waid: (angst)
waid ([personal profile] waid) wrote2010-06-07 02:47 am

Winter in London - Part XII


Part I

Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Part VI
Part VII
Part VIII
Part IX
Part X
Part XI

 

I neither moved nor spoke, but I was very alert indeed.

Watson looked away from me with immediate anxiety and odd remorse. “I am so much in the habit of writing these days,” he explained. “And I imagined it might... help me.”

“And did it?” I asked.

 “Not  noticeably,” he said, managing a rueful smile. 

 “Because it was an incomplete exercise without a reader?”

He closed his eyes, and didn’t answer me at once. At last he murmured, “I never intended it to be read.”

“But if there had been someone you could have trusted with it...?”

 “Much of it is not at all fair to you.”   That, if anything, only heightened the urgency of the need to see it, but I could not help but tense to think that here at last, behind what he called unfairness, lay the censure my failings had deserved all along...

Watson, rather remarkably, contrived to detect this line of thought without so much as looking at me. “It is not that,” he said, firmly, turning to me again. “I have never blamed you for it, Holmes  --  not for any part of it. You must not imagine that.  But afterwards I was so afraid you would find it out – and yet the longer you did not, the more I was in suspense, and it made me irritable at times.”

 “If that is your idea of being unfair to me -!”

He kept glancing between my face and his own hands, one of which was now curled into a fist and drumming out a tense rhythm on his knee. “It would not make pleasant reading,” he said at last, very softly.

 “I don’t mind that.”

“Of course you would mind it,” he said, and fell silent again, teeth clenched and breath locked with the effort of  a soundless struggle with himself.

I cannot bear this, I thought, I cannot watch you work so hard alone. “It would be a relief to you if I read it,” I said,  “if you were not the only  one who knew it all.”

“I’m not the only one,” he muttered grimly, and I began to feel ill.  “Holmes, I don’t know.”

 “You think it would. The fact that everything you have said against it concerns me argues as much. You would not need to trouble yourself with misplaced scruples about me unless you were weighing them against  some possible benefit.”

By now I was leaning forward and was watching his features carefully.  I suppose the scrutiny must have been rather too pointed, for he put up a deflecting hand, though he smiled at me from behind it. “Holmes.”

I  compelled myself to settle back in the chair.

 “I don’t know,” Watson repeated. “Not now, in any case. I couldn’t sit here and watch you reading it, and you must not heap any more strain upon yourself tonight. Let it be for now, please.”

“Very well,” I said, frustrated both at not being able to see the thing immediately and with myself for interrogating the poor man so.

  “I should not have told you. Now you will be thinking about it all evening and you have had your nerves worked up  enough on my account tonight already.”

“My nerves are fairly proof,” I said, stoutly enough, I think.

And they will have to be, for I believe I shall need to get more out of them. Still, the faint nausea  did not recede, and though my hands had stopped trembling visibly I could still feel  a subdued shivering continuing somewhere in my core. 

  The violin still lay on my knees and after a while  I began to scrape at it, not melodies for the doctor this time but little plumes of sound for myself.  I know these improvisations are not beautiful to anyone but me, except in an occasional, fragmented sense,  and I have not allowed myself the relief of them for over a fortnight. Watson continued to smoke in patient silence beside me, and  I was sorry not to be able to offer him anything better, not even to be able to make it up to him with a single canzonetta afterwards, but if I was going to sit there like a civilised person and a friend and not break into several rusted pieces of a defunct machine, then  I was going to have to dose myself with something.

* * *

I wonder where he wrote the document, and where it is now. Probably not in his desk– even had it been locked in a drawer he must have dreaded I would somehow chance upon it. In his bedroom, then – the bedside table or in the chest of drawers. I can almost feel it there, like an open window letting in the cold air.

Wherever it is it cannot be much above thirty feet from where I sit.

 I make it sound as if I am plotting to search out the manuscript and read it whether he wishes me to or no. I am not quite so wicked. But it is not easy to sit still, much less sleep, knowing oneself in the presence of such a thing.

 * * *

I knew before he told me that he had made his decision.

