Bit of wind, Donna said, talking about summers past. Cassandra carefully put the polish brush back into the little jar of paint. It seemed nice to go out for a fly just for the laugh of it. Cassandra, who used exclusively school brooms and certainly couldn't practice around the estate in Cardiff, was a little envious of Donna for that. There were a lot of things that Donna had that Cass did not, the least of which was year-round rights to fly. No reason to fixate on this one, except to not think about the rest.
"Wish I could do that over the bay," she said instead, twisting the brush-cap back onto the polish jar carefully. "We'd go there for a bit of sea breeze, and 'course the wind would stop right when we'd get done to the docks, and then it's a whole hike back into the city." She kept her voice light, conversational –– never mind that she wasn't sure she would be back in Wales at all this summer, simply no need for Donna or any of the girls to worry. It was so important everyone kept liking her in this room, kept enjoying her presence. Cass didn't need to be more of a pity case than she was already sure she was.
Donna invoked their game record for the season – Cass groaned, falling from her crosslegged position to lay on the floor, hands carefully turned nail-side up despite the dramatics of the pose. "Quaffle-sized hail, just what we need," she added, her voice halfway between abject misery and profound amusement. From here, she could just see part of Donna's red hair and freckled face around her arms. She could see her roommate messing with her hair, too -- it was Donna's hands she was looking at, marvelling at how her straight hair could just, like, tie itself up like that, when she processed the question.
"I bet snow's easier than aircon," Cass said after a moment of thought. "Like, you can't muck up snow, much, once you got it conjured up. But aircon, you got to put it in a window, hope it don't fall out onto the street, s'got five hundred little pieces inside what got to work, and it's right loud." She pulled herself back to sitting, checking her nails again for chips (none so far). "We didn't have one though, because the islands are hotter than Wales ever is, or whatever, so Dad won't buy one." There were some uncareful verb tenses in that sentence, but Cass didn't notice them. "Never mind I've never left the UK, not even been to Ireland, so why'm I supposed to know Caribbean heat, hm?" Cass rolled her eyes, as if to say parents, right? without saying so.