Once upon a time, Jack had been a girl without a home. There was Hogwarts, a place where she was good at what she did but not exactly liked. And there was her parent's house, where she wasn't even good, not in their eyes. She was a lonely nomad, always on the move, but it never hurt too bad, because she always had one companion.
The Thirst.
The Thirst was this small, unquenchable flame deep in her belly. It never went away, but it would curl up int embers and go to sleep until suddenly, some gust of change would make it flare, and the little flame would grow and grow, before lapping at her heart. And with a knapsack on her shoulder, some help from her uncle, and her two feed sturdily beneath her, she would go.
From the age of fourteen, she spent just barely a month in her parent's home. Her summers were instead spent tramping through the pastures of Utah, to her tall treehouse; they were spent along the sea of Seattle, feet in the water, hands curled around a fishing pole which was her only source of food; they were spent along the waters of Loch Ness, in a musty old tent that didn't keep the dampness out but sure kept the adventure in; in the Forest of Dean, under a canopy of leaves and stars.
Before Jack Dyllan bought into the lie that she needed anyone but herself, The Thirst had always been enough.
And then Chase and Andrew had come along. And it seemed right, it seemed fair, to invite them to the banks of Loch Ness. She didn't feel betrayed when Andrew found her in her treehouse, when he entered her place of secret. Because once you let someone in, the seal was broken, and pushing them out seemed nearly impossible. And when the summer after her seventh year came and she had lost everyone she had worked so hard to keep around - Chase, Andrew, Ari, Elliot, Vito - she couldn't even return to those places. She had a job, she had a new home, she had no reason to live like a vagrant. So she had tried to go. Tried to spend her summer under the stars, in the fields, in the trees, atop the sand. She had packed her knapsack, the knapsack that had also remained loyal when others had not.
But she couldn't leave. Because she really had never gone alone.
And The Thirst was asleep.
Sure, it came back sometimes. It even got strong enough to lap at her heart. But it always got smothered out by something, cold water dumped on the embers. It struggled to stay alive, to not get completely killed. And she struggled to. And she barely stayed afloat. And the firey, explosive Jack Dyllan became... whoever she was now.
But watching Max go. Realizing that, despite what he said, he wasn't coming back and only she knew it, and no one would understand... she felt the flame lick her heart. But she went home, because it always went away anyway. But it didn't. So she went to to work, because that had always wreaked havoc on her spirit before. But it didn't. And now, time moving forward, the loss becoming apart of the past rather than the present...
The fire was still there.
It was late. The sky was inky. She didn't want to go to Utah, even though just the thought of the amber fields tickling her cheeks still caused a flutter in her chest. She couldn't go to Loch Ness, because the ghosts of Chase and Andrew were waiting for her. And she couldn't go camping because she couldn't just pack up and leave her family.
So she went to another place. A place that wasn't apart of her childhood, wasn't apart of the time when she was Jack the Triwizard Champion, Jack the Hogwarts Badass. However it was a time, a brief time, but one of the few that survived the horrors of what her adult life had become.
She could hear the waves crashing against the cliffs, and if this specific place had not forced her to plant herself there, she would choose the cliffs, choose the spray and the cold. Or she would have chosen to lie in the thick, green grass, grass that went on as far as she could see, grass that perfectly cushioned someone who might want to gaze up at the beautiful sky.
It was amazing she had been able to apparate here. She had only been there once, and quite some time ago. But how would she ever forget it, either?
She sat on the rail of the summerhouse, of the gazebo, her head tilted back, her hands gripping the sides to keep her there. Everything else had fallen away. That sense of loss, that sense of helplessness, that sense of uncertainty, that sense of indignation that the world thought it had any right to continue to give and take away.
And all that was left was The Thirst.
As well as the small, faint memories of
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.].
This gazebo had been waiting to serve the purpose of relaxing those who came across it, those who needed a brief escape.
And boy, Jack could use an escape.