Sam genuinely thought, right then, that Louise would be a great teacher. She would understand that the students were all individuals and while they needed to learn the spells and skills they needed to survive as adults, they also needed to be allowed to follow their own path. "You're right. I had no clue what I wanted to do what I graduated" he said "Mind you, I still don't feel like I'm an adult most of the time anyway..." Even though he spent his lfe teaching, Sam still felt the same inside as he had twenty years earlier. Maybe everyone did.
But there, the real thing they'd been avoiding was out in the open, and now they'd faced it, it didn't seem so difficult after all. "I do feel bad, though. I've been over it a thousand times in my head. What sort of person has a child they don't even know exists until she's ten years old? What sort of person did that make me, that I didn't know until she actually came looking for me?" What he really meant was, why had Enitan's mother never contacted him? They'd never exchanged surnames but surely she could have found a way if she'd wanted to...did she think he would be a terrible father, or had she always meant to and circumstances had prevented it? These thoughts, illogical though they may have been, had haunted him for much of the past year. Strangely, he hadn't once wished that Enitan hadn't come into his life; once she'd turned up literally on his doorstep little parts of his life had made sense...he'd had odd melancholy feelings on the day that turned out to be her birthday, for example. "and I feel bad because of what it did to us. I wanted to put you first so many times but I can't, and I know you never had a choice about any of it, and I hate it because I love you both and I never want to let you down..."
The words spilled out all at once before Sam could consider the wisdom of them. Maybe this wasn't the time or the place, but they'd politely insisted that everything was fine for too long and he wanted to...well, be sure that everything really was okay. Particularly if any sort of life-changing decisions were being considered.
"Yeah, kids need balance. Don't we all" he laughed, but there wasn't much humour in his voice right now. It felt like he was saying all the right things, but his actions had fallen short. He didn't want to spoil the comfortable atmosphere, but those things had needed to be said.
"Hmm, I guess it could be interesting, but combining the two would probably be too much work for one professor" he said, thinking the matter over "besides, one subject is compulsory and the other is an elective, so that might be difficult to organise..." Also, Sam doubted changing the curriculum would be so easy, but he wasn't going to mention that. He didn't want to sound discouraging. "Yes, you'd send the letter to Minerva, and then she'd discuss it with the governors - I think they do it via owl mostly - and then you'd be invited to attend an interview. You'd be asked about your experience - they'll already know your qualifications from your resume - an example of how you would introduce a lesson, and probably something slightly strange to see how you'd react to an unexpectd situation..." Sam wanted to say he'd help with the letter, but he didn't want Louise to imagine he thought she couldn't manage it herself.