James S. Potter the Greatest has moves like Jagger (king_james) wrote in wariscoming,
James' thinking process tended to be a bit, okay a lot, more straightforward than Rose's. In fact, so much so, that if one wanted to be cruel (or maybe just honest) one could even call it simple. Which wasn't necessarily a bad thing, it was just that his mindset tended to be so black and white, the peripheral barely ever bothered him. There was nothing particularly difficult to him about the whole 'younger version' of his aunt and uncle. They were what they were, which were his godparents, who he loved ... just younger. See? Nothing difficult. Which might have been why he'd taken Ron's previous twattiness particularly hard. Because his Uncle Ron wasn't supposed to act that way. It wasn't that he didn't understand, James tended to be slow but despite how many times Rose and Albus might claim different, he didn't suffer from any mental afflictions. Other than being a tunnel-vision, stubborn, arse.
"Of course he will." James grin was wide, and completely unrepentant. He was ... adjusting. He could adjust. Sometimes. Certain-very rare-moments. Anywho, he'd made peace with the fact that fine this Ron, while technically while still being his uncle, wasn't his Uncle Ron, by the fact that he could certainly get away with doing more to this version that he couldn't get away with doing to the older version. Not that he considered ever doing anything to his. Much. Anyways. Rarely ever. The fact that this version, while accepted as family, was still a git. And thus, it'd be amusing to see how long it too his brain to implode.
It was all out of love of course. Honestly, if uncle Ron could deal with his uncle George younger ... and with uncle Fred, then he could deal with Rose Weasley and James Sirius Potter. Maybe.
"It's said somewhere during family dinner that our sacred duty as Weasley's is to piss each other off as much as possible. Or at least to piss off the common prat." The word was said affectionately enough. "Your dad wins by default." Because he certainly hadn't done anything prattish. And Rose tended to be more gittish that prattish.