#the hansom cab
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The Hansom Cab in London, UK
British vintage postcard
#tarjeta#postkaart#sepia#hansom#carte postale#ansichtskarte#briefkaart#london#photo#photography#postal#postkarte#vintage#british#postcard#historic#the hansom cab#ephemera
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Don't romanticise the Victorian era this and don't romanticise the victorian era that
I know it had Cholera
But what am I supposed to do?
It's where my favourite unhealthy twink and his doctor-soldier-author male wife live what do you want me to do about it?
#victorian#victorian era#1800s#Sherlock#Sherlock Holmes#john watson#john h watson#Sherlock is so autism coded fr#And they didnt even have a WORD for that back then#In 2009#No#Jokes#The other one#gay#They're gay#They literally left London during the Oscar Wilde trials#For 'obvious reasons' - John H Watson#In Sherlock: the Awakened#It wont show you their rooms#Every other sherlock game does#And they newsboy on the street said he heard 'the doctor' crying out in the night from Sherlock's rooms#WHAT DOES THAT TELL YOU#johnlock#Eliminate imossible#improbable truth remains#And this aint even improbable#He admits it TWICE in thar movie from the seventies#'Women not his glass of tea'#He gently carressed John's head in the Soviet version while rocking him to sleep in their hansom cab
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I also told him to go through Richmond Park, though he warned me that it would add considerably to the distance and his fare. It was autumn, and it struck me that the tints would be fine. And I had learnt from Raffles to appreciate such things, even amid the excitement of an audacious enterprise. -An Old Flame
#letters from bunny#crime and cricket#bunny manders#still confused about where ur legs go in a hansom cab but watever sdkfkdf
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Looking out a window of the Plaza, hansom cabs and their horses, November 18, 1946.
Photo: Dmitri Kessel for Life magazine via art.com
#vintage New York#1940s#Dmitri Kessel#Plaza Hotel#Central Park#hansom cab#color photography#Nov. 18#18 Nov.#vintage NYC#1940s in color
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"There's our man, Watson! Come along! We'll have a good look at him, if we can do no more."
"The Illustrated Sherlock Holmes Treasury" - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
#book quotes#the hound of the baskervilles#sir arthur conan doyle#sidney paget#sherlock holmes#john watson#hansom cab#following#tailing
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On a cold, fretful afternoon in early October, 1872, a hansom cab drew up outside the offices of Lockhart and Shelby, Shipping Agents, in Cheapside. The city wore an air as restless as the winds that swept the sky above it. The street was crowded with carriages; the ring of hooves, the trundle of wheels and the jingle of harness spoke of haste, and business, and fortunes being made. Messenger boys, their faces shiny with speed, flew like shuttles between banking-house and shipping company, insurance agent and Stock Exchange, lawyer and financier – flew almost as swiftly as the buttoned-up leather containers packed with bills that shot through the newly installed pneumatic tubes in the walls of Crouch's Emporium, The Shop That Sells Everything, on the corner of Holborn and Chancery Lane. Artificial winds in metal tubes, and the real wind in the grey sky snapping and flapping the company flags that flew on the important buildings, and the little sportive imitations of wind that spun down alleys and courts lifting papers and dust from the ground and letting them fall again – the city was alive with the moving air, and the only stillness in the whole street belonged in the eyes of the girl who stepped out of the hansom.
She was a person of sixteen or so: alone, and uncommonly pretty. She was slender and pale, with dark brown eyes that seemed to contradict the colour of the softly straying twists of blonde hair that escaped from the black bonnet. She was dressed in mourning. Her name was Sally Lockhart; and within fifteen minutes, she would have killed a man.
— The Ruby in the Smoke (Philip Pullman)
#book quotes#historical fiction#mystery fiction#philip pullman#sally lockhart quartet#the ruby in the smoke#description#britain#england#london#cheapside#weather#wind#technology#progress#work#horses#carriages#hansom cabs#rubbish#business#killing#murder
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Madge Frettlby (Jessica De Gouw) Blue gown.. The Mystery Of A Hansom Cab (2012). Costume by Wendy Cork.
