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Beauty's Rose




  Beauty’s Rose

  Shonna Slayton

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents added to the historical story are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Apart from actual historic events as recorded in the source material, any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2019 by Shonna Slayton. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Author.

  “Banish Fear” poem from La Belle et la Bête by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont, © 1796, now in public domain.

  PRINT ISBN: 978-1-947736-51-1

  EBOOK ISBN: 978-1-947736-50-4

  To: Fairy-tale fans.

  Beauty's Rose is inspired by the 1796 version of La Belle et la Bête by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Fairies 1

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Fairies 2

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Fairies 3

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Fairies 4

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Fairies 5

  Chapter 38

  Historical Notes

  Acknowledgments

  Also by Shonna Slayton

  Prologue

  Thyme fluttered from one cypress tree to the next as she waited for the others.

  This isn’t good. Never in my life.

  She glanced down to the other side of the wall. Oh, dear. It’s really happening.

  Here came her fellow fairies now. Clove with her short, spiky hair and matching attitude, and Sage, the oldest of them all, normally calm, but today showing signs of concern around her eyes.

  Thyme turned her ire on Clove. “What did you do?”

  Clove sputtered. “Why are you attacking me?”

  Thyme pointed over the brick wall, and the other two fluttered over the garden to see what the fuss was about.

  Immediately, Sage reached for Clove’s hand. “Oh, dear.”

  Clove stared at the young man transforming into a beast below them. “I wouldn’t. I mean, I didn’t.” She turned to Thyme. “Did I?”

  Sage fluttered around the scene, her tiny forehead wrinkled in thought. “You did.”

  Thyme shook her head. And they thought she was the one who needed supervision. She so wanted to point this out to bossy Clove, but it was obvious from Clove’s expression that the fairy was in enough pain.

  Clove slapped her tiny thighs in frustration. “I don’t know how this happened. I never made it a generational test. It was only for the prince, and when he passed the test using the second chance, the test should have been over. My place in his story ended when he and Beauty fell in love.”

  “You were quite critical of the prince,” Sage pointed out. “Are you sure you didn’t accidentally make it harsher than you intended? Maybe you had the thought in the back of your mind?”

  “I might have.” Clove bit a fingernail. “Does it work that way?”

  “He’s the first boy born into the family line,” Sage pointed out. “It’s been girls for generations. Surely it wouldn’t lie dormant for so long.”

  The three fairies stared at one another. This was something new. The curse had transferred to the offspring.

  How were they going to fix it?

  Chapter 1

  Margot shoved her Walkman into her carry-on luggage before dabbing at the perm solution dripping into her ear. Her friend Amy had tied her hair up in a plastic bag, and now her skin was tingling, bordering on burning, along her forehead. She shouldn’t have left her perm to the last minute, but here she was in a rush to get ready for her summer trip and things sort of piled up.

  “This stuff reeks,” Margot said. “I feel sorry for the person who sits next to me on the plane tomorrow.”

  “I wouldn’t mind the smell if I could go with you to France,” Amy said. She stood, hands on hips, examining Margot’s Arthur Rackham print of Sleeping Beauty tacked up on the bedroom wall. The print was one of seven fairy tales that Margot had framed and put on display.

  “Why do you still have fairy tales on your walls?”

  Margot ignored the derision in her voice. Last week, Amy had plastered her bedroom walls with INXS and Bryan Adams posters. Next month it would be something else.

  “I like them.”

  “So did I. When I was five.” Amy spun around and sat on the unmade bed. “I’ve moved on.”

  Margot’s gaze landed on the scene of the princess reaching out with her finger toward the spindle. A spine-chilling image of the moment before tragedy was about to strike. It was one of her favorite scenes.

  “When I was five,” Margot said, “I dropped a penny into a well in the Rose Garden at Butchart Gardens in Victoria and wished I could be in a fairy tale. My sister made fun, but Mom told me it was a wonderful wish. My posters keep the dream alive, so don’t spoil it for me.”

  Amy frowned in sympathy before she wrinkled her nose. “Of course, you made a wish like that.” She tapped Margot on the head.

  “Watch it. The plastic bag will fall off.” Margot patted her tingling head to make sure nothing had slipped. This was the worst part of getting a perm.

  Margot hadn’t known, but their trip to the famous gardens would be the last family trip they would take with Mom. Margot was too young to realize the significance of the wheelchair her father pushed, other than she got to ride on her mom’s lap when her little legs were too tired. But her mother was dying, and the gardens were where she wanted to go one last time. They’d all made wishes in that well, but none had come true.

  “Promise me you’ll not stay cooped up inside your aunt’s castle reading all day. You can waste your time doing that here in Bellingham.”

