Gamemaker Pye

December 16, 2015 2:17 AM
For some odd reason or another, instead of acting like a recluse and trying to separate himself out from the rest of the staff and the student body, Alfie had decided it was a good idea to continue to get more involved. And so, in addition to dealing with first year orientation he had also volunteered to help out with the team challenges which had been suggested as a way for the school to come back together after the Satori incident of the previous year. Alfie was still slightly kicking himself for not having caught it earlier but had been reassured by a drunk ex-colleague over the summer that there was really no reason for him to suspect that a Satori had infiltrated the school system. It had been a tough break, but the department didn’t hold it against him and did wish he could come back though they’d heard that the extent of his injuries really wouldn’t allow that.

The comment, from the ever glib, perpetually jealous Jeremiah Williams sent Alfie, in a glowering mood, over to Cecily’s where he had been giving a firm slap on the head and a cold glass of water because apparently he reeked of bourbon. Which, Alfie thought, was not necessarily a bad thing. It was summer time and he didn’t really have any obligations so he figured he was allowed to reek of alcohol all he wanted—no young minds to corrupt and all that. Cecily had not been pleased with him the next day and she’d told him in no uncertain terms that if he wanted to work together to figure out the bigger issue at hand then he really couldn’t be getting piss drunk over anything Jeremiah Williams said.

Now, though, Alfie was paying for not having caught the Satori before it spread the multitudes of vicious rumors and secrets around the school which he had spun—to any concerned student who had thought to ask the Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher about the Dark powers of a Satori, as mainly rumors and lies. It wasn’t that he particularly cared about the feelings of his students, but he had found that on edge students tended to produce less than satisfactory results and if a small white lie every now and then (like assuring them that in addition to truths Satoris also liked to spread rumors and blatant lies in order to stir up feelings of resentment) meant that his students were more at ease in his classroom and performing to the best of their ability then he was all for it.

As he walked up to the Quidditch Pitch, he sighed. He wasn’t a fan of the challenges and had always enjoyed watching the Quidditch games even though the outcomes were rather predictable—that Clark Dill really was an absurdly talented young man, so he was kind of disappointed with the change of events. Nevertheless, he had a challenge to lead and so he put on his best friendly face, nodding welcomingly to the students as they past him—he was in no hurry to get there, the Pitch had already been set up, all he needed to do was announce and explain the first challenge and then sit back and watch it unfold. He hadn’t even needed to gather the students there that day--signs had been posted around the school and in all of the common rooms telling the students to meet on the Pitch at a designated time and to bring along their wands (why they wouldn’t have them, he didn’t know) and other useful “problem solving sundries.” He supposed he might be required to announce the point record, but it was also a Saturday and so that meant there would be live music at the Quill and Whale which had become his new favourite place to have a drink and wind down. Something about the odd decorations soothed and pleased him in an aesthetic manner he never would have thought possible for himself.

“At least it’s good weather,” Alfie remarked quietly to Tallec as he stood and walked forward to explain the first challenge. He raised his wand and cast a Sonorus charm on his voice so that it amplified over the length of the Pitch and a little beyond so that any student who was lagging behind or who thought it prudent to whisper while he talked would be able to hear everything he said. “By now I’m sure all of you have met or at least know who is on your teams. The theme of this challenge is water. With the holidays coming up, I think the staff thought it would be fun to put a little festive twist on things, and so…”

He waved his wand again and a disillusionment charm lifted to show the layout of the Pitch. There were fifteen sleighs filled with colorfully wrapped boxes with bows and ribbons on them. A fairly large river ran through the length of it, separating the sleighs with their glistening gifts on one side of the bank from the students who were on the other near the teachers and the podium. “The point of this challenge is to bring the gifts over from that side of the river to this side of the river. The gifts must never touch the ground or the water and must arrive on this side in it’s original condition. Sound easy?” He grinned. Making things challenging was his favourite part of the job. He liked to push his students to be creative, he wanted them to work hard so that when they graduated their everyday use of magic was superb.