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#nyc#new york#history#historical fiction#gilded age#transport#fifth avenue coaches#stages#travel#old nyc#storytelling#historical details#writing#writing community#novel#research#fiction#fiction writing#cabs#hansoms#carriages#explore#travel tips#grand central depot#newsies#1992sies#newsies fanfic
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So, here have we, an entire page of insanity (and mostly nightmares.)!
I don't know how the fuck I want to draw the confounded The Merry Gentleman. Help he's invading my pages.
#That's a Sun obsessed Captain going insane in a dream#Robin repeatedly topping off several bottles of the confounded Tincture and his Darkdrop Coffees#he's presently severely nightmare plagued. He's a point away from getting kidnapped.#Robert was sent to a state of some confusion before Rob spontaneously tried gaining nightmares in Bob's absence.#Blame the Light Fingers ambition (I don't know what I'm getting into but I'm contemplating if I should pick THIS or Heart's Desire oops—)#[I picked Rob and Bob's Ambitions on a whim.]#It took me like—several damned days to return to London.#I kept purposely gaining Nightmares in spite of wanting to return.#CURSE YOU‚ MY ABILITY TO DESPERATELY TRY TO STAY IN CHARACTER!#I only managed to leave AFTER I berated The Manager of the Royal Bethlehem Hotel.#(Which I had complimented on their smooth running mere days ago.#That was also one of the reasons for the delay.)#I'd gotten free like—an evening before December strook. (striked?)#Theeen there's The Merry Gentleman tormenting my PCs.#As in—practically appearing when I least expect him and jumpscaring Rob and Syr.#(Syren drew this card straight after pushing an old lady out of a hansom cab‚ that's why they're in one#unfortunately I cannot draw one.)#Robin greeted The Merry Gentleman then#Unfortunately: high watchful. Result thar be Walls Incorrectly Placed.#Then the below doodle is a reference for myself so I didn't f_ck up the one for Robin.#Theennn the ones below are all updated or previous versions that I liked so I kept them but didn't bother to edit them in.#I like to pretend The Merry Gentleman is taller than Robin.#And Rob's the tallest FL OC I have (that is human.) so that says a handful.#The Merry Gentleman#The Manager of the Royal Bethlehem Hotel#eyestrain#♢the vigilant viper#♡the swindling spieler#♧the vehement verdant#♤the sojourning bellhop
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@thedandy-detective He would steer flawlessly if needed but. the big problem is that he would launch the cab at full speed without regard to anyone else around or IN it. He's a great driver if you have to win a race (or if you have to film a Grand Hunt in the forgotten quarter), but an absolute menace in every other context ssjdjdkf
#it's like giving your car keys to the local adrenaline junkie. who has an extensive criminal record.#does he know how to drive? yes. would he drive safely? probably not#the funny thing is hansom cabs were designed to be more agile and manoeuvrable so one more reason for hiram to go fast 🫡#godspeed he has places to go#rip the horse
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London Life - A Block In The Strand postcard by totallymystified Via Flickr: Published by Raphael Tuck & Sons. Impressionist Series No. 1364. Printed in England, chromographed in Bavaria.
#The Strand#London#omnibus#hansom cab#taxi#policeman#postcard#retro#vintage#nostalgia#chromo-litho#chromolithography#flickr
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A poem by Thomas Hardy
A Thunderstorm In Town
She wore a 'terra-cotta' dress, And we stayed, because of the pelting storm, Within the hansom's dry recess, Though the horse had stopped; yea, motionless We sat on, snug and warm.
Then the downpour ceased, to my sharp sad pain, And the glass that had screened our forms before Flew up, and out she sprang to her door: I should have kissed her if the rain Had lasted a minute more.
Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)
Image: Hansom Cab in the Rain by Unbekannt Unbekannt
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temple station with hansom cabs outside, 1899
#found this while researching hansom cabs#dare i tag fallen london LOL#i dont normally make posts like this#but i thought flblr would want to see#historical photos#tposts
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The man shook his head.
