lunes, 17 de septiembre de 2018

Enjolras and the Beast

Enjolras and the Beast

Work Text:

The story is a little different.
There is a man who lives in a castle, but the enchantments are of his own making. A stranger comes to his door, not to fulfill a promise made by a loved one, but purely by chance. The stranger finds the master of the castle to be awesome and terrifying both at once.
"What shall I call you?" asks the stranger.
"I had a name once," says the man who lives in the castle, "But it matters not anymore. My name tied me to my humanity, and I am no longer such. You may call me anything you like."
"Then I will call you Beast," says the stranger, "Because of your eyes. And as such it would only be proper for you to call me Beau."
And Beau stays, not because of any promises or magic, but because he is compelled from the very beginning to this strange and lonely Beast.
There are little changes to the story here and there.
There are no marriage proposals, though they do dine together each night. Beast is willing to share his dinner, even if he is indifferent to having company. Beau is never forbidden from visiting any places in the castle, but certain doors are simply locked, and Beast never offers a key. They row, often, because their ideologies are different. There are never apologies from either of them, but Beau always shows up at dinner again eventually.
As time passes, they grow accustomed to each other.
One day, Beau says at dinner, "I am leaving tomorrow."
Beast is impassive.
"Will you come with me?" asks Beau.
Beast shakes his head.
"Then," says Beau, "I shall return to you."
The story is made of another sort of enchantment.
The truth is that Beast is confined to the castle because its stones are made of magic. But this magic is not the sort possessed by fairies and vengeful enchantresses, but by Beast himself. In his castle built on self-isolation and over-exalted ideals, he de-personified himself into an abstract. There is no curse that will kill Beast on his twenty-first birthday if no one loves him by then, but Beau knows Beast will eventually die there regardless, in that empty castle all alone, unwilling to admit he is a man just as much as he is a cause.
The truth is that Beau named him Beast not because of a monstrous appearance or selfish uncivilized behavior. Beast is polite, impassively so, and he looks more like an angel than anyone Beau has ever met. Beau only named him Beast because of a certain look in his eyes, a surprising bright ferocity that changes him from being simply an angel.
The truth is that Beau is dreadfully ugly.
Some things are still the same.
The truth is that Beau plans to return to the castle and spend his life with his Beast.
When the story ends, Enjolras looks up and meets his eyes.



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