  “Technically, I’m only living within the walls of the old city, not the castle itself because it’s a museum, not a B&B. But my aunt’s apartment is close enough to the castle that I’m sure I’ll be able to see it from whichever window nook I’ve tucked myself into,” Margot said with a grin.

  Dad tapped the side of the door frame, interrupting Amy’s retort. “You girls about done?”

  “Almost. Amy needs to rinse me.”

  “Good. I’m getting hungry. The gang is meeting us at six for dinner. They all want to say goodbye.”

  “I’ll have her ready by five,” Amy said, shoving Margot toward the door. She stopped at Margot’s desk. “Is this it?” She picked up the invitation from the heritage society.

  The family had gotten the invitation to the town reunion in the spring. It came in an embossed envelope, and printed on thick cream paper, it read:

  CALLING ALL DESCENDANTS OF

  THE MEDIEVAL TOWN OF CHAPAIS

  Join us for our first annual celebration of our unique heritage.


  Festival, Food, and Revelry

  Kids: petting zoo and pony rides

  Teens: dress to compete in our Beauty and the Beast contest.

  (Prizes for best costumes)

  Adults: discounted rates for descendants of townsfolk

  Contact the heritage committee for more details.

  You do not want to miss this historic event!

  “Yeah, fancy isn’t it?”

  Mom’s family had come from Chapais, and she would likely have talked them all into going, were she still alive. As the family stood now, Margot’s older sister was off and married, and her brother had also moved out of the house to start his career. Neither of them wanted to go all the way to France for a town reunion. And Dad was coaching a championship ball team over the summer, so he couldn’t go either.

  Then Great-Aunt Suzette sent a personal invitation asking them to come:

  “You can all stay in my apartment above the bookshop. You are the last of my family, and I’d hate to sit at a reunion table alone.”

  How could Dad say no to such a plea? They all agreed that Margot should go to represent the family. They even pitched in to buy her plane ticket.

  Margot had never thought of herself as representing. She was the odd duck. The only reader in a family of sports fanatics. If she hadn’t looked so much like the photographs of her mom—same heart-shaped face and wide-set hazel eyes, she would have sworn the stork dropped her off at the wrong house.

  Then it was a rush to get Margot’s passport, and the next thing she knew, she was getting a perm while Amy helped pack her suitcase and teased her about her obsession with fairy tales.

  “You’re a daydreamer, Margot. You live in your head too much. Go experience real life. Be spontaneous while you’re over there.”

  “Agreed. I plan to spontaneously read through every book in the medieval history section at my aunt’s bookshop.” Margot smiled cheekily.

  “That’s not what I mean, and you know it.” Amy suddenly looked serious. “And don’t worry so much about what everyone thinks of you or your accent. Just talk.” She pointed to the posters on the wall. “French is a romance language, so get swept up in it like you get swept up in your fairy tales.”

  Margot struggled at speaking French. She thought learning to speak it would be easy because of her roots, but it turned out, that wasn’t the case. This summer was her chance to get fluent so she could earn a scholarship to a college in France that was literally in a castle. Dad wouldn’t let her go next year if she didn’t speak the language enough to get by.

  Margot shook her head. “I don’t get swept up in anything. I know the difference between real life and fairy tales. Besides, books are in my blood. I come from a long line of bookish people.”

  Dad clicked on the TV in the living room and the sound of a ball game added background noise. “Well, at least the book gene got to me. My dad’s sports gene dominated in my siblings but weakened by the time I came along.”

  Amy laughed. “Let’s get you rinsed.”

  Margot followed Amy to the end of the hall. “Finally. My scalp is on fire.” She held a towel up to her forehead to protect her face, then stuck her head under the faucet in the tub. When the plastic bag came off, a fresh burst of ammonia stung her nostrils.

  “Close your eyes,” Amy said.

  The cool water cascaded over her head and brought relief from both the burning sensation and the sharp odor. “My brother and sister won’t show tonight. They never do. Once they left home, they never looked back.”

  “Does it matter?” Amy turned off the water. She took a fresh towel and began to press it against the curlers, jabbing the hard pink plastic into Margot’s skull.

  “I can’t change them,” Margot said.

  She moved to the sink, and Amy squirted on the neutralizing solution. When she started unrolling the curlers, Margot added, “It would be nice for Dad if they would check in with him now and then, you know?”

  “Don’t worry about them. Or your dad. It’ll bring you down when you should be enjoying an amazing summer trip.”

  Margot turned slightly, hair still in Amy’s grip. “Thanks. Same goes for you. Ignore your family drama and enjoy working at Expo 86.”

