28 September 2020

MJs Hogwarts Journal Chapter 12


Saturday 21st September
By the end of the week I was so happy with myself. I’ve managed to do my first spell. Even in Transfiguration, Professor McGonagall told me that I was so close; she can sense my potential to be an excellent witch – how amazing was that. I was beaming from ear to ear when I came out of her class on Wednesday. Professor Binns even gave me a ‘Congratulations’ comment on my History of Magic homework – now to get a compliment from that guy is pretty awesome. I’m yet to get a note of acknowledgement from Professor Snape, but I think it’s all a matter of time. He’s growing on me. At first I wasn’t too sure about him; I mean if his appearance wasn’t enough to make me think that he should have been cast as the bad guy in some spooky sixties movie, he’s one of the strictest and most coldest people I have ever known. That said, I’m really warming up to him. It may have a little something to do with him favouring Slytherin and how amusing it is to see him torment the Gryffindors in Potions class, but I’m definitely becoming a Snape fan.

*

Following on from my positive week, I met Josie and Jed in the library on Saturday afternoon. We had decided that this was the best time to study being as loads of the students were having a food eating contest in the Great Hall. At first, I was surprised that Jed didn’t want to go, but being as he’d stuffed his face at every given opportunity these past three weeks, the sight of food was now making him feel sick. “I told you not to eat all those pork chops with your cave of potatoes last night,” I told him when he gripped his stomach and groaned at the breakfast table this morning.
“I couldn’t help it,” he whimpered, throwing up the hood to his thinning over-baggy bluey-grey hoodie. “They tasted so good.” I just smirked and rolled my eyes at him. It was a self-inflicted injury.
Upon first hearing about it, I had wanted to go to the food eating contest that the Weasley twins had organised. It sounded like fun. However, I think that I must have had a similar problem to Jed. I hadn’t eaten loads, but even I couldn’t resist an extra helping at last night’s dinner. It was delicious. I didn’t feel sick, like Jed; but saying that I was a little bloated would be an understatement.
Josie didn’t seem fazed by the food eating contest either way. She didn’t mention it at all. Jed and I spent most of the first hour asking Josie things that we were stuck on with our homework. “Which one came first again: Emeric the Evil or Uric the Oddball? It was Emeric, right?” asked Jed.
“No,” Josie sighed sliding her purple glasses up her nose as she looked up at Jed. “Emeric the Evil was about during the end of the Middle Ages, around the fourteen or fifteen hundreds. Uric the Oddball was born in the year nine-hundred-and-eighty-two.” Scratching his head with the spine of one of his textbooks, Jed frowned at her.
“An’ how do you know that?” he asked.
 “It’s in your textbook,” Josie exclaimed.
“Right…” I said slowly, looking from Jed to Josie. “So was Emeric before or after the Snow Blizzard?” I asked as I glanced down at my parchment and pinched the bridge of my nose. Oh, how I hate History.
“Snow Blizzard?” Josie repeated in the form of a question. She stayed quiet for a while, so I looked up and spotted her tapping her nails against her textbook while she gazed at the wall. “Oh wait,” she said with a smile as she turned to me. “You mean the Soap Blizzard of thirteen-seventy-eight?” I shrugged.
“How does she know all this stuff?” asked Jed.
“Simple,” she retorted. “I actually listen in class and read the textbooks. Seriously,” she said with a giggle. “Where would you two be without me?” I know that this sounds bad, but she was right. Okay, I’m getting stuff, but I wouldn’t understand half as much as I do without her help.
After studying the History of Magic for over an hour the dates, names and places all began to swerve around in my mind. I liked learning about it, but sometimes things were just a little too much. Jed was the first to cave in. “No, I can’t take it anymore,” Jed groaned and thumped his head against the desk. “How does wearing a jellyfish on your head and sleeping in a room with Augureys relate to why he terrorised half-bloods and Muggle-borns?”
“It doesn’t,” Josie laughed. “You’ve got the two mixed up again. Emeric the Evil was the slaughterer. Uric the Oddball was just an eccentric Ravenclaw – haven’t you heard the jokes?” As neither of us responded to her, she didn’t bother explaining herself further. I seriously don’t think that my head could have handled it anyway – it felt like it was hailing soap balls on my brain. “Doesn’t matter,” Josie said seeing that Jed and I were both too brain dead to be able to handle any more of her ever-expansive knowledge.
Jumping up from her seat, Josie announced that she’d be back and wandered off down an aisle of books. While she was gone, I stared at her jacket that hung on the back of her chair. I was mesmerised by those same coloured buttons that caught my attention the first time that I met her. She really was creative. I’d have never thought of sewing buttons to a jacket – not that I can sew. She’s always wearing brightly coloured bracelets, coloured scarfs in her hair or has decorated some item of clothing in such a way that I would never have expected to do. But what I loved most was that not once has she retorted to one of the Slytherin girls’ sly remarks about her unusual accessories. She’d just shrug it off. It was amazing. She was amazing. I must remember to tell her that sometime. Being around her just makes me want to be creative about something. I wouldn’t know where to start. What if it looked silly? What if I liked it and no one else did? I guess that was part of the risk that came with creativity.
Hearing the rhythmical pattering of Josie’s shoes as she skipped back to us, I tried to look perky. Rubbing my eyes, I pushed myself up from my parchments and sat up straight. “Here we are,” said Josie with a huge smile and wide eyes. She placed a discoloured yellow book on the table, with her little bracelet full of tiny keys jangling all the while.
