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

December 26, 2011 10:22 PM
Edmond was looking after the Seekers, always a pretty good tactic. His captain was stronger and meaner and had better aim. He was the perfect bodyguard for Arnold; there was no question about it. That was why Preston never intervened on that particular chase. His mission was to protect the rest of the team. They couldn’t lose this game, they just couldn’t. If they did they would then compete for third or fourth place. He shuddered at the thought. He had to admit that Crotalus had a good team, which was why Crotalus and Aladren were always so fiercely competitive when it came to the field. Preston had always been competitive, especially in the academic field, but this new-found competitiveness on the pitch was new. He liked it. Being on top of the game gave him a lot of satisfaction. That feeling was what had kept him on playing and the idea of a brighter and more complete curriculum.

Aladren was winning by 10 points, which was always a good thing, but he couldn’t start thinking about their victory until Arnold caught the snitch. That little sneaky ball was the one that dictated which would go on onto the next round of games. He sighed in exasperation. He wanted Arnold to catch it as soon as possible. Each minute that the snitch was out there, it gave Crotalus a bigger probability of winning. Something nobody wanted. It would be beyond humiliating to lose and stay in the bottom. The redhead didn’t do well with failure.

Preston was flying around the pitch looking for a bludger to send to his opponents. Thankfully, the bludgers were awesome enough to come his way every time he was looking for them. He looked around him to see which Crotalus player was near him and found the shorter Crotalus Chaser not too far away. The Aladren swung his bat and it collided against the ball sending it directly towards him.
0 <font color="blue">Preston S., Beater</font> There is a pretty good probability 0 <font color="blue">Preston S., Beater</font> 0 5


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

December 27, 2011 7:41 AM
Nic saved again! Simultaneously renewing Linus’ faith in him yet again, and causing the second year to wonder how his older teammate had gotten such a bad reputation in the first place. Based on this game alone, Nic was actually looking like a pretty good Keeper, and a valuable member of the Crotalus team. Regardless of his own success, with each goal he saved, the Crotalus Keeper seemed increasingly more eager to keep the Quaffle away from that end of the pitch. It might have something to do with the law of averages, in that the more attempts were made on his goals, the more Nic was likely to let in, but as Linus didn’t know the fifth year well enough to be sure, he didn’t waste any time contemplating the matter, and instead resolved to do what Nic suggested without question or quarrel.

As he’d suspected, the pass from Nic had been made to a somewhat more reliable Chaser, but seeing as the Quaffle was currently in Crotalus possession then Linus wasn’t going to argue. Instead he continued the circle his unintentional drift had set him upon, and was soon facing the right direction to follow Sam up the pitch, weaving in and out of Aladren players as they loomed in his immediate vision. The broom was still doing as it was told, albeit with more song and dance than he’d come to expect fo a broomstick. The shaking and fizzing noises were the cause of some minor anxiety, but unless there was another horrendous creak – the forewarning to the broom actually parting with itself (and probably its rider) – he resolved to remain airborne. Linus had seen other players fall off their brooms before, anyway, and nobody had ever received any serious injury as a result. That was, he supposed, yet another one of the many benefits of being a wizard: the Healing process was apparently much faster, and the pain reduction methods were almost certainly more effective, too. Hence his fear of injury was reduced, possibly by a greater amount than was realistically safe in a Quidditch game (but as far as the second year understood it, this was actually a positive characteristic for a Chaser), and hence as he lay flatter on his broom to encourage the vibrating equipment to match Sam’s speed, Linus was unburdened by fear.

Furthermore, he had the benefit of experience, and the continual reminder of this with his humming vessel, so when another Bludger came soaring his way, Linus was ready for it. He rolled out of its path, threatening the security of his breakfast for what had to be at least the third time that game, but ultimately avoiding sustaining further damage to his broom or person, at least for the time being. The manoeuvre even offered further assistance in putting Linus in a helpful position adjacent to Sam, which, for the moment at least, was unencumbered by the presence of Aladren players. Linus thought it was a good opportunity to make a pass, and so he readied himself to receive the ball as Sam came to the same decision. It wasn’t a fancy throw, but the second year was coming to understand that sometimes the more simple throws were the more elegant, and often the more successful. In this case, he was pleased for it, because it meant he could catch the ball without having to throw himself around to horribly, and he tucked it under his arm as he swerved away from Sam for the time being, keen to avoid any Bludgers that might already be on their way to the player who’d been holding the ball.

