Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective (
alldeduction) wrote in
thecapitol2013-08-30 12:15 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
Who: || Sherlock and Open
Where: || District 2 Suites
When: || A few days after the network blackout
What: || Sherlock is sulking in the most melodramatic way possible, but he has his reasons.
Warnings: || None, save Sherlock being a brooding child
It had been nearly two days, since he had left his rooms. Longer than that, since he had been fully dressed, or spoken to anyone. He'd extracted himself carefully and quietly from daily life in the tribute tower, wallowing in the blackest mood he could summon.
Punchy was missing. Sherlock had few friends, fewer still ones he could accurately describe as having greater expertise in a subject than he did, and Punchy was one of them. Despite the bizarre dialect in which he spoke, Sherlock knew the boy was brilliant when it came to computers, and hacking network systems in particular. So when their comms had been hacked, the message of rebellion spread, Sherlock had immediately wanted his opinion.
Only to find he had disappeared.
He wasn't allowed to investigate, of course - wasn't even allowed in Punchy's room - but it didn't take the world's greatest detective to be able to deduce what had happened to him. Idiot. Idiot, idiot, idiot. Sherlock wanted to shake him, hard, if only he could find him first. But there was no point in looking. Punchy had almost assuredly been taken deep into the Capitol's crooked heart.
He only hoped the boy would still be alive when he was brought out of it.
Where: || District 2 Suites
When: || A few days after the network blackout
What: || Sherlock is sulking in the most melodramatic way possible, but he has his reasons.
Warnings: || None, save Sherlock being a brooding child
It had been nearly two days, since he had left his rooms. Longer than that, since he had been fully dressed, or spoken to anyone. He'd extracted himself carefully and quietly from daily life in the tribute tower, wallowing in the blackest mood he could summon.
Punchy was missing. Sherlock had few friends, fewer still ones he could accurately describe as having greater expertise in a subject than he did, and Punchy was one of them. Despite the bizarre dialect in which he spoke, Sherlock knew the boy was brilliant when it came to computers, and hacking network systems in particular. So when their comms had been hacked, the message of rebellion spread, Sherlock had immediately wanted his opinion.
Only to find he had disappeared.
He wasn't allowed to investigate, of course - wasn't even allowed in Punchy's room - but it didn't take the world's greatest detective to be able to deduce what had happened to him. Idiot. Idiot, idiot, idiot. Sherlock wanted to shake him, hard, if only he could find him first. But there was no point in looking. Punchy had almost assuredly been taken deep into the Capitol's crooked heart.
He only hoped the boy would still be alive when he was brought out of it.

no subject
Bert was smiling, though there was a sharper edge to it now. There was no point in kicking the couch again, he had already made his point about Sherlock pouting.
"It would be a kindness on a lesser mind like mine to tell me then why you look like a pile of vomit so wretched even starved dogs wouldn't eat it."
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That was as close to a real apology as Cuthbert got outside of a life or death situation. And if he wanted Sherlock could hold that over his head for a long time. He felt terrible seeing his victim like this.
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"It's a game as much here as it is there." He bit himself off before he said more. He already had a bracelet shimmering around his wrist - he didn't need to make himself even more of a target.
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There was truth in his words and even Cuthbert knew it. But he wasn't foolish enough to say it out loud either. But he can still spur Sherlock on.
"Are you giving up both games so easily?"
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"What does it possibly matter to you what I do, or don't do? You've already proven that you are perfectly capable of the task they have assigned you to. Does it surprise you that some of us find it tedious?"
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Bert was trying to keep his cool, but this was a difficult subject and he wasn't prepared to spill his guts about it.
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"Ah. Aaahh. Now I understand." He pulled himself up until he was sitting upright. "You think this is about you. That's almost cute. No, you can let your precious conscious rest. You weren't even my first, let alone the worst, though you did manage it twice."
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"Then I was a fool for worrying over something that is obviously no real bother to thee. Mayhap you can cheer yourself with that fact. You've made a fool out of a man who tends to only do such to himself.
I have no further need to try and help thee. Rot here, if that's what makes you happy."
And with that he turned to leave again.
no subject
"As long as we remember who we're rotting for."