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A Study in Satin
Part 1: Semper Cogitus Chapters 1-10
Copyright © 2000, 2013 Tigger
All Rights Reserved. |
The model(s) in this image is in / and are no way connected with this story nor supports nor conveys the issues and situations brought up within the story. The model(s) use is solely used for the representation of looks of the main character(s) of this particular story. ~Sephrena.
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Legalities: Archiving and reposting of this story *unchanged* is permitted provided that: 1) You must have contacted the author, Tigger, and have asked permission first and received said permission to host this particular work. 2) No fee be charged, either directly or indirectly (this includes so-called "adult checks") or any form of barter or monetary transfers in order to access viewing this work *and* (3) PROVIDED that this disclaimer, all author notes, legalities and attribution to the original author are contained unchanged within the work. 4) The author of this work, Tigger, must be provided free account access at all times the work is hosted in order to modify or remove this work at his sole discretion.
The characters, situations, and places within this work are fictional. Any resemblance between actual people (living or dead), places, or situations is entirely coincidental.
The title picture is the work of its respective photographer. This work, everything other than the title picture, is the copyrighted material of the respective author. ~Tigger.
Caveate Emptor! This story is a work of fiction, intended for mature individuals who enjoy stories with transgender and erotic themes and who are legally permitted to read such stories under the laws of their location. If this does not describe you, then this story is not for you and you should check elsewhere.
In addition, this story drastically departs from what is commonly referred as "The Canon" among Sherlock Holmes enthusiasts. Should this offend you, please read no further. ~Tigger.
Characterizations: This story is based on situations and characterizations found in the Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. However, the Irene Adler character is also based on the characterization presented in the Irene Adler novels by Carole Nelson Douglas.~Tigger.
Artwork: Original Artwork graciously donated by Brandy Dewinter.
Acknowledgements: A story of this magnitude (over 1 megabyte of text, 56 chapters in three parts) is not solely the effort of one person. My sincere thanks to:
Brandy Dewinter - Simply stated, without her help, support, guidance and every so often a well intentioned nag, this story would not have happened. I think that about 85% of the words are mine, and the rest are hers, but all of them (mine in particular) are better for her eagle-eye for detail, grammar, theme and plot.
DanielSan - who kept me (almost) honest insofar as my characterization of the main characters and who caught more than a few glaring typos and manglings of the English language (American or English).
Paul1954 - who read my words to ensure that, in my attempt to make my characters sound English-Victorian, I did not make too much a hash of it. I am sure that it was often a painful experience. ~Tigger.
That solitary light issued from the second floor study of the flat at 221B Baker Street - the rooms of the fabled Mr. Sherlock Holmes. For a single moment, a shadowy figure peered out into the night through the parted drapery - a figure bent by age and other . . . less-natural enfeebling agencies.
The years had not been kind to the great detective. His longtime friend and principal biographer, Dr. John Watson had been dead for nigh onto two years. Mycroft Holmes, the brilliant if eccentric older brother who had used his contacts as a senior official of His Majesty's Government to send Holmes so many challenging cases, had also passed away. Both losses had been devastating to the man in the gloomy rooms for their passing had left that powerful and restless intellect truly and completely alone save for memories - and vices.
Sherlock's brother had been, of late, the last influential person in all of England who had still believed in the great detective's powers and abilities. With Mycroft's death, Holmes no longer had any contacts who could or would advise other such men of consequence to bring their most baffling and sensitive problems to the rooms at 221B Baker Street. Those whose hands now controlled the reins of power within the British Empire could see no point in consulting with a relic of a bygone age - a man who, in their so-very-knowing estimation, could not possibly understand the wonders and problems of their modern world.
Their casual dismissal had left Holmes to struggle against the fiendish power he could not defeat - the utter and debilitating ennui that gnawed at his very soul when his powerful brain went unchallenged.
All of which made the loss of Watson even more serious. Watson had been the stone upon which the great detective had sharpened his thoughts, tested his hypotheses and tightened his arguments. In short, Dr. John H. Watson had provided Holmes the intelligent and appreciative audience his investigative method and his ego required.
More importantly, a living John Watson would have at least attempted to dissuade Holmes from resuming his use of the seven percent solution of cocaine as a salve for his boredom. Holmes had believed that he'd defeated the need for the drug during his years abroad after the incident at the Reichenbach Falls with Professor Moriarty, but over the past two years, he had discovered that he'd been wrong. Since Watson's death, and without challenges suited to his curiosity and intellect, Holmes' use of the drug had steadily increased. Whether that was due to the unrelenting ennui or to a real and growing addiction, Holmes did not know.