“Additionally, every member of your team must cast at least one spell that significantly aids in the process of the gift movement.” It was this point that Alfie stressed heavily as he explained the challenge to the students. Every member had to participate, even the youngest ones who’d by now not even had a full semester of learning under their belt. The challenges were all about team building and school unity—though why the others thought splitting the school up into fifteen different factions was a sure fire way of bringing them all together, Alfie didn’t know. He supposed there was inter-house mingling now but it still promoted competition. “You will be scored on timeliness, creativity, and resourcefulness.” He smiled, personally believing that the last was the most important aspect before continuing. “And then, there’s just one more catch,” and Alfie waved his wand again and ice began to form, holding the sleighs steady in place and beginning to creep up the side, small pieces covering the gifts. “For bonus points you must also bring the sleigh over—separately from the gifts. You may begin!”

OOC: So, a quick recap in case you missed something in my mess of words:

-Signs telling students when to come to the pitch were placed around the school including the common rooms. These signs asked students to bring their wands and other "useful problem solving sundries."

-The challenge is Christmas themed--sleighs full of presents on opposite side of the river, students must collaborate to bring them over in their original condition. Each student must cast at least one spell.

-Teams are scored on timliness, creativity, and resourcefulness.

As usual, please write minimum of 200 word posts, be creative and realistic! Additionally, since some of you might not have had a multiple person thread, the usual "courtesy" is that we take turns in the order of posting. However the challenges are posted in Quidditch game style. Basically you reply whenever you can so that your team can have the most posts and therefore points. Have fun, good luck, and happy posting!
Subthreads:
10 Gamemaker Pye This is SPARTA! (Challenge 1) 0 Gamemaker Pye 1 5


Emrys Lucan

December 30, 2015 3:01 PM
Emrys liked to win. He did not, however, like to win at the expense of his friends, and having already seen what the Head Boy situation had done to their friend group not to mention whatever had been going on between Chloe and Ji-Eun, he had started to withdraw himself from the drama. He just didn’t do big fusses, it wasn’t his thing. He had likely inherited this particular attribute from his father who sat idly by whenever his headstrong mother and grandfather had gotten into it. He still liked his friends, he just didn’t enjoy the tension that he was living in and so had started to spend more time than usual with his little sister, helping her with her homework and preparing her for the next semester. Though she had assured him that she was already getting help from a classmate in her year so that when he was gone the next year he wouldn’t have to worry about her, she had also told him she was glad for his company since it was their last year together.

Even now, Emrys felt a little pang of sadness that Caelia was not in his challenge group. The Lucan siblings had never been competitive with one another—their father was just so serenely happy with most things they had never really grown up in a household where competition was a necessity (other than the unspoken competition between himself and Wesley, but that was another, bigger, more complicated story for another day) and that morning at breakfast and lightly teased the other about losing and what that would mean, what little things the loser would have to do for the winner. But it was all said in jest, none of it was meant, and Emrys knew that whoever’s team came out on top of the other would likely spend some time trying to cheer the other up from the mild disappointment they felt.

At least Caelia is with Charlotte, Emrys thought to himself as his sister went off to his girlfriend and briefly wondered if the classmate Caelia had asked for help from was Charlotte’s younger brother since Jack was an Aladren like himself. The parallel between the two situations amused Emrys since both Charlotte and Caelia were Crotali, but he hadn’t ever remembered their younger siblings ever interacting in a familiar manner that would suggest Caelia would be comfortable asking for such an arrangement and so Emrys was sure she had asked a different classmate, perhaps her roommate or the Quidditch guy who she seemed to be so fond of.