Nic’s instruction had been to get the ball away from that end of the pitch, and that’s what Linus intended on doing. Sam had already made them excellent headway, enjoying the cover of the opposition whiel they moved away from the goal posts. All Linus could see ahead of him was open playing space. Admittedly, this would make oncoming Bludgers easier to see, but he would presumably also be a more identifiable target to the opposing Beaters. Quidditch was a balanced game in that way: there always seemed to be both a downside and an upside to everything… aside from losing, of course, so that simply wasn’t an option. With this in mind, Linus pushed onwards, willing his broom to continue behaving and the Aladrens (who all seemed to possess spectacular broomsticks) to tire and cease to be so effective in stealing the Quaffle.

Once he’d covered a respectable distance, Linus began to see other players closing in on his peripheral vision. This, he supposed, was only to be expected considering the higher quality of the majority of brooms on the pitch – even his fasted flying on a damaged school broom wasn’t going to outstrip the other players – and the fact that he had the much-coveted Quaffle safely stowed away between his elbow and ribcage. It wouldn’t stay there for longer, however; the more players surrounded him, the easier it would be for the other team to intercept, as a percentage of them were bound to be the opposition. So, naturally, Linus did his best to look for a suitable opening ro make a pass before it was too late. Identifying a teammate in an optimum position, Linus moved in a little closer, perhaps indicating his intentions, but also giving less room for error, before recalling the Quaffle to his palm and making another short, direct pass; Strong, simple, and elegant. If this pass was successful, the Crotalus team would be making excellent headway, and might even be in a position to make their second attempt at scoring a goal. The Aladren Keeper hadn’t had much to do this game, considering Crotalus’ initial effort had been blocked by Katrina’s head, so perhaps he would be glad of the onslaught (and maybe even sufficiently ill-prepared that he let the ball sail right on through, although considering he was the assistant captain, that particular scenario was perhaps unlikely).
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> Who thinks Crotalus will score a goal? 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


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

December 27, 2011 3:25 PM
It was perhaps uncharitable of him, but after the way Crotalus had covered the Pitch very quickly to threaten the goals the last time they’d gotten their hands on the ball for more than one pass, Arthur was not inclined to let the Quaffle pass from Mr. Bauer’s hands to the hands of either Mr. Macaulay or Miss Errant. As soon as the Quaffle was back in play, he was after it, looking for the first opportunity to steal it back for yet another attempt at the Crotalus goals. What had Mr. Sawyer been doing over the summer, anyway, joining a camp? Arthur had heard of such things, though he’d never had an interest in attending one and he thought Arnold knew better than to ask. Some groups in the family still weren’t completely certain about how wise it was to let children go to school, which was a much more secure environment and where there were several of them to watch each other’s backs.

Not, he thought, usually so literally as Edmond did, though. That was one of the several things about Quidditch which amused him tremendously, how things that should have been abstract became suddenly almost real.

Getting hit by a Bludger himself, though, did not amuse him, not even a little. So when he saw that Preston was very likely about to take a shot at the Crotalus Chasers, he backed off, content to let them get injured again. That, too, would help the cause, especially if he managed to hit Mr. Bauer, the last one of the three who was still in about the same condition he’d been in when this all began.

It didn’t go quite as planned, though, and Mr. Macaulay ended up with the pass in hand. Well, it wasn’t much of a setback. Next time, he’d get it out; he didn’t expect Mr. Macaulay to carry it very far, since Edmond had so helpfully damaged the second year’s broom the last time Crotalus had been in a position of relative strength.

