The girl made a lot of sense - that much Addison had to say. For once in more than four years, someone was honestly laying down their opinions in front of her without any mention of the Death Eaters or the Order of the Phoenix. She couldn't be sure if the girl truly was unbiased or concealing the forces influencing her own opinions. Even if it was the latter, Addison would have to say that she lied very well.
For now, though, that little tinge of disappointment was fading fast and Addison was content with listening to what the girl had to say. "I never said I was here to commemorate anyone. I don't have any losses." Except perhaps a certain 25 year old, thousands of miles away from her - the only person keeping her sane even though she wished he was dead already. What was the point of having a brother - a living, breathing, eating, drinking brother - if he had all but faded from memory? Addison would have liked a place to remember him - a shrine seemed too glorifying, he didn't deserve that kind of respect for abandoning her. A tomb, perhaps. But that would require too much effort. There had been pictures but she'd burnt them all in that first wave of uncontrollable rage and hurt. And so, here she stood - in northern Britain, next to a girl she didn't know, in a world she didn't understand, in a school where she had no friends.
No, Addison supposed. Those were quite a few losses. She'd never had those things in the first place though, so it didn't hurt as much as it could have.
"Would you like to be forgotten so quickly?" Addison asked suddenly, her tone unassuming. It was a fact that people spoke a lot. She was sure that half the PA's opinions would change if they had to turn their wands on on a brother or a sister or a mother - that half the Hufflepuffs would falter if Addison asked them if they would honestly be able to take a Death Eater's life if they viewed them as a true human being. Maybe they had mothers and brothers too.
It didn't matter either way. Addison would never ask and no one would ever be honest. For now, she could listen to the girl beside her and hope that she was being truthful.
"Take heed of what makes sense." Addison echoed. "And what's that?" The tiniest bit of frustration seeped into her voice and she finally turned her head to look the girl in the face, as if daring her to answer the question that Addison had been mulling over for years. She didn't even know why she was insisting on testing the girl. Perhaps a person of even marginal intelligence and some skills of deduction was all she needed to answer the questions that everyone seemed to have the answers to.
She felt herself relax a little further at the girl's later words, a smile dawning on her lips at the girl's choice of words. Not nearly as stupid. "You aren't either." she said. Perhaps a little too bold, but she pressed on. "My opinion..." she paused, pretending to mull it over even though the words were threatening to burst forth without any prompting. She forced herself to keep quiet for at least ten seconds and then spoke, slowly. "I think that if everyone wasn't out to be such a revolutionary, the world would be a little better off - if people simply tried to fix up their own lives before taking the responsibilities of the entire wizarding world upon their shoulders but only after considering or even admitting that maybe they might do more harm than good. Or maybe that they're filthy, little hypocrites." Addison said it levelly, her voice wavering only a little as she swallowed the rest of her words and forced herself to shut up.