That was quite the list and she disliked that so much of that was lumped onto one boy. What were the Fates playing at? No one deserved that much responsibility or tragedy because there was no way that had ended with much happiness. "I shall endeavor to pretend I know nothing at all then," she decided firmly, "To give him perhaps a little sense of normal."
Her frown increased as Savannah went on. "How could my family have fallen so bloody far?" she asked, more to herself than expecting an answer. "Everyone has a touch of the Eye - as when you have a moment of surprise and realize 'I have dreamt this before.' But true Sight can't be taught, I'm afraid. That is not to say you can't learn some things - tea leaves, palmistry, that sort of thing. You can learn to read the signs." She didn't mention that accuracy would be shakey as it wasn't important. This wasn't a lesson and she wasn't a professor.
The corners of her mouth briefly perked up. "I have no idea what to expect coming this far," she admitted in a hushed tone as if it were a secret, "It's thrilling, not knowing. It doesn't happen as often as I would like."