours about the Aladren captain – he just had to see the sixth year to know that he didn’t want on the receiving end of one of his Bludgers), Aladren had made two attempts at the goal, and one the of those attempts had been successful. The Keeper actually hadn’t turned out as badly as Linus had been expecting – based, once again, on the hearsay he’d collected last year – and although he had applied for the Keeper position himself, Linus couldn’t say with absolute certainty that he’d have saved both shots, either. Saving one goal was undeniably better than saving two goals, and after Aladren scored, at least the Quaffle was back in Crotalus hands. That meant Linus had to get back into the game… or into it in the first place, as was perhaps more accurate.

It seemed prudent to follow Sam up the pitch away from the Aladrens and Nic, and so that’s what Linus did, attempting to match his teammate’s speed; he almost made himself sick flying that fast, but managed to swallow down bile and vertigo with the metaphorical spoonful of sugar that was staying on his broom and making himself open to receive a pass. Thankfully, Sam didn’t even attempt one of the more theatrical passes that Renee sometimes favoured during practises, instead moving in close so Linus barely had to adjust his own movements to catch the Quaffle. The second year reached out a hand, and leaned over the ball as he scooped it in towards his person, and then leaned forward over his broomstick to recover from the wobble he’d instigated when he’d taken his hand of the broom. He was still on course, and he had the Quaffle, and he felt a bit queasy from the speed at which he was travelling coupled with the adrenaline of making his first in-game catch, but the two slices of toast with marmalade, glass of water and bowl of cereal (with sugar, because it was a weekend and a Quidditch game, and this scenario definitely counted as an excusable occasion for extra sugar) he’d had for breakfast would probably remain within his digestive system, at least for the time being. Now the next item on his to-do list was to pass the Quaffle successfully, preferably to another Crotalus Chaser.

Looking around him as best as he could by only turning his head – if he turned much more than his shoulders he still had a tendency to wobble at an alarming rate, and this was without the added burden of holding a Quaffle – Linus identified what he believed would be his best opportunity to make a good pass. This was apparently the area at which he excelled within the realm of being a Chaser. He supposed he shouldn’t have been surprised – he’d been a decent pitcher in his Little League games, and although the Quaffle was a different size and shape, and he had to throw it whilst straddling a broomstick, Linus nevertheless retained the ability to make a ball go where he intended it to. There was the small matter of keeping his balance to contend with, but with the practice he’d gotten in since the start of term was sufficient to allow Linus to manoeuvre the red leather ball into his right hand, lift his to shoulder height, and make a short, sharp pass in the direction of the nearest suitable red-clad player.

He held his breath in the period between the ball leaving his fingertips and it being collected by another set of digits, ideally belonging to Crotalus, of course. They were, at least, a decent enough way from the goals now that it was unlikely an Aladren who intercepted his pass would make another direct attack at Nic… though this was Aladren, and hence they were insane.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Starting 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font>

December 20, 2011 7:07 PM
Russell had almost made it. For one moment, he’d thought that he’s scored, even before it happened. But then Nic just managed to deflect it, and all of a sudden Crotalus was back in the game.

Well. That was kind of a disappointment.

Before he could get too far down, though, Kitty apparently decided to be mad (Russell wasn’t entirely sure himself if he meant this in the sense of ‘angry’ or in the sense of ‘insane’) instead of sad or disappointed and dove in to grab the Quaffle and make another play, and this one, maybe just because it was so out of nowhere, succeeded.

“Ha!” he said, then raised his voice a little. “Good job, Kitty!”

There wasn’t time for much congratulations besides that, though, because then the ball was back in Crotalus hands and moving along more quickly than he would have expected. All due respect to the guy, he was a pretty good player and would be the Crotalus captain next year, but Sam didn’t usually fly that fast, and Crotali in general didn’t go very far with the ball – at least not as far as Aladrens might. It was always possible that his team tended toward being a little more daring than was really good for them, but hey – they won.

Sam passed, then the new guy passed and Russell, though not as small as Kitty, was still smaller than Arthur and decided to try for it. Swooping in, focused firmly on controlling his broom and being ready to move immediately if it looked like he was about to crash with someone, he extended his arms and snatched the ball from the air between the two Crotali.

As soon as he was sure he had it, and was clear of having it snatched out of his hands, a grin spread across his face as he turned and began heading back toward the Crotalus goals. There they went. Another minute, and they would probably have another goal. Twenty points on the board, and no trouble….

…Well, no trouble for those immediately around him, anyway. Glancing up, he saw there was something going on between Seekers and Beaters, but he didn’t have time to really look to see what. Hoping it was worse for the other team than it was for his, he made a pass, hoping again that something would go better for his team than it had for the other one.
16 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> Stealing. 183 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font>

December 21, 2011 3:20 PM
Everything had gone beautifully until the moment they reached the goals, when an unexpectedly on-the-spot Nic Sawyer had saved Russell’s shot despite it being one which Arthur was of a mind to compliment his roommate on. Arthur grimaced, but accepted it as not a matter he needed to worry too much about. It was the first attempt; there might be many more, on both sides, if the Seekers were not at top form today or the Snitch was just being more elusive today. Or the Beaters were at top form; Arnold might fly through a hurricane if the bright idea struck him to do so, but he’d slow down a little once he was hurt, as, presumably, would Miss Stephenson.

Now that he looked at him, though, he noticed that Mr. Sawyer did look more formidable than he had previously, and had clearly been practicing well. Before he had time to more than note this, though, Katrina chose not to accept the loss and darted in, heedless of the proximity of Mr. Bauer, to intercept the pass of the Quaffle back into the game and score the first goal of the day.

Arthur put his hands together twice in appreciation, not because he thought she deserved less applause, but because there was no time for more appreciation of their new Chaser. The Crotali, so slapped across the face by having two shots taken at their Keeper in a matter of seconds and all their Bludgers diverted, finally came alive, and the Quaffle was moving back down the Pitch, away from where Arthur wanted it to be and toward where he would really rather it was not. So he had to hurry after it to retrieve it and put it back where it was supposed to go, namely back through one of the Crotalus goal hoops.

His hurry to reclaim the ball, despite how much this would incense the Crotali, had, of course, nothing to do with his opinion of Mr. Wilkes. He had all the respect in the world for Mr. Wilkes. Mr. Wilkes was a fine Quidditch player, and a fine example to them all – such a very illustrious figure that he had not even needed to play a single game to be named as Edmond’s successor, and gladly accepted by them all as such. Mr. Wilkes would, if the ball came close to him, do brilliantly as Keeper; of that, Arthur was completely sure. But he would rather not test it just now.

Mr. Bauer passed the Quaffle to the new Crotalus Chaser, Mr. Macaulay, and that meant following further, further on – and then Mr. Macaulay tried to pass again, and though it was a close thing, Russell intercepted it. Arthur smiled grimly, pleased with this turn of events, and turned again, following the Quaffle back toward the goals Mr. Wilkes was not guarding. Now, they just had to score again, despite the new and improved Mr. Sawyer in front of the hoops they were preparing to assault. The Crotali would fight them for it this time, possibly, but…now he welcomed them to do that. It was difficult to muster much of an interest in doing things like this ahead of the fact, but now, now that he’d done it for a bit, he was starting to thoroughly enjoy himself.

When the ball was passed to him again, he caught it easily and kept going on, flying toward the goals at high speed, but careful not to get too far from his fellows. Drawing close to the goals, he raised his hands and turned as though starting to pass, but at the last moment he pulled out of that and took a hard, straight shot at the left hoop, putting all he had behind the Quaffle in the hopes this would make it move faster and so succeed in going through the hoop again. Twenty points in – what? He didn’t think it had been five minutes yet, though he was already losing his time sense, sadly never anywhere near the best, and expected it to be entirely gone quite soon. He shouldn’t like Miss Katrina and his brother to have all the glory of the day, after all.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> Shooting 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font>

December 21, 2011 4:23 PM
She’d had a recent dream that silver strands of hair were braided into her curls, wound so tightly that she couldn’t take them out. Sometimes when she walked, her hips hurt, her calves felt strained, her legs shook, always almost giving out. Idly she’d lean on her elbow, pressing against the table or a desk, her fingers lightly stroking her own cheek or squeezing her neck, imagining the wrinkles and lumps of extra layers of skin that would soon form. These short scenes of memory played as one silent film strip across her mind as she watched the little Aladren girl steal her Quaffle and shoot off to the other side. Somehow Renée got lost in the whirlwind of bludgers, glints of gold, flap of blue and red robes. ‘I’m getting old.’ She thought. ‘I am old.’ Somehow her body had accelerated in age, and now she was feeble, and now she was useless, and now Crotalus was behind.

Nic to Sam, Sam to Linus, and Renée quickly grew bored of feeling bad, experimenting with a new emotion as she swerved a little closer to her teammate. “Ah, hell!” Russel Layne sped right in between them and shot off. Renée didn’t feel as lost this time, and showed no hesitancy, easily keeping up with Layne. She waited for her moment, dividing her attention between where Carey and McLevy placed themselves, but it soon focused entirely on Layne and his how his body moved. She liked knowing when people were going to pass, not just whom they were going to be passing to. She didn’t allow herself to blink, refused to miss the clues, wind brushing her eyes, heat watering them. The shifts in Layne’s weight, the tilts, the raising... ‘Now!’ Like a fish springing out of water, a huge massive force of Orca seizing her prey in the clear, unprotected sky, she pushed her whole body forward, lunging for the Quaffle.

