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Archived Applications / Asta Adelaide Pendragon
« on: 01/08/2013 at 07:14 »

Application for Hogwarts School




→ CHARACTER INFORMATION.
Name: Asta Adelaide Pendragon

Birthday: April 3rd, 1926

Hometown: Unknown

Bloodline: Unknown

Magical Strength (pick one):
Conjuring & Summoning

Magical Weakness (pick one):
Charms

Year (pick two): Second, Third
*Please Note: Asta did her first year at Salem but was drawn out of education in her second when her ward, Filius Pendragon, decided to move back to England just before the borders closed. Because I failed at posting for her, she never levelled up.

Biography:
Her feet tapped lightly against the grey kerbstone ground, the rhythm steady as the pounding in her ears, a sting forming in her throat with every breath she took. The jugal in her arms was falling, and her fingers bore further into the soft fur, causing the puppy to give out a small yelp. Pulling it up with more force than needed, the small, golden Labrador jumped in her embrace, and Asta continued undeterred.

Twist had been one of the strays in Mulhouse, too young and too chubby to keep up with the others when they visited the gaff, and when Madame Noire wanted to pack up and leave, Asta had begged to keep him. The batlike woman had reluctantly agreed on the condition that she trained the dog as a buffer, but as either Asta was bad at teaching or Twist was bad at performing, he had eventually become a jugal instead. Her jugal.

Madame Noire. She was really named Duffy. Asta and Gustaf had snickered, as they had lain underneath the caravan in the dark green, moist grass, listening to the woman either suck up to an investor or yell at the workmen. Forever more beneficial when she was talking to investors, the two of them had safely pocketed the information for later use, making an entry in their secret language code to rename the feared proprietor of the troop Ducky. No reason why. Just because it sounded like Duffy and it was funny.

They had done that all the time. When you were pulled around to entertain men and women from all over the world, you picked up stray words in the language, trying to find out what it meant, twisting and turning it to crack it open, figure out its use and finally, apply it to the rebellion resources: your own language. Long summer nights while the tentmen, such as Jip and Don, the clowns, Chipper and Cruddy, and animal trainers, who Asta and Gustaf didn’t socialise with, went to the local bevvy, and cold winter nights, with nothing to do than tuck in the frayed blankets that they slept with, turned into secret messages and inventing codes for everything. Two copies had been made on paper they had nicked from the ken, safely tugged in the warm, safe environment in the green belly boxes under the reddish caravan (-ish because the colour had worn off from the dust grinding against the sides when they drove them down the road), torn a little from the moist they had endured on rainy days, but Madame Noire had never found them.

Asta had brought her copy with her, certain that it would one day help her to save Gustaf.

The distance lain behind her was long enough for the eight-year-old to finally take a break and throw a look over her right shoulder, and as fate would have it, the timing was just right for her to do it the moment a large, rather rubicund, flushed-looking man chose to step out in front of her. Normally, she would have neatly side-stepped, but Twist in her arms and eyes behind her, there was neither much room nor space for her to do damage control, and the inevitable happened.

“Ouf!” she exclaimed as her body pulled backwards from the impact, landing herself straight into a puddle assembled on the sloppy, uneven pavement, and she quickly felt the dirty water drench her now smeared, emerald green robe. If she had still been anywhere near camp, Madame Noire would have skinned her alive.

Meanwhile, the hood had fallen down, exposing her face to the stranger, and the dog, fighting to get out of the girl’s embrace, was clutched even tighter as her right-hand fingers curled around the brim of the hood, yanking it upwards in what could have looked like both a calm and frightened movement. The drunk of course started brawling, but Asta wasn’t particularly scared. He reminded her too much of Chipper.

There had been a reporter once, coming to the fun fair under the presumption that he was just any josser, but afterwards he had stalked around the grounds, finding their meat hall, walking around asking questions. Chipper had been in an unusually good mood, the corners of his lips tugging infinitely closer to his chin, a deadpan expression stuck on his features, as if someone had taken his face and turned it inside out. With the journalist disappearing in the distance, they had all beat up laughter to equal those of Agamemnon and Thor – at least the way Asta imagined them – and she had mimicked them, trying to pretend like she knew what they were laughing about.

Chipper’s facial expression had stayed put. He was mute.

Anyway, there had to be a reason why this man had stopped her right here. Fate. Some sign. Something she needed to see. Some-

Her gaze travelled upwards to linger by the wooden plank hanging outside the door, absentmindedly covering the black tights and sparkly, purple circus suit with her favourite pattern on, this time making sure to sidestep the fellow whose vision was apparently so blurred that he hadn’t noticed she’d upped and left.

While standing on the ledge to The… Le- Leak- Leaking Ca- Cau- Cowdrone (it sounded like one of those cows that had been abducted by aliens in the middle of a corn field, because they did that, aliens, abducted cows, and it was always from corn fields, because those were the easiest to make signs in with their laser beams), trying to get a firm grasp on the handle, two men butted their way out fiercely, grabbing the larger man, who obviously had trouble navigating his own legs, and dragged him along, slithering down the road from the weight of the heavy body. Asta observed them a little, almost mesmerized, until she heard the bell go off again and slipped through the legs of a couple of confused, exiting customers, Twist still tugged safely in her grasp.

As she entered the bevvy, the dog was immediately left to its own business on the floor, and dark eyes went over the shallow details in awe. She had never been allowed in a bar before, let alone a real pub. Not that they were even supposed to know that word. Once, she and Gustaf had asked around for the meaning of bevvy, which was, at least, their jib. Madame Noire had made them take care of the pig’s toenails. The great, grey ones, that was, not the brown, cuddly ones. Although, their toenails had probably been equally disgusting.

That was the way it was always done at the gaff. If something had gone wrong at camp and one of them had something to do with it, so did the other. The state of nature, as Madame Noire had learned the hard way, as she called it; experience.

“Chavi! Always learn from others’ failures. Much less painful!”

It was always said in a snuffling, drawling tone of voice, and often accompanied by a hiccup or two. The poor donah had no idea that she was their greatest teacher.

Perusing the people inside, eyes wide with fascination, she noticed they all wore cloaks just like hers, almost in as sprawled colours as her own. It had been a gift from Chipper and Gustaf. The only reason Madame had let her keep it, was because it was fanciful (and because she knew, by the end of their punishment, she would still get the pleasure of hearing them say ‘Thank you’ and ‘Bona’). Here they were, though, lined up, leaning against the bar as if they were normal people on an ordinary day. Travellers. Her head shot to the left. Some of them probably Romani. Definitely a challenge. Could she pickpocket them?

It was not that Asta meant to, it had just become habit. When people had lined up outside to buy tickets, or billets, as Madame called them, when they had been in awe on the benches over Eloise or choking on their own laughter from watching Chipper and Cruddy, when they were just walking around the fun fair, looking at animals or waiting in line for the galloper or dukkering, that was when Asta and Gustaf were truly in their ace. The market trained skilled thieves.

Another boy had been introduced once, Dave or David, Daniel or something, someone to ‘help’ them ‘expand their profits’. It had taken one pointed look between her and Gustaf, and the kid had been done for; a single, well-placed piece of jewellery hidden under his bed was all it took. Madame Noire took no excuses for good, and the boy had been working with the pigs until he had finally run away.
Of course, when Eloise had repeated the gesture and run away with Phineas, the red-haired pig-trainer who always gave them sweets, Asta had stepped in, taking her place.

She had always been the line-dancer, at first with net, because sometimes the mingers would come and supervise that everything went on according to the law (“But their law don’t apply here,” she heard the woman rage, “They’ll see.”), but on her sixth birthday it had been without (Madame called it a ‘treat’. Since then Asta had never understood Trick or Treat. Was it like pest or cholera?), and by her seventh she could sling herself down the corde pareille, just like Eloise, the princess dancing down from the roof, holding on with only her legs.

It had happened that she had fallen from the rope without the safety net (all the way down she had sulked about Madame Noire’s stupid treats), but the old woman had apparently had some sort of foresight, because the ground had turned all wobbly underneath Asta like an air matress, not hard at all, like it used to, and slung back into the air, her hand was quickly locked firmly around the rope once more.

Sometimes she had wondered if she was happy the D-boy had gone, or if she envied him. Now, however, she had gotten her escape.

It hadn’t been her intention to leave Gustaf behind, it really hadn’t.

No longer remembering who had come first or where they had come from, there was a common understanding that it didn’t matter, because they would always be together. It was a lie, of course, because it mattered where she came from, she knew, and they wouldn’t always be together. Like now; they weren’t together now. And she had promised with the pinky and the spit and everything. He was her best friend, her brother, and she had left him. But he had asked her to – did that make it alright?

Once, they had lain sprawled on a mound a little outside the troop’s area, trying to visualise the stars through the rays of the sun. Someone had once told her the stars were suns too, but obviously they were wrong, because the stars twinkled and were much smaller, and while she lay there, contemplating the meaning of such nonsense, Gustaf had asked if she wanted to marry him. They hadn’t been very old, of course, Asta told herself, and he had only made a ring out of a flower (it was an especially appropriated skill that the girl would have liked to educe from herself, but Gustaf had been the one blessed with dexterity), but she had turned him down.

Wanting to was not enough, she had learned from an early age, because she had dreams, and one of those dreams were being married so she could take her husband’s name and finally become someone, belong to someone, feel part of a family. Gustaf didn’t have a last name either, so if they married, they would keep on being nobodies with no last names, and Asta didn’t want that.

The troop was their family, of course, but Asta didn’t fancy herself sliding down ropes and pulling money from people’s waist pockets when Madame dictated they hadn’t paid enough (which was just about always) for the rest of her life.

No, the world she had entered here was exciting and new, and people looked like her. She was no outcast, and she was free. Asta decided to stay.

It wasn’t as if Asta hated Madame Noire. The woman had always looked scary, thin like a skeleton, her long, greasy, black hair falling in cascades to her waist, the thin lips coated in red lipstick, but never had they quirked upwards in a smile. That would have been even more scary. Predictable to the very end, Ducky had a predilection for old, worn hats she had fixed up herself, and not even that, but she always did the troop the courtesy of putting on one to match her mood. Asta kept track.

A tall, black one for her maestro time in the manége, a purple one with a dotted net to cover her eyes for mischief (like talking to investors), a red beret for punishment etc. etc.

