She missed Celo! She seeks him out at once. Hugs.
"Of course!" Pause. "Usually. Wished power. We use it all the time, though - safe to try?"
Aegis turns invisible, then turns visible again. "Okay, we can follow you to class. Won't do anything rash till we hear from Celo."
Cam thinks about this, but then he kisses Jellybean goodbye instead. "Maybe later. We're gonna be here for a while." He turns invisible and follows the other Bells out of the room with Aether.
In much the same way that the Bells are following Aether to her classes, Jellybean follows Celo to his. This means he is present for Celo's conversation with Callahan.
They wait until they're back at the dorm and Celo has a batch of cookies in the oven before Jellybean brainphones the Bells to let them know the results. (Although Celo was added to the brainphone earlier, he doesn't see any reason to use it if he doesn't have to.)
[Callahan scares me,] Jellybean announces. [And she definitely knows something. Doesn't wanna cough it up, though.]
[Don't all go charging off to break down her door,] Aether tells the other Bells desperately, [please, I'm terrified of her.]
[We have to do something! We can't just stay here forever! The arcane defense was calmly talking about logical paradox like that's a thing!]
[We could just - wait for a door,] says Cam. [Amariah, you visited Juliet for a while...]
[Yeah, sure, but I'd gotten to Sunshine through Milliways on both ends, I knew to expect no time to pass back home - with Jane down and us having gotten here through a door only on the one end it could already have been years! I just got my afterlife sorted out. I have witch queens to talk to and subworlds to explore and trapped angels to visit once a week in case they decide to talk to me!]
[I haven't gotten to my afterlife yet. There's billions of people on Syntropy who are disappearing to some unknown fate. Don't think I don't understand the urgency of being able to go home. But, look, they find doors here. We can wait for a door. It could've been years, but it could've been less time than we've spent, too.]
[Anyways,] says Jellybean, [there's no indication that how long we spend here matters at all to how long it will have been back home, right? Once Jane's down, it's all up for grabs. She was out for three seconds from her end last time and some of the gaps in other worlds lasted years. ...I guess if it is proportional, that's a big problem.]
[It's probably not proportional, but it probably is monotonic. If we got home now, less time would have passed than if we got home tomorrow.]
[It's the simplest explanation for what Jane noticed about her clocks when she came back last time.]