“Ah, hell!” Too slow again, and she watched with rising frustration as Arthur Carey caught the pass, continuing toward Crotalus goals once more. ‘Get the pass. Get the pass. Get the pass.’ Her eyes never wavered from his form as she sped after him, weaving where he weaved, dipping in and out and through air currents, waiting for his arm to raise, his body to tilt, directed toward a teammate. ‘There he goes, there he goes, there he... ah, hell!’ She watched as Carey took a shot, following the spark of red as it sought an entry point of rounded metal. ‘Save it, save it, save it.’ Her mind burst with prayers for Nic, imagining his long arms stretching beyond the capabilities of man. She felt as if her talents, and the chance to prove them, now hung in suspension. She pinned her future success or continued failure (where had she been the last five minutes?) on the Quaffle’s fate; ‘If it goes in, then I’m going to be bad. If Nic saves, then I’ll be the best chaser ever.

She felt like an Orca whale still, but on dry land, beating her tail helplessly on the beach, pinned by her own blubber, the mocking heat. Out of her element, she was no predator. But this was her element, air was her home, and yet she felt off. Sweaty, windswept, and fat. Water in her lungs, and everything she was doing was too slow. Every prediction she’d been making had happened in the past. ‘No more thinking. Go back to not thinking.’ She steadied her breathing, she clenched tightly to the wood. ‘Just an arrow. Fly straight, catch, pass, pass, shoot, and score.’ She waited for Nic to make the save. She waited patiently to be good again.
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> Watching Helplessly 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5

<font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font>

December 21, 2011 8:19 PM
Thankfully, Sam got the Quaffle the heck of out of Dodge, as instructed. He passed to Linus and the would-be little Keeper got it even further away. Unfortunately, that was as far as it got before the Hawks swooped in and changed its direction again. Despite a valiant attempt by Renee to intercept, it was still coming his way after the Layne Chaser passed it off to the Carey Chaser.

At least Beater Carey was still off with the Seekers. Nic had nothing good to say about the last time Aladren's largest beater had taken an interest in him.

The Carey Chaser made as if to pass, but there was something - either a lack of commitment, or an instinct born from practicing with Sam and Renee, or maybe even a whisper of Talent that somehow foretold the true intent, or possibly just the good luck that had been sorely lacking on Crotalus's end so far this game - that made Nic ready himself for a shot at the goal. He didn't know which hoop the kid might go for, so he just weaved a little in front of the center one, and found himself already heading in the right direction when the Carey Chaser committed and made for the hoop to Nic's right.

Nic pushed his broom for a quick burst of speed that it could not sustain for long, but it didn't have to. He just had to close five feet, four, three, two, and he reached out, guiding the broom one handed as he stretched forward with not just his arm and hand but his whole body. It wasn't something he would have dared a year ago, and in truth it still wasn't something he felt comfortable doing, but he was at least reasonably sure of his balance enough now that he doubted he was in any danger of a fall.

He strained for it, pushing his broom - a school model, but one that was too long and unwieldy for most people to bother with so it was still in good shape - to its limits and got his hand in front of the ball just in time to smack it away.

"Ha!" he crowed in triumph even as he went after the Quaffle to recover the falling ball. Snatching it from the air, he rose up in front of his goals, victorious for the second time, and - after checking Kitty's position - threw it back into play in the direction of one of the red-clad chasers.

He began a weave in front of the goals again, keeping his inertia going, ready, this time, in case Aladren wanted to try their cheap shot again.
1 <font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font> Keeping 165 <font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font> 0 5


<font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font>

December 21, 2011 11:54 PM
There was an audible Slap and Renée’s eyes widened in delight, a loud cheer for Nic surprising her as it burst from her throat. He dove for the Quaffle and she rose quickly in the air, targeting one of the Aladrens who would indubitably try to regain possession immediately. Nic pulled his arm back and suddenly red streaked the air. Arms thrusting upward, she grabbed it with both of her hands, the darkly tanned palms pressed tightly against the red leather, catching the Crotalus Keeper’s pass. Quickly she curved her body, hugging the Quaffle to her chest, leaning with her whole being to the left, a sharp turn within the confines of the shouting/cheering/jeering stands. Back toward Aladren goals, regaining some of the ground that both Sam and Linus had pushed for earlier. It was time to put the pressure on the other side. Nicodemus Sawyer might not have been the best Keeper ever to grace Sonora Quidditch Stadium, but Renée was resolved to never think a negative thought (regarding his Keeper skills) about him ever again, and was resolved to keep the Quaffle away from him with even greater force and intention. Best to leave his record on a high note.

A wide smile had settled on her face, strands of her hair flinging over her neck, her cheeks, the dark curls brushing her spread lips. ‘Not as old as I feared.’ Tucking the Quaffle in the crook of her arm, a hand wrapped firmly around the sleek wood, she eyed her fellow chasers once more, back to feeling useful to the team. Darting out of the way of a bludger, feeling her arm loosen involuntarily, she rolled the ball alongside her so that her hand was pinning the Quaffle to the side of her hip, cupping the leather, ready to play harder - better - the best, as she weaved in and out of players, her body jutting out in different angles as her speed increased, trying to break away from a clump and gain some free air, and make a safe pass. The Aladrens had a lead of 10 - 0 which wasn’t a lot, but after three attempts at the goals, it was enough to make Renée nervous enough to be a little more cautious than usual. ‘Then again...’ Sensing conflict, her brain finally mercifully shut down, and Renée was left with nothing but broom, ball, body, and instinct.

On one side of her, a Crotalus chaser was free but she could spy the Aladren that looked about to pop up between them. On her other she flew with an Aladren already in between her and her teammate. She kept her movements subtle but clear; slight turn to the right, her left hand raising the Quaffle and preparing to throw, arm winding back and then flicked her wrist, the Quaffle free from her grasp - “Ha!” - her smile sank as an excitable grin rose, her right hand rising quickly, catching her own toss and cradling the Quaffle before throwing it hard, fast, with a gentle successful arch as it flew over the Aladren, hopefully caught by her teammate. Unable to babysit the ball any longer, she dropped in slight height to quickly circle and make a sharp stop in front of one of the Aladrens (past collisions hadn’t taught her not to) to block them, even if only for a few seconds. Her breathing was a little hitched, she still had all her energy, but she felt the game more in her heated blood, in her perspiration, in the tiny ache in her shoulders and arms. ‘Fine, I’m old.’ She conceded. ‘But still good.
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> I knew prayer would work 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font>

December 22, 2011 9:43 AM
Linus didn’t have time to dwell on the fact that his first pass off the game – of his Quidditch career – had been unsuccessful. Later, he was certain to revel in his failure, replaying the scenario over and over until he’d figured out what he could have done to prevent Aladren’s interception. Later, he would realize that a vast proportion of the school had seen him fail, had seen him display an indisputable lack of competency. Later, he would resolve to do better, to work harder, to focus more thoroughly, to not let other players get the better of him, regardless of their greater level of experience. Now, however, was hardly the time for reflection; Crotalus needed to make up for Linus’ mistake – he needed to make up for his mistake.

Aladren were currently in possession of the Quaffle, and taking it back towards Nic. Linus surprised himself by discovering he had faith in the current Keeper. While he’d heard bad stories about the fifth year, and had even signed up to try out for his position, the second year found himself acknowledging that a fifty per cent save rate on two goal attempts was not a horrendous statistic. He was certain that if the Quaffle should enter the scoring area again, Nic would do his team proud.

Nevertheless, it would undoubtedly be better to prevent the ball from getting that close in the first place. Aladren already had one goal, and Crotalus had yet to score. The Quaffle should be heading in the other direction, as it had been just moments ago. Yet while Linus wanted to do something spectacular to bring about this state of affairs, he seemed ill-equipped to do so. By the time he’d turned his broom around, Renee had already attempted an interception as the Quaffle passed from one Chaser to another, without much luck. If she, with her experience and faster broom, couldn’t manage it, Linus didn’t think he stood much of a chance of getting the ball back, either. Admittedly Renee was a girl, and he’d heard her speak in a foreign language, so she might not even be native to America, but Linus had to concede that these disadvantages did not seem to present much of a problem in terms of Quidditch skills.

All attempts at interception in vain, the Quaffle was soon leaving the hands of the second Aladren Chaser to have the ball since Linus, as moving towards the goals. He felt his breath catch in his throat as he watched – from a reasonable distance, having not made much headway at all in following the ball once it had changed direction – the red leather ball sail towards the hoops, and then the commendable save that brought a cheer from the crowd. Linus exhaled, relieved that his new-found faith in their Keeper had not been misplaced. Then, for a tiny fraction of a second, he considered continuing his progress into the fray to be nearer the Quaffle. In an immeasurably short amount of time passed before Linus realized the pointlessness of this venture; Renee was already flying back his way, the ball tucked safely under her arm. Reassessments made, Linus turned his own broom yet again, and made to continue once again on his path towards the Aladren-kept goals, those elusive hoops that had thus far seemed to repel the Crotalus Chasers. Perhaps not for much longer.