"The Picture of Dorian Gray" - Oscar Wilde
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Hansom cab in Central Park, 1958.
Photo: Inge Morath via Magnum Photos
#vintage New York#1950s#Inge Morath#hansom cab#Central Park#horse & carriage#color photography#vintage NYC
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Wails of Wedded Bliss
Chapter 5 || Masterlist || Chapter 7
Chapter Summary: A carriage ride to Groveland parks leaves you and Sherlock in a snippy mood.
Pairing: Sherlock Homes x wife!reader
Chapter Warnings: 18+ Dead Dove Do Not Eat, Dubious Consent, domestic abuse, No sex, (mentions of past events) .
Word Count: 9k
Author Notes: This took a while. I'll be posting chapter 7 very soon.
Inspiring Song: "Achillies" by Gang of Youth
7:01am Wednesday 7th May 1890, 221B Baker Street, Marylebone, Westminster, London, England
Early day on the street of London was a thick blanket of fog and horse cabs awaiting their clients. People in uniforms marched the streets, servants and servicemen that did not have lodgings with their employers.
Sherlock and you avoided the mud and horseshit on the cobblestones, stepping carefully. His hand was strong, cupping yours as you lifted your skirts above the stench. The floor path was filthy and the boy who usually scrapped the dung of the road was not to be seen so early in the day.
You shivered slightly at the cold breeze. Your jacket was not as warm as you had believed. You felt a pity for the sight of maids passing you both without even a shawl to protect them, their faces were flushed and pink, they cupped their bare hands and blew hot breath into them. You were grateful for your gloves.
You wondered if anyone down here in the street could’ve heard your shrieking up in the 221B apartment. You weren’t particularly quiet not holding back your screams. Your warm flesh was a fresh reminder that your detective husband walking so nobly and leading you was in fact a sexual deviant.
Sherlock wrinkled his nose and was careful not to plant his walking cane into any muck.
As you stepped closer to a hansom cabriolet, Sherlock pinched your elbow and walked you both closer to a hackney coach behind the latter.
“Jarv! I dare say! Jarvey!” Sherlock called up to the driver sitting on top. The man fixed his uniform cap and peered down at you both from the height.
“Where are you off to sir?” the driver called down.
Your husband smiled and opened his coat, his fingers slid into his pocket as he stated, “To Groveland Park, Southgate.”
Your eyes widened, from baker street it was a feet of travel one normally wouldn’t take. You were sure your own husband had to have been mistaken.
“Sherlock,” you softly informed while gently touching his arm “that’s over an hour away.”
He ignored you. His thumb skated across your back softly.
“Of course sir,” the driver nodded, “that should cost you one crown and a tanner.”
Your lips tightened, it was such a large expense. Now you really started to regret using your dowry to pay of Sherlock’s selfish debts. Why the hell was he taking you both across country side!?
The detective saw your disapproval and smiled, patting your hand he exclaimed, “Fret not wife, the expense is reimbursed by Scotland Yard.”
He gave the driver half the require costs from his pocketbook before he opened the door of the carriage for you. As you climbed inside, you jumped with a noise feeling his hand squeeze your backside.
You hissed as you sat on the leather seat. You tried to maneuverer your body to sit mostly on your hip. As he climbed in and sat across from you after shutting the carriage door, you pinned him down coldly with your gaze.
He returned an expression beaming in smirtle and tapped the roof with his cane, “Drive on Jarvey!”
You felt the carriage move with a jolt and sighed as the horse carried you through London’s different roads and pathways. You looked out the window and sighed as the carriage circled down the Regent Park and past the Zoo. You had never been to a zoo in your life, your grandmother stated it was too filthy and uncouth to stroll in pens merely to gaze at queer animals from different countries.
You tried not to stick your head out the window as you kept your eyes on the entrance gates you passed. Now that you lived so close and were a married woman with free time...you pondered if Sherlock would permit you a visit.
