Sherlock Holmes (
howdull) wrote in
fossilised2016-10-13 12:02 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
One Snowy Day - For John Watson
[It was the worst blizzard that London had endured for three hundred years. That's what the news reports said before they all cut off, the power lines giving under the weight of the snow. It started as just inclement weather (everyone take care out on the roads!), and then escalated into proper warnings (the emergency services recommend you stay indoors), and had finally ended in full lockdown (up to 65% of Londoners are trapped in their homes today).
John had been in the flat, the familiar Baker Street flat, helping Sherlock to track down anyone who might be assisting in enacting Moriarty's from-beyond-the-grave comeback. It had just made sense to stay an extra hour or two until the snow let up. Big mistake, as it turned out. Now he was fully snowed in with an extremely bored and agitated Sherlock Holmes.
No radio. No internet. No TV. No electricity of any kind.
Sherlock hasn't said anything for fifty-seven minutes, probably a relief to the poor beleagured John, but that's because he's busy. He has to do something to occupy his mind, and he's chosen the fridge. Slightly manic movements have helped him get literally everything out from the fridge and freezer, distributing it all over the living room floor. There's everything from a glass jar of thumbs in formaldehyde, to three half eaten tubs of Ben and Jerry's Cookie Dough ice cream.
His treasure trove assembled, Sherlock crouches on the floor and begins to move things around, organising them and then reorganising them in an ever more frustrated manner. It takes only a further fourteen minutes before he stands up and shouts, explosively:]
DAMN IT!
[Before throwing a ceramic pot of left-over stew at the wall, where it shatters with a loud crash.]
John had been in the flat, the familiar Baker Street flat, helping Sherlock to track down anyone who might be assisting in enacting Moriarty's from-beyond-the-grave comeback. It had just made sense to stay an extra hour or two until the snow let up. Big mistake, as it turned out. Now he was fully snowed in with an extremely bored and agitated Sherlock Holmes.
No radio. No internet. No TV. No electricity of any kind.
Sherlock hasn't said anything for fifty-seven minutes, probably a relief to the poor beleagured John, but that's because he's busy. He has to do something to occupy his mind, and he's chosen the fridge. Slightly manic movements have helped him get literally everything out from the fridge and freezer, distributing it all over the living room floor. There's everything from a glass jar of thumbs in formaldehyde, to three half eaten tubs of Ben and Jerry's Cookie Dough ice cream.
His treasure trove assembled, Sherlock crouches on the floor and begins to move things around, organising them and then reorganising them in an ever more frustrated manner. It takes only a further fourteen minutes before he stands up and shouts, explosively:]
DAMN IT!
[Before throwing a ceramic pot of left-over stew at the wall, where it shatters with a loud crash.]
no subject
This is not good.
He retains enough detachment to analyse himself, and he can feel the thready nature of his pulse and the way his breathing has slowed down dramatically which, in turn, lowers the amount of needed oxygen in his body and brain. Everything is fuzzing at the edges. Where is John? He can't quite reca--Oh right, he moved out a long time ago, he lives with Mary and Rosie now. So he's alone. Right, very good. He should call an ambulance, John won't get here from his house in time.
Sherlock tries to get at his phone, but his fingers don't seem to be working too well. So he tilts his head towards the bookcase, glazed eyes fixing on the copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare, and addresses that.]
I know you're watching, Mycroft, such a pedestrian place to hide surveillance equipment, so be a good big brother for once and call an ambulance for me, will you?
no subject
he comes back into the living room just as sherlock finishes addressing the complete works of shakespeare. he spares one vital second to squint at the anthology series with suspicion before pushing it to the back of his mind. if mycroft is spying on them and he heard that, then he is going to do whatever he can to keep sherlock alive before the ambulance gets here and who knows when that'll be.
he needs to get that ridiculous coat off. god. he did not predict he'd be stripping down his best friend when he first heard the weather forecast yesterday. tongue darting along his bottom lip, he leans over his friend. ]
Arms up, now.
no subject
He squints up at John, a little alarmed that the man now seems to have three eyes and two noses. That's not a normal amount of orifices for one face, he's relatively sure about that, and that means there's something very wrong with John. Or perhaps it's not even John. It might be something that's replaced him.
The drugs are twisting his thoughts, making him paranoid, and he pushes himself a little away from John on the sofa rather than lifting his arms up.]
Stay back.
no subject
Sherlock, it's me. John. I'm really not in the mood for this. [ his voice comes out as a growl; there wasn't even an attempt to soften his voice for his daft best friend. ] So you can either lift up your arms so I can take off your coat, or I can punch you in the face.
[ it's supposed to be an empty threat, but his comment about harry has upset him enough to make it very feasible. ]
Your choice. But we need to get you out of these clothes.
[ he sincerely hopes mycroft is the only one who has bugged the flat, otherwise the sun will have their front page tomorrow. ]
no subject
[His eyes are narrowed suspiciously. John has never asked him to take his clothes off before, why would he want that now? There's no logical reason that his married best friend would want to be getting him naked.]
Take off your own clothes if you're that insistent on it.
[Why does it have to be his clothes?]
no subject
[ and he can't keep his body temperature at a safe level until help arrives if he's lounging around in wet clothing. ]
I'm a doctor, so do what I say and take that bloody coat off. I'm going to fetch some dry clothes from your room.
no subject
He feels sick, nausea spiking through him, but he doesn't have the awareness to roll onto his side right now.
All of a sudden he's in a white room with padded walls, a man in a straight jacket beaming at him brightly. You've come to visit me again, Sherlock, I'm so pleased. We have to stop meeting like this, when you're dyyyyyying, it's so predictable. Sherlock frowns at Moriarty, fingers feeling for a doorway. Don't be ridiculous, I'm not dying. This is a trick.
