The room had filled slowly after Amelia had first arrived, but at least it had filled quietly. Her essay was finished within ten minutes, but she had taken the spare time before the lesson began to reread the sentences she had wrote for grammatical errors or insufficient detail. When she had finished her check, Amelia rolled the parchment and stored in it her bag, taking out a fresh sheet just in time to start taking notes as Professor Wilson called the class’s attention.
Petrificus Totalus was by no means a complicated spell, but Amelia could see the practicality of it as the professor described. When he mentioned being paired with another student, however, Amelia was not overly keen on the idea, especially since she couldn’t exactly count any of her classmates among her friends. She knew Rafael, but only in passing, and she had a similarly distant relationship with Jack. The idea of petrifying Elijah wasn’t all that unappealing to Amelia, but before she could start to picture herself flash-freezing the dark-haired Slytherin, the professor announced that her partner would be someone she had not yet considered.
The girl was from her house, but Amelia had never been introduced to her. Amelia had seen her around and heard enough talk in the hallways to know the girl’s name was Brienne, and she was not exactly easy to miss in the common spaces of the castle, because there weren’t many other students that had ears and a tail. Amelia did not hold these traits against the other girl, but had merely taken note of them as identifying markers.
With the professor’s okay to proceed, Amelia set down her quill and took up her wand, sliding from her chair and moving to where Brienne was sitting with a plastic-looking happiness affixed on her features. Amelia wasn’t sure what had happened to make the girl so happy, or even if she was feeling that way at all, but it didn’t really matter. As long as she was proficient enough with the spell to serve as an acceptable partner, Amelia wasn’t concerned much beyond that.
“Would you like to go first, or should I?” Amelia asked the other girl, her voice strictly business. She hadn’t bothered with introductions, because it was unlikely that Brienne did not know who she was. This wasn’t because Amelia thought herself popular, but rather because of the talk that went on in class about her, and the talk she knew was happening in whispers behind her back. The rumors didn’t bother her much, mostly because she cared so little for the opinions of her peers, but that did not make her oblivious to the fact that they were circulating.