While continuing my attempts to offer what meagre and unobtrusive comfort I could,  I had tried for two days to distract myself from the proximity of  the document on the one hand and my syringe on the other by pouring energy into vengeful loathing of my Hampstead blackmailer. That was not so very difficult, for the man strikes me as much more repulsive than a number of hot-blooded murderers I have had to do with in my career. And he is a murderer too, in a moral sense, if not a legal one -- I know of at least three suicides and one death from brain-fever he should have on his non-existent conscience.

 I may have had no choice but to endure my suspense while Watson had the power to end or protract it as he chose, but  he has been quite as  agitated over this as I have. Perhaps ‘agitated’ is not the right word – I mean to say it has been leaching away his strength and left him even more obviously worn out than before. There have been no more flashes of anger with me. I could wish there had been. Instead, whenever he looked at me I could see him weighing possible consequences, some of them evidently disastrous.   I did not know how to say, nothing will happen, I will never think of you differently, nothing you can have written could change me. Now I write them down those words seem perfectly simple. Perhaps it is just as well they were beyond my reach at the time ,for as it turns out they would not have been altogether true.

Amidst all this, the confession I made to him the other day seemed to have sunk nearly without trace. After so many years of secrecy, it is almost unnerving. Uneasy as he has been,   he does not place himself at any uncharacteristic distance from me, or avoid touching me, or exhibit any symptom of squeamishness or pity that I had dreaded only a few degrees less than the possibility he would walk out and be done with it. There have been times where I suspect he was thinking of it, for I know what Watson looks like when he is curious about me. And if I had to speculate on the content of his thoughts   I would say he was wondering exactly what I got up to when I was younger, and with whom, and whether the account I gave him of my reasons for choosing abstinence was complete. And that is all.  It would be an extraordinary relief in other circumstances, but  our situation does not quite allow for that.

Then on Thursday morning a telegram came for him. He looked at it, and then at me, and then deep into nothingness. And though he did not say anything then, I knew the die was cast, because  for a little while, the tension left him.  

He dodged off to his room, leaving the telegram on the breakfast table, so I read it. It was nothing momentous, merely an  invitation from an Edwin Harcourt Burrage to call at the offices of The Young Briton the following day.

“Holmes,” he said after supper that evening, “I’ll have to go over to Mayfair tomorrow.”  And if I had not already known that his absence would mean the delivery of his account into my hands, I would have had to be very dull not to guess it then. Watson looked as  harrowed up as if he were telling me he would be spending the next day on trial for murder.

“Mr Burrage needs a series on various careers. You know, something edifying to put between all the pirate stories, so they can keep claiming it’s all about encouraging boys to make something of themselves.  I’m not sure with my history I have any business persuading impressionable youths to become either soldiers or doctors or amateur crime-fighters, but I could probably hammer something out. Anyway, if I can agree something with Burrage then I might go on to the library to make a start there, and I must go to the bank, and ...”

“You’ll be out most of the day,” I finished for him.

“Well, until six or seven,” he said, breathlessly. “Will you be busy?” I shook my head and he tried to smile at me. “I suppose once I told you, this became inevitable.

 I could actually see the fabric of his shirtfront jolting softly with his heartbeat. I wondered how either of us was was to endure the wait, and murmured, “Watson, I could take it away somewhere now, where you would not have to watch me.”

But he shook his head. “I would prefer to have something to do, in the meantime,” he said. “And in any case – Holmes, if I am knowingly going to put you through worse than I have already, I would rather you were not out in some alley in the dark at the time.”  

I said a number of inadequate things  but soon after he escaped again to his room and did not re-emerge.

I hardly know what I did with the rest of the night. I drank, wrote, smoked, roamed about the house and read over old cases, and some time around dawn I pitched unawares into sleep.

When I woke, sprawled across my bed in my clothes with no memory of how I came there, it was very late in the morning, and Watson was nowhere in the house. I determined that first, and then remembered what I had been waiting for, and leapt up and flung open the door to see if it had happened.  

Yes, on my desk – a small sheaf of papers, neatly folded.

I seized it immediately and a  sheet of notepaper, smaller  than the other pages, fell out.

My dear Holmes, [it said] we both know the following must give you pain, and your kindness in taking it upon yourself is one I fear I do wrong to accept.  I would like to offer a way back, to say you are under no obligation to continue, &c. But I think that any such gesture would be a cowardly service to my own feelings rather than an honest attempt to spare yours. For I know you will, of course, read on.

