Aha, mint. Filius got the correct tin out of his desk, summoned the kettle over to make the other professor a cup. “Sugar,†he said, taking his four cubes and pushing the sugar across his desk. “Milk’s in the little cupboard over there, use the one labelled ‘drink me’.†His N.E.W.T.s students had a lesson coming up on charms to unspoil milk.
With Albus’s death and Pomona’s retirement, Filius was having less and less luck denying that he was on the much older side for Hogwarts staff, these days. He rather missed the days that being in his sixties hadn’t made him aboundingly old. It didn’t help, that most of his colleagues still called him sir or professor, though he’d never quite felt right telling his former students they could call him ‘Filius’ (and suspected, of course, that they felt just as odd about it.)
Consequently, he ignored the ‘sir’ and leaned forward, propping his chin on one fist thoughtfully. It was perfectly natural to feel nervous about lessons -- perhaps even more so, for a professor who’d started his career during the turbulent year the dome had enclosed the school. It surprised Filius more to hear that the nervousness had been manageable so far.
“Well, you’ve had a turbulent four years at Hogwarts,†said Filius, finally. “Perhaps the anxiety is only now catching up to you, after last year’s scares? I know I was ill at ease, for much of the year -- but, of course, I’ve worked here for a long while.†Having been a professor since before the first wizarding war, he knew it was unfair to expect the same weariness of a man who’d still been a student when the second war had begun. Instead, Filius had to think back to his own professorial debut, way back in the sixties.
“This won’t reassure you, I know,†he said, finally, “But you’ll never feel you’re at your best. I haven’t in years. There’s no shame in having room to grow. Merlin knows I do.†Filius gave a wry glance upwards, as though to signify the additional three feet of height he’d hoped for as a young man.
He had a sip of his tea. “Don’t fret so much over the examinations, either, you’re a capable professor. If you keep doing as you have, they’ll be just fine.†As Head of House, Filius had a good sense of which professors could reliably get their students through their O.W.L.s -- or at least, which professors could get their Ravenclaws through. He supposed that Ravenclaws weren’t a representative sample. (As an Arithmancer, surely Timothy had some theories about that.) “I doubt your attention will slip -- it might take a little self-discipline, but there’s no reason your teaching should suffer this year. Unless…†he tilted his head. “Is something else on your mind?â€