Bats could be nice too, though, Asta mused secretively to herself, and even Madame Noire had redeeming features about her. Normally, the two of them got clothes. Often bought in a chovey (second-hand, of course), but sparkly and puffy, just the way she liked it, patterns of stars, moons and suns in colourful splashes. However, there had been rare fractions of life, little niches in time where the woman had set it upon herself to read to them too. Grand tales of big heroes and old gods introduced Asta to a world of symbolism, one she had even been allowed to explore herself as the donah had brought the children to a public library once. The girl had known what she wanted and attempted to spend hours there, simultaneously knowing all too well that she wouldn’t be allowed, due to Madame’s mercurial fancies of the moment, but she had gotten things done and had reached a point where a whole piece of paper had been filled with her handwriting on the origin and meaning of her name.

Of course, she could spell. “Who else would have the time to write the bills, hmm?” Madame’s voice sounded in her head.

 
Pocketing the notes safely in the forest green satchel that flopped back against her waist as she released it, she quickly rummaged through the contents, assuring herself that all her other notes and the secret code was still there. Not that she expected anyone to be skilled enough to steal from her, not that anyone would understand much of it if they did, but there were dinari down there too, and she needed those. Besides, those notes were important, just not to anyone but her.

One piece stuck out from the others. It was written on neat, completely white paper. Madame had said something about an official investor, and Asta had gratefully snapped the opportunity to write visibly, all her notes on aliens.

You see, Madame was like one person, accommodating both Chipper and Cruddy, but never in balance, never at the same time, so when she had learned that Asta had used her tales to research her heritage, she had told her the real story of her mother and father; how they had been in love and lying on a corn field, eating lots of corn and kissing (“Eww,” remarked Asta, scrunching up her nose and craning her neck to the side, but the woman had grabbed her ear and yelled at her to listen), when suddenly, the sky had darkened and the evil aliens had taken all the cows and Asta’s parents.

Since then, Madame Noire had always surrendered her cut-outs from newspapers of the new sightings, and Asta had never quite taken a liking to lightning.

Cramming the paper down again, she suddenly eyed a man, and considering him observantly, she witnessed him looking around himself six times to each side, before stepping out a small door on the other side of the smoky room. Six was her lucky number, so twelve had to be double as lucky, right?

Crouching down, she took a hold of the unwilling puppy, eyes still trained on the stranger, quickly jumping to her feet and traversing the damp, crowded room, with the lovely warmth emanating from pipes and loud, clattering chit chat. He almost escaped her, but she hooked him once more as she pushed through the legs of a couple of older men, one with a squeaky, quivering voice, the other a deep bass (just like Chipper and Cruddy, Asta realised), and the wild hunt continued, inattentive as she was to her pet’s vigorous protests.

Following him silently into a small backyard, she crept into the shadows, staying glued up against one of the crummy walls, only thinly disguised by the shadows provided in the rainy atmosphere. It had almost been a shock, stepping out, but Asta had known worse weather, and she had benefited from the heat inside the dusty old pub.

His figure was blurred in her vision, and she didn’t see his movements exactly, but what she did see was a bunch of stones suddenly moving. Her mouth trailing a silent “Woah,” the Labrador suddenly still in her arms, she watched as the wall opened and the man passed through. What was he? An alien?

Suddenly realising she would have no answers unless she decidedly went out there and got them, her feet almost burning with excitement (yes, her feet started to burn, not her stomach or her fingers or her head, because with Asta, her feet was always as good an indication as any that fireworks were about to start), and she got a move on, the complaints rapidly starting from beneath her chin again.

Walking into the alley, her eyes widened and her head turned and twisted, trying to capture all the details of the venue she had stumbled upon. People in different-coloured cloaks, just like her own, sprawled colours all around, almost no children. Asta would have guessed this was a fun fair if it hadn’t been for the lack of children.

You couldn’t have a fun fair without children, could you? Who was going to eat the candy floss of ride the galloper? Of course, only the adults could play E.O., but all the stands – Asta knew from experience that people were fond of their children, and children wanted to try out more things than parents because they didn’t have to give dinaris, and because of that correlation, children dragged their parents around to keep the gaff going. That was at least how Madame Noire had expressed it.

However, this seemed to go fairly well, even though it was pouring rain, and Asta stood on her bare feet, because she had forgotten her batts at home, observing the rustle and bustle of the street, wondering how you could have a camp that stayed the same place all year around. Because you couldn’t move real houses around, could you?

It certainly was a fancy gaff.

Meandering down the cobblestone ground, there were so many sights to be seen, and the eight-year-old didn’t for a second register the many eyes falling on and following her as she walked, naked feet, carrying a three-month-old golden Labrador, her cloak and satchel green and drenched. Nor did she stop until she stumbled upon a funny-looking sign.

Pen- Pan- Pen… dra- dragon, Pen-dragon!

That sounded like a Romani name. Asta Adelaide liked Romanis. They called her ‘rakli’, and she liked that.

Stepping up to the door, she solemnly knocked (why didn’t they just have a coloured veil?), and waited tentatively for someone to answer her. Houses were nice. At least they provided shelter from the downpour of the stupid rain.


→ ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
Note: This section is optional, and is up to you to complete.

House Request: N/A

Personality: Asta has been subdued during her years at Salem. The curriculum was not the fallout, the fact that her Omi (Filius Pendragon) seems to have started a new family without her has. Constantly searching for the place to call home after the first nine years of her life was spent on the road as a circus princess, the general feeling of loss has found her incapable of forgetting her place as no more than a scruffy little thing taken in on a rainy day.

Instead, she has forged deep emotional bonds to her godfather, Xalvador (or Sally, as she is still adamant about calling him), who has taken her around the world when she was only ten and has no other family than her. Beginning to get rather disgruntled about the women he takes home, however, she can get rather pouty.

Because she is afraid of losing the skills she learned as a circus princess, she still tries to exploit the untamed forces of magic in her into helping her crawl on the walls and dance down from a rope. Very interested in dancing in general, Asta has developed into a rather creative girl who doesn't know how to articulate her feelings and expresses them through other means instead. However, her focus on her days in the circus also leads to cleptomania.

Appearance: N/A

→ SAMPLE ROLEPLAY.
"Woah!"

Her eyes wide and mouth in a perpetual 'O', Asta suddenly remembered herself and looked away, trying to act cool. The boy across from her - and she had no idea what his name was, because this was another table, and she wasn't really supposed to be there - had just told her about the coolest clothes in the world, the sort that made you invisible and completely unknown, and for a second, Asta wanted it with all of her heart.

Then the food arrived.

"Incoming!" someone shouted, and she knew immediately what that meant. Ducking under the table, she wasn't fast enough, and a moment later, a batch of green peas went flying through the air. Mashed potato hit her cheek, spicy gravy her nose and cranberry sauce maimed her cloak while a shrill laughter rose to the enchanted ceiling and into the night.

Of course, some found it less amusing than others, and Asta felt where this was all going, so she snuck under the table to tiptoe out into the corridor, where she seemed to stumble on a screaming balloon.

"Oi!" she said, more to stop it all, because he was as bad as a Howler, and she never wanted to listen to another one of those, "Why would I take a picture of a loser, perhaps? I don't even-"

And then she recognised him.

"Hollup, you're that chaser-kid."

He was crying and it was ugly. Asta held out a hand in hopes that he might stop.

"Do you want to see something that makes me happy when I don't want to cry?"



→ ABOUT YOU.

Previous Characters (if applicable): Eve Hallows, Adam Just et al.

How did you find us?: Magic


2
Archived Applications / Asta Adelaide Pendragon
« on: 27/12/2012 at 22:36 »

Application for Salem Institute




→ CHARACTER INFORMATION.
Name: Asta Adelaide Pendragon

Birthday: April 3rd, 1926

Hometown: Unknown

Bloodline:
Unknown

Magical Strength (pick one):
Conjuring & Summoning

Magical Weakness (pick one):
Charms

Year (pick two): First, Second

Biography:
Her feet tapped lightly against the grey kerbstone ground, the rhythm steady as the pounding in her ears, a sting forming in her throat with every breath she took. The jugal in her arms was falling, and her fingers bore further into the soft fur, causing the puppy to give out a small yelp. Pulling it up with more force than needed, the small, golden Labrador jumped in her embrace, and Asta continued undeterred.

Twist had been one of the strays in Mulhouse, too young and too chubby to keep up with the others when they visited the gaff, and when Madame Noire wanted to pack up and leave, Asta had begged to keep him. The batlike woman had reluctantly agreed on the condition that she trained the dog as a buffer, but as either Asta was bad at teaching or Twist was bad at performing, he had eventually become a jugal instead. Her jugal.

Madame Noire. She was really named Duffy. Asta and Gustaf had snickered, as they had lain underneath the caravan in the dark green, moist grass, listening to the woman either suck up to an investor or yell at the workmen. Forever more beneficial when she was talking to investors, the two of them had safely pocketed the information for later use, making an entry in their secret language code to rename the feared proprietor of the troop Ducky. No reason why. Just because it sounded like Duffy and it was funny.

They had done that all the time. When you were pulled around to entertain men and women from all over the world, you picked up stray words in the language, trying to find out what it meant, twisting and turning it to crack it open, figure out its use and finally, apply it to the rebellion resources: your own language. Long summer nights while the tentmen, such as Jip and Don, the clowns, Chipper and Cruddy, and animal trainers, who Asta and Gustaf didn’t socialise with, went to the local bevvy, and cold winter nights, with nothing to do than tuck in the frayed blankets that they slept with, turned into secret messages and inventing codes for everything. Two copies had been made on paper they had nicked from the ken, safely tugged in the warm, safe environment in the green belly boxes under the reddish caravan (-ish because the colour had worn off from the dust grinding against the sides when they drove them down the road), torn a little from the moist they had endured on rainy days, but Madame Noire had never found them.

Asta had brought her copy with her, certain that it would one day help her to save Gustaf.

The distance lain behind her was long enough for the eight-year-old to finally take a break and throw a look over her right shoulder, and as fate would have it, the timing was just right for her to do it the moment a large, rather rubicund, flushed-looking man chose to step out in front of her. Normally, she would have neatly side-stepped, but Twist in her arms and eyes behind her, there was neither much room nor space for her to do damage control, and the inevitable happened.

“Ouf!” she exclaimed as her body pulled backwards from the impact, landing herself straight into a puddle assembled on the sloppy, uneven pavement, and she quickly felt the dirty water drench her now smeared, emerald green robe. If she had still been anywhere near camp, Madame Noire would have skinned her alive.