Please, then, believe that things are better with me now than when I began to write this account of my thoughts, and time will, I suppose, do more for me still. I have not read these pages over and so they must stand as they are, and there are things within that I do not know what to think of or how to explain. But whatever else you think as you read, you must remember  how very much worse it could have been.  We are fortunate, all things considered, to have got away with our lives. As for what did happen, you know G. has been the cause of far more protracted and irremediable suffering to many others.    Remember  those two girls, and what would  be happening to them at this moment, were it not for you.  We shall never know, my friend, how many lives you have delivered from ruin or undeserved disgrace or death. I hope you know it remains my honour to help you. 

Yours,

J.W.”

I read this hastily and put it aside, somehow at once very touched and  almost irritated in my impatience to know the whole of it at last. ‘Yes, yes, dear fellow’, I might have answered him, ‘you are  goodness itself; I already love you for it hopelessly. Further proofs of the fact,  however astonishing,  are not merely superflous but more than I am equipped to  bear at present. To the purpose, now.’

I turned to the main document.

 

* * *

I shall not say much about it.

He had given up writing some weeks ago, I understood, and his letter  said he had not read it again - but there was one new addition to the text, made at the same time as he wrote that letter to me, in the same ink – a  single penstroke. He had underlined the words  I have nothing to regret.

I had intended to read every word of it;  but I found this was like intending to hold heated iron in my hands without flinching –  not a project destined to be completely successful. Sometimes I could not keep my eyes from wincing  away from the page. I had to stop for  a while when I came to the section concerning the death of a housemaid called Phyllis Mackey, and ran into his bedroom to find the little bottle of chloral there.  When I came back I am afraid that at times I had difficulty even keeping my eyes clear enough to read for more than a line or two at a stretch.  I tried, when I reached the end, to calm myself sufficiently to make a second pass through to catch whatever I had missed. I had to conclude in the end that this would not be possible.

It was indeed as well that the doctor was absent, for I could not have borne any witnesses to the state I was in by the time I decided I was, in more than one sense, finished.

I was on my knees on the living room floor.  The pages were scattered around me. I couldn’t bring myself to touch them again. So I left them there and went downstairs.

Cocaine would not be adequate. Cocaine  means clarity, confidence, and a beguiling sheen to the surfaces of the  commonplace -- none of those things could have touched me and in any case what I wanted was erasure. And there was a bottle of morphine only a floor below me.

I reached the bottom of the steps, and stood staring at Mrs Hudson’s door for I don’t know how long. I was not conscious of any moral struggle, any indecision – I was merely baffled that it was taking me so long to do what I had come there for.  Go to the door, knock, and demand back my property.

And then I did move, grasping the newel post at the foot of the stairs  and propelling myself around it, and  then striding out through the front door.  I cannot credit any rational thought for making me do it.  It was raining heavily, though this did not immediately engage my attention. I had not even a frock-coat over the clothes I had slept in, and I was drenched by the time I reached the end of the street, but this did not matter because I was going back to Wandsworth and this time, somehow, I was getting inside that cell. I was as happy to hang for what I meant to do there as Gilfoyle could possibly have been for killing me, curse him for leaving the task unfinished. I meant it. I ploughed through the icy rain, gasping for breath, with no other thought in my head.

Or almost no other thought. I know some part of my mind pointed out to me that what I was planning was both insane and unforgivable; that to allow the doctor to return and find me absent, -- permanently, if my attempt came to anything -- was the worst thing I could do to him. But that thought seemed to have nothing to do with the freezing, scarcely human creature I was now. It belonged to a man I had no more business trying to pretend to be.

It was a surprise, therefore, to find after some indeterminate rain-lashed sweep of time that I was indoors, and not in any part of Wandsworth Prison but  in a certain residence of Pall Mall, and already in the act of banging on my brother’s door.

>>Part XIII



 

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, so next time I say I've nearly finished something, hit me and tell me to shut up, because I plainly don't know what I'm talking about. I usually mean I've written the beginning, the middle and the end and there's just a little bit of stuff that needs doing BETWEEN the beginning and middle, and the middle and end. Which then in practice runs to over 1000 words.

[identity profile] ingridmatthews.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 02:13 am (UTC)(link)
I love this but GAH, HOLMES! Watson needs you to be STRONG. :(

Still ... ♥

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 11:39 am (UTC)(link)
♥s back.