As his teammate approached, Linus readied himself to receive, in case he should be the best option. The Aladren chasers apparently had this uncanny ability to be everywhere at once – from his newcomer’s perspective, at least – and he couldn’t deny concern that without the shortness of Sam’s earlier pass, Aladren would be able to steal the ball back before Linus had a second opportunity to prove his worth. Therefore, when his eyes widened at the sight of the Quaffle soaring in a neat arc in his direction, Linus simply refused to panic, instead turning all instinctive reactions that accompanied that particular emotion into determination; the extra adrenaline and faster heartbeat combining to allow him to make a lunge for the ball unlike one he’d ever made before. Being in a game – his thoughts diverted, unbidden - was nothing at all like being in a practise. People did things they were not prone to doing, and committed acts that in usual circumstances would be prohibited by the consequences alone. In a practise, Linus might have let the Quaffle fall, with no fear of the opposition collecting the ball in his stead, and humiliating him for the second time. In this game, however, it didn’t occur to him for a moment that he even had the option of letting the Quaffle fall. He strained every muscle he had as he rose to collect it, aiming to pull in the ball to his shoulder with one hand (his other always occupied by its necessary grasp on the broomstick handle), but mis-judging by an inch or two and smacking the leather hard into his own chin. It stung from the impact in a numbing buzz, easy enough to ignore under the elating circumstances of having received the Quaffle.

His head took a moment to clear, by which time Linus had automatically made the transmission from catch to carry, tucking the ball safely against his own body as he flew onwards. Once again, the game seemed to be going in his team’s favour, but this time he didn’t have the naivety to believe with any certainty that it would last for long. Aladren had won the championship game for the previous two years, after all… but then Crotalus had been their opposition on both occasions. Linus knew that if they won the game today, Crotalus would likely rise to win the trophy. As it would also be the year he’d joined the team, Linus couldn’t easily pass on the opportunity to stress this to everyone he knew (and many he didn’t know at all). Therefore it was with a newfound courage that he managed to shift his weight to retain balance on his speeding broom as he gave a good look around for potential interception. He was by no means an expert, but having identified an opening, he felt reasonably confident that an Aladren wouldn’t be able to directly snatch it off course. Reasonably confident.

It was now or never. Linus lifted the ball once again to his chest, and made what was a relatively short pass to one of his fellow red-clad Chasers, his aim and strength as true as they had ever been, and with less wobble than he’d felt before.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Livin' on a prayer 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font>

December 22, 2011 6:38 PM
You go, Penguin!’ Renée continued to speed forward, a little ahead of him, turning her head to make sure he still had possession. The goal posts were looming, the Aladren Keeper within clear sight, and Crotalus had the ball. Familiar excitement began to rise, her heart beating a little faster, a giddy feeling, an addictive heat that flushed her face. Quidditch wasn’t just a game, it was a life style; how she wanted to live her life. The rush, the ache, the thrill, the disappointments, all of it she needed and wanted, and would have. Outside of her misguided family, outside of the sometimes stifling boundaries of Sonora, outside of what the average imagination could comprehend. She would have it, because she wanted it, and she deserved to get what she wanted. Everybody did. Everybody deserved the family best suited to them, and Renée would have that one day. Creatures that would never leave, never betray her, never ignore her, never disappear for months on end without good explanation or flimsy excuse. ‘Birds of a feather...’ And she was reminded that she was flying now, too.

Both she and Linus neared one another again, leveling off, and Renée watched as he lifted the ball to his chest. ‘Aladrens coming, Aladrens coming...’ A second before he made the short pass she jutted a little more to the side, bending down, her chest pressed against the wood, her fingers grabbing the Quaffle with her peripheral vision, clear nails digging into the leather as she accelerated in an upward diagonal motion. Her arm struggled to rise to her side, encountering resistance from the air she was rushing through, a vacuum attempting to suck her up, eat her whole. She made it through though, the Quaffle gripped by her right, her eyes settled on the Keeper’s left. ‘I wonder how good you are?’ The question was pressing in her mind, almost politely intended, as if she’d invited him into her mind to hear that one thought, and expected him to answer back with an honest, Not good enough. After losing the championship to Aladren for a few years running, it was impossible to keep up the charade (it had been a true belief once) that they were just a group of extremely lucky nerds. They did have talent, and they worked extremely well together, that couldn’t be denied. But Nic had just saved a hard shot, Linus was new yet could make decent passes and keep up with more experienced players, and as these were the only two loose ends Crotalus had had, Renée was feeling pretty good about her team, and that confidence in them flowed into herself, strengthening and re-energizing her muscles, instincts, and skill.

Her upward diagonal flight brought her rising quickly in the air roughly between the Keeper’s right and middle goal posts, continuing to imagine herself an arrow, her whole being directed toward the middle goal hoop, that quarantined area between the metal that her Quaffle longed to break through. Her arm pulled back, her body twisted, her thighs clenched on her Febre, and she was ready to shoot, ready to score, her other hand releasing the wood to point toward the middle hoop, adding strength and purpose to her throw. ‘Feint!’ With minimal change in her body, her arm thrust through the air, the Quaffle released from her tight grip, and with a grin hiding behind her nervous determination, she saw that spin she’d intended for the ball take hold of it, its path curving away from the middle goal hoop, spinning fast toward the farther away left hoop.

The heat of the sun beat down on the back of her neck where her hair parted, and the Quidditch robes couldn’t cover. As tempting as it was to sink into the sun, let it lull her into a sweet coma, rock her gently back and forth... she was all too excited about simply making a shot against Aladren, putting pressure back on them. Before she could see the Keeper either save the Quaffle or watch her shot sail through, she flipped her broom over into a dive, zig zagging a few meters before making a sharp turn around, targeting an Aladren player from behind, readying for a future interception she could make once the Keeper threw the Quaffle back into play. Her eyes lingered on the goals. ‘Score, come on, score!
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> Shooting on a prayer 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


<font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font>

December 22, 2011 9:50 PM
Kitty blinked, and then blinked again before a great whoop of joy escaped her tiny frame. She did it! She’d made a goal. Her ecstatic thoughts left her blind to the action for what felt like only moments before she realized that the Quaffle had gone, and the reds had stolen it taking it far down the pitch while she’d been lollygagging and basking in the glory of one measly score. Darn it Kitty! Keep your head in the game you can’t lose focus like that just cuz things are going your way! The small girl sternly scolded herself as she twisted her broom around and darted after the now distant red ball.

For a second it looked like the tide had turned back in their favor when another assault was made on the Crotalus goals by Arthur before the Quaffle was again lost to the sea of red. She wasn’t quite fast enough to snatch the ball back from their new Chaser, and while she might have gotten one up on the older girl at the start of the game Kitty found her hard to thwart a second time and again missed her chance to regain the coveted ball. Come on, we can do better than this, get it together Kitty!

While Kitty had been busy with her pep talk and flying full tilt she wasn’t paying quite as much attention as a game such as Quidditch warranted. At least one played against people who might be crazy (even though it was usually her team that was named such she thought the Reds deserved a bit of the title as well). She’d been following the older girl who had the Quaffle closely and just as she threw Kitty started to accelerate in an attempt to catch the ball before it reached the other Crotalus.

In theory such a move would have worked beautifully, if the girl hadn’t been certifiable and hadn’t come to a DEAD STOP right in front of her! It took all of Kitty’s lithe skill, and she still almost wrenched one of her arms out of its socket as she twisted and forced her broom into a tight desperate plunge to avoid a full on collision with the older girl. Still she thought she felt shoes tease along her back as she plummeted. It was an amazing rush as her broom spiraled out of control and Kitty fought it to regain control.

Finally she was able to pull out of the spin Kitty was halfway to the ground and much lower than the rest of the players. Grumbling, and more than a little dizzy Kitty looked up and tried to track what the heck was going on. When she saw that the older girl had the ball again and was about to shoot Kitty (still dizzy) sort of forgot that she was suppose to be the Chaser, and was the Keeper no longer. Flinging herself recklessly up she tracked the red orb through the pristine blue. Somehow she managed to get between the goals and the ball. Unfortunately she wasn’t quite in time to actually get her hands up. The ball banged painfully against the side of her head before falling. “Ouuch!” Kitty yelped as she fumbled her attempt to catch the ball while ignoring the painful sting and ringing in her ear. A small kittenish growl escaped the tiny girl as it slipped though her grasp.
0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> Seeing Red 0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 12:08 AM
Out of the corner of his eye, no more than a second after it was too late to stop trying to pass, Russell saw Renée Errant trying to intercept. He started to shout, having no idea if he was trying to startle her or warn Arthur or just vent some of the frustration which sprang into being the moment he saw her, but before he could do that, Arthur completed the pass anyway, and she was out of it.

