Cosmic Love
@mostpeculiarmademoiselleetmsieur
in response to this
Percival didn't understand the concept of unreality until the day before his seventh anniversary. Seven--seven years married, seven years happy, seven for good luck and seven for...well...far more than Percival ever expected out of life. After Grindelwald... There was so much that happened after Grindelwald Percival could never have imagined. He presumed his life over. He was sure they'd only find his corpse. But they found him alive, and in turn, he found--miraculously--reasons to live. He found love, built a family, developed his career. He traveled, he laughed, and he was...happy. Percival was happy.
But his most recent case lead to a sting, which lead to a confrontation, which lead to an out-and-out battle. For all the chaos, he was grateful to have someone as skilled and experienced as his husband at his back. They'd worked together for so long, their lives entwined in every conceivable way, Beau was an extension of his own intent, and vice-versa. So much so, in fact, that how seamlessly they operated made them damn near a force of nature. Percival's magic sang to Beau's, and Beau's responded in harmony. Hexes and spells flashed and exploded around them. Buildings crumbled. Their teammates fell. Between the pair of them, however, they were safe. It wasn't their first skirmish, and Percival was certain it wouldn't be their last.
Until it was.
As surely as they magic harmonized, Percival recognized the moment Beau's answering call fell away. First, to something quiet--he'd been hit. Percival responded immediately, casting something protective around them as he tended his bleeding husband. The wound was severe, but nothing Beau hadn't survived in the past. He bled profusely, but Percival had seen so much more blood. Sure, Beau might be sore and recovering for their anniversary, but Percival didn't doubt they'd celebrate somehow. Those assurances, those facts of Percival's universe shattered.
Beau's magic fell silent.
His breathing stopped, and no matter how Percival forced air into his lungs or compressed his chest, it wouldn't resume. His chest stilled, and no matter how he shocked his husband's still heart, it wouldn't beat. His lips paled, and no matter how Percival pressed his against them, they would not warm.
Percival didn't mourn. How often had he believed his end near only to be jarred back to reality by a slap to the face or a painful hex in Grindelwald's custody? How often had he jolted from his bed sheets after such a ludicrous scenario to find it just another nightmare?
When MACUSA sent their teams, Percival was almost, well, not quite amused, but fairly sure of himself. He'd wake any moment in his bed with Beau beside him. Sure, the image of his husband dead in his arms was distressing, but Beau would shake him conscious soon enough. Percival was certainly fussing, wrapping himself in sheets Beau would help untangle from his flailing limbs. Any moment, now...
The nightmare dragged on, but he was certain it was a nightmare. Percival was missing time, but for once, there was an odd sort of comfort in it. He knew it would all fade away with the dawn of a new day. Though, how long it continued planted budding seeds of anxiety in the back of his mind. Percival's panic telegraphed fairly loudly when he came to his nightmares. Beau had to have sensed it by now. Why hadn't he woken Percival?
Beau's funeral was exactly as Percival would have imagined it. Mourning pierced his indifferent facade as the casket was lowered into the ground. Belle's sobs, Velia's soft cries, Maurice's silent tears--they were a family he never deserved, a family he never imagined having, and they mourned. Beau was gone--here, anyway. Belle's hug felt real, as did Velia's tears against his sternum. He couldn't meet the heartbreak in Maurice's eyes--he couldn't meet anyone's eyes--so surely this was a nightmare. He lingered at the grave and its freshly piled dirt, read and reread the headstone. A simple: Beauxhomme Lafayette-Graves, beloved husband, brother, and son. And the dates. Current dates. Dates not yet passed, because this was a nightmare.
Vaguely, Percival recalled an anecdote from one of his professors at Ilvermorny: a dreamer can't read in his own dream. Percival reread his husband's headstone. Beauxhomme Lafayette-Graves, beloved husband, brother, and son.
Percival reread his husband's headstone.
Beauxhomme Lafayette-Graves, beloved husband, brother, and son.
More time lost.
Percival stumbled into their shared apartment and collapsed into the sofa in the den. He could read Beau's headstone. It never changed. It wasn't--it hadn't been--
Oh, God.
Whatever composure Percival had cobbled together beneath the delusion of a nightmare, of eventually waking in Beau's arms shattered as surely as his heart. The shards pierced his roiling stomach. With shaking hands, he covered his face and screamed into his palms.











