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Originally Posted by
Ginny_Fan Dan unwillingly made his way over to the boys carriages. He couldnt see how they could separate the boys and the girls, they must have built a new caslte or something. He found Clifford sitting in a carridge with a younger looking student. " Cliff , can you belive it , two schools , one for boys the other for girls " he was sure this would have some impact on Cliff, he wouldnt see Eva.
Dan glanced back towards the platform Ems had gone, he turned round and politley nodded at the younger boy.
Aiden watched curiously as a new boy joined the compartment he shared with Clifford (gigglegiggle). The second year could only stare as he heard what the boy was saying.
And then Aiden's sense of calamity left him, something that occurred quite rarely. "WHUTT?!" the boy shouted, his voice squeaky as ever. Then, Aiden's lip jutted out in an uncharacteristic pout. "But... all my friends are girls," he realized, mumbling sadly.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Waterloo [B]The strange news had shocked him slightly, and playing with the silver shain around his neck, Clifford blinked as the squeaky boy -- squeaked alot. Whoa. He didn't remember his voice being quite as squeaky as that. What he was laughing at though, Clifford didn't have the foggiest idea. "You wanna be careful before you burst a lung." He warned the boy, a little bewildered.
He only seemed to grow more bewildered when Aiden the squeaky head started talking to his pocket. Ooookay. This kid was either crazy. Or on a sugar high. Or both. "You're pocket is called Minky?"
Still in a state of shock and disappointment, Aiden didn't know - for once - how to respond. "My healer says I have very healthy lungs," he mumbled seriously.
Clifford's next comment DID result in a slight giggle from Aiden. "Nooo, Minkus is a prairie dog." He confirmed this by grasping MinkyPinky in one hand and pulling him all the way out of his robes' pocket. Minkus squirmed in Aiden's hand, so the boy handed him over to Clifford, not thinking that there was a possibility that this older boy didn't WANT to hang on to an unfamiliar, squirmy rodent.