Shock, pointedness, unenthusiasm- all these things flew easily and impressively over Phaedra’s admittedly rather preoccupied head. In another situation, spurred by a less engrossing conundrum, social hat firmly on, she might have picked up on the coolness- or at least lukewarm-ness- emanating from Aiden’s son as he actually quite politely ignored her own attempt at politeness.
She did register it, in some hyper-aware corner of her brain, the part whose cogs were always turning as she weighed up people and situations and words and non-words and what sort of response they did or didn’t merit from her. But the sorry truth was that whatever anomalies were flagged up in Keiran’s reaction were in that moment ignored, secondary to the inventive impulse that had brought her to his doorstep in the first place.
To that end, Keiran’s response was obliging enough- and certainly more professional than the last time she’d come looking for a book- that nothing immediately seemed amiss. It quite suited her, actually, that he had evidently taken in her urgency and was directing her to a possible solution without distractions.
Until she saw the Transfiguration label on the shelf and was faced quite starkly with the evidence of her own incompetence.
Trans-Species Transformation, Cross-Species Switches, human Transfiguration, Untransfiguration...The truth was, Phaedra’s Transfiguration experience was strangely lacking. Having dedicated all her efforts and almost all her time to her primary passion, Potions, she hadn’t paid much mind to other topics, in that characteristic carelessness that she was even now displaying. Her grandmother had honed a proficiency in dark magic, those curses and jinxes that she supposed were a rite of passage for all pureblood children, she’d later managed to become rather proficient in Charms, and had necessarily familiarised herself with Herbology quite by extension. She was not unaware of the discipline's appeal; in fact, its precision and complexity might have suited her very well, had it not been in competition with other more pressing claims on her attention. Which is to say, while she had an basic understanding of the core tenets of Transfiguration theory, she hadn’t ever expected it to be of much practical use to her. Why would she need to transfigure anything when everything she could need was readily available in its original form?
(It had, admittedly, been a rather short-sighted, presumptuous way of thinking, one that didn’t fly now that she no longer had the world at her fingertips)
So now, faced with shelf upon shelf of esoteric Transfiguration texts she was… alright, maybe just a little bit lost. A little bit out of her depth. Just a mite expectant.
So she would have expected, being as unpracticed and as evidently in need as she was, that the owner of a bookshop, headmaster of a school, knowledgeable
Transfiguration professor would be able to offer some direction. More than just thrusting her in the deep end in front of his general area of expertise.
But he wasn’t saying anything. Why wasn’t he saying anything?
Reader, there was a word for the sort of attitude she’d inadvertently adopted when it came to the ever-obliging Keiran Hayes, and while it wasn’t a new way of behaving, it wasn’t exactly intentional. Or something she was really conscious of. A byproduct of a lifetime of privilege and a trained disregard for other people’s concerns, it displayed itself occasionally with no thought to circumstances or better judgement.
It was this queer foible (more limitation than trait) that demanded more of Keiran now than he’d ever owed her. Her gaze flicked from the shelves to their proprietor, bemused. Not wanting to actually ask for help, she settled for a silent Look, an all-but-spoken
Well? And waited.
Entitlement.- Spoiler:
[This is all I was given, but if it doesn't work holla and I'll squeeze out some dialogue]