I’m Still Here
@gravemagicks
What had just happened?
Beau’s short term memory was fuzzy, confusing. He remembered fighting alongside his husband and a flash of light—but there had been constant flashes of light from spells and hexes. Had one hit him?
And now he felt as though he were floating. Why?
His surroundings came into focus, and—oh. Oh no. No.
Beau was floating. High above the battle. And there, on the ground below him, he could see Percival kneeling, cradling what looked like...oh, Dieu miséricordieux, was that...him? No. No, that couldn’t—it couldn’t be—it was. It was his body. Limp and lifeless, staring sightless at the sky.
That couldn’t be right. He couldn’t be dead. He wasn’t ready to die yet. He had to—he couldn’t just—
In an instant, he was there with Percival, trying desperately to reconnect with his body somehow. But he couldn’t. Every attempt just went through the limp form lying in his husband’s arms. He couldn’t even touch Percival without his hands slipping through his shoulder, his arm.
“No no no no no no no...”
He couldn’t be dead. He couldn’t be. Their anniversary was tomorrow. He’d had plans for it. He’d had so much he wanted to do for Percival--so much to do with Percival. This couldn’t be the end. He couldn’t be dead.
And Percival...Dieu miséricordieux, he was shattered. Beau could see his husband’s heart breaking, could almost feel the shards of it pierce him. And his surroundings were starting to fade away again.
“No no no...Percival, mon vaillant, I’m here. I’m still here. I’m right here beside you. Please, mon vaillant, please hear me. Please look at me. See me. I’m right here. I’m not gone. I’m not--please don’t let me fade like this. Please.”
Could spirits cry? Could they shed tears? He couldn’t remember ever seeing the ghosts at Hogwarts crying. But he felt like he was crying. And he knew he would be if he was back in his body.
Then it all faded away.
Beau didn’t know how much time had passed when he could see his surroundings again. When he realized he hadn’t faded from the world entirely and gone wherever the spirits who didn’t become ghosts went to. But he knew it had to have been a day, at least, because instead of the street where he’d been last--where he’d died--he now found himself at home, in the doorway between the foyer and the den of his and Percival’s apartment, looking into the den.
He turned at the sound of the front door opening, and his heart hurt to see Percival cross the threshold, looking so very worn out.
So it was still possible for a heart to break after it had stopped beating.
From the look of it, Percival had just returned from a funeral. From Beau’s funeral, no doubt. And Beau’s heart shattered anew upon the realization.
He wanted so badly to hold his husband, to comfort him--but how could he, when he couldn’t even touch him? Still, it hurt too much to see his beloved so grief-stricken, so exhausted, and to not even attempt the semblance of comfort. So when Percival sank to the sofa and dropped his head into his hands, Beau sat beside him--how strange that he could stand on the floor and sit on the sofa without sinking through them--and wrapped his arms as close around his beloved’s shoulders as he could without sliding through him.
“I wish you could see me, mon vaillant. Wish I could speak and have you hear me, touch and have you feel my touch. I wish there was some way I could let you know...I’m still here, mon amour, mon vaillant. I’m still with you, I promise. I’m not gone. I’m--I’m...dead, but I’m not gone. I’m still here.”
He carded a hand through Percival’s hair and pressed a kiss to his temple. Or rather, performed some approximation of the gestures, at least.
Oh, how he wished there was some way to come back from this. Some way to turn back time, to stop his own death from happening. But there wasn’t. Going back was only possible for the living, and could have very dangerous results, and though there were the few rare wizards known to have extended their own lives, no one had ever successfully brought the dead back to life--and who knew what dire consequences could come of that? So Beau would settle for this vague approximation of life. He would settle for being a spirit, unseen, unheard, unfelt, so long as it meant he could stay with Percival. So long as his husband would not be alone.