“Alright, team,” he said once the students had sorted themselves out in their respective groups. He had both Caelia’s potential tutors in his challenge group and he planned to watch them carefully to make sure they were good enough to be teaching his baby sister who could, at times, be a little too pliant to others’ points of view. The last time he had let someone else teach his sister still haunted him whenever he saw he delicate mannerisms or the way in which she sometimes gave an ever so slight, scornful toss of her curls in a certain students’ directions, something she hadn’t had in her before he left for school. Other than Kelsey and Alistair there was also Joey Thompson and Natalie Varth, both of whom he knew next to nothing about other than that the second year had played for the Pecari Quidditch team the previous year. Lastly was Lionel Layne, also a Pecari and two years his junior so they had only been in class together for one year when Emrys himself had been a fifth year and Lionel a third year.

With such a young batch, Emrys wasn’t really sure what sorts of spells they could pull off. He himself was the only Advanced student, which meant there was no one to lean on if he, in an out of character haste that only really affected him around Charlotte, acted rashly and messed up and important spell. “Perhaps we ought to start with the youngest student going first?” he suggested. “That way as the challenge goes on we can be sure everyone is able to perform a spell.” He didn’t want to start out the other way since leaving the one with less than a semester of learning under her belt to go last would severely limit the poor first years’ range of abilities if not render her unable to participate in the challenge—something Emrys did not want to do even if it wasn’t one of the rules that each member had to perform a spell.

“Since I’ve had the longest time to learn spells I’ll go last since that means I should be able to come up with some spell that hasn’t been used yet, does that sound like a good idea to you guys?” he asked. “How should we start this?” Emrys wasn’t really a strategist, it was why he had never tried out for the Quidditch team though he enjoyed watching the odd, well-played match. He was more of a book learned, preferring to spend his days looking over dusty old parchments and contemplating old theories instead of coming up with new theories to test.
10 Emrys Lucan Team eight, we're great! 260 Emrys Lucan 0 5


Lionel Layne

January 02, 2016 11:48 PM
Lionel was not (to the perpetual disappointment of his family, as it also meant he was unlikely to grow up into something like a lawyer or a great magician or even a proper heir to his uncle’s potions business) nearly pedantic enough to be in Aladren, but he had enough tendencies in that direction that he still felt a flutter of panic when he saw the instruction to bring problem-solving sundries to the Pitch along with their wands and persons for the first team challenge. After all, that could mean nearly anything. What was useful for problem-solving and what was completely useless or even a hindrance depended totally on context and they didn’t have any. He could bring enough stuff that he broke his back just carrying it all and find that none of it was of any use at all on the big day.

He had been worried enough to write home about the challenges, but Uncle Geoff had had no helpful advice since he and Lionel’s aunts had never been put through anything like this and Kate’s response had been little better. Someone had even convinced Alicia, who had really gotten into the challenges back in her day, to write to him, but her letter had been the most useless of all. All she had talked about were the effects the teams could have on school politics and how to use all the fault lines created by the separation of friends into competing teams to his advantage, and even with the prefect’s badge on his robes, Lionel didn’t think that was something that was really going to affect him. He wasn’t a member of any faction and didn’t want to be. He would have to take sides if the prefects ever started splitting along blood lines or something like that, but short of that, he intended to stay as far out of prefect politics as humanly possible while still performing his duties. All he’d gotten out of that letter was a glimpse into his cousin’s head, which wasn’t a place he’d ever wanted to spend much time and which had done a lot less to make him feel better than everyone else’s advice-free well-wishes had.

Aunt Anne had given him the best advice, which was to practice charms basics – making things move (automatically or by adding wings), making things stay still, making liquids turn to solids and solids to liquids – and basic defenses. Her idea of problem-solving sundries had been ‘books and lots of posterboards,’ which he hadn’t thought was very helpful, but at least she had given him something. He had practiced the basics she recommended during most of his free time for the last days before the contest and went out feeling as ready, even though he only had himself and his wand, as he thought he could be for whatever Professor Pye had to throw at him and his new friends.

Well…hopefully friends, anyway. Or at least friendly enough people to work with a lot for the rest of the year. Not-enemies, anyway.

