"Dreadful, really," Rowen added, and the way she lifted her nose at the thought of her male relatives proved that the word "crass" just wasn't insulting enough for some of them. The young witch counted herself lucky to be on this side of the Reinhardt table, away from the lackluster cousins and odd uncles and especially the aunts who lacked anything resembling a backbone despite how tight their corsets were. "Oh," Rowen said softly, her mouth lingering on the o shape as the wheels in her mind began to turn. Take Care of It, she repeated the words, letting the dark corners of her mind fill in the blanks and smirking.
"As if he has the stones," She giggled, it was a crass thing to say, but she must have been feeling especially airy from the bubbly orange juice she was sipping with brunch. Klaus would lose his inheritance or the girl, and there was something strangely comforting to Rowen about that balance. That not everything was just given to the stupid wizards in her family simply because they had the luck to inherit the right last name. Rowen had to work for it, but she was a witch, it was expected, so it felt good to know they had to earn it too. Or, at the very least, not screw up and lose it.
Suitable.
Suitable. Rowen turned the word over and over, trying to pick it apart and puzzle out what Genevieve must have meant by it, and the pause was torturous. Rowen ached at how Genevieve reduced her closest friends to mere adjectives, and while she disagreed, she nodded anyway. "Barbara is quite vintage; simplicity is elegant," Rowen added; she had always admired the way Barbara took up very little space in a room but made it seem like it was on purpose; like she had the whole 'being a teenager' thing figured out already. And Billie was indeed quiet, but Rowen never had minded; she could talk enough for the three of them, honestly. Hyacinth was sugary sweet, spirited indeed, and Rowen always trusted her to see the bright side of things, even just so that Rowen could darken them again.
Shifting in her seat, Rowen was careful with her gestures, facial expressions, and next words. While Genevieve was verbally judging her friends, Rowen knew she was in every way actually judging her. Rowen's choice of who to invite was always going to speak volumes about her character. She knew it was a test, and of course, she wouldn't accept "suitable" as a grade. She needed perfection. "Each one of them is a perfect complement to me," She finally admitted, placing her hand delicately on her chest, as if they were accessories she held dearly. "They elevate me, without overshadowing, which is what friends are meant to do, am I correct?"