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

John Umland

December 18, 2015 1:58 PM
Problem solving sundries was a broad statement, and John had seen fit to give it a broad response. Thinking practically, or at least in terms of the outdoorsy youth organization he had belonged to before school, he had brought his wand, enough paper and pens for everyone, enough oatmeal-and-fruit bars for everyone to have two (he had no idea how long they would be here or what they would be asked to do, and taking a break for a snack and some tea was often a good way to actually speed up the problem-solving process even under ideal conditions), and, lacking access to the real things, a long walking stick and a length of rope which had only begun the rope-and-walking-stick-resembling chapters of their lives in his room about an hour before he had to report for the first challenge. Thinking just to make a point, he had also brought along a few small mirrors, his magnifying glass, several potion vials and other jars, small portions of the most common things in his Potions kit, his Latin desk dictionary, a book to read if he got bored, and all the old newspapers he could get his hands on for use either as base materials for Transfiguration or as reading material for his associates if they got bored.

These things were, except for the long stick, packed into two bags, one over each shoulder. It felt all wrong to go to the Pitch without his bat, but other than that, he thought he was as prepared as he could reasonably be under the circumstances and could therefore approach the unknown with some confidence, even though the circumstances weren’t ideal.

When he had seen the names surrounding his on the Cascade Hall list, John’s first response, after careful consideration, had been to swear under his breath. Emery and Lauren he was largely neutral toward, his only objection to them was that they weren’t among the people he was already comfortable working closely with, but Park was someone he neither knew nor wanted to know, Leithan was Joe’s roommate, and then there was her - Emilia-Louise Scott. Oh, how he had not wanted to see her name on his list. She was going to drive him mad, he knew it. Maybe he deserved it after the way he’d treated her last year, but that didn’t make the prospect any more appealing. From everything his sister Julian had ever told him about Teppenpaw, he thought he might be less worried about the possibility of offending or antagonizing Arthur than he was of trying to carry on coherent conversations with Emmy-Lou again. Teppenpaws were a serene, unflappable, fair-minded lot, not the sorts to hold a man's older brother against him too much. Emmy-Lou was harder to deal with to than – than John thought he was!

With three people he was wary of and two he’d just rather were other people (he was suddenly very aware of the extent to which the Quidditch team was his social life and felt so cut off and adrift from his comfort zone that he would have almost welcomed Scarlett Brockert, who he at least knew he could have fun arguing with, to the team), he knew being prepared was more important than his old scoutmasters could have ever guessed. They had been primarily concerned with his ability to survive in the wilderness and act as a good citizen of Canada when he was in contact with civilization. Now, mostly because of Park and Scott, his pride was on the line.

He perked up a bit when Pye said the theme of the challenge was water (some of the first magic John could remember performing had involved water – he had, in a moment of stress, frozen the contents of a kettle as they came to a boil – and one of the first things he’d taught himself to do at school was heat up water for tea, so water was good), but his momentary smile faded into puzzlement at the idea of putting a ‘festive’ twist on it (what, icicles, big snowflakes? Did they really need six people to make icicles? Were they going to get to use magic to create steam-powered train sets?) and then faded into irritation as the task itself was finally disclosed, albeit irritation laced with interest in all the magic which had gone into the task. It was impressive enough, the display, but the task itself had nothing to do with water. It had to do with one of Father Christmas’ reindeer flying the coop inconveniently close to water.

He put his bags down, not concerned about theft – he had figured out how to make his closable possessions repel others who attempted to open them with mild jinxes last year during the Satori thing, though the squeak he thought he’d heard last week in a pair of shoes he’d charmed so they made no sound while trying to figure out what skills the spy must have had reminded him that he might need to boost everything a bit – and eyed the sleigh dubiously.