Meanwhile, the hood had fallen down, exposing her face to the stranger, and the dog, fighting to get out of the girl’s embrace, was clutched even tighter as her right-hand fingers curled around the brim of the hood, yanking it upwards in what could have looked like both a calm and frightened movement. The drunk of course started brawling, but Asta wasn’t particularly scared. He reminded her too much of Chipper.

There had been a reporter once, coming to the fun fair under the presumption that he was just any josser, but afterwards he had stalked around the grounds, finding their meat hall, walking around asking questions. Chipper had been in an unusually good mood, the corners of his lips tugging infinitely closer to his chin, a deadpan expression stuck on his features, as if someone had taken his face and turned it inside out. With the journalist disappearing in the distance, they had all beat up laughter to equal those of Agamemnon and Thor – at least the way Asta imagined them – and she had mimicked them, trying to pretend like she knew what they were laughing about.

Chipper’s facial expression had stayed put. He was mute.

Anyway, there had to be a reason why this man had stopped her right here. Fate. Some sign. Something she needed to see. Some-

Her gaze travelled upwards to linger by the wooden plank hanging outside the door, absentmindedly covering the black tights and sparkly, purple circus suit with her favourite pattern on, this time making sure to sidestep the fellow whose vision was apparently so blurred that he hadn’t noticed she’d upped and left.

While standing on the ledge to The… Le- Leak- Leaking Ca- Cau- Cowdrone (it sounded like one of those cows that had been abducted by aliens in the middle of a corn field, because they did that, aliens, abducted cows, and it was always from corn fields, because those were the easiest to make signs in with their laser beams), trying to get a firm grasp on the handle, two men butted their way out fiercely, grabbing the larger man, who obviously had trouble navigating his own legs, and dragged him along, slithering down the road from the weight of the heavy body. Asta observed them a little, almost mesmerized, until she heard the bell go off again and slipped through the legs of a couple of confused, exiting customers, Twist still tugged safely in her grasp.

As she entered the bevvy, the dog was immediately left to its own business on the floor, and dark eyes went over the shallow details in awe. She had never been allowed in a bar before, let alone a real pub. Not that they were even supposed to know that word. Once, she and Gustaf had asked around for the meaning of bevvy, which was, at least, their jib. Madame Noire had made them take care of the pig’s toenails. The great, grey ones, that was, not the brown, cuddly ones. Although, their toenails had probably been equally disgusting.

That was the way it was always done at the gaff. If something had gone wrong at camp and one of them had something to do with it, so did the other. The state of nature, as Madame Noire had learned the hard way, as she called it; experience.

“Chavi! Always learn from others’ failures. Much less painful!”

It was always said in a snuffling, drawling tone of voice, and often accompanied by a hiccup or two. The poor donah had no idea that she was their greatest teacher.

Perusing the people inside, eyes wide with fascination, she noticed they all wore cloaks just like hers, almost in as sprawled colours as her own. It had been a gift from Chipper and Gustaf. The only reason Madame had let her keep it, was because it was fanciful (and because she knew, by the end of their punishment, she would still get the pleasure of hearing them say ‘Thank you’ and ‘Bona’). Here they were, though, lined up, leaning against the bar as if they were normal people on an ordinary day. Travellers. Her head shot to the left. Some of them probably Romani. Definitely a challenge. Could she pickpocket them?

It was not that Asta meant to, it had just become habit. When people had lined up outside to buy tickets, or billets, as Madame called them, when they had been in awe on the benches over Eloise or choking on their own laughter from watching Chipper and Cruddy, when they were just walking around the fun fair, looking at animals or waiting in line for the galloper or dukkering, that was when Asta and Gustaf were truly in their ace. The market trained skilled thieves.

Another boy had been introduced once, Dave or David, Daniel or something, someone to ‘help’ them ‘expand their profits’. It had taken one pointed look between her and Gustaf, and the kid had been done for; a single, well-placed piece of jewellery hidden under his bed was all it took. Madame Noire took no excuses for good, and the boy had been working with the pigs until he had finally run away.
Of course, when Eloise had repeated the gesture and run away with Phineas, the red-haired pig-trainer who always gave them sweets, Asta had stepped in, taking her place.

She had always been the line-dancer, at first with net, because sometimes the mingers would come and supervise that everything went on according to the law (“But their law don’t apply here,” she heard the woman rage, “They’ll see.”), but on her sixth birthday it had been without (Madame called it a ‘treat’. Since then Asta had never understood Trick or Treat. Was it like pest or cholera?), and by her seventh she could sling herself down the corde pareille, just like Eloise, the princess dancing down from the roof, holding on with only her legs.

It had happened that she had fallen from the rope without the safety net (all the way down she had sulked about Madame Noire’s stupid treats), but the old woman had apparently had some sort of foresight, because the ground had turned all wobbly underneath Asta like an air matress, not hard at all, like it used to, and slung back into the air, her hand was quickly locked firmly around the rope once more.

Sometimes she had wondered if she was happy the D-boy had gone, or if she envied him. Now, however, she had gotten her escape.

It hadn’t been her intention to leave Gustaf behind, it really hadn’t.

No longer remembering who had come first or where they had come from, there was a common understanding that it didn’t matter, because they would always be together. It was a lie, of course, because it mattered where she came from, she knew, and they wouldn’t always be together. Like now; they weren’t together now. And she had promised with the pinky and the spit and everything. He was her best friend, her brother, and she had left him. But he had asked her to – did that make it alright?

Once, they had lain sprawled on a mound a little outside the troop’s area, trying to visualise the stars through the rays of the sun. Someone had once told her the stars were suns too, but obviously they were wrong, because the stars twinkled and were much smaller, and while she lay there, contemplating the meaning of such nonsense, Gustaf had asked if she wanted to marry him. They hadn’t been very old, of course, Asta told herself, and he had only made a ring out of a flower (it was an especially appropriated skill that the girl would have liked to educe from herself, but Gustaf had been the one blessed with dexterity), but she had turned him down.

Wanting to was not enough, she had learned from an early age, because she had dreams, and one of those dreams were being married so she could take her husband’s name and finally become someone, belong to someone, feel part of a family. Gustaf didn’t have a last name either, so if they married, they would keep on being nobodies with no last names, and Asta didn’t want that.

The troop was their family, of course, but Asta didn’t fancy herself sliding down ropes and pulling money from people’s waist pockets when Madame dictated they hadn’t paid enough (which was just about always) for the rest of her life.

No, the world she had entered here was exciting and new, and people looked like her. She was no outcast, and she was free. Asta decided to stay.

It wasn’t as if Asta hated Madame Noire. The woman had always looked scary, thin like a skeleton, her long, greasy, black hair falling in cascades to her waist, the thin lips coated in red lipstick, but never had they quirked upwards in a smile. That would have been even more scary. Predictable to the very end, Ducky had a predilection for old, worn hats she had fixed up herself, and not even that, but she always did the troop the courtesy of putting on one to match her mood. Asta kept track.

A tall, black one for her maestro time in the manége, a purple one with a dotted net to cover her eyes for mischief (like talking to investors), a red beret for punishment etc. etc.

Bats could be nice too, though, Asta mused secretively to herself, and even Madame Noire had redeeming features about her. Normally, the two of them got clothes. Often bought in a chovey (second-hand, of course), but sparkly and puffy, just the way she liked it, patterns of stars, moons and suns in colourful splashes. However, there had been rare fractions of life, little niches in time where the woman had set it upon herself to read to them too. Grand tales of big heroes and old gods introduced Asta to a world of symbolism, one she had even been allowed to explore herself as the donah had brought the children to a public library once. The girl had known what she wanted and attempted to spend hours there, simultaneously knowing all too well that she wouldn’t be allowed, due to Madame’s mercurial fancies of the moment, but she had gotten things done and had reached a point where a whole piece of paper had been filled with her handwriting on the origin and meaning of her name.

Of course, she could spell. “Who else would have the time to write the bills, hmm?” Madame’s voice sounded in her head.

 
Pocketing the notes safely in the forest green satchel that flopped back against her waist as she released it, she quickly rummaged through the contents, assuring herself that all her other notes and the secret code was still there. Not that she expected anyone to be skilled enough to steal from her, not that anyone would understand much of it if they did, but there were dinari down there too, and she needed those. Besides, those notes were important, just not to anyone but her.

One piece stuck out from the others. It was written on neat, completely white paper. Madame had said something about an official investor, and Asta had gratefully snapped the opportunity to write visibly, all her notes on aliens.

You see, Madame was like one person, accommodating both Chipper and Cruddy, but never in balance, never at the same time, so when she had learned that Asta had used her tales to research her heritage, she had told her the real story of her mother and father; how they had been in love and lying on a corn field, eating lots of corn and kissing (“Eww,” remarked Asta, scrunching up her nose and craning her neck to the side, but the woman had grabbed her ear and yelled at her to listen), when suddenly, the sky had darkened and the evil aliens had taken all the cows and Asta’s parents.

Since then, Madame Noire had always surrendered her cut-outs from newspapers of the new sightings, and Asta had never quite taken a liking to lightning.

Cramming the paper down again, she suddenly eyed a man, and considering him observantly, she witnessed him looking around himself six times to each side, before stepping out a small door on the other side of the smoky room. Six was her lucky number, so twelve had to be double as lucky, right?

Crouching down, she took a hold of the unwilling puppy, eyes still trained on the stranger, quickly jumping to her feet and traversing the damp, crowded room, with the lovely warmth emanating from pipes and loud, clattering chit chat. He almost escaped her, but she hooked him once more as she pushed through the legs of a couple of older men, one with a squeaky, quivering voice, the other a deep bass (just like Chipper and Cruddy, Asta realised), and the wild hunt continued, inattentive as she was to her pet’s vigorous protests.

Following him silently into a small backyard, she crept into the shadows, staying glued up against one of the crummy walls, only thinly disguised by the shadows provided in the rainy atmosphere. It had almost been a shock, stepping out, but Asta had known worse weather, and she had benefited from the heat inside the dusty old pub.

His figure was blurred in her vision, and she didn’t see his movements exactly, but what she did see was a bunch of stones suddenly moving. Her mouth trailing a silent “Woah,” the Labrador suddenly still in her arms, she watched as the wall opened and the man passed through. What was he? An alien?

