Sunny was off in Jack's cramped office with Max. They were putting together a collage - a secret collage Jack knew nothing about. Sunny had goaded Max into finally breaking into Jack's office and taking down the shoebox full of photos she always refused to look through. The six year old was busy pasting the pictures into a book Max had helped her buy. She hummed happily, quite content and unworried. Every few minutes, she reminded Max that it was his job to tell her if Jack was coming, so she did not have to worry for him.
Jack was downstairs, putting away groceries like the tired matriarch she had become. She seemed normal and quiet and so very... typical. She could have been anybody. It would have hurt had she not always despaired about the unwanted tragedy that the public eye often earned her. Perhaps this anonymity would mean a return to peace. Hopefully, she would earn the long sought-after peace and quiet that used to bore her.
Jack was on her way to being thought a nobody.
But someone knew she wasn't. She had made enemies in her time at the Ministry. One such enemy was waiting outside her house with a large trunk. Cameron Pollard crouched in the bushes, nursing a hatred he had held for Jack ever since she had spoke as a key witness in the trial that ruined his life. Dragon trading did not often allow much wiggle room for punishment. Jack had long forgotten him, but he had not forgotten her.
CRASH!
Jack yelped and spun around in her shock to see a trunk had been thrown through the window. She ran to the door and looked outside - nothing. Jack swallowed and retreated inside, confused and wary, closing the door firmly. She turned around in time to see the latch of the trunk had come undone and the lid had opened. Something swirled out of the heavy box, split into two, and then... right before her...
Chase Moor and Vito Dee Symons stared at her. Her throat went dry.
They looked just as they remembered her, though Chase seemed pale, touched by death. The corners of her mouth were red with dried blood, and her hair was askew. No smile nor light graced her expression. Vito, however, was perfectly unchanged. He flicked twice like static, glaring maliciously, a smile twisted onto his face.
"We're back," Chase croaked, in a voice so unlike her own.
"Your old friends," Vito drawled, his voice dull.
Jack stared at them, her heart pounding, toxic memories pounding through her veins. They advanced, in step with each other, eyes menacingly locked onto hers. "Did you forget me?" Chase asked. "Did you forget ME?" Vito echoed. "Did you forget me? Did you forget me? Did you forget me?" they chorused one after the other.
Jack turned and ran, not even questioning it. She was not going to even attempt to handle the figures - no. She would not even attempt to test her strength. She was not willing to do it. She could not. The woman who had never been bested by a boggart before now ran in fear as its apparations chased her, calling their terrible call. She scrambled upstairs and headed for the first room she saw open.
Inside, Sunny heard the sudden noise on the landing and looked to Max. "She's coming! Red alert! The eagle is approaching! Take cautionary measures - CLOSE THE DOOR!"
Jack ran into the office, pale and frantic. "S-sunny! Oh! Max. Um - we have a problem."