Joan Watson (
formersurgeon) wrote in
thecapitol2013-08-04 04:07 pm
Entry tags:
Holmes and Watson, mismatched
Who| Joan Watson and Sherlock Holmes
What| Joan and Sherlock meet their companions' counterparts
Where| Starting where she wakes up, then in the District 11 apartments common room.
When| The day after Joan's death
Warnings/Notes| Mention of Joan's death by snake, will update if anything else comes up.
Joan gasped back to life, her eyes opening wide. It took a moment of deep breaths for her to remember what was going on, for her to realize that the agony of succumbing to snake venom was now just a memory. She sat up and immediately examined her ankle and her calf. The puncture wounds were gone, the skin smooth and unmarked as if the bites had never happened. She sighed with relief, dropping her head to rest it on her knee for a moment before straightening and pushing herself up from the bed.
Some time later, after being informed of her district affiliation and given a rundown of the Training Center, Joan arrives at the District 11 apartment. She stops right at the entrance, the elevator door sliding silently closed behind her, and spends a few moments just staring at the opulence. "Oh my god," she murmurs under her breath as she catches sight of the large window along the living room, and the expanse of city beyond it. She'll explore the apartment later. For the moment, she pulls one of the chairs over so she can sit and look at the Capitol skyline, her brain whirring. Dying, coming back to life, going from a rough, deadly desert to this building in a futuristic city she's never seen before...it's going to take time to process.
What| Joan and Sherlock meet their companions' counterparts
Where| Starting where she wakes up, then in the District 11 apartments common room.
When| The day after Joan's death
Warnings/Notes| Mention of Joan's death by snake, will update if anything else comes up.
Joan gasped back to life, her eyes opening wide. It took a moment of deep breaths for her to remember what was going on, for her to realize that the agony of succumbing to snake venom was now just a memory. She sat up and immediately examined her ankle and her calf. The puncture wounds were gone, the skin smooth and unmarked as if the bites had never happened. She sighed with relief, dropping her head to rest it on her knee for a moment before straightening and pushing herself up from the bed.
Some time later, after being informed of her district affiliation and given a rundown of the Training Center, Joan arrives at the District 11 apartment. She stops right at the entrance, the elevator door sliding silently closed behind her, and spends a few moments just staring at the opulence. "Oh my god," she murmurs under her breath as she catches sight of the large window along the living room, and the expanse of city beyond it. She'll explore the apartment later. For the moment, she pulls one of the chairs over so she can sit and look at the Capitol skyline, her brain whirring. Dying, coming back to life, going from a rough, deadly desert to this building in a futuristic city she's never seen before...it's going to take time to process.

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He shook his head slowly.
"... No. I came alone. He appeared in the capitol between my first and second arenas." He paused, ground his teeth, but then decided it was best to elaborate, before she heard it from someone else. "... As punishment. They brought him here when they decided that I was unlikely to behave without leverage." He raised his wrist, flashing the silver band there.
His expression darkened slightly.
"As far as I am aware, your appearance is entirely unconnected."
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"You don't have an attachment to me," she said, and held out her hand, asking for his wrist, assuming that he can't just take the bracelet off. "Can I see the band?"
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He made a low noise but held out his arm, twisting his wrist to show the band.
"It tightens when there is any attempt to remove it," He mentioned lightly.
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Her hold on his wrist was firm but gentle. She examined the band closely.
"What did you do to misbehave?"
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He did try so hard to feel bad about that one, given the consequences, but he often couldn't manage to. He stood completely still as she examined it, but didn't pull his wrist back.
"I suppose as a deterrent it worked," He added, a little bitterly, after a moment.
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"Cameras. Of course."
Her Sherlock would have a field day if he were here, tracking down and disabling every single camera. Chances were good he'd get more than just a silver wrist band.
"Bringing John here?" she replied. "I'm not surprised."
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"Futile endeavor as it is. Their surveillance technology, while not that far advanced from ours, is pervasive. Impossible without access to equipment to be able to disable an entire room at once, let alone hack the system to send a feedback loop." The words tumbled out at an incredible rate, but he shifted and paused before continuing.
"The bands were given before this arena, after Ariadne's execution. To 'remind us of our place', as it were." His eyes caught hers, then, sharp and hard. "It would behoove you to be careful."
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"They executed someone. One of the people they brought here? What did she do?"
The fact that they felt the need to execute someone spoke volumes. They were afraid. The people who were "misbehaving" were probably more powerful than the people in charge likely wanted to let on.
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Who would expect anything less?
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These people were sick. And had all those they brought here at a distinct disadvantage, a minority in a foreign land brought here as toys to break again and again. Still, she couldn't imagine that there wasn't opposition among the natives as well.
Joan considers for a moment, then puts her thumb on the band. "Were people working with her?" she asked as she pushed it against his skin and looked up to meet his eyes, hoping she had made clear the true question, whether he was working with her. She hoped the cameras would miss the indications.