“Not more reading,” Jed grumbled.
“Nope,” Josie sang out. “Watch.” Bending down, Josie whipped her wand out from her right boot, and pointed it at the book (I also wanted to point out that I find where she keeps her wand amazing. Whenever Josie wears her black cowboy boots, she always keeps her wand hidden inside her right one. Isn’t that so cool? I just keep mine in my pocket or in my bag – how boring. Okay, my new task for the next week or two is to find a new and unusual place to store my wand).
“Ducklefors!” she called out as she slashed her wand downwards and onto the book. A bright yellow beam sparked as her wand made contact with the book. As she waved her wand away, I gasped. Jed leapt back, nearly falling off his seat.
“Quack!” It was a duck. Josie had transformed her book into a bright yellow duck. “Quack!”
“What the fudge?” exclaimed Jed with wide eyes, clawing a hand through his bushy curls. “How in the name of Merlin did you do that?” Josie shrugged and muttered an incantation returning the duck back into a yellow book.
“It was pretty cute, don’t you think?” she asked.
My mind was blown away. I’ve only just managed to get a feather to float, I can’t even turn a matchstick into a needle, yet Josie can turn a book into a duck. A bright yellow, fluffy duck. I sat there with my mouth open. I had no idea how to respond to that. There was no way to respond to that. It was just out of the blue – or should I say yellow.
“I think it works best with a yellow textbook,” Josie said as she bounced back up to return the book to its place on the shelf.
When she returned, Jed held a hand to his mouth and through a fake cough said, “Show off.”
“Am not!” Josie replied with a hard stare.
“Are too!” snapped Jed folding his arms.
“You could do it too if you only tried hard enough instead of spending all of your spare time goofing off,” she declared.
“Goofing off!” Jed raged. “Who do you think you are? How dare you judge me?”
“Alright,” she said sharply. “Was it or was it not you, Vincent and Gregory who threw Dungbombs into the girls’ toilets on the second floor? Or who replaced Neville Longbottom’s wand with a trick one, so that every time he tried to cast a spell a cascade of slugs shot out everywhere? And let’s not forget how Hermione’s Potions textbook got covered in salamander blood so that all of the words ran – was that not you too? How about Hannah Abbot’s homework turning into confetti – does that ring a bell to you? Or what about the chocolate syrup on the benches at the Gryffindor table in the Great Hall? Huh? Are you trying to tell me that you were innocent in all that?”
Folding her arms, Josie cocked an eyebrow up at Jed. Throughout her little rant, he remained silent. He just sat with his nose snarled at her. “I have witnesses Jack – don’t even try to deny it. So if you want me to help you, I suggest you grow up and study.”
“It’s First-Year for the love of Merlin. Can’t you can the lectures?” he growled. Slamming his fist against the table, Jed pushed himself up out of his chair. “I’ve had it with you always having a go at me. Do this, do that. No Jed, that’s not right.” His arm shook as he pointed a finger towards her. “You’re such a stuck up know it all.”
“Fine,” snapped Josie standing up to face him. “But I’ll let you know: I don’t rub it in your face when I can do a spell that you can’t. I don’t tell you to do the work yourself when you ask for help, even though I had to figure it all out on my own – especially when you’re the one who comes from a fully functional wizarding family background. I don’t lecture you to study all day and night. Goodness Jack, I’d flip out if I had to. Just quit having a go at me when you don’t get it first time round. Jeez, what d’you think I am, some sort of robot? I have to practise too, you know.” Running a hand through her hair Josie turned her head away from us, puffed up her cheeks and exhaled. “I only showed you Ducklefors, because I thought you’d find it funny. If I knew you’d flip out I never would’ve bothered.”
Leaning over the table, Josie spread her hands out and pushed together all of her papers and notes. Taking the quill out of her inkpot she threw it down on the table and snatched the lid. Spots splattered on the table. Not knowing where to look I stared at the smudges of ink. While Josie shoved all of her things into her bag, Jed dropped back down into his seat. “You don’t have to go,” I squeaked, as Josie snatched her jacket and looped the strap of her bag over her arm.
“I’d rather live through more taunts from your precious roommate Posey Pansy than spend another second at this table,” she snapped.
“Sorry,” Jed mumbled as Josie spun around to leave. Josie turned back around slowly and gazed at him. Jed continued to stare at the table. “I didn’t mean it,” he muttered, barely moving his mouth.
“Me either,” she whispered tracing a circle with her finger on the top of her chair. “I’m sorry too,” she said with a shrug. Catching me looking at her, Josie glanced in my direction. I jerked my head towards her chair, hoping that she would stay. She shook her head. “No. I should go.”
“You’re not gonna be able t’ answer Binn’s question on soap trade if ya leave,” said Jed looking up at her with his eyes, keeping his head low. Josie turned her head to him. “I’ve got the last ‘Medieval Madness in Magic’ textbook…” A smile poked its way into the corner of Jed’s mouth as he could tell that she was fighting with herself.
“Fine,” she said with a slight smile as she rolled her eyes. Hooking her bag onto the back of the chair, she slid back into her seat and pulled her paper back out. “I’ll stay.”
Phew. I’m glad that’s over. I knew these two could argue, but boy, do they argue. My head panged. I already had a headache from studying, but this took it to a new level. I thought they were going to kill each other. And there wasn’t a teacher or librarian around to stop it. I guess you could say that stress gets to everyone, but if this is only the third week in the school year, I’d hate to see these two coming up to end-of-year exams.

