He's twelve when he's left on his own in the upperworld.
He doesn't know he's twelve, because he's never celebrated a birthday, but that timeline seems to fit, later, when he thinks back on it. So he's twelve. His mother has promised him a special treat that day, and though he's skeptical to trust her, he follows her quietly through the door she's drawn, the bone white stick of chalk a blaring contrast to the dark hallways of the netherworld reception office. She'd knocked, and the drawing was more than a drawing, suddenly, with white light and noise spilling through into his little corner of hell as it opened, and when he steps through, Betelgeuse sees blue skies and green grass for the first time in his unlife.
He'd turned back to look at Juno, confused, curious, his big orange snake eyes watching her, waiting for the catch, for her to yank him back and punish him for being naive, and trusting her, but all the demoness had done was billow smoke from her slit throat, and nod encouragingly to him.
He takes another step, and another and another, and suddenly he's running and laughing and jumping and the air up here is different, but good, and he takes breaths he doesn't need because it feels nice, and he turns to her again to try and entice her to play with him-
And the door is gone.
He stands there, staring at the nothingness where she and it had been, and realization hits him hard, because he's twelve, and he's been left on his own.
He doesn't cry, both because he can't, and because he knows it won't change anything. It doesn't take him long to find them. Pre ghosts. Breathers. Humans. The place is lousy with them, and the smell of them irritates his sensitive nose. He's a dumb kid, sure, but he's got some survival instincts, so he hides from them as they go about their lives, strolling around this place, completely oblivious to the little demon now crashing their dimension. Breathers look so weird, all flushed with blood and bright eyed and hearts beating, no signs of death or rot or decay on them. It's a lot to ask a kid to get used to. The ghosts back home, the ones workin in Ma's office, tell him stories about the world up here, sometimes, usually in exchange for him going away, and leaving them the hell alone. (Their words) If there was one thing he learned from them, it was that humans, living or dead, didn't like things that were strange or unusual. He wanders the wilds of wherever he is for an hour before he finds a body of water, and stooping to peer into it, takes a look at himself.
His skin is pale, but not pink. The undercolor is purple, maybe, which he would have thought would be close enough, but compared to the living, breathing people walking around this place, he knows is too different. There's not much he can do about that. His hair is a bushy mess, sticking up all over the place, but at least the color is currently green. It's the eyes, teeth, and ears that really stand out. Yellow snake-like slits stare back at him, long pointed ears flick in the direction of distant sounds, and when he tries to smile down at his reflection, those too many too sharp teeth are all he can see.
He's not the best at magic, yet, mostly using it to play pranks around the office (and hey, maybe that's why Ma left him here in the first place?) but he does what he can. He throws a glamour over himself, and it's far from perfect, but the three big problems are taken care of. He looks more human than he did a minute ago, at least, and that's something.
He's less afraid to take the main paths, after that, and with that worry out of the way, he finds himself enjoying the afternoon again. So, ma left him here. So what? She's done him a favor, probably the first she's ever done anybody, because now he doesn't have to be around her just as much as she doesn't have to be around him. It's a win-win, Betelgeuse thinks stubbornly, trodding along the winding pathways lined with benches and garbage cans and other silly human things. He's starting to get a bit tired of all the green when he reaches, quite unexpectedly, the end of it.
There's a big arched sign, and he can't understand the language written over head, even though he's squinting and tilting his head. Someone at some point had sat him down and tried to teach him letters, and he'd gotten far enough to read through the first page of the Handbook, but then that person had been reassigned, and was gone, and no one had cared to keep teaching him.
He's holding his hands up at his sides, rubbing his red tipped claws against the palms of his hands, top teeth biting over his bottom lip, head tilted to one side in an extreme, when he hears a snort and then a soft giggle.
There's a woman standing in front of him. Her hair is a sunny yellow color, but her clothing is dark and dramatic, and there are roosting bats dangling from her ears. She's laughing at him. They stare at each other for a long moment, her hand raised in front of her mouth, her eyes crinkled pleasantly at the corners, and he finally breaks the silence by pointing at the sign, and speaking.
"Wazzat say?"
She blinks in surprise at his grating little voice, and then glances back at the sign. "Krap Lartnec," she tells him. "Which is flipped around and backwards for "Central Park."
He's been staring at the sign the wrong way. Of course. He feels his cheeks heat up with embarrassment. "Oh. Got it. Park. Right, yeah."
She lets out another laugh, and it's so different from the sounds his mother makes when she's guffawing at him, shaming him, that it almost doesn't register as a laugh at first. There's no cruelty to it, just amusement, and maybe curiosity.
"Are you here alone?" she asks him, and he shrugs easily. "I guess."