He was watching you the entire time. A soft smile came to his face. He took a glance out the window with you.
“I presume you’ve never been?”
Your eyes flickered between him at the steel zoo fencing and you timidly nodded, “I have always wondered what a lion looks like to the real gaze, my father promised to take me when I was a girl but-” you drifted off into silence and looked away from the window.
But he abandoned you for a cold woman in a opportunistic marriage...you hadn’t seen him for years.
“My grandparents would never approve,” You stuttered.
He nodded slowly with his silent thoughts and did not question you further.
You sighed, if you had known the journey would be to Groveland Park, you would’ve brought a novel with you to read. You cupped your hands and leant your head back.
As the cobblestones turned to soft mud and dewy grasslands you heard Sherlock finally clear his throat.
“Dear wife,” he said leaning back, racing his eyes all over your body, “What do you actually know of the Pennicott case? What details have come to light for you?” He spoke with balance.
You pursed your lips and blowed slowly. You didn’t want this to be another test of Sherlock in which he might insult you. You pinched your gloved finger and stated factually, “I recall hearing the Baron went missing a week or two ago. He took a ride on a horse in the middle of the night from his home and then sighted on a ship in Limehouse headed supposedly to France. That’s what the papers say. Then the information you shared with me this morning. You said he made a profit in his company?”
Sherlock nodded and shut the carriage windows. The light darkened the pair of you. Now your eyes adjusted to watch his face as he retold in secrecy, “Yesterday, while at the New Scotland Yard office building I decided to investigate his warehouse expenses. He was making a profit, he was destined to achieve a beating record.”
Lord Pennicott owned the largest suppliers of metal works and machinery parts, ranging from trains, to ships to food cans, to weapons.
“He partakes business often with the Vanderbilt family, very new money in the past thirty years, yes?” you noted aloud. American royalty.
There was talk of Vanderbilts heirs coming to marry English society members, Pennicott was a frequent mention in business.
Sherlock nodded and huffed, “His consultants were blithering idiots however who had barely any insight to his personal life. He was quoted being a private man...what they knew of him was that he was about to have his sixth child. I believe it is time his wife to be questioned. She has given a small testimony to the police already, but I have been offered to consult in this case by Scotland yard...and it is you that officially provoked my interest.”
Your eyes narrowed, “Me?” you exclaimed with disbelief.
He had been so hot headed the last time the topic was even mentioned. You hadn’t dared ask about it again.
“Yes,” he rubbed his hands together, “you.”
You looked at him with apparent annoyance, “Shall you elaborate how it is I that provoked you?”
He chuckled sheepishly, “because you made a an inquiry and berated me when I told you to pay attention on other matters...” His eyes glanced to the floor of the carriage before meeting yours, “I may have...reflected...and deemed it the necessary duty to follow up on the imbeciles of England’s detective division. You are perhaps not as dim as I took you for originally...”
You felt a strange buzz at the bottom of your spine with a tiny seed of smugness blooming upward.
A flutter of pride filled you from his praise until he snorted, “You’re still rather stupid, but with a value of insight.”
Your spark of light blew out. You tried to not roll your eyes.
With most of your diverse self, you desired to throttle him and argue. Instead you took your turn at observing what you could in the dim carriage.
Sherlock was not like the average gentleman. In fact, he was very abnormal to what you had gotten to know... He was incredibly unorthodox. He didn’t adhere to social norms and behaved in contradictions. Therefore you took a moment to hear his words and accept them as a hidden message. A riddle.
You smugly smiled.
“Was that an attempt to...apologise, Mr Holmes?” you finally mused.
Sherlock smirked, “That would require me to be have a sense of regret my dear wife, and I do not account such a folly.”
You smirked back and said sassily, “The words you seek, are ‘Sorry’ and ‘please forgive me.’”
Your toe nudged his ankle playfully.
He glared reliving the warm humiliation you inflicted to him this morning over Mrs Hudson. His grim look was contagious.
