Ari's eyes traveled from the pan to her friend and back to the pan, her look skeptical as he proferred excuses to a very simple question. "Cholesterol's only bad for you then, not me, huh?" she quipped. Camm did this sometimes, prioritizing a combination of generosity and lack of confrontation that she had to take into account instead of just taking everything at face value. If she did, she'd probably end up taking advantage of him twenty times over. Shaking her head, Ari slipped her wand into her hand and split the pan's content onto two plates, dropping a fork onto each one and levitating them both over to their slightly battered old table. Dropping her bag on the floor and tossing her coat over the back of her chair, she perched on it, hugging her knees up to her chest as she speared a piece of egg. "Training's okay. We started dueling again."
She shook her head. "I dunno who's in charge of it, or even if it'd happen, there was just some talk." She hesitated slightly about how much to say about her sources, for their sake, but it was Camm, and if Ari was wary of new people he was one of the people she'd trust with her life. "Something Edith said." The older woman's name had become more of a kitchen table subject than she probably ever imagined, or feared, in the last few months. Once it had been in Purcell's lips, it was clear it'd spiraled into something else entirely. Wasn't coming clean with your identity something that was supposed to help you keep control of your own narrative?
She wasn't about to ask when his mum's birthday was--she knew his dad's, but hadn't bothered to keep track of his mum's given their relationship--so his answer didn't entirely clarify much, but she gave a half-smile, a little sad but tinged with a little hope. That was the thing about parent relationships--not that Ari knew all that much about bad ones, she was pretty close to her parents, but she'd seen other people's--there was always that hope that things would get better. Unlike a toxic friend you could give up on, you were stuck with the parents you had, for better or for worse. Ari's opinion of Camm's mother was pretty sour by this point, even with the allowances for pity she gave her from having such an awful husband, but she couldn't help but buy in a little to imagining a world in which Fiona Campbell suddenly got her act together after twenty years, for Camm's sake. "What's that thing they say about never knowing what you have until it's gone? Maybe she's feeling a little of that now that Catriona's nearly an adult."
Dropping her feet to the floor, she scooted forward on the chair to rest her chin on her hand while she thought about the issue, chewing absentmindedly. "Well, would she like it better if it were Catriona's idea instead of yours? You could let your sis bring it up first instead. Probably need a good ulterior reason in any case though...maybe come up with a way it'd help her after school? Like we know someone she can job shadow for a bit while she's here, or she might want to have the experience to see whether she wants to get a job here in London or search somewhere else?"
ooc: ping me if I got ages wrong, idk when catriona's birthday is??