“Guess not,†said Donna -- useful lesson though it might have been, it was also annoying. As Manon disturbed a handful of wooden rods, letting them knock against the table, she hastened to grab at them, gathered them out of the way and frowned at the bandanna the other girl was inspecting. “Does a parachute have to be airtight?†she said worriedly -- but she didn’t know much about fabric, and less still about parachutes, so she decided that was all she ought to say on the matter, and busied herself trying to unearth some string. The other girls were discussing science again, so it behoved Donna to make herself useful.
There was a skein of canary-yellow yarn -- the shitty sort of yarn that made cheap scratchy jumpers -- in a wicker basket of plastic straws. Donna experimentally picked the yarn up, and discovered that it was entangled horribly in half of the straws and a few broken twigs of the basket -- she pulled the entire mess closer.
Jacq had said the words “independent research†now, so Donna pulled a chair up to the table and propped one knee on it, brow furrowing, rooting for the end of the yarn, only half listening as Manon pontificated. “Which half?†she asked, just to have contributed; in another moment she’d found a more worthwhile contribution -- a ragged-looking tail of yarn. She pulled, hard, and was rewarded with much more yarn and much less knot than she’d expected.
“We have string,†she said cheerfully, picking through a little tangle. “Or, yarn, same thing.†Combined with Manon’s purple bandanna, it would be a real eyesore, but -- she gave it a fierce tug -- it was strong.
She laughed -- she’d always sort of thought that driving owls to the point of crash-landings was a very British thing to do, or (perhaps) that the French were too refined for that sort of thing. It was a surprising comfort that Beauxbatons suffered too from morning dive-bombings, or at least from dive-bombings. “Does your mail come at breakfast too, at Beauxbatons?†she asked, and added, “Our owl drops our mail in the bacon every time.â€
Sitting more properly in her chair, one leg still folded underneath her, Donna dug a pair of scissors from the wicker basket -- “Did you say you wanted to cut the sponge up?†To illustrate her point, she snapped them in the air a few times.