- Messages
- 88
- OOC First Name
- Claire
- Blood Status
- Mixed Blood
- Wand
- Straight 18 Inch Rigid Applewood Wand with Vampire Blood Core
- Age
- 12 (02/2046)
Sera hadn't understood the point of history at primary school, and he still didn't understand it now that the historical figures he had to study were magical. Why did it matter what witches and wizards did five-hundred years ago? There were far too many exciting things happening in the present to waste brainpower on the past. He sighed, leafing mindlessly through the pages of an old textbook. Somewhere in here, supposedly, there was a paragraph or two on the Salem witch trials, but as he'd searched cover to cover twice already without finding them, he was beginning to think the librarian was pulling a fast one.
As he reached the end for a third time, the Ravenclaw girl who had been writing opposite him suddenly stood up and left the room. She obviously intended to come back, because she had left all of her things on the table, including, Sera noted with a pang of joy, her homework. He chewed his lip. Ravenclaw didn't have history this term, so she couldn't have been working on a Salem trials essay. Still, he'd be taking some of her classes next semester. It couldn't hurt to have a little read...
Sera's arm froze half-way across the table. He watched in horror as a puddle spread from his upset goblet and began to saturate the girl's parchment. At once the ink began to bloom; word by word, line by line, her writing became illegible. Nearly the entire first paragraph was lost by the time Sera thought to pick up the paper. Wet. Wet. Wet. Fire. Yes, he could dry it on the fire. And it wouldn't have been a terrible idea, except for the fact he decided to pinch it from a single, sodden corner. He had been holding it over the fire for all but six seconds when the corner disintegrated and the parchment, three-quarters of which had still been perfectly fine, fell straight into the flames. Oh, no. Oh no no no no no. He grabbed the fire poker from its stand, but in attempting to spear the parchment with it only succeeded in pushing it further between the burning coals.
As he reached the end for a third time, the Ravenclaw girl who had been writing opposite him suddenly stood up and left the room. She obviously intended to come back, because she had left all of her things on the table, including, Sera noted with a pang of joy, her homework. He chewed his lip. Ravenclaw didn't have history this term, so she couldn't have been working on a Salem trials essay. Still, he'd be taking some of her classes next semester. It couldn't hurt to have a little read...
Sera's arm froze half-way across the table. He watched in horror as a puddle spread from his upset goblet and began to saturate the girl's parchment. At once the ink began to bloom; word by word, line by line, her writing became illegible. Nearly the entire first paragraph was lost by the time Sera thought to pick up the paper. Wet. Wet. Wet. Fire. Yes, he could dry it on the fire. And it wouldn't have been a terrible idea, except for the fact he decided to pinch it from a single, sodden corner. He had been holding it over the fire for all but six seconds when the corner disintegrated and the parchment, three-quarters of which had still been perfectly fine, fell straight into the flames. Oh, no. Oh no no no no no. He grabbed the fire poker from its stand, but in attempting to spear the parchment with it only succeeded in pushing it further between the burning coals.