Family, friends, love affairs...it was all bollocks, the lot of it. It wasn’t worth it, none of it. It was better to be alone. By yourself you had no chance of being let down. You’d just have to live with life’s disappointments. No one would be there to disappoint you. That was a prospect Ariel had always relished. Now more than ever he wished he was alone in the world. He didn’t want to be, not really, but it sure seemed like a better option. The werewolf...alone with his thoughts. Perhaps that’s why his father was such a nutcase, too much time alone with his own mind. Ariel didn’t want that. He never wanted that. No, he couldn’t live with himself if he ended up like Fenrir.
“Charming,” Arial responded with regards to her brother, “Shouldn’t he be looking after you? I assume you’re his little sister?”
The task of looking after your loved ones was arduous but worth it. Despite having no real siblings of his own, Ariel had been blessed with half-ones. He would never admit it but he adored Orion and Penelope. Only Ollie seemed to see that. He was the only one that got to see anything other than the conniving bastard that Ariel pretended to be. Ollie, the plucky Ravenclaw that was just a tad too overemotional. Ariel wouldn’t dare call him a friend, just in case he got the wrong idea. He knew that Ollie considered him a friend, however scathing and cruel he was to him. Ollie was impossible to chase away. Ariel thanked Merlin someone was. In all honesty, the blonde didn’t know what he’d do without his friend.
Sighing, Ariel rested his head back against the wall. He was fatigued by all of this. It was a charade he couldn’t wait to be over and done with. Perhaps he’d send his mother’s Christmas present in the New Year, if he didn’t burn it before then. He looked at Jack and smirked slightly. “You’re hair is longer,” he commented absentmindedly, “only a little bit though. It’s not even worth mentioning.” But of course he’d notice, he always noticed these stupid little things, things women did like to hear. He usually used keen eyes and a good sense of smell to point out the faults in their appearance. He was merely commenting on Jack. He’d taken a swipe at her hair already, he’d think of something for in a minute.
“I can’t rest...no one can rest. We’ve all got to keep up our fun little appearances. It amuses me really but I tire of it. Still...there’s nothing wrong with hoping that one day the world will no longer be full of idiots. It’s a hope in vain though I fear.” Ariel knocked back some more of the Firewhisky. “One can also hope that their Head of House starts buying good Firewhisky.” Ariel made a face, “This is foul.”
He looked at Jack again and the sides of his lips twitched. “You’re cynicism will give you wrinkles,” he commented with a small smile. “Not that you’re wrong mind you. Once you’re an independent thinker, you don’t need them anymore. I suppose that’s a good thing. Then again, you can easily fall apart without them,” He held his drink up to the light again and turned it, watching the dust move around it, “blood is supposedly thicker than water. They’ll still screw you over though. I suppose it’s to be expected. Everyone's the same. People lie."