She moves closer to him, cautiously, like he's going to bite her, or bolt, but he doesn't really feel the need to be worried over one breather. He knows he could rip out her throat if he needs to. The glamour only hides his demonic features, not takes them away. He's still plenty capable of taking care of himself.
"Where are your parents?" She's crouched down next to him now, one knee on the pavement, big brown eyes all sweet and worried, and he shrugs again. "Don't have a dad. Mom's downstairs."
She squints at that, and he gestures down with a pointed red claw tip. "Ya know. Downstairs." The way he emphasizes it is meaningful, and when her eyes show understanding, he assumes she gets it.
"Oh, I'm so sorry."
"Don't be. I'm havin' a good time."
That doesn't seem to be what she expects, but she just nods thoughtfully. "Are you staying someplace?" He can't, for the undeath of him, figure out why she's asking, and why she cares. He shrugs again, because things feel better in threes, and says vaguely, "I guess I'm stayin' here."
That also doesn't seem to be a good answer. "You can't stay in the park overnight. There's creeps around here." He bites back the urge to explain that he's the creepiest thing here, because suddenly she's taking his hand, and she feels cool to the touch.
"Good god, kiddo, you're burning up!" she puts her other hand on his forehead, all the play gone from her voice, clearly concerned. "You might have a fever. Listen…" she worries her bottom lip with her teeth, smudging the dark color there, before she makes a decision. "Why don't you come home with me? I'll give you something to eat, make sure you're alright, and we'll figure out what to do from there, okay?"
He isn't sick, and he's pretty sure he can't get sick. It's the hellfire in his veins that makes him hot, because he's not like her, not even close, but the idea of following her seems like a fine one to him, so he just nods. "Kay. You got bugs where you live?"
She snorts again, and stands, brushing off her dark, rose patterned tights. "Sure, what New York apartment doesn't have a few roaches lurking around. You like bugs?"
"Yeah, I like em. They're crunchy an' they skitter around an' stuff."
"Yeah," she agrees, nodding thoughtfully. "Bugs kick ass."
It's his turn to snort, and then laugh, because she'd sounded so serious that it strikes him as funny. His hand is still in her's, and she gives it a squeeze. "What's your name, little buddy?"
"Betelguese."
He expects a pause, or a comment, because no newly dead has ever heard his name without wrinkling their nose and looking vaguely sick, but her smile just grows wider. "Far out. I'm Emily."
And hand in hand, they leave the park.
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Beetlejuice decides quickly Emily might be the nicest breather who ever breathed. It's a decision he makes only moments after they've left the park. Normally he'd be talking, and talking a lot, and his ma might throw something at him, a curse or a bottle, to try and shut him up. So he's giving silence a try, here, even though it feels like it hangs like a weight around his neck.
But Emily is the one instead filling the silence with sound, and he's never had such unfiltered attention from an adult before. She's talking about the park, then his hair, then his name, and everything she says is just… sunshine. She likes his hair. She likes his name. She even likes the loose fitting and filthy black and white striped shirt he's got on, she says it's deadlyvoo, whatever the hell that means, but it must be good, because Emily said it.
They're walking down the street, his little hand still in her's, when a smell hits his sensitive nose. It's unlike anything he's ever smelled before and if he wasn't tethered to her, he would have floated after it. As it is, he does feel his feet lift off the ground briefly, and he has to remind his body to obey gravity, before someone notices. Luckily, Emily only sees part of his reaction, namely the way he's sniffing the air like a dog and drooling.
"Hotdogs!" she grins, and she leads him over towards the smell before he can even ask what that word means.
There's a little cart set up, and a short, fat woman is fussing over a fire. He quickly finds the source of the smell, those little weird shapes of meat she's turning over, and he goes to reach for one, only stopped by Emily's other hand over his. "Not so fast, little bug. To unlock lunch, you need the power of capitalism." She nods gravely. He nods back, clueless, but after a moment he has the source of the smell in his hands, and he wastes no time in scarfing it down. It's good. He wants more, instantly, and tugs at her sleeve. Emily has hardly put her wallet away before it's back out again, and she's bought two more hotdogs. He eats them just as quickly, but before he can ask for more he realizes she's led him away from the woman and her meats and her fire. Clever breather.
The walk to her home isn't so bad, and it gives him time to take in his surroundings. The park had been jarring enough- what little plants grow in the netherworld are perpetually gray and withered, sad little scraggly weeds that struggle and choke each other out for the privilege of what miniscule sunshine permeates through the perpetual overcast.