Holmes... well, considering he came into this all "Oh, shit I'm not the person to help with this! I'm a fucked up emotionally stunted detective!" I just felt he wouldn't be able to take all this indefinitely without having a total meltdown at some point.

It's like a light goes off in my head when you update...

[identity profile] gaysrstillokay.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 05:20 am (UTC)(link)
Well worth the wait, m'dear. Well worth it.

You know, you have yet to end a chapter where I don't think "I had no idea that was coming". Masterfully done.

As would be expected, the writing is superb. My absolute favorite descriptions -odd though it may seem- are the little things you write about Watson, from the expressions on his face to the way he moves his hands. When he tried to shield his face from Holmes' scrutiny, my heart actually leapt a little, as such attention to the smallest detail is my heart's desire. It makes a piece so rich and visual; I always have, in my mind's eye, a clear and exact picture of this story. You paint it so vividly.

I do hope Holmes was able to keep it together enough to read the part where Watson imagined Holmes in the place of his attacker. How their world will change...

Mycroft's door... I shall have to play the Watson here because I do not know how this was the next step, Holmes.

As for the clamor for more, well, you only have yourself to blame. Your outstanding writing has ingrained in me the strangest hours. Still... completely worth it.

Re: It's like a light goes off in my head when you update...

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 11:44 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much. I'm particularly glad you like my obsession with everyone's hands and faces! It's something that, if anything, I worry about overdoing. But I wanted to try and show as much as possible of what's going on with Watson considering that it's his trauma but he's not talking to us direct about it at present.

As for Mycroft... well, for now let us just say that a character in a position of emotional and intellectual authority over Sherlock Holmes is a very useful thing, thank you, ACD!

[identity profile] rabidsamfan.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Stunning. Like Holmes, it makes me want to go do something -- anything...

I'm glad he went to Mycroft.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 11:49 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you! Yeah, I'm glad he went there too.
ext_30599: (Holmes: Brett shadow)

[identity profile] yan-tan-tether.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 12:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Eeeek, I'm so glad he's gone to Mycroft.

Also, after reading the comment above this one I went back and reread Watson's part of the story, and realised I'd somehow missed this part when I first read it:

How can I say it – I had to think of something to make it possible, I could hardly pretend it was a woman’s body under my hands and mouth. I thought of my friend lying out there – so that I should not lose sight of why I must continue, you see – but that is not all. I thought, if this were Holmes –

OH. MY. GOD.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 11:50 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for sticking with this!

OH. MY. GOD.

Yeeeeaaaah.

But there was also fun stuff in there like "hmm, maybe I should overdose on chloral," so, generally not a tranquil way for Holmes to spend his day.

[identity profile] schemingreader.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 12:33 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a really good chapter in this piece. I mean, OK, it started out a little too contemporary-feeling for me, but the ending is the most perfect thing. You know how to do upset!Holmes--it's tricky, I think.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 11:51 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I actually find Holmes slightly easier to write than Watson, and... well, I just like writing upset people generally.

(no subject)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com - 2010-06-10 10:43 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] ghosts-scare-me.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh God, the death of Phyllis Mackey. For Holmes to hear that Watson was thinking about that when he was more or less oblivious...

I really loved the whole anticipation aspect of this part - I was positively jittery with it myself - and of course Holmes's reaction; especially how he wants to read it again but just cannot bring himself to do it.

And even apart from the "Eeeh ♥! Mycroft!" aspect, Holmes going to his brother at a time like this is... sort of cute. In a Holmes way.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 12:05 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm glad you picked up on poor Phyllis Mackey. Yeah, that would have been no fun at all for Holmes, and he will have things to say about it later.

Thank you! ♥

(no subject)

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[identity profile] art-inthe-blood.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
NotgoingtoreadthisnowhavetogobacktoworkNOTgoingtoreadthisnowggggrrrrrggghhhh....
Is "I have to read the latest installment of a really ace fanfic" really such an unacceptable reason for calling in sick?

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 12:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Hee. Well it's not going anywhere, don't worry!

(I've got to admit writing it has got in the way of me doing actual work more than once.)

