She had not really considered what would come after she said hello, too afraid of following a path that could easily lend to even more what if's. Besides, Jack Dyllan forgetting to think before she spoke, acting on instinct rather than planning? Whaaaat? Never.
When he did speak, however, she found herself surprisingly amused. She had squashed most people's inkling to attempt to call her by her full name, employing the usual tactics of fear and intimidation that had helped her throughout her life. Hearing it now, after all of her work, should have been irksome. But nostalgia was a very strong force, one that could not be beaten by pride alone, and she found that while her eye's flashed and her lips dipped into a frown, a softness took the shine from her greens, and her lips managed to flip upwards into a surprised, if amused smirk.
He asked about the match and she lifted a shoulder, dropping it. "It went better than I had hoped - but I'm thinking too long term about the Cup to get cocky now." She might not have been able to speak so well as a distracted student, but her uncanny zeal for Quidditch was still there. Why the sport, of all of the magical world, had become so important to her, she did not know, nor did she labor to know. She had always taken it seriously, and now was no exception.
She had a habit of caring too much.
Before she could properly answer his first question, however, he was speaking. There was something awkward to it, though the sincerity was evident. Perhaps because she and him had never exactly told each other how they felt. Obviously, something had been stirring in them both, but they talked about his condition, the Triwizard tournament, crappy families. They never said how much they had relied on each other's company, how he could get on her nerves in this delightfully new way, how important the other had become. So it was strange, after harboring those feelings with little expression, that he expressed himself now when, for all intents and purposes, it was too late.
But too late for what? They had missed their chance for teenaged romance, but maybe that was a... good thing? Because Jack had never really needed a boyfriend, or whatever, and that wasn't what she had been looking for in Hogwarts. She had been looking for a friend.
Before she could answer, he forged on, and the question, asked politely enough, felt like the first spell in a duel - unexpected and stinging. And the thing was, she wasn't sure she knew what to say in response.
Married life. Married life. She had to address it. "I mean... it's a bit different when it was Ministry prompted. It's..." she struggled to find words, so she chose answering it as truthfully as she could. "I don't know what it is."
She didn't know what to say to his first question, though. Things could get really complicated if she tried to balance her feelings of obligation and her feelings of uncertainty, so she decided it was best to just, once again, speak honestly. "I had kinda hoped we would have stayed friends so we didn't have to miss each other too much." Ouch. That hurt. And the slight traces of vulnerability on the perpetually strong face must have been indication of that. She shrugged, because it had not been her decision that they go their separate ways. "I miss you too."