Suddenly realising she would have no answers unless she decidedly went out there and got them, her feet almost burning with excitement (yes, her feet started to burn, not her stomach or her fingers or her head, because with Asta, her feet was always as good an indication as any that fireworks were about to start), and she got a move on, the complaints rapidly starting from beneath her chin again.

Walking into the alley, her eyes widened and her head turned and twisted, trying to capture all the details of the venue she had stumbled upon. People in different-coloured cloaks, just like her own, sprawled colours all around, almost no children. Asta would have guessed this was a fun fair if it hadn’t been for the lack of children.

You couldn’t have a fun fair without children, could you? Who was going to eat the candy floss of ride the galloper? Of course, only the adults could play E.O., but all the stands – Asta knew from experience that people were fond of their children, and children wanted to try out more things than parents because they didn’t have to give dinaris, and because of that correlation, children dragged their parents around to keep the gaff going. That was at least how Madame Noire had expressed it.

However, this seemed to go fairly well, even though it was pouring rain, and Asta stood on her bare feet, because she had forgotten her batts at home, observing the rustle and bustle of the street, wondering how you could have a camp that stayed the same place all year around. Because you couldn’t move real houses around, could you?

It certainly was a fancy gaff.

Meandering down the cobblestone ground, there were so many sights to be seen, and the eight-year-old didn’t for a second register the many eyes falling on and following her as she walked, naked feet, carrying a three-month-old golden Labrador, her cloak and satchel green and drenched. Nor did she stop until she stumbled upon a funny-looking sign.

Pen- Pan- Pen… dra- dragon, Pen-dragon!

That sounded like a Romani name. Asta Adelaide liked Romanis. They called her ‘rakli’, and she liked that.

Stepping up to the door, she solemnly knocked (why didn’t they just have a coloured veil?), and waited tentatively for someone to answer her. Houses were nice. At least they provided shelter from the downpour of the stupid rain.


→ ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
Note: This section is optional, and is up to you to complete.

Society Request: N/A

Personality: N/A

Appearance: N/A

→ SAMPLE ROLEPLAY.
Please reply to the Sample Roleplay below.
'Twas unfair. Omi was probably having the time of his life, and she wasn't even allowed to do anything but boring Sybill Wort-essays - why did the Merricans have such weird names for their fights anyway? The Thirty Year's War that Nani had once spoken of had seemed pretty straightforward, considering it had lasted for thirty years.

With a pout and a sigh, Asta dropped the quill she'd been tapping against the cover of her book for the last five minutes, straightening with a red mark on her cheek from the hand that had cupped her face while her gaze slowly turned from the blazing sun and people on the Quodpot field outside to the boy next to her.

A desolate pair of eyes came to rest on some old pieces of paper, sallow with age, and the girl tilted them upwards with one end of the feathered quill, a flash of disgust crinkling the bridge of her nose at the mushroom of dust that rose when she finally closed it again.

Asta would have given anything to be able to comment on the Quodpot game instead of sitting, nearly choking from the stuffy air that crammed the two of them inside the library on the most beautiful day in all of September.

"How about I write the essay and stuff?"

Quickly, head spinning from the movement, she turned to glance at the boy to her left. 'Twas too goo-

"Nu-uuh. You'd just tattle-tail on me!"

There was not an ounce of trust in the young girl's voice as her eyes narrowed suspiciously to catch his reaction to that, and a satisfied smirk penetrated her features as she mused she'd probably caught the perpetrator right in the act.

→ ABOUT YOU.

Previous Characters (if applicable): Eve Hallows, AJ et al.

How did you find us?: Google


3
Elsewhere Accepted / Emélie d'Acquitaine-Berlot
« on: 24/10/2012 at 08:07 »

E L S E W H E R E   A D U L T

CHARACTER INFORMATION
Character Name: Emélie d'Acquitaine-Berlot
Gender: Female, I should hope
Age: 26 as per the 5th of August, 1936

Education:
L'école Conservatif (de Madame Morseau), Class of '21
L'Academie de Magie Beauxbâtons, Class of '27


Residence:
Intern Alley 1, Room 22a
London


Occupation:
Flirt

Do you plan to have a connection to a particular existing place (for example: the Ministry, Shrieking Shack) or to take over an existing shop in need of new management?
Pas du tout

Requested Magic Levels:
  • Charms: 6
  • Transfiguration: 6
  • Divination: 12
  • Summoning: 8
Do you wish to be approved as a group with any other characters? If so who and for what IC reason?
Pas du tout

Please list any other characters you already have at the site:
Eve H., Adam J. et al.

Biography: (300 words minimum.)
"So you are French?"

A giggle cracked the silence like egg shells, and the bell rang. An apologetic shrug heaved up in her shoulders and raised eyebrows whisked away the young man. She didn't care to check if he was looking back after her.

"Hello."

Dark voice, steady confirmation of authority. Turning to let her eyes wander over him, wander, not flit, because a man of authority did not need another bird in a cage, bones too fragile for fight, too quick for flight. At this point, she was a mature woman, for the previous giggles had seemed to fill the void between her and the former victim, but it had never, as he may have imagined in a fit of vanity, reached across the boundaries of their vicinity.

A nod, for it didn't need to be mysterious, but it held the potential to be, and his dark eyes, combed hair and burly constitution stood sharp in her later recollection.
Comme papa.

Daddy issues.

"What is your name?"

Shoot first, ask questions later.

"Emélie."


"Emily what?"

Commanding. Everything but her language. Connection both strengthened and hopelessly diluted, but he would like a cool woman. A conquest. In 2 minutes and 10 seconds, when their time was up, she'd move on and he'd never forget her face.

Mama would think her beyond the reach of maternal salvation, should she ever find out how she was squandering away her present time, looks and charm. Perhaps that was why Emélie was sitting in that exact spot, her back cushioned by a tacky display of red velvet against the glitter of her moonlight dress, her hair exercised in intricate design, with hairpins and curls in abundance.

"Ah-ah-aah." A finger was wagged admonishingly, but not beratingly, just enough to catch the glint in his eyes.

"My turn."

The smile that stole across her features was entertaining and mirthful, and the lumberjack across her raised an eyebrow and leaned in, unconsciously. It was almost too bad. He simply reeked of Muggle.

"Do you think you would be good for me?"

Emélie was a girl with a mission and a reason to stall. The Gaskells were a far-off consort of relatives, and she had been burdened with the heavy call of settling down the brother. Marlen. A professeur. She could have done so infinitely better than that, but family duties were the glue that held their society together, and Em, a girl of many masks, was now to bow out to her last performance.

Just one last piece of fun.

The bell rang, and another flush of faces went by, the second to last visage swimming into view.

However handsome he may have been, she saw his suit first. Pin-striped, neatly pressed, a long, oblique form bulging out from one sleeve. Slowly, interested, her gaze clawed its way up to his features, tamed into a lazy smile, peppered with befitting stubs down his jawline.

Wizard.

Finally a challenge.

He was simply sitting there, stoically calm, and she hid a smile in the palm of her hand, nothing like premeditation.

Then, leaning in as to confide, watching him mirror her actions, she looked him in the eyes in playful ardour and said, "Do you know who I am?"


Roleplay:
Reply as your character to the following:

It was impossible for Dianne to stay out of trouble. It wasn't that she was looking for trouble, it's just that trouble always managed to find her. Today she wished she could find something equally familiar but more comforting.

The five-year old girl hugged her puffskein closer to her and brushed her face in its soft fur for comfort. She had named him herself and he was always her special pet. No she was certain she had never gone down this side street before. Her anxiety increased every second as darkness fell as she walked down the road. A loud noise came to her left and she buried her face in her pet's fur completely. The scared girl bolted the opposite way slamming the both of them into the wall of the nearest building. Tottering back a few steps she found a door a few feet to her right and ran to open it. What light there was inside spilled out into the darkness and she spilled into the room.

Once in, she was caught between the impulse to curl her cloak up more tightly around her and loosen her grip on it. She wasn't alone anymore but she was now among strangers instead, which was nearly as terrifying. Her puffskein had recovered from the shock of the wall and now was purring contentedly as the girl hugged it, causing a mildly calming effect on the girl. Gathering her courage, she marched up to the nearest person, pulled on the nearest clothing hem and blurted out in a loud voice:

"I'm lost and it's dark and I wanted to know where I am but I'm not scared but I am worried that Sambundeakin is scared because he's little and needs something to eat and wants to go home."

She paused to draw a breath in her nearly never-ending sentence, "He misses my and his mommy."

To explain the scared girl held up the custard-colored puffskein. Sambundeakin the puffskein, however simply purred as if nothing on earth was wrong in the world.

Roleplay Response:
Clinks of glasses and a murmur of reprieved conversation rose from the booths of classy decoration and silent appraisal ran along the outskirts of her gaze, long-held by a gentleman by the bar.

He could be no less than 30, and yet she found him as youthful as herself, as childishly indulging as she could ever have wished for.

It smelled trouble.

As he sat down with a couple of glasses of wine, she did not allow for a glance at the red swirl that was so elegantly put before her, for he was taking up the majority of her conscience, and she did not mind.


"You are staring, ma cherie," he commented, his own gaze long lost in the finery of the French Bordeaux.

"I am aware," she responded, "I have command of my own eyes, my darling."

He was so delightfully British, and she so coquettishly French, and she stared more to squeeze out a drop of uneasiness, but he took it with calmness and candour, and she almost laughed.

Finally finished with feigning interest in the alcohol before him, he leaned forward to prop a single elbow on the surface of the table, something she directly noted, something he directly smiled at, knowing.

Just about to open his mouth and flood the scene with the freshness of new conversation, however, the door opened, a bell tolled, and Emélie lost her concentration.

In waltzed an element of surprise, and she scrunched up her nose. A second later, the girl was at their doorstep.

He seemed to listen with amusement and a flash of concern, but Emélie simply stared dully at the frightfully unfit child. What was she, seven? And she hadn't even proposed where they might find her mother, where she lived or disclosed any helpful information yet.

When it finally stopped rambling, the discourse was certain.

Snapping once, Emélie raised her hand.

"Waiter, if you please!"


OTHER
How did you find us? Google

4
Elsewhere Accepted / Adam Mahogany Just
« on: 16/10/2012 at 20:38 »

E L S E W H E R E   A D U L T

CHARACTER INFORMATION
Character Name: Adam Mahogany Just
Gender: Male
Age: 18

Education:
Madam Malavia's Magical Masters, Class of '29
Gokstad, '29-'34
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Gryffindor, Class of '36


Residence:
Intern Alley 1, Room 22b
London


Occupation:
Auror In Training

Do you plan to have a connection to a particular existing place (for example: the Ministry, Shrieking Shack) or to take over an existing shop in need of new management?
The Ministry

Requested Magic Levels: *School levels, transferred from Hogwarts.