He shot back, “And pray tell, how does your backside feel Mrs Holmes?” he chewed his bottom lip. His brows lifted, "Mayhaps you've forgotten and in need of a firm reminder?"
When your smile fell and his grew. He had won this small battle of wits. You looked away from him, your face felt incredibly warm like your bottom.
“Come now,” he purred and lean forward to pat your knees, “Don’t be so bashful. Deep down, I know you just want to be run through...” Your eyes narrowed as he continued confidently stating, “You put on this coy little show last night.” Your lips parted, your teeth bared, yet he kept running his mouth further, “I have intuition like no other man my dear and you...you are scared I will find out all those lustful secrets inside your mind-“
You didn’t let him finish his words before you ripped off your glove and delivered a sharp ringing blow to his cheek. It was a foul sting that ricocheted into your own delicate palm. You huffed angrily.
“What I did last night was not a show,” you spat, uncontrollably hot tears touched the back of your eyes, “What you did was wrong and cruel. You threatened our marriage unless I debased myself. I did what I had to,” you jabbed his chest with your finger, “and I will continue to as long as you remain faithful...”
‘or I will kill you Sherlock Holmes.’
Your words echoed both in his and your memory. He didn’t really believe you were capable of murder, and yet he also knew not to press his thumb against the sharpened knife.
His rubbed his hand on the pink print you left on his pale cheek. He plucked his cane leaning on the seat beside him and hooked it into your collar, tugging you unceremoniously forward into his lap. You were forced to sit directly over his right thigh from the awkwardness of the carriage size. He curled his walking stick behind you and trapped you on top of him.
You could feel the heat between his legs. Oh how Sherlock really was just a animal.
“I find you may come to regret those words...” he panted and licked the spot under your ear, “You think me cruel now? Just you bloody wait until you feel the thrash of my cane.”
You fluttered your eyes shut, squeezing the tears away as you regained your breath and whispered icily back into his seeking mouth, “I look forward to it.”
He pulled back to gaze at your entire face. His eyes were full of confusion. He looked like he was lost on a foreign road with know knowledge on where to go. His lips twitched, unsure to smile or frown.
“I see,” he swallowed, “You can play martyr all you want then, my future masochist...and then we will see whether you truly are a slut...or a saint...but I doubt you’ll like either result...”
You would never describe yourself as a masochist. You didn’t particularly like pain...but after a period of time when he struck your bare bottom this morning you felt warm and floating. Your belly buzzed like last night. It was wrong and you knew it was. A spanking was a punishment not a entrance for pleasure.
Sherlock set aside his cane and cupped your waist. His thumbs ran up and down your torso. He pressed his nose to yours.
“Definitely stupid,” he whispered over your lips hotly before he gently pushed you back until you sat on your side of the carriage.
You felt a slight dizziness. You couldn’t understand Sherlock no matter how much you tried. You slumped in your seat and rubbed your forehead. You pulled back the curtains and watched as the many houses turned into more trees.
Sherlock in the meantime pulled out his pipe and began stuffing it with tobacco for his pocket tin.
The bright luminous shine of the match flame filled the dark carriage as he lit his pipe and puffed. He stared you down as his gums sucked and smacked the thin mouthpiece. A swirl of grey and white smoke tails snaked from his lips and nose. His eyes held no colour, only darkness. You wondered what urged him so drastically to hate and disrespect you.
His cheek was a huge darker in this lighting.
You shut your eyes and controlled your breathing. You tried to stare at your glove that you’d dropped on the carriage flooring.
You sat both in silence for the rest of the lengthy roads to your destination. You pinched the curtains and opened them.
8:23am Wednesday 7th May 1890, Grovelands House, The Bourne, London, England.
The forestry and gardens of Groveland Park were magnificent. Giant trees replaced tall buildings. Bird chirp washed out the gossip and clatter of people.
You sighed as you breathed the clear air hunted with the earthy dew scent on the wind.
Your husband finished his pipe and tucked it back into his pocket.