Nor, at this point in his life, did he very much care.
Every game, in Holmes' opinion, eventually came to a cusp, a critical moment in which a player's options became distinctly limited. After a great deal of contemplation and reflection, Holmes had concluded that his life had arrived at just such a crossroads.
Holmes had always assumed that when such an important milestone in his amazing life finally occurred, it would come heralded by major events and great happenings. A case worthy of his powers such as the one that had led to the confrontation with Professor Moriarty at the Falls or an investigation such as the one he'd conducted on the behest of the King of Bohemia when he had first met Irene Adler, THE woman. Such a major event in the life of the greatest detective of his era, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, should have been presaged by something equally momentous.
Only it had not. Rather, the event had been marked only by a series of relatively unimportant, disconnected events in the past sennight.
It had all begun not more than a week earlier, when a particularly maudlin mood had driven Holmes to take out his case file. After Watson's death, Holmes had assumed the responsibility of documenting his investigations, not because he was vain nor because he harbored any interest in personal fame, but because the world stood to benefit from accurately rendered accounts of his method in action. Holmes had been dismayed to realize that it had been more than a year since the aging detective had been called in to undertake a case worthy of his still prodigious powers. It had been mere coincidence that the date of the final entry in the file, the date that Holmes had declared that case closed, had been one year ago to the day he had decided to look over that file.
Mere coincidence.
Later during the same week, Holmes had needed to renew his supply of cocaine. The meager supply that Watson had kept in his small surgery had been quickly consumed once Holmes had resumed using the drug. This had forced Holmes to find another supplier, which had not been difficult - until this attempt. This time when Holmes had gone to his chemist, he'd been told that from then on he would need a prescription signed by a licensed doctor in order to obtain the drug. That problem had been solved by means of a judicious bit of forgery, but Holmes knew from personal experience that forgery was a crime with a very short life. Eventually, the doctor and the chemist would reconcile their records and Holmes' forgeries would be uncovered. Holmes might be able to delay that unfortunate occasion by frequenting a number of other doctors and chemists, but it was only a matter of time before that avenue of relief, however reprehensible Watson had found his use of it, would be closed to Holmes as well.
Holmes had therefore renewed his efforts to secure work from the various government agencies that had once clamored for his attentions. Those efforts, however, had been met only with ridicule and derision. In fact, one officious little dandy had actually had the unmitigated gall to order the office guards to "escort" Holmes from the building.
Holmes had been profoundly humiliated by that cavalier dismissal and treatment. The humiliation had quickly given way to a rage the likes of which the ordinarily cold and unemotional detective rarely experienced. Briefly, he had gone so far as to actually consider turning his talents against those pompous, strutting fools - to following his greatest foe onto the path of crime, or even conquest. Then let those smug idiots at Whitehall try ignoring him. . . let them DARE to ignore King Sherlock the First.
The images such confrontations conjured up had been momentarily entertaining for Holmes, but in the end, he had discarded both notions.
Not because he doubted the feasibility of either option. Holmes firmly believed that he would have succeeded at either venture, but his decision to forgo those paths had come from what was to him, an unexpected source. Holmes was neither a religious nor a superstitious man, but the thought of how Watson would have reacted to Holmes turning his skills and will against the Crown had, in the end, dissuaded him.
Odd that after all the years of amused yet mildly condescending tolerance toward his longtime companion, Holmes should find that he needed to feel worthy of Watson's good opinion. *The follies of age,* he thought not for the first time, *are at least as numerous of those of youth, and the worst folly of all must be conscience.*
In truth, Holmes did not need to work - at least not in a financial sense. Mycroft's estate along with Holmes' own investments provided him a more than comfortable income that would last far beyond his expected lifetime. No, work was something Holmes needed, or perhaps more accurately, something Holmes craved to fill his mind, not his purse.
*So, those appear to be my only viable and personally acceptable options,* Holmes mused,*I could continue to live as I am living at that precise moment. Physically comfortable and either bored to a state of utter insensibility, or assuming I am somehow able to continue to obtain the cocaine, drugged into a similar state, but not caring.* He could continue to be a forgotten creature in this modern world, or worse yet, a pitied one.