Emrys was the seventh year Aladren prefect and clear leader, so Lionel listened politely as he spoke even though he wasn’t sure he completely agreed with his plan. Yes, they needed to make sure the younger ones had something to do, but he thought they might have a better chance of getting something done if the older ones did some leg work. Professor Pye had just said that everyone had to cast at least one spell that significantly helped, not that everyone could only cast one spell that significantly helped. As long as the first years helped, they were all right. They didn’t have to all contribute equally to satisfy the condition.

“I don’t know what the best way to start is, but I can Summon some,” he volunteered. “Probably only one at a time, though. We don’t have to get them all over the same way, though, so I don’t know if…everything has to fit together, you know? If we can each just figure out something we can do.” Elegant, coordinated plans weren't his forte. Took too much time, time they needed if they were going to finish in a respectable place. Lionel might not have been as competition-mad as some he knew, but he didn't really like the thought of coming in dead last, either.
16 Lionel Layne And have parcels to exfiltrate. 283 Lionel Layne 0 5

Kelsey Atwater

January 07, 2016 7:50 PM
Kelsey wasn't all that enthused about the Challenges. She tried to generally avoid being around those who were of inferior blood and now she was being forced. Some of her team was acceptable.She was with Alistair, which made her quite happy, as he was a fine pureblood gentleman though she had no idea why he was so into Scarlett's roommate who was hardly ladylike, even if she was from the right kind of family. It was so disappointing.

Then the team was lead by Caelia's brother Emrys, whose judgement Kelsey felt could be a bit questionable at times. Other than Charlotte Spencer and Arnold Manger, he'd made some pretty poor choices in friends. This gave her slight doubts at his ability to be a leader as leaders were supposed to make good decisions. On the other hand, he was a proper pureblood, which made her more okay with taking orders from him-Kelsey could handle getting instructions from teachers who were not of good backgrounds because they were adults who'd trained specifically in whatever subject they were teaching, but students were quite another matter-and he was an Aladren which had to mean he was at least intellectually gifted. Especially given he helped Caelia with her schoolwork.

Lionel Layne was okay, she guessed. The Laynes were an old pureblood family, but they weren't...a society family. That, she supposed, could have been worse.

However, then there were the two younger students, Joey Thompson and Natalie Varth. Nobodies. People Kelsey wanted absolutely nothing to do with. People she'd try her best to not speak to directly unless she absolutely had to.

Emrys seemed to want to have the youngest students go first, which Kelsey felt was a downright bad idea for more reasons than just their age and background. After Lionel, who didn't seem all that enthused with that idea either, volunteered to do some summoning, Kelsey spoke up. "Having us go in order of age wouldn't work because things need to be done in a certain order. The groundwork of getting over the river has to come first before we can reach the presents and have the younger students shrink them down. I can Summon too,but Lionel is correct that it would be a bit on the slow side as we can all only do one at a time."
11 Kelsey Atwater Nice rhyme. 305 Kelsey Atwater 0 5


Lionel Layne

January 08, 2016 11:43 PM
Lionel had been thinking something similar, but he still winced when Kelsey Atwater bluntly spoke her mind about each of them doing spells in a certain order. Especially when she dragged his name into it. Hearing that he was correct about something was pleasantly novel, but since he was kind of the unofficial number two of the group by decree of the list, he really didn’t want anything to make Emrys think he was trying to follow…actually, any of his least favorite cousin’s advice, but especially the part concerning times when and ways in which it might be advantageous to incite chaos in his own team.

“We do need to make sure everyone is included in our plans, though,” he said quickly, hoping to bash out some kind of extremely quick compromise. He didn’t think his chances were all that good, at least if Emrys had the Aladren haughtiness thing going on. The stuff Lionel had seen about him on library sign-up sheets over the years made Lionel think he might not be too bad about that, but better safe than sorry…except that he was talking, when the safe thing would have been to let them fight it out. “So maybe you guys – “ he smiled at the youngest students – “could think of spells you’re comfortable with while we figure out how to cross the river.” A thought occurred to him. “Unless you have ideas about that,” he added quickly, not wanting to condescend to them too much – it might inspire one to push him into the river or something – or to miss a good idea just because of its source.