Choking on your own vomit, Moriarty tuts, beaming. Not a very noble ending. Boring. Boring. Boring!]
no subject
Oh, God.
[ he runs back to the living room and kneels next to sherlock, rolling him onto his side. He aligns his palm between sherlock's shoulder blades and hits him, hard. after the fifth blow, he checks to see if sherlock is still choking. ]
no subject
The fourth blow sends him staggering out into his mind palace proper again, racing up the stairs even as the Sherlock in John's arms begins to cough and splutter.
It doesn't take long, a minute or so, before his eyes are blearily opening.]
S'that smell, J'hn?
no subject
That would be you, you git.
[ now's not the time to get upset,john scolds himself. he stretches his arm back to drag the blanket draped across his chair down to their level. after mopping some of the sick away from his mouth with the towel, he wraps the blanket around sherlock and pulls him up into his arms, keeping one steady hand on his back and letting sherlock's head flop against his shoulder. they are a picture of a concerned parent and their ridiculously overgrown, but poorly child. john doesn't care though. he grabs his wrist -- more gently, this time -- monitoring his pulse. ]
The ambulance will be here soon. You're not getting out of the christening that easily.
no subject
You called an ambu-- No, I asked Mycroft. Damn. I'll never live that down.
[He huffs, though he makes no attempt to move from his position next to John yet.]
If it isn't here now, it's not coming.
no subject
[ it does worry john a little bit -- eight minutes have already passed and he can't hear the paramedics pounding up the stairs. if they don't come, he's confident he can take care of sherlock. an army doctor's office can be anything from tundra to a scabby flat. ]
You're such an idiot. Why would you do this?
no subject
[The more time passes, the more he's regaining his sense of self. Irritation biting in that sentence as he finally pushes himself off John and shakily back onto the sofa. The ambulance is already out of his mind, it's not coming. Mycroft didn't see the message or chose to ignore it, one of the two.]
I will simply know not to buy from that particular vendor again.
no subject
Nice to know you've got your priorities sorted.
[ his expression turns stony. his phone goes off and he sighs, fumbling it out of his pocket and reading the message. ]
It's from your brother. He saw all that. Says he's going to send someone over in a bit, unless I throttle you first. Then it'll be a hearse.
[ is that last bit an embellishment? who knows? ]
no subject
A bit late now, brother. I don't need anyone, I'm fine.
[He goes to stand up, sways, and promptly falls back over onto the sofa again. His expression to John clearly warns him not to say a word.]
You're making a much bigger fuss of this than it warrants.
no subject
I came back from your bedroom and you were choking on your own vomit.
no subject
[This is what's known as a big fat lie.]
no subject
[ john's lips curl into a sardonic little smile. ]
I almost wasn't. I thought about leaving you on the stairs and going to bed. Your legacy would've been the brilliant detective who, instead of saving England from James Moriarty, overdosed on cocaine and choked to death on his own vomit. Stupid, pointless and a damn bloody waste.
no subject
Sherlock's hands begin to tremble slightly and he clasps them tightly together to hide it. He didn't die, that's what matters.]
Then I suppose I should thank you.
[For once.]
But all this fuss as if I did it on purpose is stupid, it was a miscalculation, that's all.
no subject
Oh, so someone mugged you in the street and rather than take your wallet, they forced you to shoot up on cocaine instead? Silly me.
[ he sniffs angrily, stepping over the towel to sit down in sherlock's chair. ]
I don't know why you need that stuff anyway. Surely we have a solid nine here, don't we? You know, Moriarty taking over all the screens in Trafalgar Square despite being dead for over three years?
no subject
[Sometimes he thinks that John spends too much time with Mycroft. Stupid big brother, always so officious, always so convinced that Sherlock is about three seconds away from self destructing.]
I told you on the plane, John, I'm a user not an addict. I enhance my thought processes, something which is necessary with a problem as tangled as Moriarty.
[Except that isn't quite true, he hasn't been thinking at all about Moriarty, more just how bored he was.]
I don't see what the big issue is, millions of people around the world use drugs and only a small percentage die during controlled usage. Yet billions more drink, you were given a bottle of whiskey for Christmas, and yet that is socially acceptable despite the much higher death toll.
no subject
[ don't give him any ideas john. ]
And It was socially acceptable for Bill to give me that bottle, because he knew I wasn't going to down it all in one evening. You have absolutely no self control and it's going to end up killing you one day.
[ or someone else. ]
But what do I know? I see substance abuse everywhere, apparently. Maybe I could write something on it... kill my blog like your tobacco ash analysis killed yours.
no subject
Is it just the boredom? Usually he can resist that. Are there other reasons? Ones more sentimental and more foolish?]
Don't be petulant, John.
[There's no need to bring his blog into this.]
I have a hobby, aren't you always nagging me to spend more time outside and meet more people?
no subject
[ he drops his voice to a mock baritone of sherlock's. ]
It doesn't make any sense John! Help me catalogue the food before I lose the data! No, you'll ruin the whole thing, don't touch anything!
[ he flops back dramatically into his chair. ]
When I say go out and meet people, I don't mean drug dealers. Christ.
no subject
Or try to, before he remembers there's no power and that means no kettle which means no tea. Frustrated, he stalks back into the living room and sinks into his own chair, fingers lightly tracing over the sleeve of his shirt.]
I was bored, John.
[He sounds less defensively angry, more as if he's just giving one of those explanations that should make perfect sense.]
It's necessary for me to alleviate my boredom.
(no subject)
(no subject)