Re: 9:46
He kept his breath even and measured, the illusion of casualness he'd mastered long ago. Was she going to insist he listen to her praise Mudbloods? Or worse, cause him to embrace them? Did she not see they were part of the problem with Integration? Couldn't she understand? No, she was a Weasley, of course they didn't understand that happy circumstances made them purebloods.
It was the most vile form of blood traitor who continued a pureblood line while bashing the rest of the class. Her father, in his eyes, was lower than Granger. At least she couldn't help her parentage. Arthur Weasley, however, was a fool and a traitor to the very society that had protected him and raised him.
"Yes, she was quite eloquent. Though I would not be so quick to judge the rest of our society. I seem to recall a pureblood witch who had quite the wicked hex while in school." He taunted her with civil amusement. She would not force him to admit his views of Granger had tempered, that he had protected her life on two separate occasions. Of course, the second of those incidents was how he gained his pardon, but that was irrelevant to the current discussion.