Snake disguised as Raven Browncoat Text Cut: Satine Quote:
Originally Posted by Lezleighd She thought about his comment, "Well disease or trait...hmmm...good question...I think boys looking good is a disease for girls and vice versa for girls looking good...I mean it could make everyone around you just sick." she said laughing as she hoped that made sense...yes it was rambling on but it made sense in her head....right?
She finished putting a charm on each layer and then met his eyes, "Simple...when you pull a block from that layer...BAM!...you get whatever that layer has to throw at you....I just used a charm my mom taught me that just puts a random charm on the pieces...we've never had any bad ones shoot out at us...more like water spitting, and bitting blocks, and jumping blocks and such...Are you picking up what i'm putting down?" she asked to make sure he understood what she was saying.
She glanced at the tower and then at him..."You first or me?" she said with a smile but a little nervous.
Then she realized, "O and you skirted my question earlier...you still owe me three interesting facts about you..." she said with a nod as she stared at the tower mapping out her plan. "I wouldn't call a pretty girl a disease," Kellen protested. "Frustrating maybe, distracting definitely, but I've never met a girl who left me feeling like I needed to be put in quarantine until my nausea left me." He could certainly think of a girl who he'd like to say made him nauseous, but it was part of his resolution as head boy to be more tolerant.
He listened to her explanation of the new rules, and surmised, "Sort of like exploding snap, then. And you put a whole bunch of different charms on them with one wand-wave?" There was a healthy touch of admiration in his voice, "You'll have to teach me that one. And ladies first."
He didn't really know what she was staring at, but shrugged at her question, "Three interesting things? Okay. I have my apparition license, I finished animagus training in the summer, and I plan on becoming a wandmaker after school." Cut, dried, done. Easy. |