Soon enough, he was proven right. Mr. Macaulay was not a bad Chaser, as far as it went, he did that quite nicely and it was close enough to be risky for Arthur to go in there to get it, but that didn’t bother him much. Colliding with other people seldom hurt as much as colliding with Bludgers, and considering that the Crotalus Chasers were in much worse shape than he was, well, he could afford that more easily than they could if it did happen. Just because he was not a masochist like his brother did not mean he was unwilling, if necessary, to take a bit of damage for the team. Just only if it was absolutely necessary.

This time, it was not. It was a close thing, but he came out with the Quaffle in his hand and a smile, however briefly, on his face. Then there wasn’t time for that, so the expression fell away and he was on his way back down the Pitch, searching for an opening of his own to pass in. They had covered a good amount of ground, the Crotali; in some moments, not all, but some, he couldn’t help but admire them a little for still trying. He wasn’t sure if he would have been as single-minded when he knew that ultimately, he was almost sure to fail. He had been taught when he was small that there were some things important enough to fight for even if you were sure to lose, but he still didn’t know what they were.

Seeing an opening, he took it, quickly, in the form of a short, direct pass. He had discovered that his ability to expand on situations in complex terms didn’t extend very well to the physical arena of Quidditch, but also that this was all right. Part of the pleasure of the game, after all, was not thinking anymore, just for a little while, and sometimes, simple, direct moves could work. At any rate, they were harder to have turned back on him so he ended up injured or worse, looking like a fool. He liked to leave that to others.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> I don't. 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


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

December 27, 2011 4:51 PM
Again, the Quaffle was stolen, the insistent tug of war between Aladren and Crotalus, the blue robed chasers bringing the Quaffle to Crotalus hoops, aiming and shooting, Renée already giving a disappointed sigh. The breath hitched in her throat in surprise, watching, blinking, as Nic again made the save. ‘Why is he the best Crotalus on the field right now?’ It was bizarre but it offered a pleasant security to the game that Crotalus hadn’t had in awhile, at least not since Renée had been on the team. Gripping her broom, she turned around and shot off, keeping pace with Sam and Linus, swerving around players, waiting for a pass. The familiar CRACK striking the air warned her of a bludger, and she made a sharp turn in the air, the rest of the chasers streaking past, the bludger barrelling a breath away from her, seeking another target. Her thigh, which she guessed had already begun to bruise, began to pound, like a heavy weight was being dropped on it over and over again. As much as she hated feeling pain, she felt proud whenever she got hurt and pushed through it. She’d grown up with stories of her father’s people, always in pain, always pushing through.

Ah, hell.’ Linus had passed to Sam but Carey suddenly popped in between then, stealing the ball away. Renée leaned forward on her broom, shooting toward him but quickly raising herself in the air and made another sharp turn above his form, following just above him toward her own goals. ‘Come on, pass.’ She watched his body, his arms that rose, his hand that palmed the Quaffle. She wondered, suddenly, how much better or worse a chaser he was than her. It was one thing to face off with him, three against three. But how would they compare one against the other? She considered him better than his fellow Aladren Chasers, even if this time he wasn’t the one to score. She thought Sam a shade better than her in some respects; he got hurt less, he had more patience with the game than she had, he took less risks. These were things she sometimes wondered at working at, but it would be against her nature, and she disliked going against herself. ‘Sam’s mind probably doesn’t wander as much, either.’ Renée blinked, and Arthur Carey (she liked thinking of him as just “Carey”, dubbing her opponents by their last name just... just because) made a pass.

Yes!’ She pushed down on her Febre, the broom tilting before plunging into a quick dive. She shot down, passing the Quaffle without touching it but gave it a quick backhand slap, her left arm jerking into the sudden motion. Quickly she turned her broom around, stilling for a moment, reaching out with both hands to catch the Quaffle after its interrupted trajectory. Her hands clamped down on either side of the leather ball, she leaned down on the same second and shot off again, curving with the oval shape of the pitch, regaining the ground Sam and Linus had both earned. Charlie would be missed, but she thought Linus was a fair enough substitute. Penguins substituting for eagles.