He smiled at her before continuing along after the Quaffle in case Arthur wanted to try another last-minute pass, feeling triumphant and slightly guilty about being triumphant, but mostly just triumphant. She got in the way a lot, and it was a pleasure to see her try to interfere as she always did and fail, even if his guess was that it was just brooms again. She still had, if he wasn’t mistaken, the same one she had when they’d started all this when he was a first year, she might have had it a year before that for all he knew, and he knew enough to know that in terms of fast brooms, four years was an eternity. He didn’t, now that the game was in his blood again, care how Aladren won, so long as they did.

As they drew near to the goals, he saw Arthur moving as though he were about to pass the Quaffle back to him, just like they had last time. Russell wasn’t sure what to think of that strategy, but he knew Renée was still just behind them, and so he’d better be ready to catch the ball and do something with it, even if that was just get real complicated and pass it right back to Arthur in an attempt to set some kind of school record for ‘shortest time holding the Quaffle before attempting a goal’ or something like that.

Except, it seemed Arthur had nothing like that in mind at all, and was playing the Keeper. It didn’t work, though. Things fell apart astonishingly quickly, so quickly that, despite being pretty sure he’d made an attempt to intercept, he wasn’t quite sure what had happened when suddenly, the Crotalus Chasers were up against the goals, and Renée was taking the shot. He hit his leg, frustrated….

And then Kitty was there, again, coming out of it with the ball…well, this time it didn’t end up in her hands, it bounced off her and fell, and Russell found himself reacting without thought, his brain registering that Kitty seemed out of it, that this made two of theirs who were no longer at top form, but his body, observing the narrow opening this gave the Aladren Chasers, just darting in to grab the Quaffle and move back down the Pitch with it. He turned quickly, flying fast to get away from the danger area of the goals and covering more ground than was probably strictly advisable himself to get them clear of it before attempting a pass to one of his teammates, before he got his neck broken for getting too far into the game and worrying too much about seizing on the advantage Kitty had handed them.
16 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> Not anymore. 183 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> 0 5

<font color="blue">David Wilkes, Keeper</font>

December 23, 2011 12:48 AM
Everything was too far away from David for him to be completely sure what was going on, who was doing what, at the other end, but he was able to figure it out easily enough when Aladren scored and clapped cheerfully. Crotalus got the ball, and it came back toward him for a second, but then Aladren seized it and hurried back toward Crotalus and there was another attempt at the goal – not successful, but still, two attempts in a minute or two. The game, it seemed, was going their way.

Until suddenly it wasn’t. How did the Crotali pull that off? They barely passed it at all. They should have had their brains all knocked out a long, long time before they got anywhere near him, but…they didn’t. And they didn’t because it looked like Arnold had been hurt – not bad, but hurt, which wasn’t great for their cause. He was the Seeker. David didn’t know Quidditch strategy intimately, he’d never really expected to play, so he’d never learned that much theory or whatever it was, but he knew that it was not good if the Seeker was hurt, and that this was really even worse than if anyone else was hurt, when it was pretty bad if any of them were.

Such as him. He would rather not get hurt, either. He thought the Beaters would go after the Chasers before they came after him, bit still: if the ball was in his court, people were going to do what they had to do to keep him from intercepting it as the Crotali threw it toward the goal hoops. Oh, this wasn’t going to be fun, no sir, this was not going to be fun if the Chasers didn’t stop this, and the Chasers and the Beaters allegedly on his side weren’t stopping this….

It was going to be the girl who shot, the one who was in his year but who David avoided like plague because of all the drama around her. Something about her put him off, he didn’t even know what. But he had heard about how she was in Quidditch in addition to seeing it regularly when he was watching games, and he knew that she seldom did what she appeared to do, so he knew better than to commit himself before the ball was actually leaving her hands….

…Wait, where did Kitty come from? And where did Russell come from, too, and…huh, now everything was going completely the other way again.

He was baffled by it, but not entirely displeased by this turn of events. It meant Crotalus wasn’t scoring, which meant Aladren was still in the lead. He was just a little baffled by things turning so quickly. He guessed that was the difference between watching from the bench for the past few years, or watching in the stands during his first year, and actually being out here and part of it. Big difference. He hadn’t decided yet if he liked it.
16 <font color="blue">David Wilkes, Keeper</font> ...What just happened? 169 <font color="blue">David Wilkes, Keeper</font> 0 5


<font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font>

December 23, 2011 1:35 AM
... in, go in... go - ah, hell!’ Her body calmed down from its previous excitement, her fingers loosening from around the broom handle, watching McLevy shoot up into the air, slapping the Quaffle away from its rightful path. A little closer to the Quaffle than her, Layne dove for the ball, and she turned her broom around, quickly scanning the field for Carey and then urged her Febre toward him, aware that either she, Linus, or Sam had to win the very next chance of interception. Sending mental signals to Topher and Gareth - ‘Maim McLevy. Maim McLevy. Maim McLevy.’ - she fell back into the familiar pattern of tracking Arthur Carey.

Layne was pushing as far as he dared, not passing, and Renée grew tired of waiting, of playing passive, hoping he’d throw her a bone. She’d rather steal it, fight for it upfront. Abruptly, she switched targets, swerving away from Carey, toward the actual possessor of the ball. “Hola, Russel!” She matched his previous arrogant smile at her recent failure to intercept with flashing eyes and a wide white smile of her own, curls whipping around her face, red robes flapping over her knees, flying straight toward him, as if to collide. His arm was already half raised in a throw and her robes brushed against his as one arm darted out to the side to grab his pass. “And gracias!” Her body tightened around the broom, pushing off, back toward Aladren goals.

It was easy enough to regain the ground that they’d lost, dropping beneath most of the players, keeping herself straight and narrow, which was hard to do when all the time she felt bulging now, and lumpy. Nightmares about her skin sagging, her hair trickling off her scalp like heavy drops of rain. ‘No. More. Thoughts.’ She scolded herself, blaming a little of the heat and excitement for the morbid recreations of her dreams. Even through the frustration of not having had her shot go in (it always felt bad when the very first shot failed) there was still fun to be had, Aladrens to conquer, and new information to store. She was of the opinion that worrying over the Keeper to much inhibited him, dragged him down. Probably one of the reasons why Nic used to suck so much. McLevy making the save instead of Wilkes was a good sign. It showed an absence of confidence in him, which suggested he had an absence of skill. Not earth shattering commentary, but it boosted Renée’s morale.

Regaining most of the ground stolen from them, the goals again looming, tempting, enticing her to try again and try again, an old familiar teasing friend, Renée’s speed began to slow as she looked for a pass. ‘There he is.’ Finding one of her teammates above her, she jumped heights, a quick light pass over her shoulder toward him just before she passed him, rising in the air, waiting to push forward with him and exchange more passes until they could try to even and then supersede the current score. 'Come on, Crotalus! You go, Crotalus!'
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> Crotalus happened. 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


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

December 23, 2011 2:01 AM
This, Edmond thought, rubbing his shoulder in one of the few quiet moments, this was why he really hated playing Crotalus. The whole team had the excellent makings of black widows, because they’d run anyone who played against them nearly to death in their attempts to win. He supposed he shouldn’t say anything, though; his boys were just as bad. It was going to be another long match.

He saw the Crotalus Chasers streaking back down the field with the Quaffle, but his attention for the moment was on Arnold and Marissa, and he was well away from it at the moment, anyway, so he hoped Preston would intervene if the Chasers couldn’t retrieve the Quaffle themselves and left them to it for the moment. When he got things momentarily quiet again, though, he found the girl had apparently somehow gotten down the field without losing the ball or getting Bludgered – really, where was everyone else? – and he sighed and went for it, chasing a Bludger back into range and hitting it, as hard as he could, at the first red uniform he saw.

There was something to give them pause, anyway. Hopefully break some of their bones, since that was what was best for his team. If he was going to do this, he was going to do it properly. Which, right now, meant getting back to Arnold. At least that was one Bludger that was nowhere near his Seeker.

Honestly, he didn’t know if Arnold should even be playing – he’d never seen him seem quite this put off by a hit before – but Arnold was flying on as though determined to play the game out, so Edmond would leave him to it for now. He’d won when he’d been hit more than that, whereas Thaddeus was unproven, and they were Careys. It was part of the family culture, the family mythos, that one had to be extremely tough; Edmond personally thought it was at least a little wrongheaded, but those who took the family seriously, like Morgaine, seemed to find it of some comfort in adversity. If it worked for them, he wasn’t going to criticize it unless it seemed to cause more problems than it start –

…He was really going to have to have a word with Kitty, wasn’t he? She was going to get herself hurt badly if she kept up these stunts. If the Crotalus Beaters didn’t succeed in hurting her soon enough, the simple laws of physics which controlled the Crotalus Chasers, or just the Crotalus Chasers if they got annoyed enough, would do the job for them. Emotions started to run high after a while, especially as each team experienced injuries, unfavorable conditions, all the usual setbacks. Shaking his head, he hurried back to the job of guarding Arnold, trying to watch everything at once, looking for the next thing that he’d have to fight to keep Aladren on its feet and moving along the Pitch in this match.
0 <font color="blue">Edmond Carey, Beater</font> And it lost. As it always does. 0 <font color="blue">Edmond Carey, Beater</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 2:11 AM
Arthur had never been afraid of things that other people thought he had no right to know, and neither had he been very afraid of doing things he wasn’t supposed to do in order to gain that information. Indeed, the best way for anyone to get him interested in something was to tell him he could not know it, something he thought the family should have understood better, given the kind of people it tended toward and deliberately raised its children to be, though he was increasingly skeptical about just how much environment shaped personality and dispositions, considering the cases of himself and his two brothers, one of them his twin and so brought up from before birth in conditions identical to his own. But the family did not understand it, or did not want to – it was convenient for them that he be a third son, and so, like magic, he was to them, a third son of no importance who would never dream of stepping out of his assigned place – and so he had come to read a number of books of Grandfather Carey’s, which were very interesting and some of which were possibly plausible cause for an investigation.