[identity profile] broncobabe007.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 01:39 pm (UTC)(link)
It is always difficult, commenting on this fic. Firstly, because your immense talent intimidates me. I'm sure you are perfectly lovely and approachable, you definitely seem it in your non-fic posts, but I feel like a 13 year old girl with a crush - utterly tongue tied. More importantly, I just never know where to start. It's not like I have anything constructive or critical to say, and telling you I love it just seems kind of inadequate because surely every single person who reads this loves it too.

In any case, yay! Mycroft!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh...! You're too kind! Thank you so much. And really any time anyone says as much as "Nice fic!" it makes me happy!

[identity profile] alfa.livejournal.com 2010-06-07 04:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know how I'll survive waiting for the next part. This was beautifully written and oh you make me love them more than I did before (witch is saying a lot). I think I must go distract myself before my heart bursts.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 12:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! And thanks too for your sweet note over on Cox and Co. I'm sorry about the suspense part, but I'm really glad you're invested in this.

[identity profile] choc-bunnyhead.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 01:23 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't commented on this story yet (mainly because I'm sort of shy on lj) - though I've been reading it almost since you started - checking back for updates all the time...
and it is absolutely fantastic! I know I am echoing everyone else when I praise your characterization, your attention to detail and your vivid descriptions of movements/expressions/emotion, but I really needed to comment and tell you myself! This is simply one of the best stories I've read in any fandom and I felt that you should know that. :)
Also - I've loved reading the updates about your research for this story - Fascinating!
Thank you so much for sharing your awesomeness!
(also looking forward to the next installment, of course.) :)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 12:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow, well I'm thrilled to hear you've been sticking with it so loyally for so long, and thank you very much indeed for taking the time to tell me you think so highly of this.

I'm also glad you enjoy my crazed obsessive ramblings about research. I'm always torn between gloating over finding something I can use (Jeyes cleaning fluid! At Wandsworth Prison! W00t!) and facepalming over not being able to just leave it alone already.

[identity profile] the-rusty-bird.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so wonderfully sensitive and believable and within the context of the characters and history and just. Really, really well done. You must be so proud of yourself!

I wasn't even going to read this, since I have massive issues with consent ambiguity but you've dealt with the repercussions so compassionately I've not had any moments at all where I felt uncomfortable beyond what I believe you'd want in terms of reader-character empathy. So yeah. Good job!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:26 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you very much. I'm about as proud as I can be while still feeling a little disturbed at myself for feeling the need to to do this to poor Watson! But people have been so lovely about it.

I wasn't even going to read this, since I have massive issues with consent ambiguity

I’m pretty sure I get what you mean here, (that you have issues with fic depicting anything that falls anywhere on the scale from slightly exploitative sex to out and out rape, I take it?) but just in case anyone else reading this should be in doubt on where I'm coming from with this fic: I don’t think there’s any ambiguity about consent here – there was no consent, and this was rape.

But in any case, I’m really glad you feel I’ve handled it sensitively and were only made uncomfortable in the sense of feeling empathy for the poor characters.

(no subject)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com - 2010-06-10 13:46 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] katead.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
ARGH! *FLAIL* HOW CAN YOU LEAVE IT THERE?????! :D Yay for Mycrofts to come!

Gah! LJ, don't log me out in the middle of replying to comments...!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:29 am (UTC)(link)
Heh heh. EASILY! It could have been worse, though, surely? I could have left it a paragraph or so earlier...

Thank you for reading! :D

[identity profile] photoash.livejournal.com 2010-06-08 07:51 pm (UTC)(link)
O.M.G.

Holmes!! Watson!!! ARGH! O_O

I dearly hope Holmes can get himself under control before Watson returns home or this will be yet another pain and disaster!

this whole paragraph here spoke to me as the quintessential essence of their relationship:
I read this hastily and put it aside, somehow at once very touched and almost irritated in my impatience to know the whole of it at last. ‘Yes, yes, dear fellow’, I might have answered him, ‘you are goodness itself; I already love you for it hopelessly. Further proofs of the fact, however astonishing, are not merely superflous but more than I am equipped to bear at present. To the purpose, now.’

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:36 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you. I'm particularly pleased you liked that passage, which I spent quite a bit of time on -- just one of those little moments that aren't strictly necessary but that I really really wanted.

[identity profile] jenlee1.livejournal.com 2010-06-09 03:19 am (UTC)(link)
And so finally, Holmes learns exactly what happened, in a scene that was everything I'd hoped for - tense, and painful, and pitch perfect from start to finish.

