James was tilted by the photo. When he turned around, he saw only the back of the figure facing him. He looked at the slightly curly and exquisitely styled hair and asked, "What do you think about me changing to that hairstyle?"
"It will definitely look handsome!" Sirius said firmly and then asked James, "How about I make a suit like that?"
"Definitely handsome too!" James answered with the same decisiveness.
Then the two of them bumped fists and excitedly went to find someone to do their hairstyle and clothes.
The process of Snape exchanging gems for gold Galleons went extremely smoothly. The goblins didn't care where the gems came from or whether they were stolen. They only cared about whether they could make money.
The goblins named a number, stared at Snape for a moment, and then added a few thousand Galleons. "This is the highest price."
"Okay, deal, I want cash." Snape also exchanged some pounds according to Peacock's instructions.
Snape had never seen so much money in his life. Galleons filled up an entire table, and one gem was enough for a family of five to live a comfortable life from then on.
But Peacock understood that, regardless of the quality of the gem, since she liked it and carried it with her, it couldn't be bad. The gem was produced in the fairyland, and with sufficient fairy power nourishment, the gem also carried some fairy power, making this gem a very good carrier material for alchemy, and it was normal for it to be more expensive.
"But is this the goblin from the magical world? It's a bit ugly, and it's two different creatures from the house-elves." Peacock still remembered that when she first met Snape, Snape asked her if she was a house-elf.
Snape didn't know what a house-elf looked like. He just gathered the image of a captive elf from his mother Irene's few words. It must be very beautiful, so he guessed so when he saw the peacock for the first time.
Peacock didn't like this description. She was a fairy, not some elf raised by humans. But she also knew that Snape had no ill intentions and was just sighing at her beauty, so she reluctantly accepted it.
Snape and Peacock later learned what house-elves looked like: ...
Peacock: Do you dare to look me in the eyes?
But that was all in the past. They still had some personal impressions of the house-elves.
Peacock put away all the money and flew out impatiently: "Come on, Sev, I'm going to buy a wand, not only for myself, but also for each of my sisters."
Snape followed him and found an empty corner, untransformed himself, and walked towards Ollivander's Wand Shop.
When I passed by a store on the road, I heard a devastated roar from inside: "Merlin's suspender stockings! What a terrible hairstyle!"
The collapse in the voice scared Peacock and made him return to Snape instead of flying around relying on the invisibility magic. There were too many weirdos in the wizarding world, so it would be safer for them to stay closer.
Soon they arrived at the door of the wand shop, which was a shop with wand boxes piled up to the ceiling. The shop was also dusty. Peacock didn't understand. They obviously all knew magic, so couldn't they clean up their shop?
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