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post Reichenbach AU - lost and found again
The day of his funeral had been cloudless, but the day she had visited his grave, the rain had come. For a half hour it was a misty drizzle, but as time passed it became a steady downpour. Irene's hair had become lank and plastered to her forehead and water had snuck into the gap between her collar and coat. She had stayed there for over a hour watching the raindrops smack against the freshly chiseled letters, forcing and willing and demanding herself to accept the hardest thing she'd had to face in a long time.
He's dead.
He is dead.
Sherlock Holmes is dead.
Reading the news in the papers had been enough of a shock, but that hadn't convinced her. Words were easily spun to the benefit of the writer or the speaker, and falsifications could make it into the news all the time. But gradually as paper after paper continued to report the same story in different wordings, her curiosity rose higher and higher. It was a trip back to London that forced her to come to terms with the truth. Falsifying a publication was one thing, but falsifying a tombstone - well, that was another league of its own.
It had taken time, but she had come to accept that he was gone.
That didn't mean her life had stopped its moving. Irene Adler couldn't stay in one place for too long, for she was still on the run from the past - the decisions she had made were powerful ones and the consequences just as much so. Keeping herself safe meant moving often, from one continent to the other if necessary, whatever it took to stay ahead - and to stay alive.
For the present time, her home was Berlin. The Schlosshotel Im Grunewald was proclaimed to have luxury rooms, and anything that had been built in 1912 with the purpose of being a residential palace surely had to have its perks. Irene Adler had taken up residence in one of the luxury suites, boasting a private living room and a more than comfortable bed. Berlin itself was cold but the room was warm and pleasant. The only chill was the iciness that clutched at her heart now and again.
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"Luck has nothing to do with it," he told her. "You and I are both egocentric enough to know that there's no such thing as luck --" he extended his chin out over the lip of his collar, separating the back of his neck from his damp shirt "-- luck is an excuse used by lesser people." It had been careful, systematic planning, not luck, that had saved Sherlock's life on the roof of Saint Bart's a few months earlier. The mechanics of his fall and subsequent continent-hopping escape had worked together like a Rube Goldberg machine, with each part facilitating the forward momentum of the next. Luck had been the last thing Sherlock had wanted to rely on.
"I don't imagine I need to press upon you the importance of authenticity. I saw your handiwork in Brno -- "Ykaterina Ianova," wasn't it? Marginally impressive. Enough to fool the Městská, at least." It was evident from his tone that he held the Brno Metropolitan Police Force in about as high regard as the unimaginative flatfeet at Scotland Yard. "I'll require a similarly thorough background," he continued. Beat. "And you should know that I won't be able to pay you."
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The subject of payment wasn't an issue for her, at least not right now. There were multiple ways that Irene could be compensated for her services, none of them monetary. In fact, she was drawing up a list of at least twelve now, in the span of about six seconds. If even half of those were acted upon, Irene Adler would certainly be coming out ahead in the trade.
But they could get to that later.
Irene's feet were soft on the carpet, her bright, paint chip toes standing out against the plush white. She returned the gun to its home, a good sized wooden box with a combination lock (which she closed immediately and twisted for good measure). Then her attention was on his face, her gaze moving across the sharp jawline and impatient eyes all in her own due time. Looking upon him was something she never thought she'd be able to do again, and it was at this point a luxury. She wouldn't hurry about it.
"What you're asking will take time." A pause. "But of course I can provide it."
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Each identity had been meticulously crafted in order to maintain maximum believability. The level of detail had even gone so far as to include elaborate backstories and employment records, complete with references.
Some men compose music. Others write novels. Irene Adler created phantom identities -- and she was very, very good at it.
"Fine," he said, dropping himself into a chair, "I'll wait."
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It wasn't surprising in the least to her that he was choosing to stay. After all, at this point where else would he go? If there were anywhere else he might have chosen those courses of action first, but for now Sherlock Holmes is a man without a home, a country - or an identity, at that. Her hotel suite is perhaps the safest place he can be.
Safe from certain things, at least.
Instead of taking the likely anticipated course of crossing the room to her printer, Irene instead chose the opposite corner. A bottle and two glasses were retrieved from a dark wooden cabinet, and she then regarded him with a look that, in other circumstances, could have been called almost benevolent.
"Shall I pour us a drink then?"
It wasn't a question, as halfway through the amber liquid already began spilling into the glasses, guided by a steady, manicured hand.
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He didn't answer her; rather, he pulled himself up out of the chair and set about exploring the perimeter of her room, flicking the curtains aside for a peek out onto the inner courtyard.
"Berlin's a very public place for someone of your reputation." His way of finally responding. He dropped the gauzy curtain. Every one of his observations somehow ends up coming off as a criticism. It just had that tone.
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"Hiding in plain sight can be the best way to hide."
Three ice cubes clinked into each glass, and Irene shook her head while crossing the room to push the hair from her eyes. A stray curl still twisted into her peripheral vision, but it wasn't worth setting down the glasses early for. Her attention wasn't much on her hair as it was. She was too busy silently puzzling out how Sherlock could have managed to falsify his own death in such a completely thorough manner - and at the same time knowing that no one else could have managed such a deception.
She didn't think he would have told her if she asked anyway.
Irene stopped a few inches in front of him, offering the second glass. Her lips were curved into a faint smile.
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"Or the easiest way to get caught," he pointed out, placing the glass on the sideboard and returning his hands to a comfortable knot at the small of his back.
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Leave it to Sherlock Holmes to find a blunt way to throw a comment - but that was all right. She was still far too pleased with his being here - and, well, alive - to be put out by any jab he might throw. Especially since she had been able to sustain well enough with her own circle of contacts, and tonight brought Sherlock to her in search of help. That sort of thing could make a girl feel proud.
"And what about you, Sherlock Holmes? How have you avoided being caught all this time?"
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That remark drew a laugh from her, one that was real and genuine. Leave it to Sherlock to sum up all of humanity in less than ten words. He was right, of course - many of the people they encountered were idiots. But he still had so many people looking for him, and it was surprising to her now that he had come to her for any kind of help. Sherlock did seem to pride himself on being above needing the help of others.
But for now, she wouldn't bring that up.
Irene swirled the scotch in her own glass before having another indulgent sip.
"So what sort of back story shall your new alias have? There are so many possibilities."
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"Like you, I imagine. Running from one cover to another. Although, your propensity for the theatrical -- and your taste for the luxurious -- are your Achilles heel. It took only rudimentary deduction to find you."
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In the time it had taken for her to cross the room to the very printing equipment he needed her to use, Sherlock had managed to discredit her. It was a rather impressive feat, that he would put down the very person whose help he was seeking, but only further reason to agree he was far from typical. It was one of the very reasons Irene had been so drawn to him to begin with. The man was handsome, of course, but the mind of the man was one of the most seductive things she had encountered.
Now Irene regarded him from her place on the love seat, the equipment an arm's length away.
"Do tell?"