- Josie -

21 September 2020

MJs Hogwarts Journal Chapter 11


Monday 16th September
I did it! I did it! I actually did my first spell. It was third period, just after lunch. Professor Flitwick had already made us hand in our homework parchments and then to prove that we had been practising the Wingardium Leviosa charm, he made each of us stand up at the front of the classroom in turn and say it. He laid the feather on his desk and the goal was to make it rise, even by just a centimetre. Okay, so Blondie and Blaise got the feather to swirl around a bit, but they were just showing off. When it was my turn my heart raced. I could feel it drumming in my ears. Standing at the front of the classroom, I knew that everyone was staring at me. This was it. My chance to prove that I was somebody. To prove that I could cast a spell. That I was good enough to be a witch. Gripping my wand steady, I felt my palms sweat. Closing my eyes, I inhaled nice and slow. Letting out my breath, I stared directly at Professor Flitwick’s feather – I couldn’t have anything distract me. Curled up at the one side, the feather appeared to be rocking back and forth ever so slightly. Swishing my wand slightly I projected, “Wingardium Leviosa!” It moved! The feather actually moved. It rose at least the length of my wand. I gave a little excited squeal as the feather fluttered before me. The class clapped. “Excellent work, Miss Frost,” beamed Professor Flitwick. “A job well done.” I’m so excited. I did it. My very first spell. I did it, I did it, I did it!

*

I got so close in Transfiguration too. Towards the end of the class Professor McGonagall tested us on the matchstick to needle spell – Alteareh. Well I was so nearly there. My whole matchstick turned silver and the end pointed. All that’s left now is to get the needle eye to appear and I’ve done a second spell. This really does feel like my week. I mean it! Things can only go up from here.

