Mr. Cortes said her example was a good one, and she grinned back. Her contribution made for the moment, she started doodling on the edge of her wrinkled parchment (it had gotten stuffed rather haphazardly in her bad this morning) when a whisper beside her caught her attention:
“Hi, I'm Isis. Welcome to Thunderbird house!â€â€œThanks— oh!†Ryleigh was not good with names, but she did tend to remember faces well: and as she glanced over at this girl’s, she felt like she’d seen it before. And when she said her name, the realization clicked for the eleven-year-old. “Wait, were you at camp in Vermont over the summer?! At the bonfire?†she whispered back excitedly.
Other classmates began speaking up in the interim, and Ryleigh recognized another of them: Adam, a fellow Californian and skater that she’d also met at camp. She didn’t really listen what he had to say, though, because her attention was split between her doodles and whisper-talking to Isis.
Then Mr. Cortes dumped a whole bunch of
garbage all over the floor (which made a lot of noise as it clattered around and knocked against the walls and the legs of the desks), and looked expectantly at the older girl and asked about recycling – but a curly-haired boy spoke up instead and mentioned reusing things. Both of Ryleigh’s parents were Magbobs, but ‘recycling’ wasn’t something that the girl remembered hearing very much about. Her attention began to drift again – but sharpened when she heard that they were going to get to try out some practical spells. She drew her wand, already fidgeting with it until she was given the go-ahead.
She wasn’t particularly thrilled with being advised to focus on the ‘lightest and easiest’ target, however, but at the same time was still hoping to make up for nearly being too late to class. Ryleigh scanned the floor, looking for the biggest piece of paper she could find – and grinned as her gaze alighted upon most of a newspaper. She’d often heard the older kids at the skate park she frequented say: ‘Go big or go home’ – and Ryleigh rather liked that sentiment. Though it had taken a few extra moments, the First Year had acquired her target and was feeling
very confident.
“
Separe chartam!†she repeated enthusiastically, imitating the teacher’s wand movement with a little
too much zeal, which sent her sheaf of newspaper flying across the room… to accidentally crash-land on
Adam’s desk, scattering his neat arrangement of cans to the floor with a loud clatter.
Ryleigh clapped her hands over her mouth, eyes widening slightly.
“Sorry!†she called out, genuinely meaning it – but then began to giggle uncontrollably as she replayed in her mind the cans soaring through the air in slow-motion. She’d never intentionally mess up someone else’s work… but in a way it
was oddly satisfying to engineer some harmless destruction.