Saturday morning sees Bella with her notebooks about magic all in her knapsack, her medallion safety-pinned by its chain to her bra just in case she trips the wrong way, waiting with Charlie for pickup for the Avalon trip.
"And take away time from our valuable educations? Perish the thought."
"Much more important than getting our story out accurately is knowing the events of 1776 and how to do geometry."
"...The geometry could conceivably be important, come to think of it."
"Geometry's important for...?" asks Angela.
"Inscriptions," explains Bella. "There are protractors."
"Percentages and careful arrangements of runes and cancelling things out. It's very mathy. Maybe I'll minor in math on top of majoring in Spanish and - or maybe the Spanish will be the minor, it'll depend."
More snickering. "We have lots of things to study. It's a really good thing I'm good at math."
"I'm not bad at math, but of school subjects it's my worst. Maybe it'll pick up now I see a use for it beyond things like statistics and arithmetic."
"It's useful for some other things, too, but - yeah, way more useful for inscriptions than normal day to day life."
"If it were very useful, they wouldn't have to come up with such contrived word problems. I suppose maybe people who are good at coming up with homework exercises have better uses for their talents, though."
"I wonder if in a hundred years magic will be a dreary elective in high school and people will complain about it?"
"But magic is so potentially practical, Savannah! What do you want to do when you grow up?"
"I have no idea. I'll figure it out when I get there," she shrugs.