He should, he decided, have kept his mouth shut. Saying something to the kids made it sound like he thought he was in charge. The problem was that he could see other people moving around on other teams and that was fanning some tiny hidden spark of competitiveness in him into a tiny, tiny flame, making it seem that they did not have enough time for this. They needed to do something, quick, and he thought Kelsey was right, and he’d already been talking, so one thing had just sort of led to another. Here was really hoping that Emrys was not the type who got touchy about his ideas being right and his authority being acknowledged and all that. If he was, the activity meant to bring them all together as a school might start getting awfully unpleasant, and Lionel really did not want that to happen.
16 Lionel Layne Thank you. 283 Lionel Layne 0 5


Emrys Lucan

January 09, 2016 4:54 AM
Kelsey Atwater had always been Emrys’ least favorite of his sister’s friends. He got the mild impression that the younger witch disapproved of him as well which was an idea he found to be slightly amusing since he was both older and a prefect which meant there was really nothing she could do to him in the way of authority. But she and Lionel had made a solid point that the order of how things done had to be taken into account too. Emrys smiled in the humble way he never would have picked up from his grandparents and acknowledged their point, which in reality, had been his poorly explained point all along since by “go” he had really meant “share your idea since we’re still in the planning stages.” Again, another reason why Emrys didn’t particularly feel comfortable in a leadership position—his words got jumbled up and he occasionally had issues expressing himself.

“Well of course,” he replied, addressing the whole group and doing his best not to sound too frustrated. He supposed he hadn’t spoken too clearly at first and was glad for the seeming compromise that Lionel had suggested but was really the original Emrys himself had tried to convey albeit rather poorly. “I was merely suggesting that those who knew the least amount of spells share what they could do at the beginning in case we wanted to go the route of creativity and not be overlapping all our spells. Otherwise if older students, capable of more spells simply because of age and length of study take up the easier, beginner spells, well then we’d have a bit of a problem when we needed the younger years to go, right? Even if we get it done quickly and get points in the category there is still ‘creativity’ and ‘resourcefulness’.”

Emrys was a big believer that racing wasn’t everything and that it was better to have a good, thorough job done than a quick, reckless one which was why he supposed he usually came out on top when it came to spellwork between him and Wesley who, though brilliant, kind of had some shoddy craftsmanship in the way of his finished product in class. Nevermind if he could actually do the spell properly—if he worked hard enough at it, Emrys knew his cousin could do all the spells. But Wesley was perfectly content to leave his classwork at simply ‘good enough’ which was something Emrys could never understand.

“I think that’s a great idea, Lionel,” he continued, agreeing that while the older students worked at the beginning part the younger students could think about what they could do. “I have a feeling quite a few people might try to freeze over the river. Is there a way we could get around that? Perhaps,” and now he looked to the two very youngest members of their group, wanting to make sure that they were comfortable with the idea. “While we can’t levitate an actual human being, we can work to levitate the clothes that Joey and Natalie are wearing to get them to the other side of the river at which point, if you know the shrinking charm well enough you can shrink the presents done to put into a bag that someone over here can transfigure and then levitate?”

He tilted his head slightly to get a better view on the river and decide if he had explained well enough. “So Kelsey, if you wanted to transfigure perhaps my glove into a bag and then if Joey and Natalie hold onto that bag whilst Kelsey levitates it and Lionel and I levitate your clothes, Joey and Natalie…”—he rather thought that holding ones concentration on levitating two human beings took up a considerable amount of concentration and he didn’t want to loose any of that to accidentally drop his youngest charges into what was likely a freezing cold river, taking the day’s temperatures into account, even if it was only there and created by magic. “How does that sound? It will be hard but if you’re up for it I can’t see anyone else trying to levitate two members so we can definitely get creativity points.”

“I know this contradicts my earlier statement of not wanting to use the same spell over and over but surely our method would outweigh our spell work, at that point.”
10 Emrys Lucan Squeezing it in at the last minute. 260 Emrys Lucan 0 5