"Professional? Which profession?" Xander asked Milo.
"Hello!" Alec said cheerfully, greeting his teacher. He explained about the article and which paper it was in, and she was already nodding in recognition before he finished. "What did you think of it?" Alec asked curiously.
"An interesting collection of tales, but nothing particularly earth-shattering," she replied, sorting out papers on her desk.
Alec tipped his head. "You don't think stories about historic events from the people who lived through them are that important?"
"In general, no, with specific exceptions," she replied. She picked out a colored paper clip and slid it on with care. "They were children. Children exaggerate. Eye-witness accounts are notoriously unreliable. I see no reason why a cute little blog such as that should catch my attention in any way. Besides, newspapers love their salacious headlines and human interest stories. The more horrific the better so that people can read it, be grateful they don't live like that, and enjoy a good shudder at brushing as close to tragedy as most of them will ever feel."
"Oh," Alec said, not sure how to take that. Xander started moving him along, but he said, "My ba, my father, he was in there."
"I thought I recognized him," she said vaguely.
"He doesn't exaggerate."
She glanced at him. "No, I don't suppose he would. He looked like the type of solidly grounded person who had no flair for fantasy whatsoever."
"Right," Alec confirmed, not catching her slight tone. "He's not. Which means that-"
"I'm sorry, but I have another class coming in, so unless you have a question that pertains to actual history," she prompted.
Alec wilted but nodded. "Understood. Thank you."
Xander said nothing as they walked out into the hall.