Ari laughed. "But you must understand, we've had this goblet in the family since the 12th century, when, er, our illustrious ancestor who..." she tried to think of some people who had made it onto Chocolate Frog Cards--which were definitely the greatest advantage Wizarding kids had ever been given on History of Magic O.W.L.s--for particularly stupid reasons, "was the first person to lose a chess match...to a goblin...drank poison from it to preserve his honor?" It had really fallen apart at the end, but at least she'd given it a go. "Or someting stupid like that. I guess I need practice in creativity," she admitted. "Maybe that's why I can't make top marks in disguises." It didn't really bother her--given her fairly blunt nature, Ariana rather doubted she'd be staffed very much on missions where disguise formed the core skill set--but maybe it was an accessible improvement. She'd been more of an inventive writer when she'd been a little girl, but had become sort of difficult to want to make up stories about something else when there was so much going on in the real world.
"Sorry, didn't mean to startle you," she said swiftly. "It's a mixed bag, I guess. Some of the subjects aren't things I would have picked to learn more about, I never did like Potions, but some of it is really interesting." She paused. Teachers like Murdock tried to hammer home the idea that learning what they were learning could be a matter of life and death, but Ari could feel two conflicting pulls in her and on her classmates' faces when it came up. Death seemed so much more real to her, she thought dimly at times, than someone who had just gone to school normally: where death might be a grim figure confronting the Three Brothers, it was instead the white eyes of a thestral overlaid with the eyes of the fallen many times over, and curses rushing towards her arrested self, soundless but somehow carrying the thunder of great waves. But then, the struggle between life and death had become something all too ordinary. It was easier, in that sense, to just think of it as school. "It's kind of nice to still be doing something kind of like school, too, I guess," she said, after what had seemed like a long time but waas probably just a beat. "It's pretty familiar. Don't have to really confront the 'real world' and all that."
She wondered what Zacharias would think, glancing at him sideways. He seemed both like he would be glad to leave school but that he didn't really like what he was doing here. Ari wanted to ask about it, ask if he was serious about leaving, but she didn't want to pry, either. Zacharias was prickly enough and she'd just gotten him to kind of laugh. "You know?" she settled on, figuring he might choose to keep going in that direction while she got to mimicking her last row of ornaments. It struck her that she'd done a lot of talking about herself out of that same nervousness about prying. She hoped she didn't come across as making everything about her.