As Alain tentatively reached for the elm wand, understandably hesitant about getting a replacement wand, Garrick certainly sympathised even if he couldn't empathise. His father Gervaise had made just for his eleventh birthday a 32⅜ cm hornbeam wand with the heartstring of a Hebridean Black dragon, and he had prized that wand for all of the succeeding seventy-two years he had worked with it. It must be hard to try and find another one that meant something to you, especially well after one's school years were done. Adults were less malleable than students (who often broke their wands during spellwork at school) but also conversely harder to read, so Ollivander wasn't concerned right away with the faint light that emitted from the elm wand. Often adults who needed replacements could not identify as well mentally with their early attempts, so poor spellwork results were to be expected.
When at a wave of the second wand, however, the cabinets behind him burst apart and the (mercifully well-charmed) wand boxes within scattered onto the floor, Ollivander realised this was going to be a tough sell. Whatever it was floating around in that head of the Frenchman's was making it more difficult than normal to get a good read on a good wand fit. As he chuckled at Alain's remark, Ollivander took his measuring tape back out of his pocket and tapped it to the notepad by his cash register. The end of the tape transfigured into a pen nib and began writing down all of the measurements it had taken previously on the left side, while on the right side Ollivander took a true quill and started writing down the reactions.
10259, faint light. 44528, broken cabinets. 29129-- he and the tape broke off as the wand in question flew out of Alain's hand, rebounded off the ceiling and landed on the notepad itself. After eyeing the wand a moment, Ollivander carefully put the wand back in its box, picked up his quill again, and continued writing,
complete rejection.Finally all five wands were tried out, the last failing to produce even a single spell effect, and although Alain St. Clare was putting a brave face on it, Ollivander could tell he was rather put out. He asked, of all things, if it was time to give up!
"No, no, never give up, my young friend," Ollivander said emphatically, turning back around and digging through the wandboxes that had fallen out of the exploded cabinets, extracting a particular box and holding it up to the light. "I have thousands of wands here and one of them is bound to be just right for you. Just let me think..." he tapped his chin thoughtfully with an elegantly long finger, and then grasped at another pair of wands. "I think we've narrowed... down some of the feasible... wand cores..." he tucked another pair under his arm, then turned around and spread them on the counter once again.
"Here we are. Give a wave at these. Box № 15723: elm and dragon claw, 22⅛ cm.
Box № 36293: redwood and kelpie mane, 24¾ cm.
Box № 39903: rowan and coral, 35⅕ cm.
Box № 50986: ash and dragon heartstring, 39 cm precisely.
Box № 56617: silver lime and dragon heartstring, 37⅕ cm." [span style="display:none;"]
@Alain St. Clare [/span]