"*Neither* course of action is the least bit acceptable," Holmes snarled in the barest whisper. "There is yet a third choice. This abominable maze that has become my life's game still has a third path open to me, and I choose to follow it!"
Shoving the drapery closed, Holmes strode across his study to his scientific laboratory. The weak, blue flame of a carefully adjusted Bunsen burner flickered, throwing eerie shadows about the otherwise darkened room. The scientist in Holmes watched dispassionately as the heat of the dancing flame caused a clear liquid in a small glass beaker to boil gently, sending its vapors billowing up into a distilling unit.
The beaker had been full earlier this evening but now the fluid filled less than a tenth of its original volume. Holmes picked up the modestly sized amber-colored apothecary bottle and looked at the label. Before Holmes had upended the bottle's contents into his distilling apparatus, it had originally held a spare two ounces. An entire thirty-day's supply of the solution - at least that is what the prescription he'd been forced to present had indicated.
"A prescription," he snorted into the darkness. "They will be regulating alcohol next. Or trying to, the consummate fools."
Skillfully, Holmes used a pair of metal tongs to snatch the beaker off the flame and then poured its contents onto a small metal bottomed dish. He then set the dish upon an ice bath to cool the concentrated liquid. With practiced efficiency, Holmes filled his steel hypodermic from the dish, and then stalked off to his rooms. Briefly, he worried that the contents of the needle might not be sufficient to the task. Originally, Holmes had intended to concentrate the entire bottle of cocaine, but his calculations indicated that the resulting concentrate might be too thick to pass through his hypodermic needle. Still, what the needle's reservoir currently contained was nearly three weeks' dose and that should be more than adequate to Holmes' needs.
As he had always done when embarked on a project worthy of his mettle, Holmes had planned and prepared thoroughly for this evening's agenda. Mrs. Hudson's daughter was scheduled to come in for her twice weekly cleaning day after tomorrow. With luck, she'd think he'd passed away of natural causes, although the police would see things for what they were, but Holmes had no desire to traumatize Miss Hudson either.
Quickly, Holmes went about the nightly rituals a man developed over a lifetime. A quick wash, a soothing pipeful of his tobacconist's most excellent rough-cut blend while his Edison Phonograph played Johann Sebastian Bach's Concerto for Two Violins, and fifteen minutes reading the classics (Sophocles' Antigone in the original Greek) before reaching for his bedside gas lamp.
Except tonight, rather than reaching for the gas lamp, Holmes reached for the hypodermic needle. From his meticulous researches, Holmes had determined that the now-highly concentrated cocaine solution would immediately shock and then stop his heart in a not-easily-recognizable simulation of natural cardiac arrest. If he could just turn the lamp off and throw the needle out of his immediate vicinity before he succumbed, it was entirely possible that not even the police would uncover the truth. That was the only negative aspect of his plan - at least to Holmes' way of thinking - the possibility of having his name tarred forever with the stigma of insanity for having taken his own life. Being pitied for the supposed loss of his keen mind would be a bad enough legacy, but it would immeasurably worse to have those buffoons in the government feel vindicated in their arrogant assessment of the "mad" Sherlock Holmes.
"Then you had best complete the job properly, hadn't you?" Holmes chided himself rhetorically.
*Reduced to talking to myself,* he thought resignedly, *perhaps I am losing my mind, after all.* With a sigh, he plunged the needle home, steadily injecting the cool fluid into his arm. With a speed and strength born of ego, the Great Detective flung the needle out the conveniently open window and managed to dowse the lamp.
The soothing, euphoric haze of the drug came over him much more quickly than Holmes was used to, but that was only to be expected, he surmised. At last, the boredom receded as Holmes gave himself up to the contemplation of what was, for him, the only mystery he had been unable to investigate properly. At least, not if he'd wanted to live to tell the tale.
Well, he wasn't going to live, he smiled gently to himself, so now he was free to investigate what awaited men on the other side of death's veil. The thought brought a semblance of a happy grin to his lips and then his eyes drifted closed one last time.
Chapter 2. Life after Death?
"Mr. Holmes?" The piercing sound of a feminine voice calling out his name roused him, but he didn't want to wake up. "Mr. Holmes, are you all right?" the voice called out again, louder this time and with some discernable emotion backing it.
"Who. . ?" Holmes growled, burrowing down into his bed linens.
"'tis me, Mr. Holmes, Miss Hudson. I was just finishing up my cleanin' of your rooms, but you weren't up for me to change your beddin'." her voice made the last an accusation. "I have to be getting on to my own home, sir."
