“Think so,†he replied with a bit of a shrug. He didn’t know how the semantics worked – was one even allowed to call themselves a muggle, if they were actually magical? The magical world probably had a definitive answer on that – labels seemed just as, (or more, in some cases) important in that world – but Dennis couldn’t fault anyone who’d left for not thinking of themselves as a wizard. Or for subverting the magical world’s definitive answers on things.
He glanced as Dean asked something more direct. “About leaving?†Dennis repeated, raising his eyebrows, his own question stalling rather than curious or surprised. He glanced down at the pile of things in his room. “I mean, sure, I thought that’s what was happening, you know – after.†Dennis crouched down to examine the plastic bag filled with little nails and other bits. After the dust had settled back then, Dennis had still been a young teen; he hadn’t had much agency. His parents had decided for him.
He opened the plastic bag and fished out a couple of the little tools they’d included in the pack, handing them to Dean, who he was naturally deferring to as the leader of this task. “But no, not really,†he said, answering Dean’s question properly. He’d fought to come back to the magical world, even though there wasn’t exactly a big life waiting for him when he’d gotten back. Now that he was out of school, he felt even more disconnected from it all. But still, it was better than the alternative; in the muggle world he was a twenty-year-old man who’d dropped out of school at ten, more or less, and didn’t know a single soul except parents he hadn’t seen for years now.
“Right,†he said, nodding slowly. Dean in art classes? Felt like a decade ago. He was silent for a moment, reflecting. “I mean, I agree,†he said, realising his pause had been on the longer side. “I just, I don’t know? I’ve never really tried it. Not as an adult, anyway,†he added, frowning slightly. The only time he’d really tried to connect with a muggle had been with Foxglove, and that had been a mess, so maybe Dean was right. He didn’t like to dwell on that whole thing. His older friend had had longer, though, to try to have muggle friends, or lovers or whatever. Dennis had only left school last winter. “Like I live here, but I don’t really know them,†he said, gesturing at his door.