Dean watched Dennis shift uncomfortably under his gaze and bit the inside of his cheek. He was doing it again, or he thought he was. Interacting with Dennis was just such a tightrope walk at times. So many ways to go wrong at every step and Dean had never been taught how to balance. It exhausted him in his worst moments. Why did he invest himself so deeply in the happiness of mysteries, people he seemingly could do nothing but disappoint? Why did he love them so much? Should he? It took so much out of him and he wasn’t sure where the line was between self-respect and selfishness, love and obligation.
He would ache for someone easy then, someone who clicked with him so perfectly that they always understood each other. But he didn’t think such a thing really existed, anymore. Relationships took work with no exception. And maybe after knowing someone for a long time they would get easier to fathom. He thought of Seamus, easily the closest sustained relationship—romantic, platonic, or even familial—he’d ever had. Not that the state of things these days was anything like what it’d been in school. But he had learned over the years how to navigate Seamus’s touchiness much more successfully than he was navigating Dennis’s now.
“Yeah, sounds good,” said Dean, and stood up to follow. It felt best to let Dennis guide him for now.
He almost suggested they go back to his if Dennis was really looking for someplace quieter. The bar they were leaving had allowed them a more secluded table but had a dull roar in the background, less private but also more difficult for people to overhear them talking about odd things. But thankfully, he caught himself. The talk of someone else in his life, or at least it felt like it had been that, had gotten Dennis all weird. His place had all the trappings of cohabitation now, in a way that Dennis had tried to avoid when he’d stayed. But Riley, who was now also effectively living there for lack of any other place to go, had moved in more fully. Dean didn’t want to bother Dennis with that, make him feel replaced or whatever he felt. He just nodded along as they walked together out into the cool night.
“I know a lot of muggleborns, I guess,” said Dean. “But you’re the closest.” He would never have said those things to Hermione, for instance. He liked her and admired her but she was difficult too, less in the fragile way Dennis was but more in the way that she made him feel like an idiot all the time. He’d never been an analytical thinker and logical reactions often escaped him. It was nice to have someone who he could speak emotionally to. “I figure it’s good to talk about it with someone, at least,” he said. He didn’t like the idea of Dennis bottling things up, even knowing he did so with the efficiency of a liquor plant. "I'm always here."