Pavo didn’t have many friends.
He liked to think of himself as popular, with a certain air of... charisma. Esteemed among his housemates, at least. Good at picking allies and bending them to his will. The sort of person people flocked towards if only to, if only to avoid risking an encounter with his more dangerous side. Not that alliance was a wholly reliable safeguard against that, as some did discover.
The leader of the Dark Followers saw the occupants of the school as opportunities ripe for the picking. A pool of talent into which he could dip as he chose, drawing out the more distinguished, the more gifted, the more daring to stand behind him in his lofty ambitions. Students and professors alike, they all blurred into one mass of seething threat or potential. In or out. Right or wrong. With him or against him.
The rare exceptions that stuck out among the unremarkable populace were those few peers who could comfortably straddle the line of allegiances, safe in the knowledge that their names, families, and blood kept them untouchable where others weren't. These select students, the representatives of everything Pavo believed wizarding society should be, were those he could be said to consider worthy of his attention. The
crème de la crème. The pure and privileged.
They could afford neutrality, because Pavo couldn't afford their enmity. He was as strategic picking his battles as he was picking friends.
Friend: a person from whom one stands to benefit in reputation, connections or wealth; a member of a wealthy pureblood family; an ally.Darian Levski was a friend. Of course, Pavo didn't know about Darian's little thing for That Shrew Waldorf, else his opinion might have been very different. But currently, lacking any dramatic differences in opinion and having the weight of Levski's surname and blood to recommend him, Pavo could overlook insignificant shortcomings like overdone charm, or a delay in pledging allegiance to the Dark Followers (because he had no doubt that Darian would eventually).
All this to say that on the rare occasion he happened to find himself finished with studying, out of his sister's company, with no-one to to chase down or torment and alone in the common room but for Levski, he wasn't opposed to the odd bit of casual conversation or friendly competition.
So when he got bored enough sitting there in silence and thinking over his latest plan to draw the PA out of hiding, he pushed himself up from his lounging position on the chaise, dropping his feet from the coffee table to the floor and tossing a crumpled piece of parchment at the other boy's head to catch his attention. His request was more of a challenge, but as good-humoured as Pavo could get.
“Oi, Levski. Up for a round of Wizard’s Chess?”
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