  • Charms: 10
  • Transfiguration: 11
  • Divination: 6
  • Summoning: 10
Do you wish to be approved as a group with any other characters? If so who and for what IC reason?
N/A

Please list any other characters you already have at the site:
Eve Hallows, Asta Adelaide, Jared Malhearst et al.

Biography: (300 words minimum.)
“Ja, jeg savner også dig.”

The words were familiar in his mouth, and he sighed as he spoke out his native language in what was supposed to be comforting words. In fact, telling his best friend he missed her was probably only making the situation worse.

A door slammed open behind him, and AJ flew into an upright standing position, hands on his back, as if that would make it less obvious that he had used the fireplace to communicate with the Danish redhead. His father slowly came into view, and the more AJ attempted to look completely innocent, the more persistent the Englishman became in scrutinising his facial features. At last, his father’s eyes darted towards the fireplace, where bright orange flames were cackling joyously.
His father covered the distance between them in two steps, pulled his son aside, went down on all fours and stuck his head into the fire.

Now, this might all seem like a completely arbitrary and somewhat foolish thing to do, but it wasn’t in the Just family.

Growing up in a family of wizards, used to use the hot, friendly flames instead of the telephone, this was not something Adam Just frowned upon either. Instead he turned his eyes towards the ceiling, letting his arms rise and fall resignedly, while his father said, “Well hello there, Melissa. Adam’ll have to light you later.”

Chuckling at his own joke, his father rose to his feet again, absent-mindedly dusting the sod of his hands and knees while shaking his head at what he must have thought was adorable silliness. He was like that, AJ’s father. Full of horrible jokes and ideas that they were funny.

Turning towards AJ, his facial features suddenly became serious, and he threw his right arm around AJ’s shoulders paternally, as he guided him to the kitchen.

“Listen AJ, I understand how you feel. But you’ll make friends here as well.”

In the kitchen they bumped into AJ’s mother, who was slicing tomatoes the Muggle way. Adam knew it was her silent protest against moving to West Sussex from Valby in Denmark, a suspicion confirmed by her tense air and the worried look his father shot her before turning himself and AJ towards the dinner table.

With supper being mere minutes away, his father didn’t pursue the subject any further. He knew it was two against one.

They sat down at the wooden table in front of them, his father banging his thigh against the tabletop as usual, and silence fell upon the dark stone-wall kitchen. It was an eerie feeling, as life at the Just house was normally cheerful and filled with colour. AJ considered a few words of consolation for his father, maybe just a pat on the back, but he figured it was no use.

In fact, AJ wasn’t truly angry with his father. He felt bad for his mother. It was going to be harder on her than it would be on him. On the other hand, he felt the need to let his father know he wasn’t pleased with the ‘you-have-no-choice’ approach to the situation. Had he been asked, he would probably have come willingly. Or, maybe not. He wasn’t sure how he would have reacted, or what he wanted from his father; he just knew, he needed time to let it go.

Whatever ‘it’ was.


Roleplay:
Reply as your character to the following:

It was impossible for Dianne to stay out of trouble. It wasn't that she was looking for trouble, it's just that trouble always managed to find her. Today she wished she could find something equally familiar but more comforting.

The five-year old girl hugged her puffskein closer to her and brushed her face in its soft fur for comfort. She had named him herself and he was always her special pet. No she was certain she had never gone down this side street before. Her anxiety increased every second as darkness fell as she walked down the road. A loud noise came to her left and she buried her face in her pet's fur completely. The scared girl bolted the opposite way slamming the both of them into the wall of the nearest building. Tottering back a few steps she found a door a few feet to her right and ran to open it. What light there was inside spilled out into the darkness and she spilled into the room.

Once in, she was caught between the impulse to curl her cloak up more tightly around her and loosen her grip on it. She wasn't alone anymore but she was now among strangers instead, which was nearly as terrifying. Her puffskein had recovered from the shock of the wall and now was purring contentedly as the girl hugged it, causing a mildly calming effect on the girl. Gathering her courage, she marched up to the nearest person, pulled on the nearest clothing hem and blurted out in a loud voice:

"I'm lost and it's dark and I wanted to know where I am but I'm not scared but I am worried that Sambundeakin is scared because he's little and needs something to eat and wants to go home."

She paused to draw a breath in her nearly never-ending sentence, "He misses my and his mommy."

To explain the scared girl held up the custard-colored puffskein. Sambundeakin the puffskein, however simply purred as if nothing on earth was wrong in the world.

Roleplay Response: *Permission to powerplay Tessa Alcott granted by player.

"Here you go."

The mugs connected with the glassy surface with a loud clank, and AJ turned to wipe of the dew off his clothes. A quick flick of his wand later, and the glasses were dry and un-slippery, ready for the redhead opposite him to take a swig. It wasn't long into November, and sometimes, all he needed was a brief brush of Tessa to remind him that Koren was not his life, and that he wasn't always on swinging ground.

It was almost impossible to hear anything over the chatter of voices that rose above their heads from the amount of guests frequenting the restaurant, but it was manageably pricy and invitingly comfortable, and the auror-in-training leaned back in his chair at a leisure pace, trying his best not to slump, wanting to do nothing but.

Oh, sod it. Tessa wasn't Ellerie.

"I'm lost and it's dark and I..."

Jittery, AJ jumped in his seat, noticing that he had closed his eyes for a second there before turning to make out the source of the voice.

Beside him stood a little girl, holding a puffskein to his face, making no sense at all.

"He misses my and his mommy."

"Ah, right... OK."

He threw a nervous glance at the girl opposite him, half expecting her to break in and take over the conversation, and the boy wasn't quit sure if he was thankful for that or if he wanted to prove-

Oh, he didn't need to finish that sentence at all.

"Alright darling," he said, beaming genially at the little girl, stroking Sam-butt-kin or whatever she'd named it slowly, "We'll help you find your way back home."

Turning towards the healer-in-training, he shot her a smirk.

"Won't we, Tess?"

Then, directing his attention towards the little one once more, he said jovially, "Where do you live?"


OTHER
How did you find us? Google

5

CHARACTER INFORMATION
Character Name: Jared Nemo Malhearst
Gender: Male
Age: 42 as per August 8, 1974

Education: 
Capella Cavanagh, Private tutoring September ‘38- July ‘43
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Slytherin ‘43


Residence:
Chestnut Lodge
Dog Ln, Horsford, Norwich
NR10 3DH, UK


Applying to be: (select one, see here)
Bureau Chief**

*OOC access to graphics editing programs (e.g. GIMP, Photoshop, Microsoft Paint) and some graphics editing knowledge highly recommended.
**If Bureau Chief, fill out the section at the very bottom at the application. Please also note that these applications will take longer to process.


Department of choice: (select one)
Domestic/Politics

Why did you request that particular department?
A man of more ambition than greed, Jared would never care for Style/Gossip. On the contrary, he believes it, not surprisingly, a superficial pastime that ought to be largely exposed for the sorry sap it is. Foreign could have suited him, considering that he’s been out travelling the world (Europe, mostly) for the past sixteen years, but he didn’t return to do what he’s been doing the last one and a half decade; he returned to make a difference, in particular for SM and the Order, wishing to see the policies that he so burningly believes in come to pass as reality – and like a wise woman once said, what better way to do this than controlling the media and public opinion?

Requested Magic Levels: (see here on how to do this)
  • Charms: 9
  • Transfiguration: 13
  • Divination: 6
  • Summoning: 7

Please list any other characters you already have at the site:
Eve Hallows, Adam Just, Asta Adelaide et al.

Biography: (300 words minimum.)
It was a noisy shadow that entered The Royal that evening, but unlike so many others, it didn’t dim the lights and snake up against the walls, a fugitive from the light. The doors swung up as though they’d been touched by a force of nature, and clad in nothing more distinctive than a fedora and a long coat, it moved with long strides towards the counter.

“Where is he?”

Jared Malhearst needed no introduction, for he was known, if not by his real name or appearance, then by the countless others he’d given. A fedora was a supercilious piece of clothing, and the boisterous businessman was an act he’d long since perfected. Polyjuice Potion was not cheap, nor easily crafted, and transfiguration had become a shabby, but useful alternative for so long that Jared no longer minded the imperfections. They gave his character style.

A twitch bloomed underneath the right eye of the scrawny receptionist, brown eyes struggling to keep eye contact. In the end, it broke, and the boy, no more than in his early twenties, typical Viennese, sought refuge in the papers in front of him, pretending to search for an answer he didn’t feel comfortable giving, which elicited a small smile from the man currently occupied with looking through the mandatory stack of tourist brochures as though he cared.

Thumbing through the pages of a national park no more than 25 miles away (but what was time and space when you had control of every force in the world), Jared Malhearst played his part to perfection. It was not his first businessman, and it wouldn’t be the last, nor was the incessant scratching behind his right ear, the snapping, or the stressing of every second syllable the only factors of impatience he marveled in feigning. In an occupation where you needed to blend in, you had to stand out as well, and the former Englishman knew his roles well before they knew him.

This particular businessman happened to be a delightful irritation, thus much more the pleasure to steal from, and though Mr. Rochester was no longer an issue to Jared, he was still playing his part in society through the man who stole his identity.

Some had called the 42-year-old a vampire, sucking the life out of a person to steal it for himself, and the pureblood accepted that metaphor readily, gleeful almost, still the child that never quite stopped viewing himself through the eyes of others.

Another reason for why he was so good at what he did.

“He’s waiting in your room, Sir,” came the squeak, finally, defeat evident in every little signal, and Jared’s gaze snapped up to rest, judging, on the boy.

He would never grow into a man.

“You took your sweet time for such simple information. I need the paper brought up by 6 tomorrow,” (he didn’t) “the coffee was stale,” (he wouldn’t know, he had fed the sludge to the plants) “and someone discreet to help carry a body.”

Before him, the receptionist visibly blanched, then turned ash grey, and the apparent businessman in the fedora took his sweet time to revel in it before surrendering a queasy smile (for Mr. Rochester had been an awkward man when he wasn’t powerful), saying, “I’m kidding, of course.”

