[PV] Mapping Verona

Behind a grand pair of oak doors that require some effort to push open, Penwick's library stretches far deeper than it appears at first glance. The main chamber is long and vaulted, lined by tall bookshelves and stone columns that disappear into the arched ceiling above. Books reshelve themselves with the occasional "thud", and the occasional whisper can be heard from the small alcoves that dot the perimeter of the chamber. Tall stained-glass windows filter in light into muted jewel tones, creating a spectacular display at sunrise for those early birds willing to catch it. A wide reference table dominates the centre of the main chamber, surrounded by smaller study desks. Sections are clearly labelled in Latin, Welsh and English.
In the back of the room, grand spiral staircases flank the librarian's desk. To the left, the shorter staircase leads to a mezzanine of older books chained to heavy desks. These books are not necessarily restricted, but are dangerous enough to warrant not removing them from the library. To the right, a high staircase leads to the upper levels of the library; the restricted sections, which require written permission from a professor to enter.
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Luke Campbell

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Post by Luke Campbell »

November 2nd, 2025, afternoon.
Luke claims the corner table and has no intention of leaving until the library closes. His rucksack sits tucked beneath his chair, squashed between his knobbly knees. Spread across the desk is his careful collection of sharpened pencils (plus two spares, just in case), and a rubber that is worn down to a stub. But the pièce de résistance is Blaze of Emrys propped open with his pencil case The book is well-loved and well-read judging by the cracked paperback spine.

The library is quiet in just the right way. Not completely silent exactly, but hushed, an almost religious quiet he musn't disturb. Luke tries to make himself smaller in his chair, hyper-aware that his pencil scratching might be too loud, and that the way the way he keeps flipping pages might bother someone.

He chews his bottom lip and squints at page thirty-two. There's something about jagged peaks and abandoned valleys where not even the mightiest dare to go.

Right. So the mountains go here, then. Luke's pencil hovers over the parchment-coloured paper of his sketchbook, tracing a tentative line. Not too dark yet, he might need to rub it out if he gets the scale wrong. The Vale would be to the south of the peaks, which means Emrys's village has to be... where is it again?

He flips back seventeen pages, careful not to let the book snap shut. His finger tracks down the paragraphs until he has it.

A frown mars his face when he reads.

Three rivers? He's forgotten about the third one entirely! Luke presses his lips together and studies his map. He'll have to squeeze another tributary in somehow without mucking up the forest, which he's already spent ages getting the treeline just right on. He puffs his cheeks slowly before he hunches back over his work.

The thing about maps is that they have to make sense, not just look pretty, though that's important too. Rivers have to flow downhill. Mountains have a wet and a dry side, and prevailing winds and plate tectonics must be considered too. Don't even get him started on roads! Roads have to connect places people would actually want to go and need to make sense with the terrain. Julian Verona understands that, which is why Luke loves the book and has re-read it a few too many times.

With his tongue pressed between his lips he rubs out a bit of the eastern mountain range and redraws them with more space between. There, that's better, he thinks while he allows himself a tiny smile.

Soon his pencil is getting dull again, so Luke sets it aside and picks up another one, rolling it between his fingers. This one has a better point. He really ought to have brought his automatic pencil sharpener, but it rattles and makes an awful loud grinding sound that everyone would hate him for.

His stomach rumbles quietly. He's eaten his sandwiches ages ago, and the Penguin bar has disappeared shortly after, but there's still an apple in his bag, but reaching for ir would mean stopping, and he's so close to finishing the main continent.

The pencil is really quite dull now. Luke holds it up to the light, frowning at the blunt tip. He can still use it, technically, but the lines won't be as crisp. He switches to his third pencil, the one he's been saving.

The world takes shape beneath his pencil, one scrawled wispy little line at a time. Every now and then he tilts his head, considering his work and finding more wrong than right with. Almost an hour passes before he has no more sharp pencils left. He tries to make do, but slips and inadvertently creates a dark streak across the corner of the painstakingly drawn map.

"No..." Luke whimpers, horror flooding through him.

He grabs his last stub of rubber and attacks the mark, trying to erase it without smudging the surrounding detail. But the paper is thin and he rubs too hard and then-

Riiiiiiiiip

In one motion the map rips apart and his hand shoots outward, crumpling half the map under his sleeve. A few heads turn at the noise, but now hard judging looks are the least of his concern.