Oh!’ Renée blinked, momentarily distracted, speed slowing down as a flash of gold darted across her vision. Her head turned, curls tickling her neck, trying to catch a lingering spark of gold. ‘Not your problem.’ Without a way to signal Marissa without signalling the Aladren seeker as well, Renée tightened her body’s grip around the broom and resumed her former speed, eyes darting from Crotalus chaser to Crotalus chaser, trying to judge who was in best position to receive her pass. Linus’ broom had been hit before, but he was proving capable without it. ‘There!’ Glimmer of free space and Renée darted for it, raising her arm and pushing through resistant wind and heat, a sloping arch with a tentative spin on the ball toward her teammate, hopefully shying away from an intercepting Aladren. She swerved toward the closest Aladren toward her, dipping beneath him, intending to play tag for the few seconds of waiting for her pass to be completed.
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> I do. 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


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

December 27, 2011 11:59 PM
Russell had almost had it. He’d come so close, in fact, to having it that his fingers had brushed the Quaffle as Errant swept down after it after she knocked it off-course, and he’d nearly come a little unbalanced leaning forward to try to get it back, try to get it away from her, or at least pull her down with him. At some point in the past few moments, his grasp on reasonable behavior had slipped away, and the only thing that sounded better than Arnold catching the Snitch or Aladren making another goal was her falling.

He tried to remind himself it was a game, and stuff like that was going to happen. And he was even able to remind himself. But the primary thing in his mind was to get that Quaffle back, even if it meant getting hurt himself to do it, and then laugh at her frustration at being gotten right back, again.

It was strange, feeling like this. Like he could, and would, do anything. Like their victory was sure, and there was no need to be careful, to hedge his bets, to really think at all. Strange, and later, when he was thinking, it would also be a little unnerving, just because of the sheer unfamiliarity of it. It was a world away from how he was in his everyday life, or at least he thought and devoutly hoped it was. He didn’t, when he thought about it at other times, and had thought of it earlier in this game, like to think that he was capable of losing himself this way even in the heat of the game.

Right now, though, his mind was all on the Quaffle, which was moving away from him fast, regaining all the ground Arthur had managed to steal back from them. He couldn’t have that; his roommate had worked hard for that ground, gained it at risk of personal injury every moment of the time, and some smug Crotalus on an old broom didn’t get to undo that. When she passed, Russell took a chance and came out with the Quaffle even more narrowly than she had from the last pass, but with it in his hands.

He wanted to call something out, to gloat, but was a little out of breath and it felt like his heart was in his throat, anyway, so he just flew, gaining ground back. Back, back on toward Nic Sawyer, a little past where Arthur had been, before he chanced a pass himself. He guessed that little extra space would be enough to sort of gloat, as well as get them closer than where they had been. Anyway, it felt pretty good to him, especially since he’d stayed clear of the Bludgers all the way through. That was doing pretty good, since the new Crotalus guy had needed to duck one before.

It would be great if Aladren’s Chasers could make it without getting hurt at all, in contrast to the other team. That was what he was hoping for, anyway. If they pulled that off, and Arnold caught the Snitch without getting hurt any further, this would be as good of a game as they’d ever had. It would have been better if they had come out of the game completely unscathed, but hey, this would do. It would do really well, honestly; better than he thought he might have really expected, given how much they all wanted to be in the Finals for the umpteenth year in a row. He’d take it, no problem, if they did that.
16 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> I'm betting against you, too. 183 <font color="blue">Russell Layne, Chaser</font> 0 5


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

December 28, 2011 1:41 PM
The longer the game went on, the more desperate its players became, apparently. Linus was sure he had detected this trend within his own behaviour, and it was blatantly evident in the other Chasers, as they embarked on increasingly daring interventions. It didn’t matter in terms of the progress of the game, however, as each team seemed to be suffering equally from this madness: Blue Chaser One stole Linus’ pass, and then his own pass was caught by Renee, whose next attempt was intercepted by Blue Chaser Two. Having turned in anticipation once his initial pass had turned foul, Linus had managed to follow Blue Chaser Two over the extra distance he recovered, and engaged in a crazy intervention himself. It was more luck than judgement on his part, really – he’d been flying towards the Chaser with the Quaffle, and as he’d been getting closer, he’d thought about braking on his broomstick, but it wasn’t co-operating quite as planned, meaning that the second year had continue on in a diagonal past the Aladren player. He managed to collect the Quaffle on the way past, and turn his broomstick back the other way, all at a pace much greater than that with which he was truly comfortable.

