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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Sherlock snorted quietly. Harry looked very much as if she wanted to make some sort of fairy-related comment, but a warning glance from their parents ensured she kept listening rather than interrupting.
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Although he didn't look at her, Sherlock calmly took off his watch, set it in the palm of one hand, covered it with his other palm--and then pulled his hands apart to reveal that both were empty. Which drew appreciative laughter from the adult members of John's audience and gasps from the children.
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"Was there blood everywhere?" one of the little boys asked excitedly. His mother promptly scolded him for it.
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"There's no such thing as magic," Sherlock said, and then proceeded to produce a wallet out of thin air. He offered it to John almost casually. "There, that's yours."
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"Anyways, the murderer may have gone on and never been caught, if he hadn't made a mistake-- one that Sherlock caught. Sherlock realized the woman was from out of town, and that there were tiny stains on the back of her leg from a rolling suitcase-- a rolling suitcase that was no where at the scene!"
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Somehow, while John had been talking, he'd managed to get the watch onto his friend's wrist. It was, admittedly, very much a cheap parlor trick, but he'd been very strict about repressing his show-off tendencies the whole evening. And really, it was this or let John know via Morse code exactly which of his cousins was high, who was having an affair, and how many of them were either in the closet or in debt.
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After the laughter died down, he described finding the suitcase, the slight misunderstanding with Scotland Yard (carefully editing out the drugs bust portion of the affair) and now Sherlock was alone with the mad cabbie.
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"Well. I got in the cab, since he'd promised to tell me how he did it. And then he proceeded to drive us all over London--honestly, I've seen blind people take a more direct route..."
"Where did you go?" Susan asked insistently, practically falling into John's lap in her excitement.
"An empty building. A school, in fact." He paused for a moment, his thoughts clearly folding back in on themselves. "One of the quietest places in the city. And then he offered me a choice: two pills. One poisoned, the other not. All I had to do was figure out which was which."
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His hand creeped back over to find Sherlock's. The incident was long since history, but he still remembered the way he froze when he saw Sherlock, poised to take the pill...
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There was a moment of silence, tense and breathless--and then Sherlock slid his hand into John's and squeezed gently.
"And I beat him," he finished, with a sly grin. "I took the right one. The murderer was killed by his own weapon."
Some of the adult Watsons were clearly a little uncomfortable with a story that ended in a dead murderer (at least while the kids were still up), but everyone under the age of ten was instantly won over by this incredible ending. How many stories did they get to hear, after all, where the bad guy died because somebody else was clever?
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"Taste of his own medicine," John managed, smiling thinly.
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"And is that how you became boyfriends?" she asked excitedly.
Sherlock sort of froze.
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"I'm afraid things don't move that quickly," he said, "We'd only just met, after all. Less that twenty-four hours of being flatmates."
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"Lot of procrastination, though, wasn't it?" Harry grinned. "Took you, what, two years to get yourselves sorted?"
Okay, so maybe the panic attack was ongoing.
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"Oh, shut up," he replied, casually but with a hint of iron. "There were...circumstances."
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"There's always circumstances." Harry wrinkled her nose, rather childishly. "Only shoes belong in the closet, Johnny."
"Whose closet?" asked Susan. Her mother looked about ready to die of embarrassment.
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Not gay for anyone else.
"There were cases, girlfriends, national crises...not to mention he was indisposed for a while," John said, maybe a little too sharply.
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It was a startlingly open admission on Sherlock's part--possibly the most personal thing he'd said all night. Harry's eyes widened in surprise; somewhere behind them, Mrs Watson slipped an arm around her husband's shoulder.
"I can read facts. Things, for the most part. People are..." He trailed off before giving John's hand another squeeze and pulling back slightly, as if he were trying to prove a point to himself. "Complicated. Anyway."
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"Slow but steady wins the race," he said, mildly. "Come sit with me on the couch, you loom like a stork."
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Oh. Well.
He murmured a quick thank-you in Susan's direction before settling in next to his partner. There was really no logical reason why he should feel so relaxed in someone else's personal space, but then there was really no logical reason for anything else that had happened in the past year, either.
Harry watched them both with interest and perhaps a touch of concern. She was good at people; despite all the jokes she'd been cracking she was starting to form a real picture of this relationship as a very serious one. Which she hadn't really expected from her brother.
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Susan was getting many, many extra gifts for Boxing Day.
For a while they sat like that, sharing a moment of silence while gifts were examined and the soft sound of clearing up could be heard.
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