The kid never completely relaxed, even as the looming figure before him bent down to pick up a suitcase with no articles in it and disappeared out the hall towards the escalators.

***

It was done, and the grey-haired man that stared back at Jared in the mirror looked bored. He was comfortable without his own features, for he was no longer a novice in a mask, having worked for Supra Mortalitas for sixteen years now, on missions that required expertise he had had all the time in the world to acquire. He’d been an outcast, his disappearance suspicious, his presence a burden, and they’d provided safe passage out and safe initiation into the wondrous world he’d always strived for.

The countries, people, artifacts, they were mostly a blur. Venice had spoken the language of Rome and Turin, Istanbul had crossed religions with everyone else, Minsk had tried and failed the politics that held them down, and West Berlin communicated with East Berlin daily. People were the same, and the few outstanding ones he’d encountered had taught him what they knew, only to be left like dried vegetables.

господин Truskulevna had taught him the longest, Ms. Fairchild the shortest, but only the first and the most recent of events held any importance. Of course, the first had been monstrous, a desperate escape, crying for asylum in the hope that he would turn into enough of a monster to forget her, to forgive himself, to forget himself.

Hurt, judgemental eyes stared back at him now, the deep hazel of his father, or the murky swamp green of his mother. Hard feelings grew to stone and dissolved, for he’d been left by them, and they could only expect him to return the favour. Of course, after the death of Kiera Malhearst, no one knew what had happened to her brother, and though the sentiment was laden with reproach and doubt, Jared hoped that they felt his disappearance even stronger.

Someone had once told him that Cornelius and Sentina had lost two children that day. Jared knew that they had only lost one, for he’d been gone for years.

But her. Kiera. Perfect little diamond, strong, self-secure, his only reason to stay. She’d been beautiful, just like the picture of her daughter in his hand, and he squashed the moving image of a stone-faced first year in frustration, absorbing it in a carpet of flames before it hit the ground. Then he pulled on the cloak, straightened it determinedly, and forced a smile.

It was time to return home.


Roleplay:
Reply as your character to the following:
Jim hated Mondays.

He had always hated Mondays, really; that cursed beginning of the week, that day where it still should have been the weekend and yet there was work to be done - deadlines to be made - stupid lunch meetings to attend.  Even when ‘lunch meetings’ had been just plain lunch; ‘work’, homework, he had despised the start of classes and - all at once - the next five un-fun days before the weekend started up again.

Now, cloudy October morning, Jim hated Mondays more than ever.

His desk filled with the wide-open arms of the Sunday Prophet, he scribbled furiously over sections with a bright red ink.

All the new graduates with their impeccable NEWTs and superb teacher recommendations had come in last month, only too eager to start preaching the truth - their truth - to the whole of Wizarding Britain.

Jim’s train of thought was bitter, but he smiled wanly, for he had once been one of those recruits themselves.

Most of their dreams should have been been smashed in the first week, from the first time people like Jim had told them to fetch the group some coffee. Day after day, hour after hour, that was what they now said to their youngest colleagues, as their older counterparts had told him years before: At some point everyone has to fetch us our drinks.

Almost every year, the new recruits sat down and took it - and fetched the group some coffee - and maybe it was just the age or the nostalgia, but Jim was fairly certain that they deserved it all.

They did not deserve to publish half-coherent drafts with way too many adverbs and completely unmodulated opinions.

Jim threw down the quill in disgust, ink splattering onto his button-down shirt as though it were blood.

Smartly, he piled up bits of paper, and then, still angry, face marred by an unhappy Monday, deposited the pile in front of his door before reaching out to grab at the first person he saw.

What happened to this paper?”

Roleplay Response:
A morning as grey as London had ever delivered stared Jared Malhearst back in the face from his position by the window. Of course, he could choose any position he wanted to, for it was his office, and as many another character he had played, he owned up to everything that was his; from the tacky choice of shrubbery to the comfortable, yet impractical chair he’d elected to stay out of for as long as possible.

No, the grey sky was his companion as a reminder of what was home, for it had been lost long ago, no longer inherent in the borders that lined his birth country or the people he knew, for none of them knew him. He’d been gone for too long, and he knew he did not adapt well to himself. People here expected him to be Jared Malhearst, intimidating but human beneath it all, cranky about the weather like everyone else. They complained about the clouds, but he’d quickly established that it was not the dreary horizon that ruined his mood; it was them.

So far, so good, he’d lived up to at least one of their expectations.

On the desk lay a stack of papers, every single one belonging to an eager journalist, begging for praise. Like school children, they all loved to hate the teacher, yet they pined over the lost attention from their parents and would do anything for their fifteen minutes of fame, for those were the criteria of success, and then, perhaps, her father would acknowledge her wit and his mother would give him the care that he deserved.

A snort. He needed tea.

Tired, he rubbed his eyes and went to pick up their last issue. Oswald was complaining about something or other, the way he always seemed to enjoy complaining about things infinitely more important than the weather, and Jared wanted to at least look as though he’d tried hard to get his current position. Lost in thought instead of the articles he so desperately tried to chew through, he went to the kitchen and conjured the required materials, his eyes never once leaving the pages.

One of ‘his’ reporters had chosen to do a secondary piece on current developments in society, completely missing the point that was made from the Ministry and concluding that “…change must always be good for as long as change is needed.” For the second time within two minutes, Jared snorted, and for the first time since his return, he was beginning to feel the character he was supposed to play.

Interested didn’t cover it. He was used to being in the field, and desk work was not worthy, but for some reason, Francis was no longer there to put things in perspective, and Jared felt lost like a child in a supermarket. Oswald was a steady anchor, his niece a petty distraction, and from there would his everyday life take form.

Finally done waiting on the tea, he exited the premises, only to be knocked back, the hot liquid spilling in drops of scalding hot blueberry flavour, successfully smearing the exact sentence he’d been trying to read.

What happened to this paper?”

“Why,” Jared began drawling, eyes set on the oaf while his right hand purposefully scattered some of the drops on the shirt in front of him by shaking the paper, “I do believe you just spilled tea all over it.”

It was a menacing smile that lurked in the corners of his mouth then, hoping that it would be enough to scare the halfwit on his way back to his base, knocking himself out with red ink, or, better yet, something so heavy that he could be installed in St. Mungo’s. Another pawn in a game of poker, misplaced and useless, even when he was there at the right time.

Jared had better things to do than this.


OTHER
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BUREAU CHIEF QUESTIONS
Answer these questions only if you are applying to be a bureau chief

Please describe what sort of articles you would expect your columnists to complete in an IC year's worth of issues. List division of your topic among columnists, and suggest at least 3 sample article topics per division:
For example, if my bureau was Science, I'd divide up my columnists so that one would cover Advances in Spells (sample article: new stuff for Aurors and how this will change arrests!), Advances in Potions (Skele-Gro with less pain? Discuss), Muggle Sciences (What is a Micro-Wave?) and Lifestyle (Fountain of Youth water revealed to be a joke for skin de-aging).

1) Debonair Development: How change has bettered this country. Eg Juridical Injustice and how the Ministry corrected it, Once Upon A Time – a comment on the earlier government’s mistakes, and How Michael Gray turned the Aurors upside down.
2) Lucrative Liaisons: Business is booming, and you better stay on top of things. Eg Quidditch – the new stock exchange wonder, Has The Warbling Rogue sold out? and From flop to top – Alles Saugt.
3) International Interrelations: Britain as an international player. Eg Has the president of France gone insane? Quidditch World Cup – the new arena for fighting out diplomatic issues, and Why Hogwarts is said to be one of the best educational institutions in the Wizarding World.

*These are all ideas sprouted from an IC point of view. OOCly, I believe there should be space for people who are against the Ministry changes, of course, and there are no restrictions within these areas from my side. The reason why I chose Lucrative Liaisons is that Domestics hold more than politics in my opinion, and this might actually create incentive for shopkeepers and Elsewhere in general to become a bit more active. That way we help each other develop plot.


Please outline a sample bureau-wide plot your department might experience. How would the people in your bureau be able to participate? How would you encourage their participation? (200 words minimum):
ICly, there lies great potential in the Open Letters, currently being deposited in the Domestics/Politics section. I can’t pretend that a witch hunt is my idea, but I think it’s a great one, and it would probably be the first thing to discuss on the next bureau meeting. Considering that every single writer would be able to point fingers at each other, air suspicions to Jared or each other, watch the repercussions, I believe this is truly a valuable opportunity to create in-bureau plot.

To avoid plagiarising anyone else’s brilliant ideas, I’d love to have (if possible) an underground current of pro/against the Ministry changes. This depends widely on the writers, of course, but when the bureau grows bigger, it would be interesting to watch power struggles and people trying to rat out each other. Jared will be quite obviously biased, easy to hate, easy to fear, and if the environment could be somewhat unstable, I believe this will attract the writers to communicate more, both with each other and their Bureau Chief.

Article-wise, there is a constant flow of information in the Ministry section of Elsewhere, and it’s easy to pick out the different developments and comment on them. However they’re portrayed, Jared will probably always have an opinion on it, and ICly, people who don’t agree with his views will experience public trial during the staff meetings. The Time Warp, though neither Domestic nor Political (necessarily) will also create an opportunity for a bureau-wide plot, even if it isn’t shielded to our bureau. In general, I think there are lots of opportunities to create bureau-wide plots, but I think the most important ones are those that involve the character’s personal views, both on each other and society.


How would you ensure that your columnists and photographer get their articles in on time? How would you help to expand your bureau and make it as active as possible? (200 words minimum):
I’d like to round up activity first. It’s a bit evident in the previous section, but I think the easiest way to engage people is to feed them character development opportunities. Domestics/Politics is attractive to people because they are allowed to ICly comment on the changes happening in society and with the Order, and if we could both play on the easy access to the board-wide plot and the promise of working with interesting characters and creating plots of their own based on their work, I think we hit jackpot.

Also, I want to create those opportunities with Jared; not only is his character easy to plot with, but by staying active. Ensuring that writers and photographers get their articles and photos in on time depends on how active the Bureau Chief is, and small updates, ideas, conferences spread throughout term will help people remember when and where. Obviously, there will be a list of deadlines for people to check if they’re in doubt, but I think the most important thing is to keep in touch. Offer help if needed, reminding them when it’s almost time.

