Science and Faith | By : ambersue Category: S through Z > Sherlock (BBC) > Sherlock (BBC) Views: 3734 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 1 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Sherlock (BBC). The show and all characters belong to BBC, Moffat, Gatiss, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I don't profit from a thing. |
**A/N UPDATE! Sorry it's been so long...this is my first real attempt at a multi-chapter fic and I am finding it both delightful and daunting. Because I'm my own beta, I get a little revision happy. I have added a "prologue" chapter, because even though I'm assuming the boys weren't together pre-Reichenbach, I felt I needed to introduce at least a hint of sexual tension before the break. I've also done some revising to the original three chapters, and chapter four (well, five, now that I have the prologue) is up! Working on the next chapter now. I'm planning on it being a bit longer, so be patient.**
We’re smiling but we’re close to tears Even after all these years We just now get the feeling That we’re meeting for the first time1 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ *** Overture: John *** I’m a high-functioning sociopath. Do your research. John has always fancied himself an open-minded sort of chap, but Sherlock’s words give him pause. He’s familiar with the term, of course, though disorders of the brain have never been his particular cup of tea. But the brief definition he remembers from uni is hardly a medical diagnosis, so he follows the advice he knows Anderson won’t, and does his research. One should know these things about one’s flatmates—shouldn’t one? Charming. Manipulative. Entitled. Demonstrate a marked lack of empathy. Well, yes. But he knew that within a few hours of meeting him, didn’t he? The bloody man left him at a crime scene halfway across the city without so much as a goodbye-here’s-half-a-cab-fare-home. Compulsive need for excitement and risk-taking, a need to live life on the edge. That one actually seemed a bit interesting, until John had to shoot a man dead just to keep the lanky git from offing himself in some sort of suicide game. Show love, happiness, and affection only when it suits their ends. Have no capacity for true emotional attachment. For a while, this one rings just as true. John defends himself against it, doesn’t let Sherlock lie. When Sherlock introduces John as a friend, John corrects him: “Colleague.” Because John realised early on—right around the time Sherlock cured his limp with a lunatic race across half of London—that he was bound to the maniac, for better or worse. But he won’t let it become something that it’s not, something that it can’t be. Sherlock isn’t his friend. Not really. John is a means to an end. He’s not sure what end—but Sherlock is the one who used the term sociopath, and surely he wouldn’t use it if it weren’t accurate. John slips up a few times, finds himself thinking of Sherlock as almost human. But the detective is quick to remind him: “Heroes don’t exist, John, and if they did, I wouldn’t be one of them.” So when they are standing at the pool, John wrapped in enough explosives to take out a city block, John doesn’t expect Sherlock to care. Jim, this Moriarty fellow, who is madder than twelve Sherlocks and a bag of monkeys, this man who kidnapped him and wired him with Symtex and painted a laser sight over his heart, this is really the same man who he’s been living with for the last few months. Moriarty and Sherlock, just two sides of the same coin, both using John Watson for their own amusement. “I will burn the heart out of you,” says Moriarty, and John spares a moment to inwardly roll his eyes. He has a vision of Sherlock flopping down on the couch, huffily drawing his dressing gown around him. Quite the dramatic pair, these two. “I’ve been reliably informed that I don’t have one,” Sherlock answers coolly. Hell, the man puts ice to shame. Beneath a layer of terror at the thought of a billion pieces of Dr. John Watson lying scattered about a darkened pool, the doctor himself is still annoyed by the showmanship of it all. “But we both know,” Moriarty sighs, “that’s not quite true.” Maybe it’s the madman’s tone, or maybe it’s the way Sherlock’s eyes flick to John—almost imperceptible, so quick John can’t be positive it’s not his overstressed mind playing tricks on him. Maybe it’s the moment where he sees—where he imagines he sees—pity and sorrow and loss reflected in those grey depths. Somehow, after months of believing the man is some sort of organic computer running purely on electricity, tea, and nervous energy, John sees the human being underneath. And maybe it’s not real, but if Sherlock is faking it, he ought to quit detecting now and go win himself a bloody BAFTA. He can’t process it all in the moment, but days later, when he replays that evening, John recalls the panic in Sherlock’s voice as the detective strips him of the explosive-laden vest, remembers the bumbling, awkward body language as Sherlock tries to thank him for attempting, yet again, to save his life. John reviews his research, but he can’t fit them together, the Sherlock he saw that night, and the sociopath incapable of forming emotional attachment. Sherlock is not infallible, John reminds himself. He was at least a little bit wrong about Harry, wasn’t he? Maybe, John thinks, just maybe, Sherlock is also a little bit wrong about himself.
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