An incredible stench assailed Holmes' nose, forcing him awake, and with wakefulness, came recognition. The *last* thing he wanted was for Miss Hudson to realize what had happened. "No, that's quite all right, Miss Hudson. You just leave out the clean linens and I will see to the bedding myself when I get up."
"Are you all right, then sir? I've never known you to be a lay-a-bed, sir," Miss Hudson's voice was less strident now, more uncertain. "Not in all the years I've known you."
"Just a bit of the ague, Miss Hudson. My doctor prescribed a concoction that made me sleep. I am better now, but you should keep your distance. I would not want you to become ill yourself and possibly pass the illness to your mother or sister."
"No indeed, Mr. Holmes," Miss Hudson quickly agreed. "I've left some soup simmerin' on your stove, sir. It should do you up right and tight if you've got the strength to go get it."
Holmes got another whiff of his soiled bed linens and nearly gagged. The thought of food only made the growing nausea worse. "That will be quite all right, Miss Hudson. I am feeling much more the thing. A hot bowl of soup will be exactly what I need once I have had a chance to bathe." *The bath, at least, is the truth of the matter,* he thought.
A thought occurred to Holmes and he called out, "Did you come a day early for some reason, Miss Hudson?"
"Early? Why, today's my regular day, Mr. Holmes," Miss Hudson replied before pausing, "Oh, I see. That potion your doctor gave you made you sleep longer than you thought, Mr. Holmes."
*I've been unconscious for more than thirty six hours?* Holmes asked himself. *That explains the condition of my bed, but I expected my rest to be far longer than that. What happened?*
Holmes reveries were interrupted by his housekeeper. "Well, since you're feelin' able, Mr. Holmes, I'll be on my way. Hope you feel better. Just leave the dirty linens in the hamper in the kitchen and I will see to them next time. Good day, Mr. Holmes. Don't worry about the stains. My mum has the same problem, her bein' of an age, y'know, and I know just how to get them white and sweet again."
Holmes growled a 'thank you' and a farewell and then listened carefully for her departure. Quickly, he got out of his bed, as much to escape the foul odors as to ensure the door was securely bolted. Whatever was happening, it was definitely NOT what Holmes expected, and until he understood what was happening, he wanted no more guests.
Unfortunately, no sooner was he out of bed, then the world began to spin giddily. Urgently, Holmes reached out toward his bedside table to steady himself, but it was too far away and too late.
Sherlock Holmes fell to the floor in a swoon.
*Perhaps there is a heaven, after all,* Holmes thought in wonder before two other circumstances seemed to refute that. The sewer-like stench of his own bodily wastes again assailed him bringing back the memories of his conversation with Miss Hudson.
Quickly, he turned to leave the room and its foul odors only to trip and fall two steps later.
On the hem of his nightshirt.
Slowly, but still without any pain, Holmes eased himself once again to his feet. He looked down at the hem of his robe and momentarily gawked. The nightshirt's hem, which had just that night before been well above Holmes' ankles, now pooled on the floor about his feet. "Definitely a mystery is afoot here," he said aloud before turning towards his laboratory. He nearly tripped again, but caught himself. Deftly, he gathered up a handful of the nightshirt up in one hand and pulled the garment off, tossing it to the floor by his bed. Grimly, Holmes took in the multiple stains marking the nightshirt that had not been there when he'd first donned it - how long ago had that been? By the look of the dawn and taking into consideration Miss Hudson's earlier revelations, Holmes concluded that he'd worn that garment for at least two days and three nights. *One mystery at a time,* he told himself as he donned his dressing robe before striding off again.
Holmes snatched up a pencil and a book as he moved past his desk towards a large empty wall on the far end of the lab. Holmes stood, back to the all and rested the book on his head. Holding the book in place, Holmes stepped out from under the book and used the pencil to mark the book's position on the wall. A ruler confirmed what the detective's trained senses had already discerned.
Sherlock Holmes had somehow shrunk almost three and a half inches since he'd gone to his bed three nights past. "Amazing," he half whispered to himself before rushing off to his dressing room again, this time nearly tripping over his own feet in his haste.
One look in his reflecting glass showed that he was much more than not dead. In addition to his decreased stature, Holmes saw that he looked visibly younger. His skin had not been so . . so smooth and supple in decades.
