Gaston song (Beauty and Beast).
1726: the crowd in a small town tavern cheers local Hero, Alpha man, who facializes his (male) mate
### Copyright Β© 2023. This is a copyrighted work. Unauthorized use is prohibited. All rights reserved by the author.
My contribution to
"Karaoke 2023" Author Challenge
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---------- GAY ALERT! For Adult Readers Only! Scenes of homosexual sexuality are very soft here, yet nevertheless, are undoubtedly GAY.
This is a fairytale of pure fiction. Any reference to actual events is intended to be entirely fortuitous.
In the first half of the 18th century, a fictional and fabulous northern France had been entangled in plagues, wars, and famines that had mowed down the population. For this reason, all the people present in town were over 21 years old.
Do not try to imitate characters from the tale! All the performers in the scene act as professionals (some are hazardous activities, don't try them at home).
As you may have noticed somehow, English is not my mother tongue, so please forgive the mistakes. ###
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1726, France. A small country town north of Paris, near an Enchanted Forest.
The wackiest weirdo girl in town, the bookworm Belle Dubois, had just rejected a marriage proposal made by the most admired hunter in the area, the famous Gaston, a former mercenary, ex-army captain, and actual hunter. She humiliated him in front of everyone, publicly.
Now mad with rage, Gaston walked fast and furious toward the village's only tavern. As he advanced, he cursed to himself loudly, "Who does she think she is, that girl has messed with the wrong man! No one says no to Gaston!"
His former military adjutant, and now hunting mate, LeFou followed him prancing like a fawn or a hare. "Heh heh. Darn right! No one, male or female, ever says no to..."
But as usual, Gaston did not listen to him. The Captain never listened to anyone: and least of all he never listened to LeFou, who had stayed with him after the most recent war had ended.
Not that the wars were over: a mercenary warmonger like Gaston was sure he would soon receive new job offers. But for that very reason, he was in a hurry to get married, and he could not accept a rejection of his Proposal.
And then there was a problem of Reputation.
He was considered by everyone to be the Hero Next Door. Everyone admired his LONG rifle, his infallible LONG bow with a LONG quiver full of LONG arrows, his LONG boots, or as LeFou once said, "No one goes tromping around wearing boots like Gaston."
Without listening to LeFou's homoerotic thoughts, Gaston muttered, spelling out the too-long words, "Dismissed! Rejected! Publicly humiliated! Sounds like the tags of an erotic tale! Puff... Gaston opened the tavern door. A wave of heat hit the two wanderers.
"Hey you, Fonzarelly! Get out of my chair reserved for me in front of the crackling fireplace! If you want your own space, lock yourself in the loo and call it 'my office,' you wanker dead! See on the floor that quiver of arrows? It's mine, if you don't disappear right now, I'll impale you with a dozen arrows in your asshole," roared Gaston. When Gaston mistreated losers, in such a manly way, LeFou was daydreaming.
Sinking into his favorite armchair, made of deer antlers and bear furs, which he had personally killed (and not for food, but only to obtain stupid metal trophies), Gaston put one leg over the armrest, spreading his thighs wide.
Some thought he did it for exhibitionism; others thought he did it to show that no one could teach him manners.
The girls who worked in the tavern constantly stared at the bulge bulging in his pants: and also LeFou. No, the girls were not staring at LeFou: it was LeFou who was staring at the bulge, too.
"No one does manspreading like Gaston," LeFou silently thought.
Unbuttoned shirt, tight pants, two wide musketeer boots, light leather, with a mid-thigh cuff, and a large square metal buckle at ankle level. With his legs spread wide, in a loud voice, and staring at the melancholy look of a bear now reduced to carpet under his feet, Gaston shouted to the barmaids, "Why, be rejected it's more than I can bear! [he looked at the carpet] Bear? More beer!"
But then, shaking his head, he bent down resting his chin on top of his elbow. A sculptor, a man named Rodin, was present in the tavern and took inspiration: Gaston was the perfect example of the 18th-century overthinking Thinker.
That evening, Gaston was depressed, and he knew that beer would not soothe his humiliation. "Beer... What for? Nothing helps, I'm disgraced."
Beneath Gaston's feet, near the bear's snout, LeFou had also crouched down and was looking down on his tall cub to cuddle. In a motherly voice, LeFou said to him:
"Who? Disgraced... You? Never! Gaston, you've got to pull yourself together!"
LeFou was sincere in his admiration for the former captain. LeFou was also an excellent marksman with excellent aim, but never like Gaston: and more than once, he had saved his life. Devotion soon merged with admiration... LeFou followed him everywhere except to the roadside brothels, where he preferred to stay outside under the guise of looking after the horses while Gaston first made one or two girls laugh, then moan, and finally scream at a time. But LeFou was proud of how strong and virile Gaston was... he liked him the way he was. Seeing his hero depressed was too painful, and it contrasted with the image of perfection that LeFou had become accustomed to (and that haunted him during sleep, or when he secretly masturbated).
LeFou tried to lift Gaston's spirits by showing him that everyone in the village admired him: with broad hand gestures, LeFou solicited the consent of the other people in the tavern.
"Gosh, it disturbs me to see you, Gaston, looking so down in the dumps... Every guy here, he'd love to be you, Gaston, even when taking your lumps!"
Everyone nodded. The men longed to look like Gaston, and the three girls who worked in the tavern longed to be wildly fucked by him like a Beast, even though it had never happened until that day.
"There's no man in town as admired as you, you're everyone's favorite guy. Everyone's awed and inspired by you...and it's not very hard to see why..." murmured LeFou, staring at the darting muscles, but mostly contemplating longingly the bulge below the hero's belt.
"No one's licks as Gaston!" shouted one of the girls, to encourage him, although she didn't know from experience because he had never licked her pussy.
"No one's as quick as Gaston..." said one patron, with a grimace, implying that he was just a premature ejaculator. Prostitutes liked their customers to be early ejaculators because they committed less time. Perhaps that reputation was also widespread among all but LeFou did not know it. At that moment, LeFou was turned to do a difficult thing, and he did not notice the grimace that changed the meaning of the word "quick": he thought it meant "clever" or "very quick at chasing hares."
LeFou was busy tightening a leather belt around Gaston's neck. It was a game they had played many times for the show. First Gaston would blush from the effort, then he would swell his neck muscles so much that he would break the belt buckle. Each time, LeFou looked at him longingly, blushing at the thought that, one day, he might put a thin leather belt around the base of Gaston's thick cock, to keep it erect longer, and see if with his own tongue, he would be able to get it so hard that he would break the buckle even then... Still daydreaming, LeFou hummed:
"No one's neck's as incredibly thick as Gaston..."
Gaston gritted his teeth, swelled his neck muscles, and broke the belt. A large stain wet the front of LeFou's pants (as happened every time they played this game).
Another girl, hopeful, commented, "For there's no man in town half as manly..."
LeFou turned to the girl nodding, "Perfect, a pure paragon! You can ask any Tom, Dick, or Stanley, and they'll tell you whose team they prefer to be on!"
Everyone admitted that as a teammate in the shooting and weightlifting sports Gaston was always a first choice.
"Who plays FARTS like Gaston? Who breaks ARSES like Gaston? Who's much more than the sum of his parts like Gaston?"
After breaking the belt, Gaston had broken all doubt and insecurity. Inside, he was still insecure: but "life is a stage" (wrote a poet a few years before 1726) and Gaston did not want to disappoint his audience. Only he knew how much difference there was between the strong and rough appearance of the external specimen, and the deep sadness of the soul when he was alone or when night terrors made him relive traumas and massacres. Gaston decided that the audience needed apparent security.