George gave him an innocent sort of hopeful look. Or he tried, anyway. George had lost the ability to look believably innocent right about the time he got out of nappies and slipped his first something into Percy's drink. (Which had actually happened on the same day, or so he'd been told.) "Don't suppose you have any of that sort of thing to smoke then? For the sake of RESEARCH." Anything could be justified in the name of research if one was creative about it.
"The laughs are the best bit, though," George told him, a bit earnestly really. He and Fred loved that sodding map. Moony, Padfoot, Prongs, and Wortmail were their first heroes. Well. Second. Their older brothers chased mummies and tended dragons. So there might have been some hero worship mixed in with the demonic little brothers act, too. "So you're taking all the credit then? Those other blokes were just riding on Moony's coattails?"
George looked a bit like someone had taken away his favorite toy and had a piss all over it, really. "Dumbledore HELPED? You had the HEADMASTER'S help?" He pursed his lips. "Giants have fallen and turned into tiny little garden gnomes in my heart," he lamented with great and showy sadness. "You'd best tell me some good stories of debauchery and pranks to raise yourself back up in my esteem." He downed his second shot and then dangled the glass between two fingers at Remus in a clear pour me more sort of gesture.
"Fred and me liked Sirius. I mean. . ." Well, sometimes. He'd been a bit mad and unpredictable and hadn't always seemed to appreciate the twins' sense of a dramatic entrance or their habit of exploding things when bored. But he'd had moments where he was different, and more aware, and the twins had chatted with him about pranks gone by now and then. George, in a rare moment of thoughtfulness, refrained from mentioning that Remus' former mate was barking mad at the end though. "Gin's carrying the torch these days. Along with her girlfriend." Which George approved of, since it mean no grubby little younger year bloke was pawing at his sister.