- Josie -

14 September 2020

MJs Hogwarts Journal Chapter 10


Sunday 15th September
I’m starting to get really bad with writing in here already. It’s just that there are so many things that I want to learn to do. I want to prove to Professor Snape that I can make the perfect potion. I want to be able to identify all of the plants in Herbology and name what they are used to heal. I want to be able to cast charms on my first attempt and transform one object into another. Then there is the History of Magic – no matter how boring Professor Binns is, I’m determined to learn all about my magical, ancestral past. After everything I’ve heard about the one they call You-Know-Who and the Wizarding War, I’m really determined to study everything that there is to know about Defence Against the Dark Arts too – even if it means teaching myself. Then there’s Astronomy as well. I’m constantly stargazing, trying to understand the night sky a little more each time. Aside from the lessons there’s socialising with fellow Slytherins, meeting up with Josie, exploring the castle, trying to find my way around the library, fighting over bathroom time with my roommates, retracing my steps around the castle to try and remember my way and recall which are the steps that disappear. Goodness just writing that list was exhausting. I just can’t help it. I want everything to be perfect. It’s not just a case of wanting to learn everything in one go either; I know that I need to prove to my parents that they made the right decision in letting me come here. If I fail, they could easily send me to a normal Muggle school, back home, next year. I can’t let that happen. I just can’t.
Jed and I agreed not to take another outing to Hagrid’s hut this week. After what happened with Josie last Sunday (and we still don’t know what), we were both a little worried about having the two of them meet again. It was a bit of a shame though, because I really wanted to ask Hagrid about the Care of Magical Creatures class. We already had to buy the ‘Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them’ book, but I was disappointed when I found out that we won’t even be studying Care of Magical Creatures until the third year – how unfair. I have a sneaking suspicion that this will be my favourite class. I guess I’ll just have to wait to find out though.
After doing some homework, Jed, Josie and I took a wander around the school grounds. We just started strolling around in the grassy/rocky area that surrounded the castle. With the sun lowering in the sky, it poked out at awkward angels through the trees blinding us at ever given moment. I adjusted the snapback baseball cap that sat on my head, then dove my hands into my jeans pockets. “You know what I’d like t’ know?” said Jed as he kicked a stone towards the wall.
“What?” Josie asked as I shrugged.
“Why the Forbidden Forest’s forbidden. I’ve heard all the stories ‘bout dangerous creatures ‘n’ things, but d’you really think that Dumbledore would keep all those things in there if it’s so close t’ the school?” Jed declared. I must admit, I hadn’t even thought about this before. It was a really good point.
“The creatures are probably more scared of us than we are of them,” Josie told us. “They probably only attack as a way of self-defence.” Attack? Oh great, I hadn’t even thought about creatures attacking me. It was bad enough having to digest the idea of wizards shooting spells at me – now I have to worry about ferocious beasts as well.
“Do you want to know what interests me?” Josie asked.
“Go on then,” said Jed as he turned to her.
“After the feast on the first night, Professor Dumbledore warned us that the third-floor on the right-hand side of the castle is out of bounds. Well, if you think about it that’s a lot of castle. I wonder what they’re hiding there,” she pondered.
“Whatever it is,” I told her. “It sounds scary. Didn’t Dumbledore threaten whoever dears enter there with death?”
“Yup,” Jed nodded. “Even the Weasley twins know not to mess with the big D on this one.”
I felt like the time had come for me to unveil my little bit of news. I was quite proud of myself actually. I’d done loads of research and learnt a lot about the wizarding world without really meaning to. “Guys…” I said a little more hesitantly than I meant to. Without realising it, I had stopped walking. Noticing that I wasn’t with them anymore, Jed and Josie turned back towards me.
“What’s the matter?” asked Jed, as Josie’s eyes widened as she stared at me.
“I need to tell you something,” I confessed.
“What’s wrong?” asked Jed.
“Are you okay?” Josie worried.
“I’m fine,” I laughed as they came back to my side. “I’m fine.” The creases in Jed’s forehead lifted and Josie smiled at me as she tilted her head a little. “I just wanted to tell you that I’ve decided… I don’t care about flying anymore.” Josie threw her hands to her mouth as she gasped, while Jed’s eyes nearly popped out of his head.
“What?” they both cried.
“But I thought you loved the idea of being able to fly,” Josie said with a pout. “What happened to wanting to be like Samantha in the opening to ‘Bewitched’?”
Holding a hand up to stop the conversation, Jed snapped, “Wait! What on Earth are you…?” His sentence trailed as the confusion furrowed onto his brow.
