Either my internet or tumblr is being weird so if you've already got this ask, please ignore! For the fic meme: twink fight fic, please?
I did get it! Twink Fight Fic (actual working title: la prospettiva de' perdimenti but I hadn't thought of it when I named the file) is a sequel to my recent fic sfumato, chiaroscuro, unione, which is about Leonardo da Vinci's assistant Francesco Melzi dealing with his maestro's death. In the sequel, Leonardo's partner Salaì returns to France (where Leonardo spent the last years of his life in the service of François I) and has to deal with his own guilt over being absent. Also Francesco Melzi judging him. Thus the twink fight.
(They're both well past twinkdom, actually. Francesco is almost 30 and Salaì is almost 40.)
Since it's Sunday, have some twink animosity, below the cut.
Francesco is sitting in the chapel, fiddling with some beads. The sunlight catches his thick golden hair; his soft pink lips move aimlessly over his prayers. He's always been pious; now, in his grief, he looks oddly saintly, like one of those prissy saints that Raphael paints. Raphael, but not Leonardo—Leonardo had never asked Francesco to sit for him, although he's certainly pretty enough. Perhaps he had simply not wanted to distract Francesco from his various administrative duties, but Salaì had felt a little stab of smug and fairly unbecoming satisfaction that the privilege of immortality in oils, the honor of being the likeness of a saint, had been reserved for Salaì himself.
(Now, Salaì had done some sketches. One of them, a drawing in red chalk in which Francesco's face was obscured but his lovely rounded arse most definitely was not, had caught Leonardo's attention, enough that he remarked aloud on the beauty of the work. If he'd guessed who the model was, he hadn't let on—after all, Francesco hadn't even been wearing a hat, let alone anything else—but Francesco had been in earshot and the ecstatic shade of pink he'd turned could have lit the entire studio.)
"Francesco?" Salaì says.
Francesco looks up at him, his grey eyes wide and strangely vacant, his expression unreadable.
"Giacomo," he replies.
It's been years since anyone in Leonardo's household had addressed Salaì by his baptismal name. Francesco had clung to it for years, out of his aristocratic formality or perhaps just out of jealousy. He's Giacomo again, back in Milan; he hasn't minded it so much, there. He can't imagine being Salaì with his sisters, and Giacomo feels all right when Bianca calls him that. But here—it's a reminder of his own apostasy.
"Melzi," Salaì says; all he can do, in the moment, is acknowledge the cooling of relations. But Francesco is already on his feet; he crosses the space between them in a few wide steps—and Salaì staggers as Francesco strikes him a sharp blow across the face.