Sherlock is also over by the window. He's between cases, and bored. In the past two days he's poisoned (and then cured) two ravens, and discovered a phosphorescent powder which only shows up under special lighting.
And now, he is bored, and strumming his out-of-tune violin, and drinking what might be cleaning fluid.
He shakes his head, then moves off the couch with familiar, crisp energy, surveying the room. His eyes flick- paper on the dresser, the date. Folded open to an article on crime- the shelves. Consulting detective.
Peculiar and varied interests. Tendency towards inebriation. The violin.
And for his part, he examines the bizarre fabric--too smooth and almost glossy to be simply cotton, or wool. The cut of it is unusual, as well. Too simplified for this year, and much too clean for this city.
"Tell me...do you know a man named Mycroft? Not a burly, heavy set fellow with an obnoxious laugh. A smaller one. Brown hair."
Arms folding defensively for a moment, but that doesn't last- he's into the chemistry cabinet, glancing at the compounds- yes, authentic to the period. The wall paper, even. The taste in the air.
"I believe he is somewhere one hundred years in the future. I had begun to believe he was merely a specter, some element of drink or chemical I had ingested."
He stands abruptly. The poor, battered violin is set carelessly on the floor.
"Honestly? From a murderous cab driver, a Chinese smuggling act and traveling circus, a dead boy's shoes, a very long game, a woman with more whips and leather than half the stables in London, and last of all, a tremendous confrontation ending in a suicide and a leap off of a building."
He's equal parts curious and satisfied. It wouldn't be right if this Sherlock--any Sherlock--didn't have the good doctor nearby.
"How curious. I never had a headstone, but I did wait to reveal myself to him until after he had finished writing a beautiful memoir about our adventures together."
"He was a professor. A brilliant mathematician, a scholar of the first order. Also someone entirely capable of maneuvering governments, a career which paid handsomely, if illegally."
He spouts this off, and is about to throw in a pithy remark about the Professor's ultimate demise. But technology.
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