deductivedetective (
deductivedetective) wrote in
circle72012-02-14 11:58 pm
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a lovely date for a murder, don't you agree
Neither of them called it a date. Sherlock may not have been the most socially up-to-speed person, but he knew what this was; what John was asking. He humored him and agreed, not pressing the matter. It wasn't unusual for them to to be together anyway, even before this. In fact, catching them without the other was even more odd.
It wasn't too fancy, anyway. The Chinese place down the street was good, and authentic (according to Sherlock's verification), and reasonably priced for two men sharing money. The atmosphere wasn't romantic, at least. Sherlock imagined the pressure on John would be lessened if just for that reason, even if he didn't understand the big deal.
"Eating in today for once, eh, Sherlock?" the host asked with a polite smile as they entered. "Two, then?"
"Yes, thank you," Sherlock said, looking at John. "Any plans after this, by the way?"
It wasn't too fancy, anyway. The Chinese place down the street was good, and authentic (according to Sherlock's verification), and reasonably priced for two men sharing money. The atmosphere wasn't romantic, at least. Sherlock imagined the pressure on John would be lessened if just for that reason, even if he didn't understand the big deal.
"Eating in today for once, eh, Sherlock?" the host asked with a polite smile as they entered. "Two, then?"
"Yes, thank you," Sherlock said, looking at John. "Any plans after this, by the way?"

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About that time during the movie, Lestrade came through the door with a paper bag in tow from a deli near the hospital John had stayed at. "John, sorry, I couldn't get to the hospital until today, and they told me you'd come back here so I..."
John's stomach sank, and he suddenly had developed a great dislike for Sherlock and his culture of keeping the door unlocked, and an even greater dislike of Lestrade's habit of coming in without knocking (which honestly wasn't really fair, Lestrade never had a reason to knock before, except for the odd chance that he'd catch Sherlock running around the flat in a sheet). For a long while, Lestrade just stared.
"Am I interrupting something?"
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"No."
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"Right, well um, I got you some sandwiches, though I suppose it was kind of a moot point since you're off the hospital food now anyway," Lestrade said, depositing the bag on the desk, he then extended his reach over Sherlock to offer John and envelope. "And this is from the rest of the police department."
It was a get well soon card with a graphic of a cartoon dog in bed with a water bag on its head and a thermometer hanging out of its mouth. It wasn't exactly appropriate for the specific injury, but the sentiment was there all the same. Even Sally and Donovan had signed it.
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"Apologies, Lestrade. I was testing something," he said matter-of-factly. "There's some of Mrs. Hudson's cakes left, if you'd like as well."
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"Yeah, no problem," said Lestrade, helping himself to one of the cakes. He seemed to go on as if there had never been any tension in the room at all. He was talking again before he even swallowed the snack cake: "That Star Trek? I love that movie. That Captain Kirk is something else."
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He made his way to the kitchen, where he wrote some fake notes on legs falling asleep, and how long recovery took, and how long it was possible to anchor an angry small man with a damaged shoulder with your own body weight. May as well make it convincing just in case.
"Much prefer Spock," Sherlock piped in.
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"I don't think I'll be able to eat meat for a week," John added with a groan.
"Exactly why those sandwiches are caprese," Lestrade shook his head. "The team feels the same."
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"Ring us if you get anything interesting."
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"Why are you so concerned with it, anyway?"
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John didn't answer Sherlock at first, letting the question sit in his head for awhile. He slumped back down in his chair, adjusting his bad arm in the brace. "I don't know," he admitted finally, pursing his lips into a subtle frown. "I'm really not gay, you know... I don't really want people talking. I don't want to be thought about that way."
John turned his glance up to Sherlock.
"And," he began. "It just so happens that the person I like's a bloke. It's really all sort of a fluke, this."
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"They're going to realize eventually, John," he said. "And people will talk. I've said it before.
"But all right."
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"Is this a short-term arrangement?" he asked. "I'm not sure what you're implying."
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Sherlock ran a hand through his hair, realizing he hadn't considered the possibility of this not 'working out.'
"I see. Well. I'll, um," he struggled a bit, "try to be discreet."
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"You're worried."
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carry me home NANA NANA NA NANA NA