So very Watson, to be so concerned about how Holmes might react to reading his account of the assault. And Holmes, of course, immediately proves him right. Sigh...

Fantastic, as always, and Mycroft's impending appearance is certainly a pleasant surprise; his views on the situation should be very interesting, so say the least. *waits eagerly for more*

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:42 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm glad it was what you were hoping for.

I've been looking forward to the Mycroft scene myself, which I've had partly written for ages though it still needs a fair bit of work. I hope you'll like that bit too!

[identity profile] hpstrangelove.livejournal.com 2010-06-09 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I just wanted to let you know I friended you to keep track of your updates, in case you're wondering who I am - I haven't reached here yet, but I promise to leave a 'real' comment when I finally catch up.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:43 am (UTC)(link)
Friending is always welcome and comments always appreciated when you have the time for them! Thanks for dropping in.

[identity profile] citronpapillion.livejournal.com 2010-06-09 09:48 pm (UTC)(link)
FFFFFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDFJSHBMDHFG nv,dfhmgbjvdmnsfb gadsmng jnn bvmnxfc

this is like, WHAT, THE ELEVENTY-NINTH TIME YOU'VE MADE ME SOOOBBBBBdfhsbjhg

oh god. i love this so much. i was screaming at the computer screen, and my friend was giving me the "wtfisyourproblem--it'sonlymanporn?" stare, but.. dfgjshj oh man.

i love you so goshdarn much, woman. YOU MAKE ME WANT TO HAVE YOUR BABIES. gshkj <3333333333

*IS FINISHED SPAMMING YOU WITH OMGWTFBBQ1!1one1!!*

;_; <3

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 11:46 am (UTC)(link)
Hee hee! I always love your comments, my dear, they are crazy and hilarious and very flattering all at once: I think "what is wrong with you SOB SOB SOB" remains my favourite. I appreciate the offer of progeny! Thank you, as always. And don't cry too much.

(no subject)

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ancientreader: sebastian stan as bucky looking pensive (Default)

[personal profile] ancientreader 2010-06-09 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
This is brilliant beyond my ability even to praise it. One thing I love is how you convey their misery without melodrama.

I noticed you saying in response to someone else's comment that you don't mind people friending you, so I'm going to go ahead and do that because I am desperate to read the rest of this the very minute you post it. Please let me know if that's not okay with you!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-10 12:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you very much -- that's lovely to hear! Of course friending is fine and welcome.
cordelia_v: my default icon (Sherlock)

[personal profile] cordelia_v 2010-06-10 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Here because of Scheming Reader's rec, and I'm so glad that I followed her link.

This piece throws me back to my earliest days reading fanfic, when I was utterly absorbed and transported by the ways that a good writer could give me MOAR of that canon I desired, only even better, because it offered themes and POVs that you cannot obtain from canon. I stayed up 'til 2 a.m. reading this, and I can't remember the last time I did that.

There is so much to single out and praise here (pacing, characterization even of minor characters, material culture or details of the setting, the perfection of the angst/hurt), but what really stuns me is the character voices for Watson and Holmes.

They are utterly and completely creatures of their time and culture here: how do you do that?. And by writing them so very persuasively as possessing Victorian worldviews and diction, you make them more compellingly themselves. I'm enthralled.

And to sum up: this story just rocks. And of course, I will be on tenterhooks to see where you take this.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-11 08:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm thrilled you found it gripping enough to stay up reading it!

It's very flattering that it seems to fit the period and culture to you. I worried... God, my every other reply to comments seems to start with "I worried...!" I worried about their attitudes to various things (rape, specifically male rape, and homosexuality) seeming too modern. At least with Holmes you've got a character who swims against the flow of Victorian culture so much it's not that hard to imagine he might be at least somewhat ahead of his time, but then he's still got to be that in an of his time sort of way. And Watson's in a weird way almost more complicated, outwardly much more conventional, but a self-professed "bohemian" too who's evidently drawn to what's different, or he wouldn't eb so intrigued by Holmes and his cases.