Both hands shoot up to his head, grabbing his hair, pulling at the clumps and kneading it into thick curls between his fingers. Dismay deafens him inside and out, for a while he doesn't even notice how red hot his face has become.

@Tristan Verona
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Tristan Verona

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Post by Tristan Verona »

Tristan Verona
Starring : @Luke Campbell
2025/11/02

Words. Small words. Long words. Sentences. Paragraphs. All of these are presently swimming under the tired eyes of a slightly regretful Modron student. Many nights of sleeplessness have taken a toll on the young Tristan, and he’s starting to feel the consequences.

Under the dim lights of the Penwick library, he blinks twice. With a shake of his head, he stirs himself awake and stares back down at the yellowed pages of the heavy leather-bound book lying patiently on the wooden desk. He reads from the top of the page for the third time this session, hoping this time will stick. As much as Tristan might fool around sometimes, he still cares about his grades. Being here at Penwick is an incredible privilege that he doesn’t take lightly. That’s why he needs to do this; he isn’t about to tarnish the legacy he has been entrusted with.

From the corner of his eye, he notices a bluish shadow moving before realizing that Transfiguration: Alterations and Transformations Vol. 1 is slowly starting to fly away, flapping its pages like a paper butterfly.

With a yelp and a bound, the now fully awakened boy successfully catches the escaped book before it can head back to the coziness of its home shelf. Unfortunately for this tome, he still needs it to finish studying.

Behind a counter, an unimpressed librarian briefly parts with his steaming tea to shush the minor inconvenience before turning back to the distractions of his own making. The minor inconvenience whispers an apology and heads back to try to study once more.

The next hour passes by quickly, and Tristan actually feels like he made some progress. He’s starting to get a deeper grasp on foundational magic, and everything he’s learned about the history of Penwick and the surrounding area so far makes him eager to explore every nook and cranny he can find.

Okay, that’s enough for today, he thinks, getting up to head towards the library exit, Maybe I can meet up with Devi and…

His thoughts are interrupted when something taps the front of his shoe. A glance towards the point of impact reveals a stray pencil with a dull tip. It doesn’t take long for Tristan to find it’s owner. As he surveys his surroundings, he spots one or two other school supplies that seem to have fallen from a nearby desk occupied by a clearly distressed student. Purple robe, blond hair and seemingly around his age, Tristan wonders if they might have shared a class or two.

This will just take a second.

Picking up the pencil, he heads towards the kid who seems very focused on the contents of the desk in front of him.

“Hey, I think you dropped this.”

Closing in the distance between the two of them, the contents of that focus become much clearer. It seems that he has arrived in the midst of a dispiriting accident. Ripped paper is rarely intentional, and much less on what seems to be intricate and precise drawings of an artist’s sketchbook.

But as disheartening as it must be for the artist, what catches Tristan’s eye in the following moment is the cover of a book he has seen many, many times before.

“Are you reading Blaze of Emrys?”
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Post by Luke Campbell »

Luke let out a shrill yelp. As if disturbing all the other library-goers with his carelessness wasn't bad enough! Even the librarian had taken notice now and uttered a well-practised "Sssh!" in his direction. This was a complete disaster, a nightmare without end, to make such a scene and be publicly admonished, oh the horror! Luke was feeling very hot indeed by the time he managed to actually look at the boy who had startled him so.

Scruffy hair, pale and tired looking, ill-fitting uniform... This was a capital T Troublemaker, the worst sort of person you could possibly hang around with because they invariably dragged you into all sorts of terribly dangerous situations and, worst of all, had absolutely no regard for the rules. That disregard was plain enough to see. The untidy uniform was such a crumpled, wrinkled mess that Luke was amazed the boy hadn't been scolded for it by now. Perhaps he has, he considered, but he doesn't care. Which, all things considered, was even worse.

Luke considered that perhaps he was a bit justified in crying out at the other's sudden appearance. After all, he really did look frightfully ghoulish. It was only after several seconds of staring and coming up with all sorts of horrible assumptions that Luke finally registered what the boy had said, and what he was holding in his hand.

"Oh, uh... thanks," he said, taking the pencil quickly out of the scruffy boy's hand as though it was contaminated. There wasn't a whole lot of sincerity to be heard in his voice, even though he was grateful to have his stuff back. "I didn't drop it tho-"

He was cut off and thrown off guard a second time (though thankfully without yelping) when the boy cut in and asked about the book. Luke answered and acted without thinking. "No!"

