Who: Blaise Zabini, Theodore Nott (and anyone else around/Infirmary) What: Blaise gets claustrophobic during the lockdown and has a panic attack. THUS, he goes to the infirmary! When: Wednesday afternoon Where: Random lockdown room --> Infirmary Why: He's sick. And has an ego problem. (And another hard problem.) Warning: NONE YET. Might get changed, though. + ANGER Status: Incomplete!
Blaise was stuck in some random room with too many people he didn't like. They were ugly and boring and he wanted to be somewhere else. Honestly, he didn't even understand what all the commotion was about. The "explosion" had happened while he was completely passed out and only a few screaming kids had woken him up. That's when he left, only to be dragged into a nearby room for "lockdown". So here he was - pacing - and locked in. While he wasn't scared, his mind was racing over the possibilities of the cause of that explosion: Had someone broken in? Was it just a prank? Were they under serious attack? He wanted to know and his paranoia was mixing with his claustrophobia and general misanthropy.
Feeling a drop of sweat ease its way down the side of his head, Blaise realized he was going to throw up. "I have to get out of here," he turned to the nearest adult, the one watching over them, forcing them together. It took several minutes of convincing before he finally gave in and sent Blaise off with an escort. It must have been really serious if he couldn't even walk himself under the pretense of throwing up.
Blaise just hated crowds and couldn't stand being caged up. Although he would never admit this problem under normal circumstance, he just couldn't handle that room any longer. By the time Blaise and his escort arrived at the infirmary, Blaise was only feeling worse. It wasn't normal, but walking while feeling nauseous never really helped anyone. With a bruised ego (from being weak at all), Blaise made it to a bed with the help of the student and groaned, wiping an arm across his soaking forehead; even his breathing was quicker than usual as he reached the tip of the panic attack.