"Not at first - obviously - but, y'know, after... I thought about it," Dennis admitted, "My parents didn't want me to go back and I'd already been out for a year." And Colin was dead. "I went to a new school again and thought that was the end of that." He might have said went to a new school, but really his words detailed months of skipping class and refusing to get out of bed. If he'd left it for longer, maybe he would have started thinking like Dean was describing - imagining the magical world buzzing unseen all around him, wondering what he was missing out on. As it was, however, he'd just felt so messed up that anything had to be better than the reality he was living in. Even magic. Especially magic. "But then one day, after two years of not touching my wand, I hitchhiked to London and found Diagon alley - which was pretty hard actually," Dennis snorted and shook his head, the memory of that day abstract enough to be almost funny.
Dennis wondered what it was like to feel hopeful about a relationship. He wondered what it was like to have a sustained relationship, and realised that Dean was probably the closest thing to one that he'd ever had. Aside from Dean, real connections with other people were more like scattered pinpoints of light, or bizarrely intense but painfully short-lived bursts of energy like Foxglove. He wasn’t sure what sort of work he had to do to cultivate something more sustained. Just thinking about it made him feel many things in rapid succession; overwhelmed, lonely, angry, defensive, jealous, closed.
Not in the slightest.
Dennis looked up, something in the tone of his friend’s voice catching his attention. Dennis blinked, flicking his puzzled gaze away again as Dean kept talking. He was regretting asking anything. It had made him feel weird and now he was acting weird and the worst part was that Dean could tell. He could feel the other man’s eyes on him, could easily imagine the questions there that Dean was too careful to actually say. The concern there that was appreciated - desperately, sometimes - but also sometimes pretty fucking condescending. Dennis’ muddy green-brown eyes slid down to his empty glass. He was only a few drinks in, but maybe his thoughts were already addled by the alcohol. He felt it a little, just at the edges, but he also felt irritatingly sober in other ways. “Yeah, maybe just a walk for a bit?” Dennis got to his feet. He waited for Dean to follow suit before moving to the stairs.
He was being selfish, stupid. By now, though, he thought he actually probably could put a face to the name Dean had given him. Riley. Dennis felt like he was a muggleborn? He wasn't sure; couldn't remember exactly (and that irked him) but if he was a muggleborn and a Gryffindor, there was no way Colin hadn't known him. Dennis wondered vaguely what had happened to him during the war. Was he a runaway too? Maybe he and Dean had bonded over it. Dennis trotted down the staircase to the lower level.
"There are a few little bars a couple of roads from here, you know, near that old brick building that used to be a wool factory or something?" He slowed his pace, falling into step with Dean as they made their way to the door. "I was thinking we could go somewhere quieter." He tried to give an excuse for his actions, give a reason for suddenly wanting to get out of the place he'd invited Dean to. Dennis wasn't usually so awkward or strange, but he usually didn't feel so vulnerable either. He usually didn't feel so invested or like things he did actually mattered. Maybe that was a problem, he thought vaguely.
"It's... I dunno. Talking about that stuff - the muggle stuff - I don't really do that." That was an acceptable excuse, he thought. Not a lie. "...Not that I don't like talking about it," he added honestly. They stepped outside and Dennis shivered, the colder temperature taking him by surprise. He focused on the feeling, the immediate tightness in his shoulders and the goosebumps appearing up and down his arms. It was distracting, and distracting was good. The outside air was damp, but the rain had slowed to a sort of misty mizzle so he didn't bother with spells or umbrellas. Dennis started walking in the direction of the other bars he'd been talking about, but beside the cold being outside was actually pretty nice. The icy air was sobering and it cut through his churning thoughts like a blade. "I don't have any other muggleborn friends," he said, "I think about it a lot, but yeah. I guess I don't talk about it."
Dean was better at expressing, he thought. More in touch with his feelings, more able to turn them into words. Less constrained, perhaps by what an adult was supposed to be like and what a man was supposed to be like. Dennis' mind wandered back to when he'd first reached out to Dean and when he'd first been in his house, minimising his presence as much as possible and not sharing anything. How had they gone from that to Dennis being able to speak his thoughts more with the Gryffindor alumni than anyone else in the world? There was something about Dean, he decided that just made things easier.