He snatched the book off the desk and clutched it to his chest. "I mean... yes..." he added quickly, easing up a little when the scruffy boy showed no obvious signs of trying to take it from him. Now he really wasn't sure what to make of him. He didn't know any capital T troublemakers who left him in peace, or who enjoyed reading, or who recognized a book. Who was this boy? He thought he vaguely recognized him from his classes, though he tended to keep his head down and preferred to work alone if he could help it...

"I wasn't reading it exactly, I've already read it loads of times. I was just drawing something from it." His face had returned to a more regular shade of pink by now. "Why? Have you read it too?" For the first time, there wasn't a hint of defensiveness or judgement in his voice. One might even say he sounded keen.
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Tristan Verona

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Post by Tristan Verona »

Tristan Verona
Starring : @Luke Campbell
2025/11/02

This was the last place Tristan expected to have his ear ringing, but here he was, finding out that Banshees had been welcomed into academia. He was now convinced that the blond-haired spirit in front of him was only parading around in human skin. That would explain the pitch of the scream and the intense staring that followed. Tristan shot a glance into the swamp-tinted eyes that were unravelling him. If the student ever had a soul, it had escaped with the shriek. Tristan’s father would be glad to learn that his writing had surpassed the confines of humanity and found its way into the hands of myth.

Nonetheless, even though his original mission had been accomplished, seeing one of his father’s books on the desk made him want to stick around. Where he had lived, he hadn’t met many others who had read them. He had wondered if others were as immersed in these fantasy worlds as much as he had been.

The nervous wreck in front of him did seem to be, seeing as his fingers were digging into the hardback quickly swiped from its resting place. Tristan couldn’t help but glance around them hoping to find another source for the discomfort the boy was clearly feeling. All he could find was the stern glares of other readers disturbed by the noisy duo. Not wanting to attract anymore unwanted attention, he silently pulled the chair back and sat down besides his counterpart.

Passing his hand through his unruly hair, Tristan rested his back in the seat. Keeping his voice down, he responded.

"I've read it a few times too. My dad shared his copy with me and I went through it in a day."

Of course, he didn't specify that his dad had written the book in the first place. That seemed like the type of thing you didn't want to mention unless you wanted to show off, which Tristan didn't really care for.

"Penwick kind of reminds me of the land of Dinas, actually. Some of the things I've seen feel straight out of fantasy. Who knows, there might even be a dragon hiding somewhere around here.”

Tristan laughed to himself. If this one had screamed when he had seen another student, Tristan didn’t want to be around if he saw a dragon.

He gave another glance at the ripped drawing. It was an impressive piece of work. There were so many details and intricacies that even Tristan had forgotten about. This guy knew his stuff. It was a real shame that it had been ruined.

straight out of fantasy...

His hand instinctively rested on the pocket where his wand was. There was no obligation for him to stay. He surely had other things he could turn his attention to rather than sticking around the banshee. Maybe it was because he was the only Verona at Penwick, but he didn't feel right to just leave.

“I’m pretty sure they taught us a mending charm in class at the beginning of the year. I could try fixing your drawing if you’d like?”
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Post by Luke Campbell »

Luke's eyes widened. "You read it?" He tried not to speak too loudly to avoid the librarian's wrath, but the disbelief in his voice was unmistakable. "In a single day?"

He almost dropped his copy in surprise, but when the slightly imposing boy showed no sign of leaving, Luke shrank back into the hard shell of his chair instead. This Modron boy who looked like he had been dragged through a hedgerow, judging by the state of his hair, just wasn't the right sort of person to make conversation with, no more than strictly necessary at any rate.

"Penwick kind of reminds me of the land of Dinas, actually. Some of the things I've seen feel straight out of fantasy. Who knows, there might even be a dragon hiding somewhere around here.”

Luke's expression softened a bit, thought it didn't last for very long. This boy was proving very difficult to figure out and Luke wasn't sure he liked that in anyone.

And yet, even as he he pulled his knees up tight against the desk's underside and collected the two halves of his map, he couldn't help but be curious. "You must be a voracious reader then," he said quietly, emphasizing the unusual word with a hint of superiority. "That means being very keen on something, by the way," he explained. Tristan surely knew fewer fancy words than him, if he knew any at all.

