theyarder: (sadness. so.)
[personal profile] theyarder
OT4 'verse.
Verse note: Lestrade and Mary are married and have a one-year-old-ish son named Robert, who is Holmes's godchild.


The armband is a little too tight; it doesn't cut off his circulation, but he can always feel it, a tight grip around his bicep. He could adjust it; he could ask Mary to fix it, make it so it sits more comfortably, but that seems wrong. Holmes's death shouldn't be comfortable. It sits on him the way this arm band does, it chokes something in his chest the way this chokes his arm, and loosening the band won't make anything any better. So he picks at it in the cab on the way to Baker street.

He and Mary have spoken to Watson of course, have visited, but he wants to go on his own, too. They're all friends, Lord knows by now maybe a little more than that, more like a family, but he feels he ought to pay his respects on his own; that's how this all started, anyway. Drinks after a case, not-so-serious conversations over a crime scene. He and Mary and Watson and Holmes, the four of them are a family, were a family, but Lestrade needs to do something that's just for him and Watson.

He exits the cab, and it's impossible, but Baker street looks emptier from the sidewalk than it did months, weeks prior. He closes his eyes and steels himself, thankfully not something too difficult for a copper, and then he presses forward. His steps on the stair are automatically loud, forced habit, and he pauses halfway when he realizes he's been stomping needlessly. His grip tightens around the rail, and he takes a breath before he forges on.

Come on, Lestrade. You can't be in pieces when you see him.

At the landing, he knocks, all too painfully aware that this time it's genuinely politeness. It's been a while since he felt the undercurrent of the embarrassment from how he discovered Holmes and Watson just this way the first time around; it had become just amusement, just a small joke that he'd make his presence so well-known on the stair. He clenches his jaw.

"Watson?" he calls out. "Mrs. Hudson said you were in."

Date: 2012-01-24 03:44 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
Watson laid the letter on a nearby table. "It was the best he could have done, in the circumstances," he said. "I'm thankful for what there is. There was a... conversation we had, the night before. He made reference to it."

Always. Watson ran his fingers over the words on the paper, sighing. "I'm not sure what I would have managed to write, were our positions reversed."

In retrospect, he wondered if the 'conversation' they had had the night before had been a goodbye, if Holmes had somehow knew... if that were true, Watson would likely never know the answer.

Date: 2012-01-24 04:32 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (my pleasure)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
Watson's expression softened a little. "Thank you," he said quietly. "I appreciate that. I realise he wasn't... he wasn't exactly the most open book, but..." He shook his head. "I wouldn't have had him any other way."

It was too easy to fall into regret, to wish he had not been so reluctant about their affair in the first place, to wish he hadn't abandoned him like he did, to wish he had never had all those secret fears and condemnations that Holmes was somehow corrupting him. It was better not to think of that, far better.

"I'm not sorry," he said, smiling a little, "for the trick we played on you and Mary."

Date: 2012-01-24 05:20 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (light)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
"It was our pleasure," Watson said, his smile a little broader. It was far better to focus on the good memories.

He rose suddenly. "Did you want more brandy?" he asked, going to pour himself another glass. "We should have... we should have a toast," he said, rather desperately. "To Holmes, and what he was, and who he was, and what he accomplished."

His voice broke a little, but his smile was stubborn, if somewhat strained.

Date: 2012-01-24 05:52 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (calm)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
Watson laughed, a bittersweet sort of sound. "To Sherlock Holmes," he said. "Friend, and ally, and... and... and husband." It felt strange to say so aloud, to say so in front of anyone, in front of Lestrade. He flushed a little. "For lack of a better term. A genuinely unique and unexpected man."

He took a long swig of brandy, looking around the room, seeing Holmes everywhere. It seemed a little less crushing, now.

"I don't suppose," Watson said quietly, and without a lot of hope, "that you might ever have need of a police surgeon at the Yard? When I'm not working this practice I plan on getting, of course." It would be good to still be involved in detective work, even in such a small way.

Date: 2012-01-24 06:22 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (satisfied)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
"Thank you," Watson said, his voice soft again. "I would appreciate that, a good deal. A practice takes some time to build, at any rate, so if I can stay busy in the meantime... I suspect it would be good for me."

There was a relief in that, in being accepted, in being welcomed, in having some sort of purpose to his life besides packing up the odds and ends of someone else's death.

"Thank you, also, for coming to see me today. I think I needed it."

Date: 2012-01-24 06:45 am (UTC)
lightconductor: (my pleasure)
From: [personal profile] lightconductor
Surprised by the hug, to say the least, Watson smiled, warmly and genuinely, relieved to be able to count Lestrade among his friends that day. He hadn't expected the hug, didn't think Lestrade had expected it either, but he was very grateful for it.

"Good evening, Guy," he said. "I'm glad to know you."

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theyarder: (Default)
Inspector G. Lestrade

January 2012

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