Josie and I filled Jed in on Muggle television and my favourite programme – ‘Bewitched’. He didn’t seem to follow on too well. I had tried to have a conversation with Jed before about television, but he never understood it. He just kept asking, “So how do all the people fit inside such a tiny little box if you don’t use magic?” The concept of electricity to wizarding-folk is almost as complicated to grasp as magic is to Muggles. Wow, I’d never thought about it before, but maybe electricity is a type of magic – it’s the magic that you use if you don’t have powers. Hmm, I’m liking this Muggle-born thing; I get the best of both worlds.
Sorry, long tangent. Anyway, after we kind of managed to loosen Jed’s confusion, I revealed my sudden change of mind. “I’m just saying, why do we have to learn to fly?” Jed raised a finger towards me as he was about to interrupt (no doubt by telling me that flying was the best way to get around) I spoke over him. “Nope,” I snapped. “I’ve done my research and there are loads of different ways for witches and wizards to get about. There’s something called floo powder, which I think is a little bit like flour that you hold in your hands, then stand in a fireplace and shout the name of your destination. As you throw the powder to the ground you zoom up the chimney and magically reappear in the fireplace of where you want to be.” Jed didn’t seem that impressed with my explanation. He’d probably already travelled by floo powder loads of times. Josie smiled and nodded at me though, so I kept going: “Then there’s a portkey, which is designed to take you to one specific place when you touch it. You can enchant a mode of transport (such as a Muggle car or motorbike) to fly and you just steer it as though you were driving on the road, but it would be flying. Then there’s this thing called Apperation, which is a bit like instant teleportation from one place to another, but I think that you need to be seventeen in order to that.”
“And hold a license,” Jed added.
“Another one that I found was something called a Vanishing Cabinet,” I told them. “It comes in two pieces. One is placed where you are, I guess, and the other is in another place, so when you step inside one, you appear in the other. And the last one that I found has something to do with toilets. It’s a little bit disgusting actually. In fact, Jed, you might know more about this than me,” I said as I looked at him, but I turned to Josie, wanting to finish my little speech. “Apparently the Ministry of Magic get to work by flushing themselves down the public toilets in London, which sounds completely disgusting.” Josie pinched her eyes closed and shuddered, while Jed laughed.
“They don’t do that anymore,” he said holding a hand to his stomach from laughing. “You-Know-Who made the workers of the Ministry travel to work that way during the Wizarding War. No one’s flushed themselves down a bog in over ten years.”
“Well that’s good to know,” I chuckled.
As Jed patted me on the shoulder, we turned back towards the castle and began making our way up the steps. “Mellie,” Josie sang out. “What made you give up on your dream of wanting to fly? Just because there are other methods of transportation, it doesn’t mean that you should give up,” she said and gently brushed her hand against my left elbow. Okay, so maybe Josie went a little too far by calling flying my dream. I’d be happy by just being able to cast one spell (and not being the last kid in the whole Year to do so). I admit that I really, really wanted to learn to fly a broomstick, but the reality of it happening was starting to look so slim that it was upsetting me.
“Don’t worry ‘bout it, MJ,” said Jed with half a smile. “You can’t be good at everything.”
“Thanks,” I muttered looking back at him.
“Unless you’re José,” he mumbled, leaning towards my right ear.
“Hey!” Josie exclaimed, leaning over me. “I heard that.”
“But it’s true,” Jed smirked. “You are good at everthin’.”
“Am not!”
“Are too!”
“Am not!” Josie squeaked.
“Guys,” I sighed, throwing an arm around each of their shoulders. The plan was that by pulling them both to my sides in a sort of hug, they’d get along. Let’s just say that wasn’t the first time they’d been bickering.
“Sorry,” mumbled Josie, trying to pull out from under my grip. I locked my elbow tighter around her. I waited for a while, but after Josie apologised, Jed said nothing. Stepping inside the castle, I flicked his ear.
Oowh,” he projected as Pansy passed us by. I watched as her head shot towards us. I flicked Jed again. “Hey,” he roared. “Cut it out.”
“Don’t you have something to say?” I asked him.
“Like what?” he grumbled.
“A sorry wouldn’t go amiss.”
“Fine,” he sighed rolling his eyes. “José, I didn’t mean to call you a know-it-all. I’m sorry, ‘kay?” Josie shrugged at him. “You’re just a teeny bit of a know-it-all,” he added with a cheeky smile. I glared at him. “What?” he gasped. “She is in Ravenclaw. She knows more than I do anyway.” My eyes shot from Jed to Josie. I let out a breath seeing her smile.
“It’s okay,” she sighed. “I guess I kinda deserve it.” Grinning from ear to ear I pulled my friends tighter for a big hug.

- Josie -