So it continued – Linus worked to take the Quaffle back up to the point, more or less, from which he’d released it after Nic’s most recent save. The ball had been back and forth over this stretch an unbelievable number of times in the past minute, neither team making any real progress. Yet despite this, Linus didn’t feel at all discouraged. His thoughts the last time the Quaffle had been in his possession were centered around Crotalus success, and the possibility that they might be able to make another attempt at the goal, if only he could keep the ball in Crotalus hands. He couldn’t deny that it was frustrating that no matter how hard hjis team tried, no matter how much ground they covered, no matter how many balls they intercepted, that Aladren seemed to end up with the Quaffle again, anyway. They had a reputation for being a little left of sane, but this evidently worked to their favour. On the Crotalus team, Renee was reputed to be the one of them with most screws loose, and she seemed to be a perfectly adept player herself. This could only lead to a logical conclusion that being crazy made one a better Quidditch player, which wasn’t an entirely new concept, but it wasn’t one that Linus wanted to consider midgame; that equalizing goal was teasing them, elusively out of reach, getting no nearer with time and effort.

Well, maybe that was about to change. Clinging to the belief that the Beaters would be too distracted by the constant yo-yo tribute to be in a position to make a potentially threatening shot at him, Linus flew for a greater stretch than he otherwise would have done. In fact, it was probably the longest he’d ever hold onto the Quaffle, even during practises. It just made good sense to pass the ball often, to avoid being too obvious a Bludger target. On the other hand, in situations such as this, where every pass of the ball resulted in its being transferred to the other team, then perhaps hanging onto it for a longer while was prudent.

There did reach a stage, however, when even Linus’ determined attitude was overrun by his fickle gut. He needed to pass the ball, before he was hit by a Bludger, or his broomstick exploded, or something equally undesirable. His pass success rate, however, was much worse than Nic’s Keeping record, for this game, at least. So it wasn’t with much conviction that he sought out a suitable time and place to pass, but his existing self-belief was sufficiently strong that he didn’t doubt his own abilities… he simply wasn’t keen to underestimate Aladren. The second year knew he was good at passing – that was probably the only reason he got onto the team in the first place, considering his flying was still in obvious need of improvement – it was just hard to manage a direct shot from a broomstick to a broomstick without the other team getting in the way. As undesirable as the situation might be, Linus truly couldn’t hold onto the ball any longer. He raised it up, and employing all the strength and aim he could muster (which might have been less, following the game’s exertion, if it hadn’t been balanced out by the increasing level of determination, and correspondingly greater risk taking born of desperation), passed the ball.

Perhaps this time it would fall into Crotalus hands. Perhaps this time it would be transported to the goalposts, and perhaps it would go in, and they would score that extra point. He knew, on some level, that it probably didn’t matter how many points they scored, because unless either team reached a lead greater than one hundred and fifty points (which seemed unlikely in an intra-school match such as this) then the winning Seeker would determine the outcome of the game, anyway. Linus had faith in his team’s captain – even though she was a girl, she wouldn’t have been awarded the position if she was in any way incompetent – but he couldn’t deny that the fact she’d been beaten twice in the past two years by Aladren’s counterpart player made him a little edgy. If all this work he and the other Chasers had put in was for nothing, then, well, that would be difficult to take gracefully. There was nothing Linus could do about it either way, of course, so he simply had to channel all his efforts into making their points total as high as possible. Maybe this time they’d be lucky.
0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> I'm not placing my bet yet. 0 <font color="red">Linus Macaulay, Chaser</font> 0 5