The carriage rocked and creaked to a stop. You felt the driver climb down and opened the door. Sherlock climbed out first, he cleared his throat and hugged his walking stick to his side. He held out his hand for you.
“Come along Mrs Holmes.”
As you reached for him, the both of you matched eyes. Your hand was trembling.
You stepped down to the gravelled path and Sherlock released your hand to pay the remaining wage of the journey to the driver.
You quickly ducked back through its little door to retrieve your lost glove. And when you grasped it you felt a warmth behind you.
Sherlock’s hands with his cane cupped your waist and pulled you back against him slowly. There was something cruel and intimate about it... He stole your glove from your covered hand and slid your naked palm through the material but not before pressing his lips against the inside of your wrist.
Your eyes flickered and your heart thrashed. What the hell was he doing? The driver saw it all and smirked. He climbed back to the top of the carriage and clicked his tongue, fleeing slowly away. Sherlocks eyes were full of obsession.
You crossed your brows and tore yourself from his arms.
“No,” you whispered. You didn’t truly know what you were saying ‘no’ towards. It wasnt right of your husband to play a angered beast to rise fear in you only to transform into an adoring dove.
His false softness reverted back to his smirking wickedness.
His eyes glance back over your shoulder and he chuckled.
“Good morning Inspector Lestrade,” he purred.
You turned around to take in the sight of a short gentleman who was the owner of a thick black friendly mutton chops.
He wore a happy and surprised expression.
He was also carrying on his forearm a walking stick. He nodded his head and tipped his top hat to the both of you. He wore no gloves and to the private eye you could see the darkened yellowing skin of his knuckles and back of his palm.
“Good morning Detective and-“ he paused glancing you up and down.
“Lestrade,” Sherlock cleared his throat, and turned to wave a hand in regards to your presence, “Meet my wife, Y/N.”
The officers whiskers twitched. He bowed his head briefly, acknowledging, “Mrs Holmes.”
You granted a small polite curtsy, repeating back with a soft tone, “Inspector.”
You graced him with a small smile and he flashed you a nervous grin.
He scratched the back of his head and said with a strain in his voice to your husband, “Sir, this is a matter of professional business, your wife present I fear might be deemed....” he grimaced, “irresponsible?” he shook his head at the thoughts, “I must insist she returns to home,” he waved out his arm to direct you to a buggy and horse besides the entrance gates, his vehicle no doubt, he smiled, “Madam.”
Inspector Lestrade was a clear average man with common decency and a good sense of propriety. Sherlock was bring you into his space of work fit for men, you had no place here...nonetheless you willingly came along...he didn’t need to spank that out of you at least.
But before he could take grasp of your delicate hand, Sherlock reached forward and lowered your reaching wrist with an annoyed sigh, “I invited her. She has valued skills I need. It’s the least you can do after yesterday.”
Sherlock lightly tapped to the dark spot growing along his own jawline.
“Mrs Holmes,” The inspector flushed and nervously smiled, “I apologise greatly for the deformation of your husbands face.”
You looked between the two men. From Sherlock’s jaw to the Inspectors knuckles. The dots connected within seconds.. A light noise mixed with amusement, shock and horror slipped out of your tongue as you exclaimed, “You struck my husband?”
“In my defence Mrs Holmes,” Lestrade leaned against his walking stick and glanced to the gravel unable to meet your eyes, “One might argue he deserved it. And he returned a brightful force himself...”
Sherlock deserving a punch? Noooo surely not! After all the pair of you had experienced these two or three days, you understood entirely. For you wished to do nothing more than the same as Inspector Lestrade.
Sherlock snickered, and you released a bubbling giggle, “That does not surprise me. I’m curious what drove you to such lengths as to strike him.”
It wouldn’t take a lot you suspected, Sherlock already proved his habit on making more than one person uncomfortable and offended.
But instead of a confident man of the law, he was still sheepishly pushing the gravel around with his walking cane.
