Rowen was firm in her beliefs, and not one of these ridiculous aggressors could prove her wrong. They spouted off nonsense, but not one of them provided any decent proof of why they should not be in separate schools. At the very least, it would have let them avoid uncomfortable situations like the one they found themselves in presently. Rowen folded her hands on her desk, sitting up straight but remaining calm. They could be passionate, but she would be rock solid. Jae was first continuing his complaint about being less fortunate, and Rowen gave him the opposite of a sympathetic look, sarcasm dripping from her words as she spoke. "My heart breaks for you and your muggle parents, truly." A blatant lie, but that didn't require further explanation. Rowen was sure Jae had to move mountains to catch up to her, and that wasn't his fault, but it wasn't hers either. So why should they both have to suffer because his parents had a magical child unknowingly? That didn't seem like a fair deal for any of them.
Soléy was next, and Rowen was quick to turn her head to face the blond Trickett. Trickett number four hundred and thirty-two, but who was counting. "Oh, please," She said, narrowing her eyes on Soléy with a sinister look on her face. "You don't need a wand to learn about magic. Not everything is spells and enchantments; I'd expect you to know that." There were plenty of things she had been tutored on before coming to Hogwarts that were not illegal for underage wizards. Basic Arithmancy, history, and the properties of potion ingredients, to name a few. Rowen found Soléy's words narrow-minded. Though, it would have been a lie to say her parents hadn't made sure she could learn wand magic early too. It paid to know important people, and again, Rowen wasn't going to apologize for her advantages. Just because the evil little witch had a head start didn't mean she had not worked just as hard as anyone.
The Ravenclaw was startled by Pixie's outburst, jumping a little in her seat as the younger witch's words rang out across the room. Rowen, irritated by the sheer fact that the underclassman was talking to her in the first place, turned toward Pixie and shook her head. "Your mistaken, Pixie," She said, venom in her voice; what kind of name was Pixie anyway, she thought. "I am gifted in magic, but I still have to work hard." Magic was more than natural-born abilities; Rowen knew that as well as anyone, but she imagined the big difference was that she didn't complain when something was difficult, like everyone else in the world seemed to; she just worked that much harder. Rowen had never found a mountain she couldn't climb, and she wasn't going to let them bring her down to their level.
Pixie went off a typically Gryffindor-Esque tantrum, and Rowen sat up again, her chin held high. She had no idea the other witch was Dyslexic, but not because she was oblivious to Pixie's plight, but instead to Pixie entirely. The younger Trickett did not even register to Rowen, at least not until she'd started shouting at her. It was a good bet Rowen would remember her and her disabilities now. "A Gryffindor, lecturing me about acceptance?" She asked, incredulous, her head tilting to the side. "What a joke." Rowen had started strong; she held her ground, but with each attack, she found herself more and more likely to strike back. She didn't want to educate them on what the world should have been like anymore; she wanted to make them suffer the way they were making her. She needed to hurt them.
And the stupid grin on Killian's face made it even worse. Like he believed himself some hero, the Arthur of some awful round table of mudblood miscreants, and Rowen was sick of it. "Call it segregation if you must, but you haven't presented me with a single reason why it is not a good idea." Jae and Killian exchanged mockeries, and Rowen felt her cheeks getting warmer. Pulling her hands down from the top of her desk, they curled into tiny fists hidden underneath. Her fingernails dug into her palms, deeper as Killian and then Jae rose from their desks. As if they could intimidate her. Rowen Reinhardt would not be scared off by a nerd pretending to be a lion (even if he was a foot taller than a fifth-year had any right to be) and a teenage wizard with ear piercings.
Killian pulled his wand, and Rowen's right hand darted to where her wand was in her sleeve. "Duel you?" She repeated, but there was no laughter in her tone, not even sarcasm. If this were what he wanted, Rowen wouldn't back down, but she didn't have any plans on losing either. Along with every other subject she'd had private tutoring in, her cousin Wolfgang had seen to it that she would always be able to protect herself. Killian was a fool to challenge her, but Rowen knew better than to start slinging spells right in the middle of History of Magic class. She nodded, though, one single, silent nod, daring him to make the first move and give her justification to protect herself.
The atmosphere in the room shifted as if even the stones in the walls knew to be still just then. All Rowen heard was the ticking of the clock, in time with the blood pumping in her ears, until Soléy spoke again. Rowen was thankful that Soléy had the good sense to remind them all the professor was still there, but she was less than pleased about the Hufflepuff hinting toward an assignment. She'd remember to pay the Trickett back for that one day. Still, though, the timing was perfect. Rowen was still sitting, her wand hidden under the desk, so she was sure it looked as though Killian was the antagonist in this situation. He had stood up, he had caused an uprising, and he had challenged an unarmed witch to a duel. It was the perfect combination for punishment.
Rowen turned to listen to the professor, paying close attention to every word and turning to Killian as he was told to put his wand away, the triumphantly sinister smile clear on her face. As with all things, Rowen assumed she won. Even if a hundred of them stood up and screamed in her face, even if they gave her sensible counterarguments that shifted her views, Rowen would still think she had the upper hand. It was a sickness. The professor began to thank them for the opinions, and Rowen gave her a sickly sweet smile, but it faded quickly as the professor doled out detentions. She understood why Killian received one and even why she had been looped in, but why not Jae, Pixie, and Soléy, too? Rowen wanted them all punished.
When Professor Ellington asked a question to restart the original lesson plan, Jae had to interject. "Isn't it obvious?" Rowen spit back at him, "He threatened another student, which is clearly against the rules. Just like your earrings." She thought to throw Soléy and Pixie under the broom too, but she didn't have any usable dirt on either Trickett. Gathering dirt was now on the tippy top of her to-do list, after writing this essay, of course.
OOC DISCLAIMER: Samm does not share any of Rowen's awful opinions and I apologize for her behavior. <333