She was eighteen years old and she should have had her whole life ahead of her. Because, really, eighteen years old was still childhood, legality or not. She should have been travelling the countryside in a car packed full of friends, hair blowing in the wind, loud music devastating young eardrums that would lose their power later in life. Her biggest worries should have been what her NEWT scores turned out to be. Things should have been full of promise as she looked forward into the horizon with high hopes.
But Jack Dyllan had never been a normal teenager. She had only spoken at graduation because her professors liked her, not because she was well-liked. She had lost all of her friends in one night, and she had not seen Vito since she had discovered she had created him. It was a bit unfair, seeing as she had sacrificed everyone else for him, and now she was left out to dry. Her new job at the Ministry came with a sizable start up bonus so she had secured herself a place. At eighteen, she had none of the perks of youth and all of the expectations of an adult.
She had grown up quickly.
So why was she acting so strangely.
Jack knew what she was doing. She had been following two of Vito's guys, hoping that they could lead her straight to the monster in question. Knowing she had been guilty by association had given her the extra-curricular task of eradicating evil from the world. It seemed easy enough, from her perspective, but it had meant more than a few sleepless nights and a pretty alcohol-drenched bloodstream. It also meant that, sometimes, she looked like she was suffering some sort of strange stroke in the middle of Diagon Alley.
But she knew what she was doing. This was a stroke of genius.
Jack finished unrolling tripwire across the street. One end was tied to a bench and the line stretched across the dusty street, slack in the dust. Jack glanced about, blowing her hair out of her face as she surveyed the scene - it just needed another hand. Her hands on her hips, muggle t-shirt making her stick out like a sore thumb. And that's when she spotted someone long associated with the worst thing that had ever happened to her as a student.
Keiran Hayes.
She had not forgotten that stupid, fcking Quidditch match, but she supposed she could not be picky now. Taylors and Edwards would be approaching any moment now, and she had to be ready for them. So, without much of a warning, she turned and hurried towards him.
"Keiran Hayes. Long time, no see. Jack Dyllan. Let's not talk about The Game, okay? Look, I need a favor. Real quick, no pressure. Can you help?"