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

December 28, 2011 4:35 PM
Her outrage at being intercepted (again) was swiftly overcome by her spiteful pleasure at seeing Linus take the Quaffle back so soon. Turning her broom around she followed the youngest Crotalus chaser, flanking his right side, the wind and heat growing more forceful with every second that passed. It was the breeze caused by flapping robes and enforced speed that made her aware of her perspiration. It brushed along the beads of sweat that had soaked through her hair, dotted her forehead, trickled down the nape of her neck. The hammer that battered her thigh hadn’t ceased, but its tempo had slowed down, the pain rippling in lesser waves up and down her right leg. None of this made her tired, and even in her frustration she wasn’t exhausted, she was thrilled, she was excited. Despite the fact that it really did suck to lose to Aladren again and again (thoroughly spent and slumped on her bed, unable to muster enough energy to change just yet, gripping her pillow and attempting to tear off what she saw as a faceless Aladren’s head), she couldn’t deny that playing against them ruined all other games for her. This was what Quidditch was meant to be. What it should be. Feel like always.

She became free a few times, and attempted to catch Linus’ eye, but he just kept on going. The stadium was a blur, the players were a blur, and all Renée could clearly see was the Quaffle kept tight in Linus’ grip. ‘Okay, alright, let’s just do it.’ She increased her speed, understanding Linus’ plan, and stripped past him, ready for him to pass ahead, the Aladren goals nearing, the Aladren Keeper’s form sharpening in her vision, and another chance for Crotalus too was coming up. Thoughts and hopes wilted away. Instincts and purpose bloomed. Turning slightly, sensing familiar movement in the air, Renée kept flying straight, her speed unchanging, her left hand letting go of the Febre to catch Linus’ direct pass. At once she was rising in the air, her thighs (she ignored the burn) clamped tightly on the broom, using her whole body to jerk it up as she rose swiftly into the air; less wind resistance when she shot up completely straight. Again, her body remembered the arrow.

Her hand was clamped down tightly on the red leather, the orb pressed against her chest, and her brown eyed vision seemed to have sharpened. She saw the hoops clearly, the Keeper clearly, and several possibilities made themselves known to her in seconds. And she had only seconds left to make a choice. Aladren knew her affinity for feints, but it was just stupid to take a direct shot at a capable keeper. Unless he... thought she was going to feint. Or, she could feint at the goals and pass the Quaffle to either Sam or Linus to take the shot. She would, she could, but all they’d done was pass pass pass again and pass. She was bored, she was impatient, she was frustrated, she needed to at least try for another goal. Now. When they finally came across their very rare chance in the game. She wasn’t going to waste Linus’ risky flight down the pitch.
She palmed the Quaffle, still rising in the air, throwing her weight forward, the broom tilting down just as she had risen above the metal ringed hoops. Her friends one day, enemies another. ‘Left hoop...’ She made a half-hearted feint toward it, her body and eyes already switching toward the middle ring, only her arm attempting to convince the Keeper of her intention. ‘Middle hoop...’ Her arm shot forward, not like an arrow, like a catapult pulled back, stretched as far as it would go, until finally it had reached its limit and sprung forward and the Quaffle left its hold... her right hand grabbed it and her broom which was tilted toward the left hoop flew, her left arm ending its motion to fall at her side, and Renée took a shot at the left goal hoop, continuing to fly past, a sharp turn to prevent flying into the stands.

She resisted the urge to sag on her broom, thankful that she’d found away to distract from the pain in her thigh. Both arms had been strained with the force she’d exerted. Her final shot had been an arrow. In her vague peripheral vision she had glimpsed the fast speed and direction as it shot toward a potential goal. Renée looked toward Aladren goals with cleared eyes, trying to discern what had happened; fortune, or delayed gratification.
0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> How about now? 0 <font color = red>Renée Errant {Chaser}</font> 0 5


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

December 28, 2011 8:23 PM
Arthur saw the reddish shape overhead, but somehow froze, finding himself unable to react to this intrusion until it was far too late to do anything about it and he was, for a moment, just hanging in the air, going the wrong way, feeling slightly stunned. In the back of his mind, part of him was aware that this was not the proper thing to do and shrieking commands at his hands and legs to go about the processes which would be necessary to reverse all this, but they weren’t listening. Which frightened him, making it worse.

