Andria nodded. "Totally agree. In fact, sometimes the movies ruin the series for me. Has that ever happened to you? I've asked some of the girls, and they disagree. Like seriously disagree," she said. "Like why keep it a secret? Girls like to gossip. I even do. I guess I don't want to deal with all that stuff. Not sure what else's there to say about it." The house test. When Andria first came across it, she tried her hardest to get into Gryffindor. It seemed like the thing to be at the time. No matter how hard she tried or how many times she took the test, however, Ravenclaw always showed up at the bottom. Her first thought was that the quiz was tampered, every outcome only sorting to Ravenclaw. When she told her friends, each of them told her how they got a different house. Her hypothesis seriously went through the window then. Eventually, after learning more about Ravenclaw, the more it stuck with her. "I suppose there are more factors to each. Totally a generalization for Syltherin," she said. "As for what's right and what's wrong. I'm not sure I'll win a philosophical conversation with a philosophy major, but deciding what's right depends on the perspective. For example, Draco. When he let the DEs into Hogwarts, people died. That didn't stop him from thinking it was the right thing to do - even if Voldemort did threaten his parents - I think? "On the other hand, we could also talk about Harry. His actions may have been right to the majority, but people still did disagree with them. What I'm trying to say is that whichever side you're on, the definition of right or wrong changes." Andria glanced at her watch. She blinked. "Oh shoot! Lost track of the time. I've got to run for a tennis thing." She went and picked up her bag. It seemed the two had been talking for longer than she'd thought. "Why don't you catch some sleep? We'll definitely have more time to talk tonight - if I haven't bored or scared you off that is."