But there's enough sunlight and water and everything to go around here, and it all grows green and vibrant. The city feels the same way, sort of. Like there's plenty of space to stretch out and grow, and so they did. In the netherworld, everything is short and cramped, but bigger on the inside, with long, winding hallways meant to confuse and trap the dead. The buildings here are so tall looking up at them makes him dizzy, but he hardly has time to admire them before Emily is guiding him this way and that, and finally, to another door. She presses a button and they're let inside, and he experiences another first as they ride the elevator up a few floors.
They ride the first few floors up in relative silence, until - "Get ready to jump!" Emily says suddenly, crouching, and he follows her lead, and jumps when she does. There's a brief moment of weightlessness before gravity catches up with them, and their feet hit the elevator floor again, in time for the doors to open.
"Good job, Beetlejuice!" she praises, pushing that long sun colored hair out of her face, and he beams up at her.
"Feels like flyin, kinda!"
"Right?" she enthuses loudly, and he's about to ask her how a breather knows what flying feels like, but a door down the hall opens, and the biggest man Betelguese has ever seen steps out. "Thought I heard you rattling the elevator," he's chiding Emily, who only gives her snort and smile in return. "Lydia isn't even with you, do you really play that game when you're-" his eyes fall on Betelgeuse. "Alone?"
"Charles, I made a new friend!" Emily tells him simply, leading the little demon into their apartment. The interior is dim, but he can see fine. He knows his amber eyes are glowing a little in the gloom, and he closes them, just for a moment, as Emily leads him down the hall and into a sunny, well lit kitchen. The big man, Charles, is tailing behind, looking mystified. "Where on earth did you find him?" a hint of nerves creeps into the breather's voice. "You didn't… steal him.. Right?"
"Charles!" Emily laughs, like it's an absurd question. Betelgeuse can't tell if it is or not. Emily doesn't seem like a child snatching witch, but he doesn't know enough about such things to be sure.
"I didn't steal him," she clarifies, busying herself with getting the boy a cup of ice water, and stopping by for a moment to touch the back of her hand to his forehead again. "I found him wandering around Central Park. He said he doesn't have any folks, and he was all alone, and he feels feverish. I'm being responsible! I'm a responsible adult!"
"A responsible adult who still plays the elevator game, despite being told by maintenance you might throw the whole elevator out of whack?" Charles askes, but he doesn't look angry, more amused.
"I was teaching Beetlejuice how to play."
The pause he was expecting with Emily finds its home with Charles.
Charles glances at the boy. Betelguese stares back with big amber eyes, sipping quietly at his ice water. Charles looks to Emily, who seems to be waiting expectantly. The silence stretches for another beat before Charles asks, baffled, "Is that… his name?"
Emily throws her hands up like he's asked if the sky is really blue. "Of course it's his name! Or at least, that's the name he gave me. I'm respecting it. Respectful and responsible, that's me." She turns and winks at Betelgeuse. He returns the strange breather gesture because he likes Emily more than he's ever liked anyone before.
The water cup is empty, and he simply lets it go, no longer interested in holding it. It bounces and rolls across the floor, and Charles wrinkles his brow at the boy. "Wh-"
Before he can say much more, Betelgeuse is sniffing at the air, and he crouches on all fours, nose to the ground, like a dog in a cartoon. He's caught the scent of some kind of upperworld bug, and despite all the hotted dogs, he's still hungry. He's on the prowl around the kitchen, weaving under the little dining table and three chairs, and then back down the hall, into the living room. Charles and Emily poke their heads out of the kitchen to watch him.
"I think you brought a feral child into the house, Em."
She makes a psshaw sound and rolls her eyes, smacking gently at his lapels. "He's a kid. Kids are weird. I was doing weird kid stuff when I was his age, too."
"And you never stopped," comes the dry response.
"Charles, I know you worry, but he's a little kid, lost in New York. I mean, my god, it's like a movie! I couldn't just leave him, and I wasn't just going to give him to some cop, he's probably an undocumented runaway or something-" and the rest of her rambling is drown out by Charles gasping and grabbing her, and her own muffled gasps of shock, because Betelgeuse has caught the bug. And also, he's on the ceiling.
He may have been trying to blend in, but the second he caught the scent of that delicious crunchy upperworld bug meat, everything else was out of mind. He'd spotted it on the ceiling, and had followed it up there, ignoring gravity to get what he wanted, and right as he pounced on it, nearly catlike, Charles and Emily had gasped. Their breather noises distract him long enough for the bug to skitter away, and he loses his concentration, and drops to the living room floor with a sickening crunch. Emily shrieks, and Charles panics, sprinting for the boy, certain he'll find a dead child with a broken neck. Instead Betelguise sits up, his glamour disturbed from the fall, and the breathers get an eyeful of what he really looks like.
There's a beat. They're all staring at each other for a long moment.
"I… I might have brought a feral child into the house," Emily admits sheepishly.