It only lasted for a moment, though, before he started to get himself back in hand. His hands worked first, if only awkwardly and not at their most efficiently, and he managed to get the broom turned around again and start back in the direction the game was now taking. Back, back toward the Quaffle, there he went, he’d rather like it if his brother would catch the Snitch right now, but he would just keep going until then. Keep going, keep going, get the Quaffle back….

…Or see Russell get the Quaffle back. That was also good. Arthur shrugged, forcing himself to focus. Just a bit more, and they would be back to the goals; just a bit more, and they’d score. Mr. Sawyer had improved, but no one won every time. No one succeeded every time – even Arnold, Arthur was pessimistically sure, would fail one day. It might only be one day, but it would come nevertheless. Mr. Sawyer would not succeed every time, any more than Arnold would, than Arthur would, than Miss Errant would. Sooner or later, she’d miss an interception, and he hoped dearly that he’d be there to see it. He hoped especially that he’d be the one completing it, or at least be the initiator.

This time, though, he was hoping that he would win, and Mr. Sawyer would lose. Though it seemed it wasn’t to be on this turn. Mr. Macaulay got the Quaffle back, and then - oh, dear, Miss Errant had it again.

Once again, non-fatally but disablingly poisoning her the night before the next time Crotalus was set to play Aladren and pinning it on Miss Bennett, with her indiscreet little grudge, occurred to him as the most tactically sound move Aladren could make if they could find a way to ensure she got the poison without being close enough for it to be traced back to them. Not something he’d actually do, not over a Quidditch match, but it was a nice little moment of fantasy. Then he got back to the game. Stealing it from her was always a pleasure, if only because she seemed to interfere in his affairs more than any of her associates did and because she was often rather…flamboyant. He disapproved of her style, and showing her how ineffective she was not something he felt any remorse about enjoying.

But she didn’t pass. She ran on, toward the goals. And, before he quite noticed that he was planning to do it, he was copying a move Miss Errant herself had used more than once in their acquaintance on this Pitch and flying ahead, taking advantage of her not noticing he was on the right side of her at the right time, to fly forward, beneath her turn, and pull the Quaffle out of play before Mr. Wilkes ever had time to figure out if he could do anything with her twisty thought processes. It hit his hands with more force than he'd expected, and he almost fumbled for a second, but then he pulled it back out and had it in hand and the Aladren goals were secure again.

Because he had some care for his dignity and some more care for his neck, though, he did not pause to smile at her, or comment, or interact with her further in any way, instead rising and going over everyone’s heads, lifting the game higher into the air for the moment, to get away from the immediate area. Then, once he was clear, he dove again in case any Beaters had taken the opportunity to spot him, and then he rose again, flying even, now, crossing ground and hoping his luck held. If they got it back, he had no intentions of letting them just carry it back to the Aladren goals without anyone having much of a chance to do something about that, up to and including flying across their path if a Bludger didn’t appear.

Finally, though, he passed, making an underhanded throw to one of the other blue uniforms around him and then going on the defense, swooping at the nearest Crotalus Chaser and thinking, even as he enjoyed the degree of his control over his broom, of his next move, to push Crotalus back and keep the Quaffle moving in the direction he wanted it to, back toward Mr. Sawyer and his goals, while they all waited for Arnold and Miss Stephenson to get on with it so they could all go have some food, water, and sleep and feel better in the morning.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> He'd be prudent not to bet with you now, too. 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5


<font color="red">Topher Calhoun, Beater</font>

December 28, 2011 9:15 PM
By the second time Crotalus reached the Aladren goals, most of Topher’s initial optimism about this game had faded away. Maybe they’d come out of this covered in glory, but if they didn’t come out of it covered in even more blood, it would only be because the Chasers stayed in too much of a useless knot for him to do anything with. One time, he had thought he had a decent shot at one of the Aladren Chasers, but then Renee had darted too close to the guy, apparently trying to play tag or something, and made it impossible without risking further injury to her. Which he did not think would be the smartest course of action for him to take. How many hits could anyone take before they stopped working, anyway? He didn’t know, exactly, but he was guessing that it wasn’t a high number, and getting one of them from friendly fire would just be icing on the pretty darn unwelcome cake.
 