Arthur toyed with the idea occasionally of using this information to blackmail the old man, but knew how unlikely it was to work – at best, the old man would either laugh at him or laugh at him and then give him a memory charm; at worst, the old man would have him killed for being so presumptuous – so mainly, Grandfather’s library was just a source of things he wasn’t supposed to know, a way to amuse himself when Anthony VI annoyed him in some way and he wanted to get a little of his own back in a way which was unlikely to be noticed by Anthony and so allow him to retaliate. One day, it might be different, but right now, Arthur knew that if it came to a direct confrontation, he would lose and Grandfather would win. So he learned just how rotten people were to each other and daydreamed about doing as much for his grandfather and then went back to being a good third son, despite being chronologically second.

Arthur was not a violent individual. The only people he’d ever really even idly thought about doing violent things to were his paternal grandparents, and, less seriously, to a few cousins when they refused to shut up and annoyed him dreadfully, or the occasional opposing player in Quidditch. At the moment, though, he was glaring at Mr. Wilkes around a Crotalus Chaser, hoping to convey in this look the nature of all the unpleasant things he knew and just how many of them he would be willing to test on David’s person if that Quaffle went through a hoop and allowed Crotalus to take away their lead.

Perhaps she caught the edge of his glare, or more likely not, but suddenly, Kitty appeared from nowhere and again changed the game, this time in true Aladren fashion, with her head. Admittedly, the Quaffle bouncing off her head wasn’t what most people thought of when they thought of Aladrens using their heads, but it amused him to exploit the technicality. As Russell fled with the Quaffle again, Arthur followed, covering his roommate in the expectation of a pass coming soon, so as not to invite Mr. Calhoun and Mr. Whitebriar to demonstrate for Edmond and Preston how their mutual position was to be played.

The pass didn’t come as soon as he expected, but it still came soon enough, and...Miss Errant intercepted it. Well, that was a complication he had hoped not to have, but not a major one.

In some respects, he found her very interesting. She always fought just as hard as if she didn't realize that she could not win. Every time, it was the same, her making tiny little gains for her team which ultimately meant absolutely nothing, since Aladren usually recaptured the ball with ease; by the time she got on form, they were also starting to enjoy the rough, unkind pleasures of the game, and would no sooner let her keep that Quaffle than they would hand their mothers over to the Aurors. Was she really so dull-witted as to realize that her flashy defiance just caught her a Bludger, that she was just going through the motions? Or was the defiance because she knew this? He would have been interested to know.

She didn't seem inclined to give an interview at the moment, though, so he had to content himself with watching for her pass. When it came, suddenly as usual but he had been keeping a close eye on her hands, he caught it without difficulty, smiling to himself at how things were once again going as well as he would like them to, much less could reasonably expect them to under Quidditch conditions. He turned, regained what they had lost, and covered more ground, bringing them nearly to the half mark which would take them back onto the Crotalus side of the Pitch and so, if it completed, closer to Mr. Sawyer than to Mr. Wilkes. Then, deciding to let another have the honor of crossing, he took his opportunity to pass, starting what he hoped would be a short, smooth arc of the ball from his hands into those of another Aladren, and then to the goals for a third time.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> It was inevitable 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 9:34 AM
Once again, there was that short period of elation as Linus made a successful pass to one of his fellow Chasers. Maybe the whole school wouldn’t be laughing at him later, after all. He hadn’t participated in the great a great deal as of yet, but there was no denying that this most recent volley of passes between him and Renee was admirable to say the least. If his performance only continued to improve then perhaps Crotalus would win this game more easily than Linus had first anticipated. He’d never doubted that they could win; he’d just believed it would be a great deal of effort. After all, it was common knowledge that the Aladren team were certifiably insane.

A few minutes later, Linus could fully appreciate why everyone thought the Aladren team was nuts. Katrina had tried to play both Chaser and Keeper, and had let the Quaffle hit her in the head. Then one of the older Chasers had collected the Quaffle, and taken it back down the pitch for longer than Linus would have dared, even with the beaters being more or less occupied with the Seekers, as they were at present. It was frustrating, not just because he’d only moments ago decided that Crotalus had a good grasp on the game, but because yet again he had to work on turning him broom around to go and reclaim the ball. All this to-ing and fro-ing was impractical, not to mention an inconvenience when one was doing his best to get the ball up the other end of the pitch. That was what sport was all about, though – being hindered by the opposition. It wouldn’t really be competition otherwise, and Linus knew this logically, but right now logic didn’t seem to be featuring much in his harried mind.

Having worked to turn his school broom around once more – it wasn’t all that battered compared to some of the more ancient-looking sticks; perhaps there had been a new supply fairly recently in history – Linus focussed his efforts and attentions on the Quaffle as it swapped hands from Aladren, briefly to Crotalus, and then back again to a blue-clad Chaser, getting progressively closer to Nic’s goals. Linus thought he might be able to intercept. His broom wasn’t as fast as the others, but in the time that had elapsed when Renee held the ball, Linus hadn’t altered his course, and so he managed to somehow be in the right place at the right time to work on intercepting a pass from one of the Aladren Chasers. This wasn’t something Linus would normally attempt; interceptions often ended in injury, and he wasn’t so confident in his own skills to put them to that sort of rigorous testing on a regular basis. From time to time, however, it was his role as Chaser to undergo calculated risk. As he’d been engrossed so intensely watching the Quaffle move, he felt almost drawn into it, as if the two of them had an affinity of sorts, uninterruptable and irrepressible. He moved towards it, like a moth to a flame – a super-speedy moth towards a red leather flame. The ball flew from blue Chaser’s hands, and an unexpected by-product of Linus’ singular motive was that he was unaware of the approaching Bludger until it smacked the back of his broomstick smartly, missing his rear end by mere millimetres. His instinct was to cling on for his life as he spiralled out of control, being only semi-conscious of the Quaffle that bounced freely off his spinning person, and the sharp cracking sound as his broomstick spilt not quite in two.

Desperately fighting the urge to vomit once more, Linus clenched his knees and teeth, and pulled up on his handle to bring himself out of the spin. He had no idea what had happened to the Quaffle, or whether his interference had helped or hindered his own team’s progress. His aim for the moment was to force his head to stop spinning and to assess the damage to his own broomstick. He felt fine himself – the rebounding Quaffle hadn’t hurt and the Bludger hadn’t caused any damage to his person – so he didn’t think there was a real need for an alternate player to join the game, but if his broomstick wasn’t going to co-operate then it would be better for the team if an alternative vessel could be substituted, and he wasn’t at all sure whether this was compatible with the rules.

So far his first game had been a real trial of his commitment to the sport. If every game was this eventful, Linus could perceive two potential outcomes: either he would tire of excessive effort for little apparent reward, and throw in the proverbial towel ahead of his graduation, or, conversely, he would be spurred on by the sweet scent of victory, close enough to sample its fragrance only, but not yet its taste. Victory was a strong encouragement, even to the weak, and Linus did not fall under that category in any given circumstance. It was entirely possible that the outcome of this one game alone would be a determining factor in his decision regarding his continued position on the team. Then again, if he managed to hang on to playing Chaser for another two years then his coveted position of Keeper would eventually become vacant, and Linus thought that, even with the added pressure of being solely responsible for the goals scored or otherwise by the opposition, remaining in more or less one place would be infinitely preferable to all this chasing up and down the pitch like an inept sheepdog.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Or perhaps it was inedible 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 10:54 AM
Lucky for Kitty her fellow Chasers were on the ball and her fumble didn’t result in the Reds getting the Quaffle again. How embarrassing that would be, to save it only to give it right back to the enemy. Her ear was still ringing slightly, but the annoying sound was finally starting to fade, but it still stung. That girl threw really hard. Note to self: do not stop Quaffles with your head Kitty snorted on a laugh as she re-orientated herself into the game. Before shooting off down the pitch Kitty threw a wink and a grin over her shoulder at David. She hoped there weren’t any hard feelings for her momentary lapse.

Russell managed to save her little fumble, and began a brilliant run down the pitch. Finally having gotten her head on straight Kitty flung herself joyfully down the pitch, the sting and embarrassment of her fumble forgotten in favor of the wind. Unfortunately she hadn’t been able to get into position fast enough and again the Quaffle was stolen. The crack of bat on Bludger caused the small girl to veer and glance around only to grin when she saw it wasn’t aimed in her direction but at the meddling Reds.

