fighting_northumerland (
fighting_northumerland) wrote2012-02-09 02:58 am
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YULE
John stopped in front of the front door. It wasn't too late, he reasoned-- they hadn't seen him yet. They could escape back into the cab, get Chinese, have a quiet night to themselves and not deal with the madness of Watson Christmas...
Behind them, the cab pulled away and turned off into traffic. Trapped.
"Well then," he said, steeling himself, and knocked.
Behind them, the cab pulled away and turned off into traffic. Trapped.
"Well then," he said, steeling himself, and knocked.
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He shifted in his chair, and then very carefully moved his hand from John's wrist to his face: a brief, uncertain touch, but a warm one all the same.
"And don't--dribble, all right? We made it to coffee, it'll be a disgrace if everything goes to hell now." The remark was nowhere near his usual level of acid or sharpness--in fact it was almost gentle. Or at least as gentle as Sherlock Holmes could ever get.
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"Let's go in the living room, or they'll come find us here and Harry will be unbearable."
He reverently closes the box and tucks it into his pocket, patting it safely into position.
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It was still uncomfortable, but--it was a gesture, and his work had taught him that most people needed things translated for them through metaphors and gestures on a regular basis. Show, don't tell, Lestrade had shouted at him once when he was thinking aloud at a crime scene; he'd always thought that a surprisingly scientific approach on Lestrade's part.
He leaned in and kissed John, quick and soft.
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"John!" Harry shouts, "How long are you two going to make out in there before joining the rest of us?"
John cringed, but leaned in for a quick reciprocal kiss before taking Sherlock's hand.
"She'll come in here next, and frankly, we don't deserve that."
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"Uncle John," Susan shouted from the living room, "you're going to miss all the presents! And you have to tell us a story, you always tell us a story!"
"If you tell them about Baskerville I'm calling a cab back to the train station," Sherlock muttered.
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"Susan," he called, as they stepped into the living room. "If you'd hand me the package in green, you'll find the red one under it is for you--" he'd hardly finished his sentence before the package zoomed to his hands, brought by a child-sized blur.
"Happy Christmas," he said, handing the package to Sherlock.
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"Open it, open it!" Susan cried, attaching herself to his leg. Apparently she'd forgotten her Uncle John's advice about being gentle. "And come sit by me! Daddy says you went to Buckingham Palace, I want to hear about it!"
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"Of course I got you a present. It's Christmas," he said. "Dunno if you like it, but I know you like useful things..."
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Okay, so a copy of Freakonomics personally annotated by Sherlock Holmes might be a really weird Christmas present, but it wasn't like he'd ever bought presents for anything approaching in-laws before.
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"Ta, Sherlock," Mr. Watson said, surprised. "How did you know--" he stopped, and then laughed uproariously.
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"Erm, he just means," John cut in, quickly, "you seem to know everything, so we shouldn't be surprised at this point. Open your present, Susan might burst."
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He'd finally managed to get the package open, and when he realized just what the sleek headphones inside were for, his face softened with a genuine smile.
"Now that," he said, "is brilliant."
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John flushed pink. "I just thought, you know, when you're trying to work a case and Anderson won't shut up," he said, breathlessly. "Be best to just tune him out."
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Without really thinking about it, he moved back to John and hugged him, right there in front of his family, God, and everyone.
Apparently the way to Sherlock's heart was through his disdain for other human beings.
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"See, not all bad," John whispered.
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"Well, you can use it to ignore Anderson all you like, but if you don't hear me call for breakfast I'll come find you and drag you down by the ear," John murmured.
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He slipped the headphones on, and almost immediately his face relaxed into an expression of pure bliss. With one source of outside stimuli muffled, his mind had far less clutter to sort through.
"Should we try calling him for breakfast, dear?" Mrs Watson asked, a touch impishly.
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"Only one way to be sure, though," he leaned in close and shouted "Sherlock! PANCAKES!"
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"All right, all right!" he nearly shouted back, taking the headphones off again. "You've made your point."
Quite a few of the other Watsons were laughing and applauding. "Don't worry, dear, my Tom's the same way," one of the women put in, which touched off quite a few affectionate arguments among the married couples.
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"You'll have your pancakes yet," John promised, ignoring the watchful eyes of the Watsons.
Susan tugged at his jumper, clearly at the end of her patience. "Uncle John, the gifts are open. Stories?"
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"Well," John said slowly, leaning back against the couch. "Just how much have you heard about the Study in Pink?"
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"Are there a prince and princess in it?" she asked.
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