“I can make a bridge,” he offered. “That isn’t ice on top, that is. That way, if we do drop something, technically it doesn’t touch water in any of its forms, except, you know, humidity in the air.” Exact words were important when dealing with authority figures. He’d use ice as a base, then cover it, like putting a carpet over a floor – he could transfigure the improvised staff or some of the newspaper for that. Then they could also just slide the sleigh over something similar to linoleum if his first idea, Transfiguring it into something smaller and carrying it across, didn’t work. He knew he’d never turned something that large into…anything, actually, much less something small like a pebble, and doubted from Julian’s experiences if the Advanced class did it often, so there was a good chance that playing lawyer might be the best solution. He wanted to at least try the Transfiguration just to see if he could (Emery would probably have to do the untransfiguration if it worked), but he definitely saw ‘transfigure the sleigh’ as a plan in need of a back-up plan. “Ah – Arthur and Emmy-Lou could work on the ice, or covering - " he thought, on second thought, that would be the simpler task - "depending on what you're comfortable with, and then go carry some presents while the rest of us Summon more?” Having a non-slippery way for the youngest ones to run across and carry presents back over manually would definitely decrease the amount of time involved in moving the presents over since it would be dicey to Summon multiple presents at once without dropping some and possibly damaging them, so John was prepared to argue that their contribution would be essential enough to meet the participation parameters. “Then we – “ this with a gesture which included Emery and, reluctantly, Jamie Park; Quidditch rivalries aside, the older boy’s conduct on the Pitch had given John a decidedly low opinion of him – “tackle the sleigh.” A thought occurred to him. "Unless someone else has a better idea," he added.
16 John Umland Let us go forth and conquer, Team Three. 285 John Umland 0 5


Jamie Park

January 01, 2016 2:26 AM
School unity. School spirit. Teamwork. Blah blah blah. All of it was a load of crap, AND it meant that Quidditch had been cancelled. The Pecari Quidditch team could be a bit uptight sometimes but at least they were broadly cool, unlike the bunch of nerds he’d been put with for this. John Umland was the worst prospect. Jamie had seen him in class, hunched over his little notebook and had overheard him rambling about bird types on more than one occasion. Aladren was the most whacked out house on the planet. Only somewhere like that could grade A losers like John and Clark play the coolest spots on a Quidditch team. Besides John, he didn’t really know the rest, though it was a seriously Aladren heavy squad, and he planned on watching his back against them. His other problem was Lauren Song. His mother had pointed her out more than once when looking at his and Ji-Eun’s yearbooks, and now with this much enforced social contact, she’d probably see that as grounds for them getting married.

John lived up to expectations by showing up looking like he was going camping for a week. As they were set to being Santa’s little helpers, he crossed his arms over his chest with a scowl. This was totally lame. But of course, Captain Nerdface was seriousl getting into it. Jamie rolled his eyes as John began to talk.

“Yeah, I’m sure water in the air’s going to be a massive problem. What do you think they’re sitting in now, doofus?” he scoffed. As John continued to ramble, his attention turned to the bags at the boy’s feet. Seriously…. What was with that kid? Wondering what was in them, he picked one up, hand tugging at the fastening. He dropped it sharply as the bag gave him a sharp, tingling sensation in his fingers.

“What the hell man?” he snapped at John. “What kind of person sets their bags to shock their team-mates?”
13 Jamie Park And then help little old ladies cross the road. NERD. 284 Jamie Park 0 5

John Umland

January 02, 2016 5:46 PM
”What do you think they’re sitting in now, doofus?” asked Jamie Park, displaying the extraordinary subtlety and careful application of a deep knowledge of strategy in approaching what he thought was a problem that he was absolutely not noted for displaying on the Pitch. Chess and Go were the standard games people analyzed to figure out how their opponents thought (chess was a large part of why John had always considered his sister smarter than most people gave her credit for, though her ability with cards didn't hurt, either), but John thought Quidditch had its merits, too. How else could he have so quickly learned that Jamie Park was one of the best things one could hope to see on an opponent’s team and one of the worst things to see on one’s own?

Maybe that was why Jamie’s insult him left him curiously unmoved. Or maybe it was just that as a goad, doofus just…lacked something. Sociology wasn’t his thing and he had only a vague idea of what a ‘normal’ teenager was supposed to be like (books indicated the beasts were shallow, petty, wildly emotional, and had no interests outside of gossip and committing every sexual sin in the book, but surely that was at least a bit of an exaggeration – if it wasn’t, how could even a marginally sentient being stand to live that way for a single week? It sounded so boring, almost as boring as the books he’d tried to read about the behaviors of such creatures), but he’d thought people gave that one up in about grade three. He blinked twice, then continued as though he hadn’t heard anything.

Park got more of a reaction when he went for one of John’s bags and then just as quickly dropped it. John snatched it up himself, patting it to check for damage, but the lack of jangling noises made him think nothing was broken. Once this hasty inspection was done, he glared at the older boy.

