Title: Entirety
Pairings: Tsuzuki/Hisoka
Notes: On the spot incoherent little tidbit about some idea that popped into my head. Watch me be incredibly ineloquent.
------

If asked what he liked the most about Hisoka, Tsuzuki wouldn't be able to answer.

It's ridiculous, he thinks, when in a romantic novel, the male protagonist likens the beautiful female lead's every feature to the stars in the sky, to silk, to anything even remotely romantic in an apparent display of affection.

To Tsuzuki, Hisoka is Hisoka.

He is a whole. He is a person. He is not a pair of emerald green eyes snapping with emotion; he is not a pair of thin, pale lips pressed together in concentration or turned ever so slightly up at the corners in a quiet expression of amusement. He is not a slender young man forever frozen in the steps of time, an everlasting epitome to humanity's perfection in adolescent youth.

Hisoka wa Hisoka desu, Tsuzuki would say.

The Chinese have a saying - it's difficult to translate, but it is a concept that Tsuzuki nevertheless believes in. "Wu Yien Guan" - the Five Features of a person's face - they are not to be admired separately, but rather taken together to form the full picture of a person's appearance. If taken separately, perhaps they are beautiful in their own right, or perhaps they possess some fault or another, but it is not until they are taken together that the person's full beauty becomes apparent.

Hisoka is beautiful, not because of his eyes nor his mouth nor his perfectly formed, pert nose, but because simply, altogether, he is.

Tsuzuki does not love any one part of Hisoka more than another, because he cannot take any one part of Hisoka without taking the rest. He loves Hisoka as a whole.

In clarification, if Tsuzuki were to be asked which part of Hisoka he loved most, there would be no more honest answer than that of Hisoka himself. Hisoka is Tsuzuki's favorite part of Hisoka, and nothing can change that.

---

The End!

---

Yes, C&C if you want, but for this, it's neither expected nor required. P

Wolf