Padril clicked his tongue, placing his hands in his pants pockets as he surveyed the village. They had drugs and drinks, he knew, but they were a sacred supply. They couldn't simply start the evening off using their precious, and hard-fought for illicit substances. They would need to make their own fun, then they could relax. But what to do? The village was completely silent except for the Hog's Head, only the owner knew by now Padril definitely wasn't seventeen.Besides, that was boring. Unimaginative. Della had probably thought of it and dismissed it already anyway, so it definitely didn't have her approval. They needed something new, that would make a good story.
Padril raised a hand out of his pocket and clicked it, his face lighting up. "You remember that terrible clothes store? Griffon's Robes for Boys, Girls, and Children At Heart?" he asked Della, perpetually annoyed at the stupid store name. "The building's pretty dreadful, and that Griffon fellow didn't look too bright, or too wealthy. He probably couldn't, and can't afford, good security spells. I bet there's a way for us to slip into there." He looked down at the village, getting his bearings. Griffon's Robes was toward the end of the village, on the side away from Hogwarts. The Hufflepuff grabbed Della's hand and raced towards the building, trying to stick to the shadows. They darted from building to building until they stood behind the clothes store itself.
Griffon's Robes had been painted in a god-awful array of rainbow colours, but they had since faded. It had been a regular village building, but the years of incompetence had really worn down at the poor thing. There were cracks on the window, bits of wood paneling looked like they were coming off, and there were a number of fallen, smashed roof tiles lying forgotten in the back. To make matters worse, there was a padlock on the backdoor. A padlock. Jesus, this guy was desperate. Padril tilted his head as he realised Griffon was probably just a squib, and a very sad and incompetent one at that. Making fun of him suddenly seemed a lot less funny. But Padril was still resolved to break into the store; they just wouldn't steal or wreck anything, it'd be like they were never there. He looked at Della for directions, unused to leading one of their outings for such a long period.