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"... In a sense. One of the Mentors, from this world. Eva Salazar. Conned her to trusting her, and betrayed her on the night of the attempt." His voice was dispassionate, but there was a warning. No one from this world could be trusted. Not even former tributes. To her unspoken question, he added: "No one else. Not sure who would want to be tangled up in such idiocy."
He lets the implication hang. It would have gone down a lot differently, if he were involved.
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"So, apart from always changing my clothes and going to the bathroom in the dark," she said, wryly thinking that the cameras probably had infrared, "and not trying to blow up leaders, is there anything else I need to know about surviving in this city?"
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He managed not to give a look of disgust, knowing he was on camera, but the temptation was massive.
"The city is something better experienced than discussed, however."
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"Not everyone comes back. They seem to prefer 'favourites' - the more interesting, the better the story, the more likely that you'll be revived in the capitol after your death." He frowned, looking down, before turning back to her. "The Sponsors are the money. They pay for the gifts that are sent to tributes in the arena. The gifts I sent you and John? Entirely paid for by begging." He couldn't quite keep the bitterness out of the words. "Without them, you would never have received the anti-venom."
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"If they don't find me interesting, I'll die in the arena, and they won't bring me back to life," she said, more for her benefit than his. "Okay. What interests them? I'm guessing sex and violence, since as far as I can tell, they're human, and humans are the same everywhere."
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He paused, hesitating. John hadn't told her about what had happened between them before the arena, and while with everyone else he was attempting to hammer the idea home with a sledgehammer, telling Joan about his confession was strangely off-putting. She would learn it, eventually. Would see it, or would hear about it. He'd been shamelessly playing up his 'unrequited love' to every sponsor he could get his hands on.
But it was one thing to do so with strangers, quite another to do so with the multiple universe duplicate of your supposed affections.
So while normally he would have feigned a touch of awkwardness, just for effect, here it was entirely real.
"... Love, tends to be more acceptable." He cleared his throat. "Sacrifice. Brotherhood. And bloodshed, of course, the violence is in everything. But they like to think their tributes can be Heroes." He paused. "... Or Monsters."
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She picked up on his awkwardness in discussing love, another thing that was so much like her Sherlock, who even after everything will never admit to having loved Irene Adler. It was awkwardness, though, not dismissive or despising. That was what clued her in to the idea he was talking about himself and John. Sacrifice and brotherhood, yes. But clearly more.
"Which are you?" she asked. "The Hero or the Monster?"
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"Neither, I imagine," Sherlock answered her question carefully. "Despite what John would believe I am not exactly 'hero' material. But I've managed to get through three arenas having never killed anyone." He paused, glanced at the ceiling, and then reluctantly added: "... On purpose."
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"It makes a difference," she said, "not killing people on purpose. You also actively saved my life, and John's."
If he hadn't actively killed people, and regretted the deaths he may have inadvertently caused, then his survival and regard wasn't based on violence.
"Love, then," she said mildly.
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Instead he shuffled awkwardly as she called him out on it, hoping he had successfully avoided the topic and dismayed to find he had not. It was ridiculous, really, the aversion, considering how he had been acting in the Capitol now for weeks. Every one of his actions was precisely made for that reason.
And yet...
His brows furrowed and he glanced at the floor. "Once he returns to the capitol I mean to persuade him to petition for release from the Games," he said instead, side-stepping. He looked back up at her. "You may want to consider it as well, though I doubt they would take someone straight from their first arena. They are seeking tributes with 'useful' talents who ah - would be better put to use outside of the games rather than within." His brows were still furrowed, the awkwardness had never left, though he was doing his best to smother it down, put it aside.
Unwilling to acknowledge that despite all his bravado there might be some truth to the underlying message. (Unwilling to think about it.)
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"I imagine he'd be useful as a doctor. I doubt they'd really want their captives working with their police." She didn't mention her own medical background, because she told John, and likely Sherlock via video feed. "What's the drug scene around here?"
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He was worse than useless, here.
He knew her medical background. Knew it before she had mentioned it to John. He could read it in her hands, even if he hadn't suspected it, based upon her doppleganger connection. The lack of army service was more interesting, to him, but then he supposed it wasn't the first major difference between her and John.
To her question, his face darkened. "... Heavy. They carry an alarming array of designer drugs, and the hedonism culture does not inspire - ah - restraint." He'd had a hard time, when here on his own, staying clean. But she didn't need to know that. "Morphling, is the most common. Opiate, with physical side effects. But there are others."
He released a hard breath, glancing back out the window. "They consider it amusing. One sponsor drugged nearly half the tributes, for Valentine's day." He did not need to mention that number included himself.
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"Have you been having issues with substance abuse here?" Better to come out and ask, she had decided.
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Another difference. John hadn't even wanted to entertain the idea of his past drug use, when they had first met. (Later, much later, he knew it all too well.)
It was an odd feeling, perhaps partially shame, having her hone in so easily upon something he managed to hide, especially here. Especially after meeting the other Sherlock.
"Not even cigarettes," He added with a bitter melancholy.
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