Oh, no -- he could tell right away she hadn’t liked that answer. Zhenya looked away and Conrad did too, staring back at the performers as they took their bows, unable even to politely applaud. He hadn’t even thought about the club at Durmstrang, as he usually forgot it existed at all, but the thought sent a wave of fresh revulsion through him again -- he didn’t want to do these things at all, he thought, but especially not where anybody else could watch him. He got enough grief as it was.
Another performance was beginning and he pretended for a moment to watch it. It had been a stupid idea, he couldn’t help thinking, but he thought it would hurt her feelings to say so. As soon as he couldn’t stand the silence, he brandished his hand at the performer in the middle -- “I can’t do any of that,†he said in a whisper, “I can barely stand on one foot. And --†he broke off and looked at Zhenya again. “I couldn’t wear whatever that is,†he said, this time unable to keep from sounding offended. He glanced at his lap -- his robes sort of hid how bony his legs were, so he examined his snowglobe again, noticing offhand the tight clothes they were all wearing.
He would definitely have to hide this when he got home, he decided, but he doubted it would do him much good -- his parents didn’t need much provocation anymore to search Conrad’s room for anything he shouldn’t have had. He’d lost three galleons’ worth of pocket money in three years that way, and most of it he had gotten legitimately; his father was less likely to confiscate a trinket but he could still take badly to Conrad’s owning one.
Zhenya spoke again and Conrad glanced quickly back at her -- it sounded as though she had expected that this might be grounds to break up on, and Conrad said quickly, with some bafflement, “Of course I do.†Had this been such a big deal to her, whether or not he was interested in flying? It wasn’t as though she liked anything he was interested in (it occurred to him that he wasn’t sure he’d told her about anything he was interested in, but that wasn’t the point.)
As a concession he said, “I mean, maybe you could show me how to -- I don’t know -- I don’t want to learn any tricks -- but something basic.†He already dreaded it, but he drew himself up in his seat as if that would seal the promise, as if it would make him feel any better for compromising. Now he wanted rather badly to take it back, or to specify exactly how basic he meant, but that would weaken his position even further, so he just stared stiffly out at the performance again.