Amelia had put down her book as the professor started the lesson, though begrudgingly. She had just gotten to a particularly good part of the novel and was hesitant to put off finding out what would happen until the end of class. She knew, though, that the professor would not tolerate any inattentiveness, so she had stored the book in her bag and taken out her wand.
Jack Dyllan had slid into the classroom late, but still managed to answer the question correctly, which was slightly impressive. Amelia was continually surprised by the girl, who seemed almost to be a contradiction of herself. She had the attitude that she didn’t care about classes, but she showed up more often than many people who did claim to care, and she was not unintelligent. Perhaps it was just the structure of lessons that bothered her, for she seemed to have a definite rebellious streak in them.
Whatever Jack’s reasons, her answer had made the class progress, and Amelia turned back to the professor as he described today’s task. Amelia found herself frowning more deeply as the professor went on, because his description of the task seemed to imply that when he opened the closet, chaos was going to spill from it, and within that chaos they would be expected to perform today’s spell correctly. Amelia, being a control freak, was immediately opposed to this idea, and certain that she would perform better without the added crazy around her.
But she did not have either the time nor the gall to say anything about the task before the professor made good on his promise to let loose the Erkilngs. For a moment, they were invisible to Amelia, shielded by the row of desks in front of her, and she heard them before she saw them. Their elvish cackles began to fill the room, the sound bringing Amelia to her feet, wand in hand. Standing, she spotted a pair of them running across the front of the room, and she grabbed a desk for stability as she made a sharp turn around it to follow them.
Though they were smaller than her by far, they had the added advantage of being able to fit under the desks, which significantly increased their agility. Although Amelia was trying to get within range to fire a spell, the little devils were not making it easy. The pair she had been followed eventually split, leaving her to choose one or the other, and she had followed the one she thought to be slower, but after dashing several times around the room only to see the damn thing disappearing behind another desk or chair, Amelia stood upright, her pale fingers curling tighter around her wand and into the palm of her wand-less hand in frustration.
Couldn’t he just have given them to us in boxes? Amelia fumed, Then we would be demonstrating our transfiguration skills, rather than our Erkling corralling skills.
And our looking like idiots skills, another part of Amelia’s mind quipped, knowing that running around hunched over in search of a two-foot-tall erkling and failing miserably had to be doing nothing for her image-wise.