When the Roses Turned Black
(inspired by Beauty and the Beast)

In 1766, in a remote French village, the garden of a reclusive nobleman began to change. His roses — once brilliant red — turned dark as ink, though no disease could be found. He refused to let anyone touch them.
Locals whispered that he had made a deal: the flowers would never wilt as long as he kept something buried beneath the soil. When a maid finally broke the rule and dug near the roots, she unearthed a locket containing a portrait of a woman — and her wedding ring, still on a skeletal hand.
The nobleman vanished soon after. When his manor was abandoned, storytellers wove his legend into something more romantic — the Beast who learned to love again. But the real man was no monster of fur and claws — just a grieving soul who fed his heart to the ground until beauty itself decayed.



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