I say you kill your heroes and fly, fly, baby don't cry
No need to worry 'cause, everybody will die
Jack had been pondering how exactly to do this since the Hogsmeade trip. She was surprised when inspiration arrived from her own childhood, shocked that something her parents had done was somehow now helping her in the present. That had to be some sort of first. But there it was, a crystal clear memory of being thrown into the pool to learn how to swim. For some reason, she couldn’t remember much of the specifics of that memory, only that she now knew how to swim.
The problem was working out the logistics. As her plan formed, the only major drawback was the timing. But even that she could make work. As far as she figured, a fear of heights stemmed from the looking down and seeing the distance. But at night, certainly it would be better! At night, you couldn’t see how steep the drop was.
It was the thought process of a semi-sane person without an ounce of reasonable fear. So what could possibly go wrong?
She’d stashed two of the better loaner brooms ahead of class, choosing a borrowed broom over her own just in case someone discovered them. But she’d arrived early and double checked they hadn’t been moved, and as the rest of the class filed in for Astronomy, tried to not get too excited at the prospect.
Despite their newfound friendliness, Jack didn’t break her pattern of solitary study during class. The only time she did was to cheat off of a smarter neighbor, but Matt was sitting on the other side of the observation deck. As the final hour started to wind down though, Jack yawned loudly, stretching her arms out and leaning back, trying to catch Lestrange’s eye. She saw him shoot her a look and she made a quick gesture for a smoke, hoping that’d be enough. He caught her drift and gave her a look in the affirmative, and she turned back to her star chart.
Yeah, she was lucky if she got better than a P on this one. Who needed star charts anyway?
As the class began to file out, Jack lingered, pretending to fumble with her charts while she kept an eye on the professor.
The second it was just her and Matt she turned. “I lied. I have a better idea.”
She jogged over to an alcove and returned with the two brooms. “Let’s teach you how to fly!”