Her mother's face was drawn when Ari Apparated to Exeter on September 1st, a copy of the Sunday Prophet clenched in her hand, the first thing her Portkey-lagged self had seen in the afternoon when she finally woke up after crashing after a harrowing trip from California. To her credit, Eliza Laurier had never verbally questioned her family's Ministry employment, despite her own harrowing ordeals during the last year of the war. Ari had always thought that she assumed, because of them, perhaps, that the Ministry was more stymied in good intentions than intentionally and pervasively maintaining an anti-Muggleborn status quo; or perhaps she just recognized her middle child's impulse to protect. For her part, Ariana had read Edith's columns with a growing sense of unease. Ari knew in her bones that there were people like their department Head, Jocasta, who had chosen their vocation to serve and protect. There was no doubt that the last year of training had sharpened her skills to do just that; but she was the child of her father, a protest resigner during the war. Was it worth remaining in such an institution when all of them appeared to be crumbling into immorality?
'Don't believe everything you read in the Prophet,' her mother had always said, looking over her young shoulder at articles slandering this or that politician's magical abilities or sexual morality or prognosticating a catastrophe. This, though, was not about incorrect facts or tabloid sensationalism. This was about a voice: not only that one of the most infamous living Death Eaters had been released not four years after the Battle of Hogwarts, but that he was given a major platform by the acting editor of the newspaper, a sympathetic interview emphasizing his modesty and slight ideological differences. What was the point of it all--what was the point of them dying for this--if four years after they had demanded his head for his luridly described crimes the public was not rioting in the streets at his release, drinking his words instead from this rag? Student radicals. Her blood had burned in her veins upon reading that, flashes of green and falling children overwhelming her vision. Ari did not bring up the war in any way but casually or matter-of-factly if she could not help it. Now she wanted more than her mother's or Edith's stories of survival. She wanted to draw out her memories of the war and plunge every last wizard in Britain into them. Maybe then they would understand. But she couldn't even really make Prosper understand...
She had calmed down enough, pushed by her mother's somber and careful tones, by the time Edith's letter had arrived, to not immediately want the head of everyone involved any longer. 'Death isn't the answer,' she had said, the look in her eyes far away. 'Martyrdom just makes more.' Eliza had glanced at her, then, and then the pocket in which she knew she always kept her wand. 'Some battles need to be fought in other ways,' was her restrained comment before excusing herself for an interview. She just seemed tired, and that made Ari scared. She had flopped down on her childhood bed then, having missed her father and sister's departure to King's Cross by a few hours, and wondered what she was doing; she'd owled in 'sick' for half the week, avoiding the Ministry and the Aurors she didn't know if she could trust. When Edith's letter arrived to London the next week, her reply was restrained and serious; she felt as thought she was searching for some kind of resolution, unsure that she would ever come to one.
Ari had never been to a Muggle bar, but in drinking, at least, it was evident that Muggles and wizards were not so different. She glanced around uncertainly, looking for Edith's glasses, before spotting her sitting across from a young man she had never met but recognized as Dean Thomas. "Hey, Edith," she said quietly, sliding in next to her and then glancing awkwardly across at Dean. "Um. I'm Ariana," she said, sticking out a hand and racking her brains with a way to introduce herself. "I was in Dennis's year," she settled on. He had mentioned spending time with him over the previous Christmas, so it was probably the closest connection she had to him. "My mum's been compiling stories of," she paused, glancing around, unsure if people could hear, "people like her and Edith," she offered, explaining the connection. She turned in Edith's direction, her expression dark. "I thought she'd be as furious as I was, you know, but she just sounded...resigned."