Finally, though, at last, he got an opening that Preston or Edmond or his own Chasers didn’t mess up before he could take it when Arthur Carey pulled away from the goals and then went out with the Quaffle, running with it. He was a great target, very helpfully the largest of the three Aladren Chasers, and he had an annoying habit of being able to appear in more places more quickly than the other two, generally. Taking him out might not completely turn this game around in Crotalus’ favor, but it would be a good step in that general direction.
 
Carey pulled off some fancy work at the beginning, so Topher’s first shot at him missed, but he followed the Bludger and made another as the flight course seemed to stabilize, this time aiming at the guy just as he tried to pass the Quaffle off to another Aladren Chaser. Well! An unforeseen advantage. If the shot didn’t go completely as planned, then it might very well still hit an Aladren, and whichever it hit, or even if it hit no one at all, it might disrupt the pass, giving Crotalus a chance to get back in it. David Wilkes had yet to be tried at all, and it seemed like a shame to let him go the whole game without a shot his Chasers didn’t interrupt, and surely they could only do that so many times.
 
Unless, of course, Aladrens were stranger than he thought and there was some kind of arrangement so each of them would steal the ball from a Crotalus shot, in which case Russell still had to do it, but come on. There had to be limits, and that was sailing right past them into strangeness. That wasn’t the safest move to attempt anytime, and surely they couldn’t be that arrogant.
0 <font color="red">Topher Calhoun, Beater</font> Betting on this match seems like a bad idea for everyone 0 <font color="red">Topher Calhoun, Beater</font> 0 5


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

December 28, 2011 10:17 PM
As the ball left his hands, Arthur heard the crack of bat on Bludger. That could be ill, could be good – he wouldn’t know until he saw more, which meant taking his eyes from the pass and not knowing how it turned out.

He saw Mr. Calhoun, and he saw the Bludger. It was heading for him. Oh, drat. That wasn’t the way he wanted this to go. No more than he’d wanted things to go so that he ended up here in the first place, anyway, at least right now; they should have won the twenty points a minute ago, at the other end, not had this long reversal down the Pitch. A curse on it.

This time, though, at least he wasn’t frozen. As he saw the ball coming toward him, he got out of the way, flying back and going along with it when he realized he was starting to tip over, rolling in the air with both hands firm on his broom for a moment in an attempt to avoid the Bludger, which he could hear after him. That was an unfortunate sound, the one they made when they were going through the air; it was enough to set his teeth on edge by itself, enough to shake someone’s nerves, if they let it. He had no intention of letting it, but still…it set his teeth on edge.

They slipped off each other with another faint sound which he also found unpleasant when his best efforts proved insufficient to get him away from the Bludger. It took him on the side of the leg, just above the knee; a glancing blow, he supposed, but painful enough for that. Still, he didn’t complain. If the angle had been just a little different, it would have either broken his arm or hit the side of his abdomen, maybe breaking ribs, or at least knocked the air out of him, each of which would have been worse than what he had right now.

Still, it was bad enough. He had hoped to get out of this in one piece. It would have been much more pleasant for him, much more agreeable for the team, so they could all celebrate their victory at the end as a group somewhere other than the hospital tent, where he and his brother were both going to end up, and likely a few others by the end, along with the Crotalus wounded. It really had been inevitable that this game was going to be violent; he was only surprised Aladren was doing so well right now.

Hopefully, it would continue to go so well for them, but he wouldn’t bet on it. He had to look for the Quaffle now, though, before he wasted any time gambling. He would figure out what had happened to the ball after he fled the Bludger, figure out what he should do about that, and then get back in the game as quickly as possible.
0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> Betting's a bad habit, anyway 0 <font color="blue">Arthur Carey, Chaser</font> 0 5