In any case, the reason I can "speak Victorian" -- maybe not with a native accent, but fairly fluently -- is that I had an education in which literature stopped in approximately 1922. This has its drawbacks (at some point postmodernism happened?) but it has to be good for something!

ext_58380: (smirk AR)

[identity profile] bk7brokemybrain.livejournal.com 2010-06-11 09:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Aww. I love that Sherlock can and does run to his older brother for comfort and guidance.
Now I have caught up, and can start whining like the rest of your fans for an update, lol.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! Yeah, he's all "DRUGS! VIOLENCE! ...Mycroft."

Update has happened! I've been holding off on replying comments until I could get the damn thing done.

[identity profile] nightrobin11.livejournal.com 2010-06-12 02:23 am (UTC)(link)
My, oh my,...I didn't expect so good of a story to be found answering a response to the kink meme...<3

Needless to say, I have very much enjoyed this story.^^ It is so beautifully written, that I believe to be reading a novel at times, it is just worded so well. I really like the characterization and most especially the admission of Holmes' homosexuality. I thought that chapter was especially moving and so, Holmes-like, it just seemed very logical and in-character to me.

I love the way you write! I can't wait to read more of this amazing story, fantastic job thus far. I'll follow this story to its end!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm sorry not to reply to this before, I was putting off dealing with comments while I wrangled with the next part. I'm really glad you're enjoying this!

[identity profile] kate-lear.livejournal.com 2010-06-12 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
Have only now had time to sit down with this & read it with the attention it deserves, & oh my goodness, it's amazing. Holmes' reaction when he read the document seemed really spot-on to me - of course he'd have a mini-meltdown because he's not good with emotion & wouldn't know how to deal with it.

& I'm really looking forward to reading the conversation between Mycroft & Sherlock.

In fact the only problem with it is that I originally thought that reading a new installment would content me. However I find myself instead more impatient than ever to read the next part and watch the pair of them try to work towards some sort of resolution...

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 05:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! Yes, it seemed obvious to me he'd freak out completely -- which really, he is more than entitled to do by this point, provided he can manage to do it without making things even worse for Watson.

(Anonymous) 2010-06-12 11:15 am (UTC)(link)
Thank god, he wound up at Mycroft's.
(Seriously, I read those last 5 paragraphs while whispering dontdosomethingstupid dontdosomethingstupid)

This is an amazing story, and I'm looking forward to reading more.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you -- that is really exactly the reaction I was hoping for!

[identity profile] lolaraincoat.livejournal.com 2010-06-13 03:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm also here on [livejournal.com profile] schemingreader's rec, which was seconded with wild enthusiasm by [livejournal.com profile] cordelia_v. Wow! they were so very, very right. This is gorgeous - a great reminder of what fanfic can be, as an artform in itself, and often is not.

And, um, here's a stupid and obscure question: I was wondering what histories of gender and sexuality in this era you had been reading, if any? Partly I ask because of your canny use of Stead's _Maiden Tribute_ (and holy cow, of course Watson and Stead have a lot in common, you are brilliant to suggest that parallel) which put me in mind of J. Walkowitz's studies of London prostitution and sexual scandal. And then it occurred to me that maybe you named Gilfoyle after Timothy Gilfoyle, historian of prostitution in New York? If any new characters appear named Stansell, White, or Guy, then I will know for sure ... ;)

Anyway, mainly, I just wanted to thank you for this. It is terrific!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you very much!

Oh dear, that question makes me go "YAY! It looks as if I know what I'm doing!" and "OH NO! I don't really know what I'm doing!" all at once! Although yes, I did name Gilfoyle after Timothy Gilfoyle (though I'd forgotten the first name), ... which I'm sure the poor man did not deserve. But I'd been through so many names for that character and none of them worked and I thought "Gilfoyle" had a nicely elegant-yet-faintly-creepy Victorian feel.

Aside from Maiden Tribute, which was obviously massively important to this, I can't really remember what I read. It was all online, and fairly haphazard and garbled, Timothy Gilfoyle must have popped up somewhere, evidently. I knew of Maiden Tribute and a bit about other Victorian anti-prostitution campaigners from some TV documentary ages ago, and I'd read The Crimson Petal and the White. That's about it.


Anyway, again, thank you! I'm really glad you're enjoying this.

[identity profile] tiwtin.livejournal.com 2010-06-14 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
I've just caught up with these. It's heatbreaking and wonderful and my heart is bleeding for them both.

Wonderful fic - amazing angst - can't wait for more.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-06-16 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you very much!

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