As the fog lifts...

Disclaimer:  I don't own any of the original Moulin Rouge characters or storyline.  Frankly, I'm glad Bazmark owns them, because no one else could have done so well with the story.

A/N:  I know many of you won't like the way I started this story, but keep in mind that the people who made this movie based it around the Orphean myth.  Christian was written from a story in which the hero goes down into the underworld a child, falls tragically in love with a mysterious beauty, and changes, grows, and matures because of it.  The Christian in my story finally grasps reality and moves on in life.  Please excuse him for it.

"Up Where We Belong"

Chapter One:  As the fog lifts…

            "The End."

            Christian lifted he gaze to stare out the cracked window of his apartment.  Past the decrepit Moulin Rouge, the sun was setting in a violet summer sky as the typewriter bit into paper for those last few precious letters.  It truly was the end.  For Christian, the closing of that day signaled for him another ending in his life.  It wasn't enough to just mourn Satine and wish she were with him still.  It was too hard to face the demons of both the past and the present, so he decided to give one up.  Satine would always be with him as his first and true love, but her memory had turned him into a monster, and that was something he could not afford to be.  He had just written perhaps his most meaningful piece of work.  He couldn't allow it to waste away to nothing.  So he put his sorrow behind him, sealed Satine forever into the depths of his heart, and went out to get his appearance altered. 

            Down the street there stood a barbershop where there once was an absinthe bar.  It was strange to see Monmartre changed so.  The Paris officials had decided at some point, probably when Christian was too drunk to care, that the Village of Sin needed some morals put into it.  Bars and brothels still occupied the streets, but not in the force they once were.  The Bohemian revolution was drawing to a close.  Fortunately for Christian, there was still a call for modern writers and artists, but the inspiration just wasn't quite there.

            As the barber hacked months of abuse and neglect from Christian face and hair, he watched himself be transformed.  When the bushy beard had fallen away, he barely recognized himself.  He looked younger without the hair, but still much older than he had been on the day Satine died.  There were lines and shadows around his eyes and mouth that proclaimed much more age than his five and twenty years.  He supposed some of his youth would return with his sobriety, but until then he could have passed for forty. 

            He paid the man out of his payment from Spectacular, Spectacular, although that supply was running low after his binge on the bottle.  He needed another income, and fast.  The story might help him a little, but only if he could get a publisher to like it without having to change it beyond recognition.  As he looked around his trashed apartment, the doorbell rang with the answer to his prayers.

            "Robert?"  Christian said, more shocked than he had been in months.  "How in bloody hell did you track me down?"

            "Nice to see you as well, big brother," the younger man said.  It was easy to tell he and Christian were related.  They looked exactly the same, except for Robert's sandy blonde hair, which he had gotten from their mother.  "I asked around Monmartre for a young poet from England.  Everyone seemed to know who you were, and they all seemed sorry for you for some reason.  What have you been up to, Christian?"

            "It's a long story, Robert, and I really don't feel like getting into it right now.  What brings you to Paris after all this time?  Did you finally decide to give up on law school?"

            "Stop joking around, Christian.  I'm here on serious business."

            "Well, what is it?"

            "It's father.  He passed away two weeks ago."