Harry is terrifyingly calm when Draco is threatened not only that Draco understands Harry’s darkness better than anyone
They don’t “fix” each other ,They recognise each other
As for Hermione × Pansy
Both underestimated and are Both socially sharp, Together they pull strings from the shadows, This couple runs Hogwarts without anyone realizing
And at last
Theo × Ron (Chaos × control)
Ron protects physically and Theo protects intellectually
They are the most lethal pair when provoked
The first time Draco Malfoy realised Harry Potter was not what the world would one day call him, Harry was nine years old and smiling.
It was a small thing—easy to miss.
A boy on the playground had shoved Ron Weasley to the ground, laughing, calling him poor. Children were cruel like that. Draco had seen worse.
What he had not seen before was the way Harry watched it happen.
Not shocked.
Not angry.
Just… attentive.
Harry waited. He always waited.
When Ron got up, dirt on his knees and rage in his eyes, Harry touched his arm—light, restraining. Whispered something Draco couldn’t hear.
Then Hermione Granger stepped in.
She didn’t yell. She didn’t threaten. She simply spoke—calm, precise—and within minutes the boy who had shoved Ron was apologising, crying, swearing he hadn’t meant it. His friends drifted away from him over the next week. Teachers began watching him more closely. His name acquired a tone when spoken.
No one ever connected it to the girl with the wild hair and the polite smile.
Draco did.
So did Pansy Parkinson, who leaned against the iron fence beside him and murmured,
“Heroes don’t usually look like that.”
Theo Nott, quiet as always, said nothing. He just watched Ron crack his knuckles slowly, satisfaction flickering across his face like a promise.
That was the day the three of them understood.
They met again and again after that—inevitably, orbiting the same spaces, drawn together by something none of them bothered to name.
Harry never pretended with them.
That was the strangest part.
With everyone else, he was polite. Careful. Grateful.
With Draco, he was sharp-eyed and honest.
“You’d have done worse,” Harry said once, casually, after Draco suggested a different solution to a problem involving a broken window and a blamed third party.
Draco laughed. “I would’ve enjoyed it more.”
Harry smiled back. Not brighter. Not softer.
Just… knowing.
Hermione and Pansy circled each other like chess players long before they learned the game. Conversations layered with meaning, compliments that cut as much as they praised. When Hermione corrected Pansy, it was deliberate. When Pansy listened, it was because she wanted to.
Ron and Theo were stranger still—an unlikely pair bound by a shared understanding of loyalty. Ron burned hot, obvious in his protectiveness. Theo was ice-cold, quiet in his calculations. Together, they were balance.
By the time Hogwarts letters arrived, alliances were already formed.
They stood on opposite sides of the platform, red and green futures waiting to be assigned, and Draco knew—knew—that the Sorting Hat would lie.
Because courage wasn’t always noble.
Intelligence wasn’t always kind.
Loyalty wasn’t always good.
And love?
Love was the most dangerous thing of all.
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The train had not yet begun to move when Harry noticed the green.
It was a stupid thing to notice—just a flash of color among trunks and robes—but his eyes followed it anyway, tracking the boy attached to it. Pale hair. Straight back. The kind of posture that assumed the world would rearrange itself if it didn’t fit.
Malfoy, Harry thought distantly. He didn’t know how he knew. Some instincts came pre-labeled.
Harry chose a compartment halfway down the train. Not hidden. Not central. Watched, but not crowded.
Ron dropped his trunk with a thud. “This thing’s massive,” he said, already grinning, already loud. Harry liked that—Ron filled space without trying to control it.
Hermione arrived minutes later, breathless, eyes sharp, already cataloguing everything wrong with the train’s seating arrangement.
“This compartment will be inefficient once the trolley comes,” she announced, then paused. Looked at Harry. Really looked.
Something flickered there. Curiosity sharpened into interest.
Harry met her gaze evenly.
Hermione Granger decided, in that instant, that Harry Potter was not what she had expected—and that was far more compelling.
Two compartments away, Draco Malfoy sat with Pansy Parkinson and Theodore Nott.
Draco had chosen the compartment deliberately: forward-facing, window seat, clear sightlines into the corridor. He liked knowing who passed him. Who hesitated. Who pretended not to look.
“Don’t stare,” Pansy murmured, catching his gaze linger a fraction too long on a dark-haired boy laughing too easily.
“I’m not,” Draco replied coolly.
Theo didn’t look up from the book he wasn’t reading. “You are,” he said. “But you’re also measuring.”
Draco smiled thinly. “Someone has to.”
The boy—Potter—radiated attention without courting it. Draco disliked that instinctively. Power should be deliberate. Controlled.
And yet, something about him felt… calibrated.
Draco leaned back. Distance, he reminded himself. Distance first.
The train lurched into motion.
Harry felt it in his bones—change beginning whether he liked it or not.
Ron pressed his face to the window like a child who hadn’t quite decided whether to be embarrassed about it. Hermione was already organizing sweets when the trolley arrived, insisting on fairness in distribution.
Harry let them orbit him, comfortable in the chaos.
And yet—his awareness kept drifting.
He didn’t look directly. He didn’t need to.
Somewhere nearby, a presence kept not approaching. A deliberate absence. That was rarer than attention.
Interesting, Harry thought.
Hermione noticed it too.
She noticed everything.
The blond boy—Malfoy—had glanced into their compartment once. Just once. Assessing. Then looked away as if they were already filed and categorized.
Hermione disliked that.
She also respected the confidence it took.
“He’s watching you,” she murmured to Harry under the rattle of the tracks.
Harry smiled faintly. “No. He’s making sure I don’t watch him.”
Hermione blinked. Then smiled too—slow, thoughtful.
Attraction, for Hermione, was never physical first. It was intellectual.
And something about the way Harry noticed without staring felt… rare.
Pansy Parkinson, meanwhile, was bored.
Which meant she was dangerous.
“Potter’s friends are obvious,” she said lightly. “The redhead’s a walking temper. The girl’s a knife wrapped in manners.”
Theo turned a page. “And Potter?”
Draco watched the corridor reflection instead of the window. “Potter doesn’t lead,” he said. “He anchors.”
Pansy’s lips curved. “That’s worse.”
“Exactly,” Draco replied.
They said nothing after that.
Distance held.
At one point, the train jolted hard enough that Hermione stumbled into Harry’s shoulder.
She froze. He didn’t move away.
The contact lasted less than a second—but Hermione felt it register. Not flustered. Not startled.
Grounded.
She straightened quickly. “Sorry.”
“It’s fine,” Harry said.
Ron, oblivious, was mid-rant about Chocolate Frogs.
Hermione glanced at Harry again, something warm and curious settling behind her eyes.
Later, when the train slowed near Hogsmeade, everyone stood at once.
Crowds pressed. Voices overlapped. Trunks banged into shins.
For a brief, accidental moment, Harry and Draco passed each other in the corridor.
No insults. No sneers. No introductions.
Just a shared look—measured, aware, quietly acknowledging the other’s existence.
Draco inclined his head the barest fraction.
Harry didn’t smile.
But he remembered it.
By the time the train stopped, sides had not been chosen.
But lines had been noticed.
And somewhere between the rattle of the tracks and the first glimpse of the castle, six children learned the same lesson:
Some alliances announce themselves loudly.
Others arrive early, quietly—
—and wait.
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