Darn it! That girl had stolen the ball again! Sky blue eyes locked on the red robed female, deciding to call her Queen of Thieves seems that’s what she clearly was. It was a good thing that Arthur was spot on and managed to take it right back before it got too far down the field. Swift as the wind Kitty positioned herself for the next pass. The Quaffle arched and before she could reach it a Red got in the way, but he’d forgotten a vital rule to Quidditch, always always watch out for the Bludgers. You could never get so focused that you forgot the danger…or you ended up as he did and spinning with a broken broom. At least it was only the broom and not his head.

But that left the Quaffle free, if falling and Kitty dove after the coveted ball before any more reds could take it into their heads to try and steal it again. Her small hands snapped the ball up out of the air and Kitty, keeping her eye out for any Bludgers that might be sent her way, flew swiftly back towards the goals. Finally again past the half way mark and firmly back in Reds territory Kitty spotted a blue not far behind her. The ball flew, and Kitty hoped the QoT would keep her hands off it this time.
0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> Perhaps, mine now though 0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 1:26 PM
For a moment, it seemed that Crotalus’ new Chaser, Mr. Macaulay, who, it had to be admitted, had been doing very well for himself so far, would muck things up again, but then something else happened to render his attempt at interference as ineffective as, ultimately, his friend Miss Errant’s had been. The ball made it to Katrina, and Arthur flew on, content.

He was fascinated, once more, with the emotional reactions the game could bring out. He knew that it had its ups and downs; he knew that very well. Even a game which was, for the most part, dominated easily was going to usually involve some small, brief reversals, some times where the other team seemed to gain an inch, but these didn’t break the pattern. Crotalus was a game where it mattered a little more if the opposition seemed to get its feet back under it at all, but still: they had never lost to Crotalus, at least since his brother had been playing Seeker. Arnold was better than Miss Stephenson, or at least Edmond was better than Mr. Calhoun; this was a recognized fact. Even the Crotali could not deny that very well anymore, not after the past few years.

Occasionally, it struck him how very pointless all of what they were doing down here was. They fought over that little ball like dogs over a single bone, they took injuries, they ran themselves ragged by the end of the game as often as not…and for what? It all came down, ultimately, to the Seekers. He had read of cases where the team which did not catch the Snitch still won the game, but those were cases where there was a huge imbalance in Chaser performance, likely an equally uneven situation with the Keepers, and it was almost always at the professional level. It wasn’t going to happen in one of these games; the teams were close enough to equal, Aladren only having a slight advantage in all fields, and he suspected the Snitches were enchanted somehow to keep the game from going on too long, which would likely keep the game from going on long enough for one of them, short of the other’s Keeper and all its reserves ending up in the hospital with fractured skulls, to get enough points to manage it anyway. So really, the game could have just been Arnold, Miss Stephenson, and the four Beaters; as far as he could tell, all the rest of them did was give the Beaters more things to look at, to keep it all in confusion, so everyone couldn’t see each other at once. There was no other point, and the only way for there to be would be to end the game some other way, or at least reduce the points attached to the Snitch.

That, though, he was reasonably sure, was heretical thinking, and his own brother would be at the head of the mob tying him to a stake if he ever voiced such thoughts aloud. It was the tradition that the Snitch ended the game and was worth a hundred and fifty points, in memory of the hundred and fifty galleons, then a fortune, attached to the first game in which something like the notion of the Snitch arose. The game was going to be what the game already was, there was no question of that, and no real use in thinking on the matter, either.

Katrina crossed the line, then went past it, and then passed again to Arthur. He caught the ball, his face relaxing for a moment into an almost conspiratorial smile, and hen he began to fly more erratically to shake off any attempts by the Crotalus Beaters to retaliate for this trouble-free pass. Coincidentally, he hoped it might also make him harder for the Crotalus Chasers to track. Finally, though, he settled next to one of his fellows and passed again, biting his lip slightly in concentration and hoping Aladren should have the same good fortune in crossing the whole Pitch very quickly as Crotalus had the last time around.

They’d have it back before it got to Mr. Wilkes again if they did not, of course. Or else Katrina would be her own dear, not quite sane self and retrieve it for them from the very front of the goals again. One way or another, though, it was going back through the Crotalus goal hoops. He would have liked more than anything for them to score fifty points, so they could round the game off at an even two hundred, but right now, twenty would do very well, he thought. Twenty was a good start for them. He would take that for now, once this bit of business was done and he was either watching for another pass or stealing the ball back for Aladren.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> And now mine 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 2:39 PM
For a few minutes it became a fun little game with in the larger game. Kitty played keep pace with Arthur as he twisted and turned while carrying the Quaffle deeper into the Red zone. It was a good tactic to keep annoyed Beaters from targeting them as well as keeping the thieves away. She kept close enough that if he chose to pass she would be there to receive it, but didn’t get so close that they risked collision with his erratic movements. It was great fun watching closely, trying to predict when the next weave would come and being ready to mimic him.

His tactics seemed to be working as they kept away from the Crotalus players both Chasers and Beaters. While her bit of fun was just that, she made sure to pay attention and not allow her focus to become lost in her little game. On the Pitch it seemed like nothing else existed, just them, the enemy team, the balls and the goals. She didn’t know how long the game had gone on for but for as long as it existed this was all Kitty knew. Quidditch became its own world were nothing else truly held sway besides the game. For a moment she wondered if it was the same for everyone. Where all the lines blurred and became unnecessary, unacknowledged. Blood, gender, race, religion, these things were meaningless, falling away, unable to hold on to the players as they flew. It was brilliant, and Kitty threw herself fully into the magic that was Quidditch. She secretly hoped the Snitch was never caught.

Again the crimson ball was flying and Kitty snatched it gleefully out of the air before tucking it almost lovingly against her chest. After having her fun with Arthur’s twisting path Kitty decided to shot forward in what was a more dangerous but much faster straight line, relying on speed and her slight build to keep her safe as she demolished the distance between her and the goals. So fast, it was almost hard to keep her eyes open in the biting wind, but Kitty couldn’t keep the grin from her lips as the three hoops loomed before her and their guardian focused on her. Kitty shifted her weight fast appearing to aim at the far right hoop before suddenly shifting with such force that she almost flipped off her broom and throwing as fast as she could to another team mate.
0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> And mine again 0 <font color="blue"> Kitty McLevy - Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Preston S., Beater</font>

December 23, 2011 4:26 PM
10 – 0 in favor of Aladren. That was Preston was talking about! Aladren’s superiority on the pitch was obvious and everyone that tried to say otherwise was just mad or stupid. There were no questions about the best house at the school. Aladren had academic and sports on its belt, and he was proud of being part of it. He couldn’t phantom the idea of being part of another house, maybe Crotalus, but the idea just made him shudder. No, Aladren was the best thing that could have happened to him. There was no question about Preston’s allegiance or his pureblood superiority theories. Of course, he could agree on some half-bloods or muggleborns being good but not enough. Purebloods were better. The redhead wasn’t an extremist when it came to his ideas, but they existed.

Anyways, the game was still going and they still were winning by 10. He was sure Arnold would catch the snitch and make the whole team proud. He was proud of his team and really hoped to be the one to captain it when the time came. Though, the captain title wasn’t as important as Prefect and Head Boy. Preston would gladly give it up for any of the other two titles.

The wind was buzzing in his ears and the adrenaline was making the calm boy get all excited about what he was doing. There was no question about his love for the game. He had tried to just see it as a step for his greatness, but he was now hooked on it. He knew he wasn’t the best out there, but he practiced hard to do a good job.

The redhead cleared his throat and zoomed after a bludger that he had seen not too far away. He weeed while he flew after that. If someone saw him in this elation state his whole reputation would go down the drain. He was lucky there was none one near him. He reached the bludher and whacked it with his bat. The bludger was directed at the closest Crotalus chaser.
0 <font color="blue">Preston S., Beater</font> Here Bludger, bludger, bludger 0 <font color="blue">Preston S., Beater</font> 0 5


<font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font>

December 23, 2011 4:56 PM
Her pass intercepted and, it seemed, one Crotalus chaser down. Renée couldn’t really be sure, her eyes not allowed to linger upon Linus for too long, trusting that if it were anything really serious, Coach Pierce would help him, and then either Paul or Cepheus would take his place. Not that she really wanted to lose the Penguin. He worked well enough with her and Sam. The Aladrens were passing the Quaffle back and forth, speeding back toward the tall goal posts and Nic who hovered between rings, guarding them. Her teeth unconsciously sank into her tongue, heart thudding, unable to stand the thought of another Aladren goal. The game felt a little like a magnet; she, Linus, and Sam dragged the Quaffle as far as they could, but eventually it came back to Crotalus goals on its own, unable to fight magnetism, its natural attraction to one end of the pitch. ‘Which only means I have to drag even harder.

McLevy, Carey, McLevy - and Renée saw her prepare to take the shot, teeth sinking deeper into her tongue, the rush of salt and hints of iron. ‘No. No. No.’ She just didn’t want it, didn’t like it, didn’t like seeing this girl take this shot in this game. ‘Game... right, this is a game.’ It was only a game when she knew she could play forever and ever and ever. But this was elimination. If they lost this game, she wouldn’t be able to play until the next year. In most other schools, and in Professional Quidditch, teams accumulated points through snitches caught and goals scored, and then were ranked by their number of points, not eliminated after losing just one game. In most schools, all the houses played each other, each house allowed to participate in more than just one game per year. Sonora seemed to reject this long ago well established and fair system of Quidditch, which was only fine when Crotalus had been set up against weaker teams and had then gone on to play Aladren. Renée had at least gotten to play two games a year, no matter if she lost the championship. But now, here, this was what Teppenpaw and Pecari must feel like all the time. ‘Unjust. Unjust. Unjust.