“Oh yes, Lestrade,” Sherlock barked in amusement, “Regale to my wife what I did to provoke your fist...”
Sherlock slapped his cane against Lestrades forcing the inspector to lose his balance and fall on one knee.
“Blast!” the inspector cried as he wobbled to stand back up.
You smacked a hand against Sherlock’s chest and shook your head at him and for that he discreetly tapped your backside with the head of his cane. You bit back the gasp and clenched your fingers on his coat. You didn’t like witnessing your husband behave so openly as a bully. It was very unsightly.
“Your husband, Mrs Holmes,” Lestrade winced and dusted dirt off his knee, “decided to elude to that which I am incompetent in my work therefore in other things.”
You accusingly turned your attention back to Sherlock, “Other things?”
“I think the inspector has trouble,” he smirked, “getting it up.”
‘Getting it up? What up?...oh!’ your eyes flashed wide
“Sherlock you didn’t!”
Your husband cackled meanly and rubbed soft circles into your back with his thumb.
“I’d rather say he started it,” Sherlock claimed fluttering his eyes at you before he snarled in the inspectors direction, “Go on Lestrade...now, you tell her what you said to me before I insulted your virility?”
You turned your attention back to the officer.
The mutton chop cop sputtered embarrassingly. His hands straightened his jacket and lifted his hat to smooth back his hair.
He licked his dry lips and hastily muttered, “I dare not repeat the words I so indecisively chose especially in front of such a fine and polite lady.”
Sherlocks mouth was close to your ear as he whispered, “I think he’s rather scared.”
“Of what?” you snipped back still crossed with Sherlock’s behaviour.
“What you’ll do to him...after what he called you.”
‘After what he called me? What was said? When was it said?...’
You softly hummed, “Did he insult me?”
“Detective Holmes,” the inspectors face turned a darker shade as he tensely pressed, “This really isn’t professional.”
Your husband moved his hand and lightly guided you to stand behind him as if to be a protective wall between you and the inspector. He stood a full foot above the inspector.
He glared down and sneered, “Then why bother saying it yesterday when you can’t even say it today in front of the woman herself?”
You saw how his hand squeezed his cane furiously. It was that action alone that sent an icy stream of fear down your spine. You weren’t sure of it, but you couldn’t put it passed Sherlock to start a brawl, particularly since the two men had clearly tussled fearsomely yesterday.
You sighed obnoxiously loud and very unladylike. You clapped your hands to snap both their attentions your way.
“Listening to a pair of men bicker is tiresome and leaves my learning brain in wanting,” you rolled your eyes and walked ahead of them both, calling over your shoulder, “Let us put aside what frivolous nonsense occurred yesterday and perform our duty instilled by the righteousness of God and the Queen herself, yes?”
You were stepping towards the main large house where you were confident was the Pennicott Estate. The gravel crunched beneath your striding walk.
Sherlock and Lestrade appeared gobsmacked by the sight of your leading March.
“Very well,” the inspector relented and walked ahead.
Sherlock caught up with both of you and squeezed your elbow, he gestured forward with his cane, “Lead the way Lestrade.”
And as the gentleman walked ahead of you, Sherlock sucked his head back to your ear with a smug tone, “Nicely done, dear wife.”
You rolled your eyes and shook him off, as if he wasn’t the reason you performed such a song and dance if tell them to return to their work over his foul demonstrating behaviour.
HELPLINES:
If you are a victim of sexual abuse, assault or domestic violence or know someone who is please reach out to these links that share helpline services, phone numbers or emails. Consent and respect is important in every relationship whether between friends, family or even strangers.
Australian Helpline Services
UK Helpline Services
American Helpline Services
India Helpline Services.
#sherlock holmes x female reader#sherlock holmes x poc!reader#sherlock holmes x y/n#sherlock holmes x you#sherlock holmes x ofc#sherlock holmes x reader#henry cavill x y/n#henry cavill x ofc#dead dove do not eat#dead dove fic#henry cavill x female reader#henry cavill x reader#henry cavill x you#milky fics
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