“I have no idea,” he said coldly, adding ‘asks loaded questions’ to his list of complaints against Park. “I’m the kind of person who doesn’t want people on the other teams to steal my things once we get busy and use my things to help their teams beat mine.” He struggled to think of the best response, annoyance and pride (so that spell had worked; since he had not exactly been able to test something written specifically not to react to him, he had only had his confidence in his abilities to go on before, and while that had grown steadily last year, nothing was like hard proof) clouding his thinking. “I assumed my teammates would ask what I brought instead of just grabbing things. Thank you for correcting my assumption.” He felt his eyes trying to drift toward Emery and refused to let them. If Park thought John was going to appeal to authority for protection, he’d never shut up. Even goading Jamie into attacking him would be a better outcome than that. “The things I brought that I think will be most useful here are newspapers for Transfiguration. They’re perfect for making something those of us who cross the river won’t slip on, so if you’re done acting like an eight-year-old, we can get to work.”
16 John Umland I suppose I can make time for that, too. 285 John Umland 0 5


Emery Kijewski-Jareau

January 02, 2016 6:22 PM
His final year at Sonora was definitely not going the way he had hoped it would have gone. He was no longer upset over the fact that he did not receive the head badge, but the lack of true understanding from his friends had caused a rift between him and them. Sometimes it still irritated him how little they tried, which didn’t help the situation. Chloe had already told him that she wasn’t going to get involved with any of it. She supported him by voting for him, it didn’t work out for him, but she wasn’t going to blame Arnold for that. Emery, in all reality, did not blame Arnold for it either. He blamed the school. But Arnold carried the badge, so whenever Emery saw him, he was reminded of his own failure and the school’s favoritism to Purebloods.

When Chloe had left to deal with the death of her biological mother, Emery’s anger had shifted to concern. Chloe had gone off the deep end during the summer when she had been dealing with her mother’s crazy antics, Emery was worried about how she would handle the funeral and meeting her other family. He wasn’t there to keep an eye on her and to look out for her, so he had no idea if she was going to fall back into her old pattern of partying or something worse. She came back though and reassured him that she hadn’t slipped back into that life. She had spent most of her time with their friends, Travis and Ben.

The shift in emotion had triggered his acceptance of things, but too much time had passed and after the conversation between himself and Arnold in their dorm room had happened. Emery didn’t think there was any way of moving on from it. So, he kept to the schedule that he had already been doing, which was mainly studying and reviewing colleges and filling out applications. The only other thing on his mind had been the challenges. His mother had talked about these back when she had been the Headmistress. Back then, Emery had been so excited about coming to Sonora and doing similar things, but now it didn’t seem all that much fun. He already had too much on his plate to bother with things like this.

It also didn’t help that he didn’t really know anyone on his team. He knew Park to be Ji-Eun’s brother and John as on the Aladren Quidditch team and presumably related to Julian. That was the extent of his knowledge of the people. He had no idea of their magical capabilities, so that could become an issue if the challenges were difficult. However, since the first challenge was to be on the pitch, it might be more of a physical challenge. Emery had started working out with his sister the year prior, so he was no longer a weak, lanky kid and with Jamie and John on Quidditch teams, they might also be physically able. Emery wasn’t quite sure on the rest of them though.
Professor Pye began to speak and as it turned out, the challenge had to do with a Christmas theme. Presents and a sleigh. Getting over the water would easy enough for the gifts so long as they found a way to get to the other side. One of the teams was using a broom, which wasn’t a terrible idea, but Emery didn’t want to look as though he were copying. He turned his attention to John as the kid began to give out ideas. The poor kid didn’t get out his ideas without Park feeling the need to put him down for it. The corners of Emery’s mouth turned down. John retaliated in kind, which somewhat amused Emery simply because he wasn’t wrong with what he said.
“Okay, can we just focus on the task now?” Emery stated, stepping in to stop the war from continuing on. “Newspaper was a good idea.” Emery said. “Have you ever transfigured something so large, John? Anyone have any other ideas that might help get the presents or sleigh across the water?” Emery asked the team. “I think our best option for the sleigh is to shrink it so that someone can just carry it or I can charm it to fly, if we’re going to be in the spirit of it.”
6 Emery Kijewski-Jareau Great team work, guys... 259 Emery Kijewski-Jareau 0 5