She knew there was nothing she could much do at this angle behind McLevy, speeding after her, the end of the girl’s broom brushing the handle of Renée’s. She pulled back a little, swerving to the right so that Nic could catch the Quaffle either before it sailed through the hoop or after, and toss it up to her. ‘Come on, Nic. You can do it. Save it again!’ Intake of breath, and then McLevy turned, throwing the ball a few feet away from Renée but close enough for her body to form into an instant dive, her hand reaching to grab the red leather bound ball, and suddenly - ‘Yes!’ - shooting off - ‘Yes!’ - it was a game again. A pleased, and relieved, smile played on her lips, curving sharply around a bludger that was heading in the opposite direction, rolling over on her broom a few times to avoid an aggressive opposing player. She tucked the ball under her arm, and blinked away a stray lash that had slipped from over her lids. Her vision dimmed momentarily, enough so that when she looked around for Linus, she couldn’t tell if he was on his broom and able to continue contributing to the game or not. Unsure, she kept on flying, chest to the wood, knees clamped and beginning to stiffen, she was grateful to her broom for getting Crotalus a substantial amount of field away from their own goals.

CRACK

There was another bludger, actually hit in her specific direction, and besides a vague sense of where she’d heard the sound, Renée was blind to its location. The memory of being attacked from behind, an Aladren’s beaters bat hitting a bludger directly into the back of her head throbbed painfully, as if the memory was reenacting itself on her flesh and bone. Not eager to relive that particular experience (blacking out and blood, not so much fun) quickly picked a direction and sped off. “Ah!” A slight hiss, moving just a tad slow, the bludger coming from the side and slamming into her thigh.

She went with the force, swerving to the left, the bludger ricocheting off her body and targeting some new random player. Teeth returned to tongue, sinking and digging, and she resisted the tears, her face turning a little red beneath the darkened skin, sweat beading her forehead. Still, her arm’s cradling hold over the Quaffle had only tightened, and Renée could deal with the pain, her left leg perfectly all right, tightening around the wood, giving her balance. ‘Pain! Pain! Pain!’ There was no point in getting upset about bludger beatings. They were apart of the game, everyone knew what they were getting into. ‘I’m gonna murder that mother &*($#@!’ Controlling her temper could only be achieved by continuing to fly, and a new recklessness emerged, summoned by the suddenly pounding, twisting pain in her bones, tremors in her right thigh.

She swerved away from the stands, ignoring whatever insults or encouragement the students had to offer from below, her teeth graduating from tongue to lower lip, stifling any whimpers that might’ve wanted to explode from her body. ‘This is nothing compared to back of my head, at least. And I came back from that.’ Her eyes, clear of tears but flashing with a determined brightness, locked in on one of her fellow Crotalus chasers. She sped closer toward them, her left leg and right arm jerking the Febre up, attempting to use her body again as a barricade against the Aladren chaser nearest to her (she was already damaged, might as well get over fear of being hurt) and made a neat drop pass right over her teammate. ‘Go!’ The shout was the only thought in her mind.

She had no idea how the seekers were doing. Marissa was good, was captain, and yet had managed to lose to Arnold Carey every game they’d played. It was infuriating to leave the game to them, after all - Renée shut her mind down, seeking desperately for the permanent button, needing herself not to think a single thought at all besides pass, pass, catch, shoot, score, grab again. Not too far away, but not of immediate danger to her, was another bludger plummeting through the air. Mentally printing out a list of names - seven guesses who - getting rid of the thoughts that way, Renée sent out her wish that Gareth and Topher would just take a short break from the seekers and help out the rest of the team either by defending them (‘Pain, ow. Pain! Pain! Pain!) or maiming their pick of Aladren. She turned to look to where the Quaffle had gotten to, to head off into where she’d be needed next.
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> Here Quaffle, Quaffle, Quaffle 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 9:54 PM
Another smooth pass. Very good. He had been right; the Crotalus advances were really only momentary breaks in the inevitable pattern, which would correct itself without difficulty in a moment. This was an easy game so far, and a moment of effort now and again would just give it a bit of spice, not run the risk of derailing it all of a sudden.

He thought Kitty would be the one to attempt the shot, but then, tiresomely, Miss Errant decided to interfere once more. Silly thing; there was no way, this close, now that her group had showed its hand too strongly and gotten Aladren on its guard again, that they would ever permit her to make it far. As Preston quickly proved in high fashion, hitting her solidly with a Bludger. Arthur would have stopped to applaud, if he’d had any time for that. He would have to express his congratulations later, once it was over and that wouldn’t be to perhaps hand Crotalus an opening again.

Though, if Preston succeeded in giving her a head injury bad enough to take her out of the rest of the game, Arthur might applaud him as she fell anyway. She usually did begin to annoy him about the third time she did this, and he would rather not get annoyed. Being annoyed clouded his judgment, and he wanted to think clearly, and act in the best way possible, not be driven by emotions which would get his head cracked open if he wasn’t lucky.

Before, Miss Errant had passed over her shoulder; now, she dropped it. Arthur wasn't sure why. The whole school was on to her liking for dropping things especially, so there was little advantage to it since usually all three opposing Chasers, if they had any wits and were in the physical condition to do it, would be covering her completely, and it was less controlled, too. It was easier for someone to do exactly what he was doing right now, and come in from the side and snatch the ball right out of its intended line and into his own hands, completely ruining the play the Crotali had been trying to make. Really not very clever of them, to give him the chance twice now, though he didn't complain of it. Anything they wanted to do to help his team was welcome.

Admittedly, it wasn’t as smooth as he might have liked for it to be. He nearly collided with the Crotalus Chaser the ball had been meant for; there were disadvantages to being the biggest of the three Aladren Chasers, and having bits of him in more places than a smaller person would was one of them. A firm control of his broom, though – flying wasn’t his delight, the way it was his brother’s, but he had been taught to do it almost as soon as he’d firmly mastered walking, as someone higher up, probably not his father given that he was better than Father, had decided he must – kept that from happening, and he was soon right back on the course they had been following to begin with, drawing nearer and nearer to the goals before passing again.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> It doesn't like you, and will bite if you keep that up 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Sam Bauer, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 11:06 PM
For a minute, he had been on the outside, looking in, but that had been perfectly okay because Linus and Renée had everything in hand. Sam wasn’t too picky about how the Quaffle made its way back down the Pitch, so long as it did. They needed to make up the ground they’d just lost when Aladren had scored, and scored like that especially. He would have bet his bottom galleon on the Aladren Chasers laughing at them as Nic didn’t see Kitty McLevy coming from that angle.

After all, Sam had been in a repeated assault on the goals before. On the other side. Back against Pecari, two, three years ago, he and Charlie and Renée had all had a good time going for Starbuck Gregory time after time, completely ignoring the Pecari Chasers and the Pecari Beaters. He guessed this was what he got for enjoying that, for how amused they’d all been with Pecari’s complete helplessness: that now Aladren should do the same thing to Crotalus. Though, thankfully, not to the same extent, letting the ball move again after just two goal-side shots.

That, though in its turn, was of small comfort when the Aladren Keeper didn’t even have to bother to Keep. And then things fell apart for Crotalus very fast, with Linus spiraling out of control in the attempt to interfere, then Renée getting hit in one which succeeded, but only as long as it took Arthur Carey to recollect it, nearly hitting Sam in the process. There was something almost insultingly casual about the way Aladren recovered from everything Crotalus could throw at them.

Now would be a great time for the Beaters to show up. Really great. Because he, Sam, was currently the only Crotalus Chaser who had yet to run afoul of the Aladren ones, and they could use the help right about now.

In the meantime, he dove for the Quaffle when Carey passed it, knowing it was a slim chance it would really do any good, but willing to try now anyway. There wasn’t, after all, anyone else left, and he felt like taking his turn to take a strike against them, anyway, if the Beaters weren’t feeling it at this moment.
16 <font color="red">Sam Bauer, Chaser</font> I find all your personifications of the balls disturbing. 163 <font color="red">Sam Bauer, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font>

December 23, 2011 11:39 PM
OOC: So, I managed to completely forget to end Sam’s post and, despite using the preview window, not notice this until after hitting ‘post reply’. So here goes assuming I can semi-write for my other characters in Quidditch threads to fix that. BIC:

Russell had been the one to carry the Quaffle back into Aladren hands, taking advantage of a moment, but, as usual, Kitty and Arthur were the stars of the show, moving it back down the field. They should have all been pulverized, just as the Crotalus team should have been pulverized before them, but instead, it was the Crotali who were now taking all the damage, two of them by the time they got almost back to Nic Sawyer. It seemed that Aladren still had the luck.