In short, there are three main areas to consider:
1)   Jared himself. I’m prone to plotting, and the more active he is as a character, the easier it will be for staff members to relate to him.
2)   The content of the articles. By constantly updating people on what is going on with the Ministry and focusing help with ideas through the staff meetings, we can encourage people to write more and stay active.
3)   In-bureau plots. The better the environment for plotting is, the more fun it is.

As for expanding the bureau, I believe that has to do with the signals sent by the people already engaged. The more plot happening at the Ministry, the more personal plot people have, the happier they are, the more will also begin considering to join. We already have a couple of truly gifted plotters and writers, and I’m sure this will send positive signals to the rest.

6
Elsewhere Accepted / Re: Asta Adelaide
« on: 27/01/2012 at 16:05 »
Hahaha! Noted, Tibbs! (:

7
Elsewhere Accepted / Re: Asta Adelaide
« on: 24/01/2012 at 23:21 »
Should you also wish to take a look at one of Asta's notes about her name origin and meaning, here is your chance.


8
Elsewhere Accepted / Re: Asta Adelaide
« on: 24/01/2012 at 21:53 »
(OOC: The appication exceeded the character limit, so here comes the RP-response)

ROLEPLAY
Reply as your character to the following:

It was impossible for Dianne to stay out of trouble. It wasn't that she was looking for trouble, it's just that trouble always managed to find her. Today she wished she could find something equally familiar but more comforting.

The five-year old girl hugged her puffskein closer to her and brushed her face in its soft fur for comfort. She had named him herself and he was always her special pet. No she was certain she had never gone down this side street before. Her anxiety increased every second as darkness fell as she walked down the road. A loud noise came to her left and she buried her face in her pet's fur completely. The scared girl bolted the opposite way slamming the both of them into the wall of the nearest building. Tottering back a few steps she found a door a few feet to her right and ran to open it. What light there was inside spilled out into the darkness and she spilled into the room.

Once in, she was caught between the impulse to curl her cloak up more tightly around her and loosen her grip on it. She wasn't alone anymore but she was now among strangers instead, which was nearly as terrifying. Her puffskein had recovered from the shock of the wall and now was purring contentedly as the girl hugged it, causing a mildly calming effect on the girl. Gathering her courage, she marched up to the nearest person, pulled on the nearest clothing hem and blurted out in a loud voice:

"I'm lost and it's dark and I wanted to know where I am but I'm not scared but I am worried that Sambundeakin is scared because he's little and needs something to eat and wants to go home."

She paused to draw a breath in her nearly never-ending sentence, "He misses my and his mommy."

To explain the scared girl held up the custard-colored puffskein. Sambundeakin the puffskein, however simply purred as if nothing on earth was wrong in the world.

Roleplay Response:
They were laughing at her. No, rather they were laughing with her. Could people do that when you weren't laughing yourself?

Big men at bar desks seemed to always have fun. It was never like Madame Noire or Chipper (even though she loved Chipper). Asta wondered briefly what she would be like if she got a taste of the golden liquid they were drinking. It smelled both sweet and bitter at the same time. But neither Omi nor Xal gave her permission. Always like that. Real grown-ups didn’t think she could do anything.

Asta had quickly realised that it wasn’t a fun fair, but a diagonal alley or something of the kind, and ‘parently that meant that she could not lie outside in the evening, or run around with Twist all day or eat all the sweets that other people gave her (especially not if it was in Twilight Street or something like that), but there were no benefits either.

Leaning over the bar disk, her arms interlaced, she smiled sweetly, feeling really silly and not at all as adorable or worth paying attention to in the dress Omi had given her, as she did in her own suit, but still out to get sweets.

“Xaaal,” she began, her voice coated in milk and honey, “can I have a fizzing whizbee more?”

The noisy clatter beaten up by the crowd of men sitting around her was almost unbearable, and her smile transfigured into a frown. Some even wanted to pinch her cheeks, but there went the line. “No pinching cheeks,” she said sulkily, clambering down from the tall stool with great difficulty to the music of the large men disappearing into a fit of laughter – again.

Making her way to the stairs up to her room (where she always had some spare sweets and dinaris for rough times), when someone tugged in her hem, and she turned around by instinct, coming face to face with a little girl.

Whatever words came out of the girl’s mouth didn’t make much sense, but Asta sort of recognised her. Didn’t know from where, didn’t really care, but something familiar about her made her stop.

Eyeing the furry creature in the girl’s hands suspiciously, she brought her left elbow to rest on her right arm, currently curled around her chest, and her hand made an intricate movement around her chin to support the weight of the head, giving Asta the appearance of someone thinking hard.

“Fine!” she finally said, trying to grab at the girl’s wrist to pull her with her, “We’re at the Warbling Rogue, and that up there,” she pointed towards the smiling barkeeper, “is Xal. He’s good. He knows everyone worth knowing,” (except for Gustaf and Chipper), “and he’s bona! You want me to go with you?”

Asta didn’t really wanted to. She wanted sweets. Then again, the girl really did remind her of someone…

9
Elsewhere Accepted / Asta Adelaide
« on: 24/01/2012 at 21:52 »

CHARACTER INFORMATION
Character Name: Asta Adelaide
Gender: Female
Age: 8 years old. DOB:April 3rd, 1963

Education: 
School of life/Madame Noire's experiences.

Residence:
Warbling Rogue
c/o Filius Pendragon


Occupation:
Unofficially wand-maker apprentice.

Do you plan to have a connection to a particular existing place (example St Mungo's, the Ministry, Shrieking Shack) or to take over an existing shop in need of new management?
Special relation to
Warbling Rogue (residence)
Pendragon's Wands (work place and favourite playground - especially when Amity's there)
Honeydukes (regular/favourite restaurant)


Requested Magic Levels:
  • Charms: 0
  • Transfiguration: 0
  • Divination: 0
  • Summoning: 0
Do you wish to be approved as a group with any other characters? If so who and for what IC reason?
Filius Pendragon - legal guardian.

Please list any other characters you already have at the site:
Eve Hallows, Adam Just, Juliette Chanterelle, Rosalind Lancaster

Special Phrase: Tibble's beard of power

Biography: (300 words minimum.)
Her feet tapped lightly against the grey kerbstone ground, the rhythm steady as the pounding in her ears, a sting forming in her throat with every breath she took. The jugal in her arms was falling, and her fingers bore further into the soft fur, causing the puppy to give out a small yelp. Pulling it up with more force than needed, the small, golden Labrador jumped in her embrace, and Asta continued undeterred.

Twist had been one of the strays in Mulhouse, too young and too chubby to keep up with the others when they visited the gaff, and when Madame Noire wanted to pack up and leave, Asta had begged to keep him. The batlike woman had reluctantly agreed on the condition that she trained the dog as a buffer, but as either Asta was bad at teaching or Twist was bad at performing, he had eventually become a jugal instead. Her jugal.

Madame Noire. She was really named Duffy. Asta and Gustaf had snickered, as they had lain underneath the caravan in the dark green, moist grass, listening to the woman either suck up to an investor or yell at the workmen. Forever more beneficial when she was talking to investors, the two of them had safely pocketed the information for later use, making an entry in their secret language code to rename the feared proprietor of the troop Ducky. No reason why. Just because it sounded like Duffy and it was funny.

They had done that all the time. When you were pulled around to entertain men and women from all over the world, you picked up stray words in the language, trying to find out what it meant, twisting and turning it to crack it open, figure out its use and finally, apply it to the rebellion resources: your own language. Long summer nights while the tentmen, such as Jip and Don, the clowns, Chipper and Cruddy, and animal trainers, who Asta and Gustaf didn’t socialise with, went to the local bevvy, and cold winter nights, with nothing to do than tuck in the frayed blankets that they slept with, turned into secret messages and inventing codes for everything. Two copies had been made on paper they had nicked from the ken, safely tugged in the warm, safe environment in the green belly boxes under the reddish caravan (-ish because the colour had worn off from the dust grinding against the sides when they drove them down the road), torn a little from the moist they had endured on rainy days, but Madame Noire had never found them.

Asta had brought her copy with her, certain that it would one day help her to save Gustaf.

The distance lain behind her was long enough for the eight-year-old to finally take a break and throw a look over her right shoulder, and as fate would have it, the timing was just right for her to do it the moment a large, rather rubicund, flushed-looking man chose to step out in front of her. Normally, she would have neatly side-stepped, but Twist in her arms and eyes behind her, there was neither much room nor space for her to do damage control, and the inevitable happened.

“Ouf!” she exclaimed as her body pulled backwards from the impact, landing herself straight into a puddle assembled on the sloppy, uneven pavement, and she quickly felt the dirty water drench her now smeared, emerald green robe. If she had still been anywhere near camp, Madame Noire would have skinned her alive.

Meanwhile, the hood had fallen down, exposing her face to the stranger, and the dog, fighting to get out of the girl’s embrace, was clutched even tighter as her right-hand fingers curled around the brim of the hood, yanking it upwards in what could have looked like both a calm and frightened movement. The drunk of course started brawling, but Asta wasn’t particularly scared. He reminded her too much of Chipper.

There had been a reporter once, coming to the fun fair under the presumption that he was just any josser, but afterwards he had stalked around the grounds, finding their meat hall, walking around asking questions. Chipper had been in an unusually good mood, the corners of his lips tugging infinitely closer to his chin, a deadpan expression stuck on his features, as if someone had taken his face and turned it inside out. With the journalist disappearing in the distance, they had all beat up laughter to equal those of Agamemnon and Thor – at least the way Asta imagined them – and she had mimicked them, trying to pretend like she knew what they were laughing about.

Chipper’s facial expression had stayed put. He was mute.

Anyway, there had to be a reason why this man had stopped her right here. Fate. Some sign. Something she needed to see. Some-

Her gaze travelled upwards to linger by the wooden plank hanging outside the door, absentmindedly covering the black tights and sparkly, purple circus suit with her favourite pattern on, this time making sure to sidestep the fellow whose vision was apparently so blurred that he hadn’t noticed she’d upped and left.

While standing on the ledge to The… Le- Leak- Leaking Ca- Cau- Cowdrone (it sounded like one of those cows that had been abducted by aliens in the middle of a corn field, because they did that, aliens, abducted cows, and it was always from corn fields, because those were the easiest to make signs in with their laser beams), trying to get a firm grasp on the handle, two men butted their way out fiercely, grabbing the larger man, who obviously had trouble navigating his own legs, and dragged him along, slithering down the road from the weight of the heavy body. Asta observed them a little, almost mesmerized, until she heard the bell go off again and slipped through the legs of a couple of confused, exiting customers, Twist still tugged safely in her grasp.

