Sherlock Holmes (
howdull) wrote in
fossilised2017-01-24 03:58 pm
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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 had 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 planning to catch a train to visit Harry, she claimed to be off the drink again and it was his duty as brother to go and support her. 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 hadn't said anything for fifty-seven minutes, probably a relief to the poor beleaguered John, but that was because he was busy. He had to do something to occupy his mind, it was either that or dig into his stash of drugs hidden in John's bedroom, and he had 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 crouched on the floor and began to move things around, organising them and then reorganising them in an ever more frustrated manner. It took only a further fourteen minutes before he stood up and shouted, explosively.
"DAMN IT!"
Before he threw a ceramic pot of left-over stew at the wall, where it shattered with a loud crash and drenched John's chair (and John, if he happened to be in it) in congealed lumps of meat in gravy.
John had been planning to catch a train to visit Harry, she claimed to be off the drink again and it was his duty as brother to go and support her. 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 hadn't said anything for fifty-seven minutes, probably a relief to the poor beleaguered John, but that was because he was busy. He had to do something to occupy his mind, it was either that or dig into his stash of drugs hidden in John's bedroom, and he had 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 crouched on the floor and began to move things around, organising them and then reorganising them in an ever more frustrated manner. It took only a further fourteen minutes before he stood up and shouted, explosively.
"DAMN IT!"
Before he threw a ceramic pot of left-over stew at the wall, where it shattered with a loud crash and drenched John's chair (and John, if he happened to be in it) in congealed lumps of meat in gravy.
no subject
The cab ride and any aches or pains were soundly ignored in favour of thinking. There would be clues laid out for him to find, he was sure of it, Moriarty enjoyed their game too much to allow anything else.
"Hm?" He tilted his head to look at John - glassy eyes, pale, pinched expression - and shook his head. "Yes; you, however, have a mild to moderate concussion. Mycroft will have made sure you had some pain relief issued while sleeping, but I'm sure we could find some paracetamol somewhere."
no subject
It was impossible to diagnose yourself as a doctor, mostly when you’re a doctor as stubborn as John Watson. He didn’t believe for a second that he was as bad off as Sherlock seemed to make him out to be, thank you, though he couldn’t deny the dizziness. Still, the choice had been to stay home and recover or let Sherlock get himself hurt again and John did not care to have that repeated.
He turned his attention to the street outside. There were almost no pedestrians because there were no shops open. Even the convenience stores hadn’t bothered, save for a few 24-hour Tescos, and that was just unfortunate, low end of the totem pole employees shoveling their side walks just in case any customers showed up.
No matter how unlikely that might be.
They crossed the bridge carefully and arrived at the warehouse not too long after that, John back out in the cold and paying while Sherlock headed right up inside.
He wasn’t sure what they had come to find. If Sherlock found any sloppy clues, that would just mean that Moriarty was egging them on. John didn’t like that. Not at all.
no subject
Besides, he wanted to.
Long legs took the stairs by twos and threes, leaving John behind to pay the cabbie. Unfortunately, that cab driver wasn't exactly who he should be. He got out and strong-armed John back into the back of the cab, all the doors locking and the partition closed to keep him from being able to touch the driver.
"Settle in, Dr. Watson," he said, voice rough through the little tannoy system. "We're going for a drive."
no subject
"We've done this before!" John proclaimed before he tested the locked doors with a decided annoyance and wrestled for some sort of control of what was happening to him. No such luck. Black film rolled over the inside of the windows, obscuring the view. He hated always being kidnapped. It was so undignified.
Upstairs, waiting in the blast radius for Sherlock to happen upon it, was a single television monitor laying in the ash and rubble. It swung to life as he walked forward, Moriarty's face visible through cracks in the screen.
"We've hardly been apart but I've missed you as much as you've missed me. Don't worry about John," the recording or the broadcast said (though the production did seem to lend towards a prerecorded statement. "Decided he's the carrot after all! Will you play? Of course you will. But first we have to finish our first game. There actually was a little ricin in that tea. You were right! There's a bit of medicine for you under this screen."
no subject
He was far too happy about being right to care about the implications of his own possible demise. A small amount of medicine wouldn't save his life, more prolong the agony, but that was probably part of the game. He slipped over to collect the bottle, but he only tasted a drop on his tongue to analyse if it was, indeed, medicine or something else entirely.
Finally his brain caught up to him and he registered that John had been taken. Possibly hurt, unlikely to be dead. Damn. He didn't bother asking something mundane and pointless such as where is he. "Then let's play, tell me the first game, Jim."