Not that Crotalus cared, of course, or gave up just because they were kind of at a disadvantage now, with only one first-string Chaser who hadn’t just taken a pretty rough beating. Reneee Errant managed to carry the Quaffle a way even though she got hurt, and Arthur’s recovery of it could have been smoother, and then, as Arthur tried to pass it once more, Sam Bauer…didn’t really manage to intercept it, but he did manage to knock it off-course, out of the pass Russell’s team- and roommate seemed to have meant for it.

Russell could hear him muttering about this, not sounding best pleased, as Russell passed him, not intending to sit back when Crotalus had succeeded in fumbling and so leaving the Quaffle right up for grabs to whoever could get his hands on it the quickest. Maybe he had a talent for this; he wasn’t sure. Anyway, he came out of his dive for the falling Quaffle with it in his hands, and he decided not to take any more chances this close to the goals. He wasn’t going to pass – he wasn’t completely sure about trying to feint, using the tactic which had failed for them last time, again, but he was definitely not going to pass for real. He was going to make an attempt to score another goal for the Hawks.

He came toward the goals more toward the left hoop, raising his hands as though to shoot toward it, before changing directions fast enough that he felt momentarily a little goofy-headed even as he shot for the center, throwing the ball as hard as he could, putting his whole body into throwing it and setting his balance just enough off that he worried for a second about actually falling from his broom. That wouldn’t be very good…

He wavered for a moment, trying to steady himself. For a second, it occurred to him to just let himself fall; it would make the whole thing, whether he scored or not, kind of funny, but it might also distract the Keeper. Then, though, after only a split second of contemplating, he knew he didn’t quite have the nerve for that, he wasn’t that far gone with the Quidditch craziness yet, so instead, he grabbed the broom, sending it forward at the same time, and turning as though it were all part of regaining his balance, hoping this would (in addition to legitimately helping him not fall; turning so fast and then throwing so hard had made his head feel weirder than he thought at the time) distract the Keeper anyway. He just needed the guy to be thrown for one second, that was it, that was all it would take –

He reversed, moving back into the phalanx of Chasers. By now, it had either worked or not worked, and he disliked presenting such a nice target for the Beaters when it wasn’t even at all possible it was going to help. Plus, that put him in all the better position to turn and run after the Quaffle, or play with it depending on what happened with it, once it was soaring back out and the game began again.
16 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> Moving on. 183 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font>

December 24, 2011 7:48 AM
He had stopped spinning. He felt that his skin might be closer to gray than its usual rosy shade, perhaps even tinged with the faintest hint of green, but Linus ascertained himself to be otherwise unharmed. As for his broomstick, it was obviously a fairly sturdy build, he thought, as he firmly guided it to re-join the fray and it obeyed… though not without quarrel. It shuddered as it turned with far less control than it had at the beginning of the game, and it vibrated with a humming regularity that threatened to numb his arms and wrists when it flew straight. Its speed, however, seemed relatively unaffected. Admittedly, as a player with perhaps a limited amount of control and balance compared to his more experienced counterparts, it could be argued that an unstable broomstick was now bestowed in the worst possible hands to facilitate a Crotalus victory, but the second year felt sufficiently competent to continue.

As he regained his bearings, he quickly established that while his ricocheting Quaffle had eventually landed in Aladren’s hands (all that for nothing? What a disappointment!), Renee, relentless as ever, had apparently just stolen the ball back again. Linus encouraged his broom into a wide sweeping circle as he moved to join his teammate again in their never-ending struggling to carry the Quaffle back up to the other end of the pitch. He hoped to be in a position to receive a pass soon, but he watched from behind as another Bludger (or was it the same one?) caught a second Crotalus Chaser. This time, the damage seemed less detrimental to the game, but having caused more injury to the player. Linus decided that, as personal preference, he preferred to forgo the pain and settled for putting the game at risk, and briefly considered that this might indicate he had some work to do on his attitude towards team sports.

To her credit, Renee continued to play as if she hadn’t been hit, and Linus saw what he initially believed to be an opportune pattern, of Sam coming in below Renee to receive a pass, and Linus himself well placed to come up round whichever side of Sam seems to be optimum (interpretable as whichever side is least hindered by presence of Aladren players) to receive a second pass. But of course, what initially seemed like an excellent and most commendable line-up was shattered in mere moments as a blue Chaser got in the way (they were exceptionally good at that, Linus noted with irritation) and stole back the Quaffle once more for his team.

So it was on again: the wild goose chase that was the Crotalus Chasers’ pursuit of the Quaffle. Linus turned his broom once more with difficulty, discovering that wider loops were more effective and less likely to make the broomstick creak in an ominous fashion than tighter turns. He was also more attuned, thanks to his recent experiences, of the presence of other flying objects on the pitch, not least Bludgers, but also his fellow Chasers, on this new expedition towards Nic’s hoops. In addition his progress was potentially minimally hindered by his broomstick (now emitting fizzing noises, barely perceptible over the rushing wind). Regardless, Linus followed the Quaffle right down the pitch as it made its progress in the hands of the other blue Chaser – next year Linus might make the effort to learn their names, if only to differentiate them in his head, and prevent the confusion of calling the two opposing male Chasers by the same impersonal noun – who then attempted to score.

Once again there were two potential scenarios: the least preferable was that Aladren scored again, creating an embarrassing twenty-point lead. Then, presumably the Crotalus Keeper would recover the ball and make renewed efforts at delivering it to his Chasers, who, in turn, would redouble their own efforts at making sure the Quaffle didn’t return to that end of the pitch yet again. The other outcome, naturally the one towards which Linus was leaning, was that Nic managed another save, and tossed the Quaffle back out into play. Either way, the Crotalus Chasers needed to be ready and unobstructed to receive a pass. Linus pulled his broomstick to a halt in anticipation; or, at least, that was his aim. The Bludger-battered equipment seemed to have other ideas, however (providing inanimate objects could have ideas… Linus wasn’t entirely sure how these things worked within the wizarding world. If a broomstick could respond to commands, he wasn’t ruling out the possibility of original and abstract thought). It slowed a little, but not to a full stop, and began to shudder a little more violently than the steady oscillations of its prior post-collision malfunctions. Linus would liken the sensation to cornering a go-kart with a shoddy breaking system as he turned his broom to the side instead, drifting unintentionally but helplessly towards the goalposts himself. Not so close that he ran the risk of coming between the Keeper and his view of the incoming Quaffle, which was probably beneficial to Crotalus, which might be the only redeemable feature of the scenario. Though in fact, Linus might even be well-placed to receive a pass from Nic once he saved the shot. Whether he could then control his broomstick suitably to do anything useful with the Quaffle once it was in his possession was another matter entirely.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Must we? 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5

<font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font>

December 24, 2011 10:18 AM
Renee and Linus made it a good distance across the Pitch for him. Well, no doubt they were attempting to even the score, no just accommodate Nic's craving for a short break and breather, but it worked out that way well enough. It was hard to tell from this distance, but there may have even been a shot at goals. Judging by the Crotalus groaning in the stands, though, it hadn't made it in.

Unfortunately, the attempt had seemingly put the ball into Aladren possession and they started coming back. There were a few hiccups where it back-tracked a little, but overall there was a definite trend toward his side of the pitch. Worse, the trek resulted in two of his teammates having too-close encounters with bludgers. If any of the Aladren Chasers had taken damage yet, he hadn't seen it happen and none of them looked especially hurt as the Carey Chaser intercepted from the injured Renee and the Layne Chaser recovered the falling ball after Sam only partially intercepted back.

Then the Layne Chaser was coming for Nic. And so, apparently, was Linus on his injured broom. Ignoring Linus, Nic moved for the right, realized Layne wasn't going that way after all, and changed directions as the ball flew through the air. Layne kept on coming for the side hope, but Nic's eyes were all on the Quaffle as it flew for the middle hoop. It had taken a while to train himself to watch the Quaffle and only the Quaffle, but three years of facing Daniel Nash and his tendency to bluff about having the ball had taught Nic to keep track of its actual location.

In this particular case, its actual location was hurtling toward the center goal. Nic had pulled a solid 180, using a move far more commonly found on a half-pipe than a Quidditch Pitch but it worked well enough to convert his speed in one direction for nearly equal speed in the opposite direction, and he managed to get in front of the ball for his first solid catch of the game. Center hoop shots were always tricky for the Chasers since that's where the Keeper tended to hang out, and Nic hadn't gone far enough to the side for that distance to be unrecoverable.

Secure in the knowledge that a seventy-five percent save rate was pretty darn amazing, and three saves was more than he'd made in the rest of his Keeping career combined, Nic felt he was definitely holding up his end of the team this game. He might even write to Charlie to brag, if he could figure out her new address. But that was for later. Now was for getting the Quaffle safely into the hands of another red robe so it could try to make it over to Wilkes again. He looked for a clear shot to a Crotalus chaser and got rid of the ball for the fourth time this game.

"Get off my property and don't come back, ya'hear!" he shouted after the ball, shaking his fist a little. He was in an amazingly good mood after his own good performance, and it struck him as funny to mimic one of the old men in his neighborhood who didn't care for teenagers skateboarding on his driveway.
1 <font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font> Perhaps in the other direction this time? 165 <font color=red>Nic Sawyer, Keeper</font> 0 5