As she entered the bevvy, the dog was immediately left to its own business on the floor, and dark eyes went over the shallow details in awe. She had never been allowed in a bar before, let alone a real pub. Not that they were even supposed to know that word. Once, she and Gustaf had asked around for the meaning of bevvy, which was, at least, their jib. Madame Noire had made them take care of the pig’s toenails. The great, grey ones, that was, not the brown, cuddly ones. Although, their toenails had probably been equally disgusting.

That was the way it was always done at the gaff. If something had gone wrong at camp and one of them had something to do with it, so did the other. The state of nature, as Madame Noire had learned the hard way, as she called it; experience.

“Chavi! Always learn from others’ failures. Much less painful!”

It was always said in a snuffling, drawling tone of voice, and often accompanied by a hiccup or two. The poor donah had no idea that she was their greatest teacher.

Perusing the people inside, eyes wide with fascination, she noticed they all wore cloaks just like hers, almost in as sprawled colours as her own. It had been a gift from Chipper and Gustaf. The only reason Madame had let her keep it, was because it was fanciful (and because she knew, by the end of their punishment, she would still get the pleasure of hearing them say ‘Thank you’ and ‘Bona’). Here they were, though, lined up, leaning against the bar as if they were normal people on an ordinary day. Travellers. Her head shot to the left. Some of them probably Romani. Definitely a challenge. Could she pickpocket them?

It was not that Asta meant to, it had just become habit. When people had lined up outside to buy tickets, or billets, as Madame called them, when they had been in awe on the benches over Eloise or choking on their own laughter from watching Chipper and Cruddy, when they were just walking around the fun fair, looking at animals or waiting in line for the galloper or dukkering, that was when Asta and Gustaf were truly in their ace. The market trained skilled thieves.

Another boy had been introduced once, Dave or David, Daniel or something, someone to ‘help’ them ‘expand their profits’. It had taken one pointed look between her and Gustaf, and the kid had been done for; a single, well-placed piece of jewellery hidden under his bed was all it took. Madame Noire took no excuses for good, and the boy had been working with the pigs until he had finally run away.
Of course, when Eloise had repeated the gesture and run away with Phineas, the red-haired pig-trainer who always gave them sweets, Asta had stepped in, taking her place.

She had always been the line-dancer, at first with net, because sometimes the mingers would come and supervise that everything went on according to the law (“But their law don’t apply here,” she heard the woman rage, “They’ll see.”), but on her sixth birthday it had been without (Madame called it a ‘treat’. Since then Asta had never understood Trick or Treat. Was it like pest or cholera?), and by her seventh she could sling herself down the corde pareille, just like Eloise, the princess dancing down from the roof, holding on with only her legs.

It had happened that she had fallen from the rope without the safety net (all the way down she had sulked about Madame Noire’s stupid treats), but the old woman had apparently had some sort of foresight, because the ground had turned all wobbly underneath Asta like an air matress, not hard at all, like it used to, and slung back into the air, her hand was quickly locked firmly around the rope once more.

Sometimes she had wondered if she was happy the D-boy had gone, or if she envied him. Now, however, she had gotten her escape.

It hadn’t been her intention to leave Gustaf behind, it really hadn’t.

No longer remembering who had come first or where they had come from, there was a common understanding that it didn’t matter, because they would always be together. It was a lie, of course, because it mattered where she came from, she knew, and they wouldn’t always be together. Like now; they weren’t together now. And she had promised with the pinky and the spit and everything. He was her best friend, her brother, and she had left him. But he had asked her to – did that make it alright?

Once, they had lain sprawled on a mound a little outside the troop’s area, trying to visualise the stars through the rays of the sun. Someone had once told her the stars were suns too, but obviously they were wrong, because the stars twinkled and were much smaller, and while she lay there, contemplating the meaning of such nonsense, Gustaf had asked if she wanted to marry him. They hadn’t been very old, of course, Asta told herself, and he had only made a ring out of a flower (it was an especially appropriated skill that the girl would have liked to educe from herself, but Gustaf had been the one blessed with dexterity), but she had turned him down.

Wanting to was not enough, she had learned from an early age, because she had dreams, and one of those dreams were being married so she could take her husband’s name and finally become someone, belong to someone, feel part of a family. Gustaf didn’t have a last name either, so if they married, they would keep on being nobodies with no last names, and Asta didn’t want that.

The troop was their family, of course, but Asta didn’t fancy herself sliding down ropes and pulling money from people’s waist pockets when Madame dictated they hadn’t paid enough (which was just about always) for the rest of her life.

No, the world she had entered here was exciting and new, and people looked like her. She was no outcast, and she was free. Asta decided to stay.

It wasn’t as if Asta hated Madame Noire. The woman had always looked scary, thin like a skeleton, her long, greasy, black hair falling in cascades to her waist, the thin lips coated in red lipstick, but never had they quirked upwards in a smile. That would have been even more scary. Predictable to the very end, Ducky had a predilection for old, worn hats she had fixed up herself, and not even that, but she always did the troop the courtesy of putting on one to match her mood. Asta kept track.

A tall, black one for her maestro time in the manége, a purple one with a dotted net to cover her eyes for mischief (like talking to investors), a red beret for punishment etc. etc.

Bats could be nice too, though, Asta mused secretively to herself, and even Madame Noire had redeeming features about her. Normally, the two of them got clothes. Often bought in a chovey (second-hand, of course), but sparkly and puffy, just the way she liked it, patterns of stars, moons and suns in colourful splashes. However, there had been rare fractions of life, little niches in time where the woman had set it upon herself to read to them too. Grand tales of big heroes and old gods introduced Asta to a world of symbolism, one she had even been allowed to explore herself as the donah had brought the children to a public library once. The girl had known what she wanted and attempted to spend hours there, simultaneously knowing all too well that she wouldn’t be allowed, due to Madame’s mercurial fancies of the moment, but she had gotten things done and had reached a point where a whole piece of paper had been filled with her handwriting on the origin and meaning of her name.

Of course, she could spell. “Who else would have the time to write the bills, hmm?” Madame’s voice sounded in her head.

 
Pocketing the notes safely in the forest green satchel that flopped back against her waist as she released it, she quickly rummaged through the contents, assuring herself that all her other notes and the secret code was still there. Not that she expected anyone to be skilled enough to steal from her, not that anyone would understand much of it if they did, but there were dinari down there too, and she needed those. Besides, those notes were important, just not to anyone but her.

One piece stuck out from the others. It was written on neat, completely white paper. Madame had said something about an official investor, and Asta had gratefully snapped the opportunity to write visibly, all her notes on aliens.

You see, Madame was like one person, accommodating both Chipper and Cruddy, but never in balance, never at the same time, so when she had learned that Asta had used her tales to research her heritage, she had told her the real story of her mother and father; how they had been in love and lying on a corn field, eating lots of corn and kissing (“Eww,” remarked Asta, scrunching up her nose and craning her neck to the side, but the woman had grabbed her ear and yelled at her to listen), when suddenly, the sky had darkened and the evil aliens had taken all the cows and Asta’s parents.

Since then, Madame Noire had always surrendered her cut-outs from newspapers of the new sightings, and Asta had never quite taken a liking to lightning.

Cramming the paper down again, she suddenly eyed a man, and considering him observantly, she witnessed him looking around himself six times to each side, before stepping out a small door on the other side of the smoky room. Six was her lucky number, so twelve had to be double as lucky, right?

Crouching down, she took a hold of the unwilling puppy, eyes still trained on the stranger, quickly jumping to her feet and traversing the damp, crowded room, with the lovely warmth emanating from pipes and loud, clattering chit chat. He almost escaped her, but she hooked him once more as she pushed through the legs of a couple of older men, one with a squeaky, quivering voice, the other a deep bass (just like Chipper and Cruddy, Asta realised), and the wild hunt continued, inattentive as she was to her pet’s vigorous protests.

Following him silently into a small backyard, she crept into the shadows, staying glued up against one of the crummy walls, only thinly disguised by the shadows provided in the rainy atmosphere. It had almost been a shock, stepping out, but Asta had known worse weather, and she had benefited from the heat inside the dusty old pub.

His figure was blurred in her vision, and she didn’t see his movements exactly, but what she did see was a bunch of stones suddenly moving. Her mouth trailing a silent “Woah,” the Labrador suddenly still in her arms, she watched as the wall opened and the man passed through. What was he? An alien?

Suddenly realising she would have no answers unless she decidedly went out there and got them, her feet almost burning with excitement (yes, her feet started to burn, not her stomach or her fingers or her head, because with Asta, her feet was always as good an indication as any that fireworks were about to start), and she got a move on, the complaints rapidly starting from beneath her chin again.

Walking into the alley, her eyes widened and her head turned and twisted, trying to capture all the details of the venue she had stumbled upon. People in different-coloured cloaks, just like her own, sprawled colours all around, almost no children. Asta would have guessed this was a fun fair if it hadn’t been for the lack of children.

You couldn’t have a fun fair without children, could you? Who was going to eat the candy floss of ride the galloper? Of course, only the adults could play E.O., but all the stands – Asta knew from experience that people were fond of their children, and children wanted to try out more things than parents because they didn’t have to give dinaris, and because of that correlation, children dragged their parents around to keep the gaff going. That was at least how Madame Noire had expressed it.

However, this seemed to go fairly well, even though it was pouring rain, and Asta stood on her bare feet, because she had forgotten her batts at home, observing the rustle and bustle of the street, wondering how you could have a camp that stayed the same place all year around. Because you couldn’t move real houses around, could you?

It certainly was a fancy gaff.

Meandering down the cobblestone ground, there were so many sights to be seen, and the eight-year-old didn’t for a second register the many eyes falling on and following her as she walked, naked feet, carrying a three-month-old golden Labrador, her cloak and satchel green and drenched. Nor did she stop until she stumbled upon a funny-looking sign.

Pen- Pan- Pen… dra- dragon, Pen-dragon!

That sounded like a Romani name. Asta Adelaide liked Romanis. They called her ‘rakli’, and she liked that.

Stepping up to the door, she solemnly knocked (why didn’t they just have a coloured veil?), and waited tentatively for someone to answer her. Houses were nice. At least they provided shelter from the downpour of the stupid rain.


OOC: Relation confirmed by Filius Pendragon. Others are NPC's.

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