Benjamin ate the quill himself, which made Donna think maybe he hadn’t done anything untoward to it, but she wasn’t about to be sorry for her caution. He didn’t seem to be ordering something from Weasleys, so she shrugged and said, cagily, “You never know.†She didn’t want to tell him outright he was acting outrageously suspicious, but he was. Hunching like a bat or something, in a window, on his own, berk.
There was no point in antagonising him, though -- and, in any case, she had already clashed with Slytherin Quidditch players this year and wasn’t keen to get written up as some instigator of inter-house squabbling. (It would be undoubtedly deserved, but what a pain.)
Why were all the Slytherin players so bloody tall, anyway? It was infuriating -- Donna liked to think she could stand her own in a fight, but it was hard not to be intimidated by a seven-inch height difference. She wasn’t frail by any means but she also wasn’t six-foot-whatever. It wasn’t fair; her sister Chloe had gotten to hit five-ten at least.
He tried to flip the question onto her, and Donna answered readily, “I’m going back to my dormitory, I forgot something there.â€