"Speaking of which, if you really did read it, I'd be very keen to know what happens in chapter three, I seem to have suddenly forgotten." The know-it-all smirk that accompanied the statement told a different story. This had very little to do with forgetfulness and a lot to do with Tristan having his worth and intelligence tested by his rather snobbish classmate.

He probably just read the cover, Luke thought to himself. And even if Tristan had actually read the book, he surely would not be able to say what happened in the third chapter. That was the price that one paid for reading it in one go instead of reading it properly, which was of course the way Luke read his books: slowly and deliberately, one succulent chapter at a time. As in many things, Luke favored caution and attention to detail over haste.

That caution hadn't saved his map though.

Luke's gaze fell back to the tragedy that now rested in two halves on the desk. The jagged tear had ruined hours of work, he'd have no choice but to start over from scratch again for his perfect map.

"I’m pretty sure they taught us a mending charm in class at the beginning of the year. I could try fixing your drawing if you’d like?"

"I know that," Luke huffed, crossing his arms over his chest. "I was there, you know." Just because he hadn't put a name to the face before didn't mean he'd never seen Tristan around before. Lessons were often shared with another house and some classes even had all houses present. "But just because we were told how to do it, doesn't mean you should! Didn't you listen to the Professor? Spells can go horribly wrong. It's best to stick to theory, really. I've read all about the ways spells can backfire, you could scorch yourself, or send yourself flying through the air or you could even splinch" Tristan probably didn't know what splinching was because presumably no one but Luke had consulted all available literature on the dangers of practical magic. Tristan's offer, as if to prove a point, was backfiring spectacularly.

Luke's face contorted into something between worried and horrified. "You don't mean to say you actually use your wand outside of classes, do you? That would be very dangerous and irresponsible, you could hurt someone!"

@Tristan Verona
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Tristan Verona

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Post by Tristan Verona »

Tristan Verona
Starring : @Luke Campbell
2025/11/02

Just be yourself.

Despite having heard advice of the sort many times, Tristan hadn’t believed it once. People only said that because they pretended it would always produce the best outcome. He operated on the simpler notion of being the person needed in the moment. If he had just been himself, he wouldn’t have handled the rising irritation as well as he had so far.

"Speaking of which, if you really did read it, I'd be very keen to know what happens in chapter three, I seem to have suddenly forgotten.”

It had started with a startle, followed by a rude stare, a sprinkle of condescension and topped with an absurd challenge. This annoyance sundae was starting to taste quite sour. Tristan could of just left, but he wasn’t going to give this snob the satisfaction of whatever game he was trying to play. So instead, he stayed seated and stared back at his challenger with a tepid gaze.

“Can’t fault you for that, some people prefer the illustrations over the story. They actually adapted it into a graphic novel if you’re more of a visual person.” Tristan responded while nodding in the direction of the map. He couldn’t deny that Luke was talented, but so far, that was the only compliment he was willing to part with.

“ The artist did a beautiful job portraying Emrys’s first time entering the Court of Scales. It doesn’t exactly have the same narrative depth as the book does. I prefer the way the novel describes the crest of each royal house and its backstory. I also love that we get the first mention of the House of Mabon in that chapter, even though it only becomes significant during the second book.”

Not too much, don’t show off.

It took a lot of effort for Tristan not to get ahead of himself. It would be easy for him, but not because of skill or work. He had an unfair advantage, and there was no pride to be found in that. As much as it might be satisfying to shatter Luke’s ego, he thought better of it.

That restraint didn’t last more than a minute.

“That would be very dangerous and irresponsible, you could hurt someone!”

Tristan knew that. He had been on the hurting end of magic a few times since the start of the school year.
But how would they ever get better if they didn’t even try? What was the point of coming to a magic school if you were going to be scared of using the wand that had been given to you?

Tristan wasn’t afraid of pain. He wasn’t scared of failure. They were all a part of the process.
No, Tristan was afraid of missing his chance, leaving this school, and being forgotten.
Tristan Verona would be a name remembered by all.

A question was answered with another question.

“Are you saying you don’t do any homework? Don’t you want to get good grades?”

Without a second thought, he grabbed one of the dull pencils on the desk and snapped it.
Satisfied with the clean break, he carefully set the two ends back down on the table, letting them settle as he reached for his wand. He didn’t even glance up at the boy next to him. He focused only on the task at hand. His movement wasn’t impulsive; it was calculated. Unlike his nervous classmate, he had been practicing. Recalling the pages from the grimoire he was just reading before joining Luke, Tristan let the incantation flow out of his mouth with quiet assurance.

