Diagon alley still made him anxious.
Dennis could count the amount of times he’d been here on one hand and every single time had been tumultuous in one way or another. Before his first year at Hogwarts, Dennis had come with his brother and his parents and he’d almost wet himself with excitement. It was so strange to contrast the memory of that visit with the last couple of times he’d been here. Now, as he made his way slowly through the crowd, the excitement of it all made him feel anxious enough to make him uncomfortable and nostalgic enough to make him upset. It was one of those places heavily laden with memories and Dennis had a hard enough time as it was escaping his own head. He knew he spent far too much time reminiscing.
Today, he’d bought some school robes. While he wasn’t a particularly tall guy, it seemed that he had grown since purchasing the old robes – the sleeves stopped several inches above his wrists. He’d opted for second-hand ones because they were cheaper and he wasn’t about to fork out a bunch of cash for new robes when he wasn’t even sure if he’d be returning to school next year. Not that the cash he has was hard-won, exactly. Dennis was sure there were probably laws about scamming muggles out of cash with magic and then going to Gringotts and exchanging pounds for sickles, but he didn’t have a lot of options at the moment. He’d discovered that the account he and his brother had shared was still there, with a small handful of coins sitting inside too. Now that he was done, Dennis was planning on heading back out into the muggle world and back to his muggle hostel.
Dennis paused as he moved past a quidditch shop. He stood in front of the window, muddy green-brown eyes transfixed on the newest, flashiest broomstick hovering in the shop window. A slight frown marked his forehead, but he was so still that the only part of him that was moving was his hair as it was tousled gently by the wind. He’d played quidditch when he was an underclassman, but he’d been too enthusiastic and silly to ever dream of making it onto the school team. Colin had gone through a short phase of wanting to play, but he hadn’t been very good either, from memory. Besides, they’d never been able to afford something like a decent broomstick.
Dennis wondered what he would have done if he’d been left with his brother’s broomstick after he’d died, along with the other stuff. Chess set, he thought. Gobstones. Camera. A pair of quidditch-themed socks. Dennis blinked, breaking the spell his own mind seemed to hold over him. Moving away from the shop, Dennis tried to remember which team Colin had liked enough that he’d bought a pair of socks with their logo on it. The seventeen year old made his way down Diagon alley, distancing himself from that shop intentionally. It was strange that the name didn’t immediately jump to mind.
After a moment, he felt awash with relief. Puddlemere United, he thought, the words drifting back after years of hiding somewhere out of touch. That was the team that Colin had decided to follow – for whatever reason – and naturally, Dennis had claimed the team as his own also. He’d always gone along with Colin, following his brother like some kind of pop idol or something. Quidditch had never really mattered to him, which was probably why it had been so easy to forget his old favourite team. All of Colin’s socks were red except for that pair, he remembered vaguely.
Dennis almost jumped when someone called his name. He’d gotten into the practice of mentally distancing himself from other people around him over the past couple of weeks. Being alone for that amount of time had made the behaviour habitual – it was easy to forget that they were all people when you never talked to them, he thought. The Gryffindor turned to find Keela Doyle smiling and waving at him as if being here was the most normal thing in the world and he couldn’t decide if he felt relieved or dysphoric. Dennis forced what looked like a casual, easy half-smile and slowed as she caught up to him.
“Something like that,” he replied casually, holding up his shopping bags as an explanation. “School stuff.” Dennis glanced down at her shopping bags, glad that he was running into her at a time when he was actually showered with brushed teeth and clean clothes, even if he had had to wash them the slow, muggle way. “How about you?” Keela had looked like she was going somewhere, so he started walking again, falling into step with her easily.