Sherlock Holmes (
workaphilic) wrote in
paradisa2013-02-15 01:32 am
Entry tags:
032 || dictated;
[He notices immediately. Of course.
Not because John is missing. John is frequently awake before Sherlock, and it's become less unusual for him to be out in the morning, doing this, doing that. (Doing what, he's not always sure. He doesn't always pay attention. (Why not?)) He notices because everything else is missing.
(His breakfast trail throughout the kitchen (covered but not eliminated), tracks in the carpet, the unevenness of the blinds (checking the weather), his tread on the stairs, the squeaky (seventh) step.)
The flat is staggeringly empty, for all its miniscule missing pieces.
Checking is a formality. The nameplate, back to just the one: Sherlock Holmes. (One year, two months, three weeks, and one day since that was last true. Less, depending on how you look at it.)
The dog is making a high-pitched, terrible sound. (Gladstone, John picked the name Gladstone.) It's lying in a heap at the foot of John's (abandoned) arm chair, and Sherlock stares at it from the mouth of the kitchen.
He checks the fridge (jam and deli meat next to the jar of eyes on the second shelf) and the cabinets (tins of beans and boxes of tea). Enough to last him a week or two, maybe more. (After that, well. After that.)
He steps back into the sitting room, and stoops to lift Gladstone up by the middle. It squirms and whines at first, more used to John than to Sherlock, but settles quietly against his shoulder. The sleeve of his dressing gown slips down his arm, and he ignores it.
He opens the journal and writes a filter. He won't pretend to think that Moriarty won't find out within the hour, but he's not in the mood for it, not yet.
(He can see his failures just fine for himself.)]
[ Filtered Away from Jim Moriarty ]
[He's calm when he speaks.]
Dr. John Watson is gone.
[Home? No, he can't say that. Not for certain. There's a possibility the castle's kept him on a string, tucked away, mind wiped, barely himself. Is that better than the alternative? (He doesn't know, can't know, useless.)
Gladstone whines. The journal shuts.
He has nothing else to say.]
Not because John is missing. John is frequently awake before Sherlock, and it's become less unusual for him to be out in the morning, doing this, doing that. (Doing what, he's not always sure. He doesn't always pay attention. (Why not?)) He notices because everything else is missing.
(His breakfast trail throughout the kitchen (covered but not eliminated), tracks in the carpet, the unevenness of the blinds (checking the weather), his tread on the stairs, the squeaky (seventh) step.)
The flat is staggeringly empty, for all its miniscule missing pieces.
Checking is a formality. The nameplate, back to just the one: Sherlock Holmes. (One year, two months, three weeks, and one day since that was last true. Less, depending on how you look at it.)
The dog is making a high-pitched, terrible sound. (Gladstone, John picked the name Gladstone.) It's lying in a heap at the foot of John's (abandoned) arm chair, and Sherlock stares at it from the mouth of the kitchen.
He checks the fridge (jam and deli meat next to the jar of eyes on the second shelf) and the cabinets (tins of beans and boxes of tea). Enough to last him a week or two, maybe more. (After that, well. After that.)
He steps back into the sitting room, and stoops to lift Gladstone up by the middle. It squirms and whines at first, more used to John than to Sherlock, but settles quietly against his shoulder. The sleeve of his dressing gown slips down his arm, and he ignores it.
He opens the journal and writes a filter. He won't pretend to think that Moriarty won't find out within the hour, but he's not in the mood for it, not yet.
(He can see his failures just fine for himself.)]
[ Filtered Away from Jim Moriarty ]
[He's calm when he speaks.]
Dr. John Watson is gone.
[Home? No, he can't say that. Not for certain. There's a possibility the castle's kept him on a string, tucked away, mind wiped, barely himself. Is that better than the alternative? (He doesn't know, can't know, useless.)
Gladstone whines. The journal shuts.
He has nothing else to say.]

dictated
An acquaintance of yours?
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[ Just as calm. He has nothing else to say. ]
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And neither of them are interested in pity parties.]
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if - or when! - he bothers to look, he'll find a tray with a covered dome and a thermos. iced tea. sandwiches.
remember to eat, you.
he's not sticking around to make sure, this time - he learned better. but he's not giving up either]
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The tray vanishes from the hallway within ten minutes or so, an acknowledgement of the gesture, but the odds of it actually being consumed before it's all unfit to eat are slim to none. Not out of stubbornness or pride, but a general lack of appetite.
Still: message heard, loud and clear.]
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[Clear and to-the-point. He's not in the mood for matching wit today.]
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[And, yes, that's a little bit of a lie. He's almost irritated at himself for his half-second of disbelief when things didn't quite add up this morning.]
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He was a good man, and a good subject. [she pauses, taking a moment to form words, of loss, of good bye. Hardly comfort, because she doesn't know completely how to give that.] I shall miss him, very much.
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Not here
He'd be just as heartbroken...honest!]
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Dictated
[What else can she say? She knows how words mean nothing to this man. Only action.]
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It was going to happen eventually.
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[The words sound hollow to her, as they always do. She doesn't want to think of the life Peeta has gone back to. Not now, not ever.]
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Oh well. Seems you'll have to make do from now on.
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Late but I want all the Pi CR
I am sorry to hear it. [The sentiment is genuine. She wouldn't bother otherwise.] I will miss him.
yes good!!
His voice is dull when he finally answers.]
He didn't much appreciate Paradisa. Perhaps it's for the best.
[It isn't. For Sherlock, maybe, for the safety of his secret, but for John? Hardly.]
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