Reparo
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Post by Luke Campbell »

Luke's brow furrowed. He was about to say some very choice, very stern, very big words when Tristan grabbed his pencil like a marauding barbarian. How dare he? Luke had hardly managed to open his mouth when the horrible boy did something terrible and unspeakable. With a snap, righteous anger turned into wide-eyed shock. That pencil, his pencil had been perfectly serviceable and now it had been murdered!

"What are you-!" Luke was practically frothing at the mouth.

But the show of horrors had only just gotten started. The scruffy Modron boy had produced his wand with the kind of fanciful flourish that signalled that he meant to use it. Actually use it, right there, right in the middle of the library! As if it were a most natural thing to go about casting spells willy-nilly wherever one pleased. It was a bleeding miracle the boy wasn't holding it the wrong way round, it was. A shame too, because if he had, then at least the reckless rogue would have had the decency of blowing himself up instead of putting them both in mortal danger.

"Reparo"

For a split second the tip of the boy's wand was illuminated by a soft and ominious glow. Luke took a step back, expecting something horrible to happen next. Intead, the two halves of the pencil shuddered on the desk, rolling toward each other, then meeting with a soft click. The break sealed itself perfectly, leaving so trace of damage, leaving Luke to gawk at it.

Luke looked at the wand. Then at Tristan's face, which wasn't smug or fearful or proud, merely a little satisfied. And rightfully so.

"You..." Luke's voice came out sounding a lot smaller than he'd intended.

His fingers reached for the pencil, then pulled back suddenly. What if it would explode in his hand? What if the spell wore off and it would break again the moment he touched it? But it just lay there, looking very ordinary and whole, thanks very much. Biting down on his lip, Luke mustered the courage to pick it up again, testing it as he rolled it between thumb and forefinger, then holding it out at arm's length, examining it in the light. Nothing about it showed it had been broken at all.

"That's..." Luke swallowed hard. His gaze flickered to his ruined map, the jagged tear bisecting all those careful hours of work. The mountains he'd redrawn three times. The coastline he'd measured with a ruler. The forests whose treeline he'd spent ages perfecting. "That's actually rather... good."

Luke dropped his shoulders and returned to frowning rather like a stern parent at the boy. "Though you still shouldn't have done that without asking first." Despite his expression, there was a noticeable lack of bite in his voice, as though he was rather struggling to be actually upset now that Tristan had demonstrated he was, unfortunately, a capable young wizard.

Luke's eyes drifted back to the torn map and bit down thoughtfully on his bottom lip. "Do you really think you could fix it and not set it on fire, or something?"

@Tristan Verona
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Tristan Verona

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Post by Tristan Verona »

Tristan Verona
Starring : @Luke Campbell
2025/11/02

A satisfied look came over the young wizard in training. Tristan couldn’t imagine a day when performing magic would ever get stale. Pieces of pencils moving on their own to reconstruct themselves, it wasn’t grand spectacular sorcery per se, but it was impressive enough to the eyes of the right beholder. The unexplainable manifesting itself in the careful combination of specific syllables and acacia, how could you not be enchanted?

It seemed that even his effusive companion agreed, or at least disagreed less. The expected objections were slowly quelled and began to transform into what an optimist might call a compliment. Apparently, Luke could do more than hiss snide remarks.

“Do you really think you could fix it and not set it on fire, or something?”

Tristan’s guard cautiously came down. For the first time since the start of their conversation, this sounded genuine. Well… the condescension had likely been genuine as well, but there was no malice or sarcasm in the voice he heard. However, he wasn’t going to let him off the hook that easily.

His wand retreated underneath his robe from which it had so quickly emerged. Safely by his side, he returned to a calmer composure.

“If you’re as precise with your wand as you are with your pen, I have no doubt you could handle it. Why don’t you give it a try?”

There was no lie to be found in that statement. There was no denying that Luke was precise. The only mistake on the paper was the rip. The rest of it was detailed, well-thought-out, and elegantly drawn. If the banshee could loosen up a bit, he could probably give Tristan a run for his pocket change.

He probably shouldn’t be thinking about duelling at a time like this.

“You don’t have to worry, if anything goes wrong, I’ll ask your permission before helping.”

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