  Finally, the curlers were out. Another rinse under the tap, and Amy handed her the towel to scrunch-dry her own hair as they returned to Margot’s bedroom and half-empty suitcase.

  “Here, pack this to remember me by.” Amy pulled a cassette tape out of her bucket bag, a drawstring purse. “I made us a summer of ’86 tape so we’ll always remember this summer…even if we’re spending it apart.”

  “Thanks.” Margot did a quick scan of the titles. “These are great. ‘If She Knew What She Wants’ by The Bangles, ‘Take My Breath Away’ from Berlin. We never did see that movie, did we?”

  “No, but I’m going to Karate Kid II this weekend.”

  “Without me?”

  “Mr. Miyagi waits for no one.”

  “Fine.” Margot continued scanning the tape. “This is a good one. ‘Something About You’—Level 42, and my favorite, ‘Mad About You’—Belinda Carlisle, thank you.” Margot wiggled the tape. “Uh, you put a lot of love songs on here.”

  “It’s the summer of love,” Amy said. “I’m calling it right now. If you don’t come back with a French boyfriend, I don’t know what I’ll do with you.”

  “You can’t make these things happen.”

  “Oh, but you can. You’ve got no reputation over there. What’s the town’s name again?”

  “Chapais.” She voiced the s on the end.

  “Chapais.” Amy corrected her in a proper French accent, no s. She had no trouble in French but was a terrible tutor. “In Chapais no one knows you’re a wallflower. You can pretend you’re popular.”

  “Gee, thanks. I didn’t know I was unpopular.” Margot tossed a pillow at Amy’s head.

  “You know what I mean. If you think you’re popular, you’ll act popular. You’ll get the garçon.”

  “Get my waiter? Maybe it was a good thing you never taught me French. At least I know that one.”

  Amy wrinkled her brow, then shook her head. “Garçon means boy.”

  “Right.”

  Amy laughed. “Doesn’t matter. It’s happening. You’ll find a French boyfriend, and I’ll meet someone from Sweden at the Swatch exhibit, and we’ll exchange Swatches along with our undying love.”

  Margot laughed. Sometimes Amy could be so cheesy. “I think you mean from Switzerland.”

  “What did I say?”

  “Sweden.”

  “Oh, well, same diff. Besides, I also put that friends are friends forever song on there. I know you like that one.”

  “I saw. Thank you. I am going to miss you.”

  They were each going off on their summer adventures. If nothing else, the summer of ’86 would be different and memorable. With her going to France for this town reunion, and Amy off to work in her uncle’s Cantonese restaurant near the World’s Expo in Vancouver, something interesting was bound to happen. Amy thought it was all about boys, but Margot was hoping for something longer lasting and life changing.

  “Well, Mr. Tremblay? What do you think?” Amy paraded Margot into the living room.

  He glanced up from the baseball stats in front of him. “As beautiful as ever.”

  “Told you I have skills,” Amy said smugly. “Just give it a little back comb at the sides and—for me—please use hair spray. Now, about your wardrobe…”

  Margot held up her hands. “I’m good, thanks.” Amy was all designer; Margot was curl up and read. Comfy all the way. “Be happy you talked me into the perm.”

  “Speaking of wardrobe,” Dad said, “your sister gave you her costume. It’s hanging in the hall closet.”

  “Costume?” Amy scooted out to the hall.

  “Oh. I don’t think I’ll enter the dress-up contest. That’s not really my thing.”

  Amy squealed and came back with the outfit. “You must. This is perf
ect!”

  She held up a long, burgundy skirt, an ecru peasant blouse, and a white apron with ruffles. A blue patterned scarf was draped around the hanger.

  A warm memory tugged at Margot. “Is that Mom’s?” Margot asked, reaching for the scarf.

  “Yeah. Yeah, that was her favorite. I’m surprised your sister is letting you take it with you.”

  “Me, too.” Margot fingered the soft material, letting it drop as Amy ran off to pack it.

  Dad put down his pen and leaned back in the chair. “You remind me of her.”

  “Mom?”

  “Neither of you enjoyed hanging out at all our ball games. And your mother even preferred the TV to be set to another channel. The two of you would have gone off and had your fun while we spent hours at the field.”

  Margot didn’t know her dad had noticed how out of sync she felt with the family.

  “She would have been thrilled you were taking this trip. She loved Chapais so much she almost lived there.”

  “What stopped her?”

  Dad grinned. “She met me. Couldn’t resist the guns.” He flexed his arms, and Margot rolled her eyes.

  “You sure you’ll be all right while I’m gone?” She frowned at the corn chips and pop bottle on the table. “I stocked the freezer with meals for you, but you’ve got to remember to take them out.”