Fena says, "I've never actually taught somebody a language beyond just a few words before. I think they picked me because all the other dragons in the country have, like, jobs."
(Her English is flawless and her accent precisely Matilda's.)
"I think you will probably do fine," says Matilda. "Tell me about Ertydon!"
"Okay." She writes this down. "Let's see, what's the alphabet like?"
Matilda extracts more words from her, along with their spellings. Then sentences. It is a very productive lesson.
And Matilda is perfectly fine with learning languages from someone who has no idea how to teach them! Everyone wins.
Lessons continue. Raha is generally more impressed with Matilda's progress than Fena is (Fena turns out to be well over a century old and very vague on the concept of having to learn a language; she notes that the other girls at her school seem to have more trouble than this when they're studying Leraal or Vansalese or Munine or Kida, but seems to chalk it up entirely to smaller humans being better at language acquisition.) Raha gets through all the ingredients featured in the introductory recipe book, quizzes Matilda on them, and then lets her start working on the potions in the book. They're very assorted. She could make soap or confectioner's glaze or a headache cure or sunscreen or plant food or glue that will only set in the presence of a second potion and then bond permanently.
And then one day when she is summoned for her witchcraft lesson, she is clutching her notebook and bouncing excitedly.
"I did witchcraft on Earth! Well, not exactly," she says. "It didn't work quite the same way. But it was definitely magic! Now I want to test if I can do the same thing here! I hope it doesn't mess up learning real witchcraft, but it's still really exciting!"
"It didn't! Potions always worked at home, but making them never did! But then this morning I decided to try something again, and it worked! Except when I do it on Earth it feels more like when I do what you call sorcery. So I think it's my magic, or Earth's magic, I'm really not sure how distinct those things are yet. I think my magic learned how to do witchcraft."
She shakes her head. "I have one friend who learned to fly after I made her fly around, but so far nobody else can do anything, and she's not the only person I flew around. And she can't move things that aren't herself."
"It wasn't any more and I don't think it was very differently. I think either she was different to start with, or it's because she's my best friend. If it's just about how good a friend somebody is, though, Miss Honey should be able to do some magic and she can't..."
"Hmm. Well, I was going to save this for a surprise, but over the last few weeks Kerah and I have been working on a wizard spell called an analysis that we think ought to be able to look right at your magic and see what it's doing. We'll probably have a first version ready to try in a couple of days, and maybe then we can get some answers."
"That's so cool! How does it work? I want to hear all about it!"
"Analyses are pretty advanced wizardry. If you can teach your magic to do any simple wizard spell we can get into the curriculum and work up to complicated stuff, how about?" chuckles Terali. "But I can cast the analysis on you when it's ready, if you like, and you can look at your own magic with it."