Clockwork
A Beauty and the Beast fan fiction by
DISCLAIMER: Beauty and the Beast and
related characters are trademarks of the
The most frightening
moment of Cogsworth's life, even more frightening than when he was turned into
a clock, was the day that he had forgotten what he used to look like. He had
looked away from himself and had spotted
Of course, as terrifying as that moment
had been, there was something more worrying going on: he was slowly but surely
forgetting what being human was like. The sensation of hot,
cold, soft, sharp were nothing but dim memory. He could still feel pain,
but it wasn't the same as feeling it on the flesh. Sleeping was something that
he pretended to do, but not something he really needed. And mostly, he didn't
even bother to pretend anymore. There was no point to it. Not really.
Cogsworth was beginning to feel more and
more like there was no point in anything. He had held little hope to begin with
that they'd ever be human again - but he'd still had enough hope to dream about
it back when he'd been able to dream. But, as the years passed and the castle
crumbled around them, his hopes had crumbled too.
The Prince had to find true love and be
loved in return. Cogsworth couldn't imagine any woman truly loving the Prince
when he'd been human - now that he was a monster (in more than ways than just
appearance on most days) . . . It wasn't possible. Who could love a beast?
And, as if that wasn't disheartening
enough, there was the time limit. The rose that had bloomed for ten long years
had just begun to show signs of wilt. The rose that would, in time, lose all of
its petals and seal their fates. The rose . . . He'd seen it only once or twice
and, if he hadn't known its true power, he would have thought it the most
beautiful flower in the world.
But, knowing what he knew, when he saw it,
he was not transfixed by its beauty. All he saw was his doom and the doom of
all his friends and of everyone in the castle. Very soon, no more than maybe a
single year more, they would all be trapped in these forms. How long would it
be until they were nothing more than what they appeared? How long before they
all forgot ever being human?
Well, Cogsworth had already decided one
thing: the day that the rose lost its very last petal, that
would be the day that he made the long trip to a town and threw himself under
the first cart wheel he came across. Cowardly - undoubtably.
Desperate - unquestionably. Still, better to be a dead coward than a clock that
played at life but couldn't remember what living was.
At least, those were his thoughts on the
subject. Thoughts that he had never voiced aloud for fear that
If he was a braver . . . individual,
Cogsworth might have told him for that very reason. However, he wasn't and he
didn't want anyone to try and change his mind now that it was made up.
"Is there something wrong? You look
troubled."
Even as a clock,
Friend or not,
As a human,
Cogsworth shook his head. His friend was
never one to stay depressed for long. Even when they'd first changed, it hadn't
taken him that long to adapt to the differences. It was one of the things that
annoyed Cogsworth about him: it hardly seemed fair that
He'd been about to say something appropriately
scathing when he heard pounding. It sounded almost as though . . . someone was
knocking on the door. But that wasn't possible. No one came to the castle
anymore.
As if to contradict him, the door opened
with a loud squeak - oiling the doors had not been much of a priority since the
Prince was the only one to use it and he didn't care too much about the
condition of the doors - and a shadowy figure entered the castle, hesitant and
afraid.
"Hello?" It was an older man,
his gray hair soaked with rain and his simple clock torn in many places.
"Hello?"
"Old fellow must have lost his way in
the woods,"
"Keep quiet," he muttered as
quietly as he could. "Maybe he'll go away." Part of him was ecstatic
to have someone in the castle again but most of him was terrified of what the
Prince would say. Or do.
"Is someone there?" He sounded
afraid. It was for the best: the sooner he left, the better off he'd be.
Unfortunately, Cogsworth knew his friend
well enough to know that he wouldn't agree - when he'd been human, he'd had a
nasty habit of taking in strays. "Not a word,
The old man looked around him, probably
sensing that he wasn't quite alone. "I don't mean to intrude," he
began, speaking in a slightly raised voice, "but I've lost my horse and I
need a place to stay for the night."
Oh no. Cogsworth looked over at
"Oh, Cogsworth, have a heart!"
What was the fool doing, speaking so
loudly! "Shush, shush, shhh!" Cogsworth quickly covered
Judging from the heat he suddenly felt on
his fitting, the answer was no. And, while pain was different now that he was a
clock, it still existed and Cogsworth couldn't stop himself from shouting when
it got too hot.
Nursing his singed limb, Cogsworth was
vaguely aware of