"Or is this how the afterlife occurs?" he asked himself. "If this is heaven, however, I would have preferred to keep my normal height. And I most *definitely* would have preferred not to have lost control of my bodily functions in so humiliating a manner."
Only a sudden, undeniably urgent call from Nature pulled him away from his glass, but once in the water closet, another shock greeted him. It was not just his body's height that had changed. He was. . . smaller - all over. In fact, he was a great deal smaller. Although not a vain man, at least where physical prowess and size were concerned, Holmes was still greatly taken aback when he opened his dressing gown to relieve his bladder.
His manhood had shrunk, too. Actually, it had *more* than merely shrunk in proportion this new stature, it had all but disappeared. Heavens above, but Holmes had seen infants with greater . . .masculine endowments than he now possessed.
After that momentary shock, Holmes forced his intellect to reassert itself. He needed to determine whether his mind might be similarly afflicted. Holmes tested himself by first by recalling the design and results of a recent chemical experiment he'd conducted and then by mentally constructing the classic proof of the Theorem of Pythagoras. Neither problem proved to be at all difficult, thus confirming that Holmes' mind, at least, remained . . . adult. That concern dealt with, Holmes was all the more determined to deal with this situation with his famous rationality and powers of deduction powers.
Returning to his looking glass, Holmes inventoried and cataloged his person, comparing it to the old body he remembered so well. Like his manly parts, the rest of his body had also become smaller, although by no means as much as had his genitals. His hands, which had always been long and fine fingered for a male, were now thinner, almost dainty, and tipped with surprisingly long nails. Slippers that had once fit him as perfectly as. . .well, as a well worn slipper, now foundered about a much smaller, more slender foot.
About the only thing besides his fingernails that was longer about him was his hair. He'd gone to bed a balding old man, but now two to three inches of thick, luxuriant almost-black hair covered his head, and framed a face that while it was still slender was also somehow less. . .saturnine. . somehow more. . .
"Juvenile is the word you are attempting to deny, Holmes," he said aloud, not at all surprised to hear a voice markedly different from his own issue forth from his mouth.
"No, that's not right either," Holmes realized, still speaking aloud, trying to understand the changes in his voice. "My face, even when I was much younger, never looked like *that*! In fact, this face looks like none of the men of my lineage, as recorded in the paintings in Mycroft's old house. Which means that whatever has occurred, it not merely a simple age reversal. My understanding of that monk Mendel's work on heredity is that such features are statistically very unlikely unless I am somehow no longer of the Holmes family line. Which I would have thought impossible were it not for the evidence of my own eyes."
The curiosity that was part and parcel of Sherlock Holmes came to the fore and focused his full attention on this new and fascinating problem. The detective studied his reflection as though it was the face of a stranger's face, using his powers of observation to assess age, ethnic background, fitness and physical attributes.
"Age, hmmm," he said as he began to assess the changes he saw in his mirror, " a bit of a conundrum, that. The size of the head relative to stature of the total body would seem to be consistent with adult proportions, yet there is no evidence of beard growth. Quite peculiar, that." Holmes ran those incredibly soft fingers over his cheeks. "Not even the slightest indication of stubble although it has been more than two days since I last shaved. That factor combined with the significant diminution of my masculine development would also indicate a pre-pubescent condition. Rather contradictory indications, all around."
Holmes turned his attention to his torso and bodily extremities, turning and twisting this way and that so he could examine himself from every possible angle. "Remarkably supple," he murmured to himself with a touch of pleasure, "Certainly more so than I can remember in many a year. On the other hand, muscular development is also slight. While such an apparent lack of muscle tissue is often a sign of a rapid growth spurt in the underlying skeletal structure, there is no evidence of the corresponding gauntness." Holmes gently pinched the flesh of his smooth thigh and watched the skin spring back when he released it. "In point of fact, it seems to be just the opposite as this body has a smoothing layer of fat - much more than I have ever possessed before, and certainly more than that aging relic that went to bed three nights past."
"The face retains a distinctly English appearance. Though the nose is much shorter than before, it is still quite narrow. The eyes are slanted upward slightly, not through the presence of an oriental epicanthic fold, but as though it were a more natural shape. This is accented by higher than normal cheekbones. It is almost as if . . . "
"Oh, dear God. I refuse to believe it!"
Shocked at the direction his inquiries seemed to point, Holmes pulled on a clean dressing gown over the offending body. Thus attired, Holmes made his way back to his laboratory where the apparatus he'd used to concentrate the fatal dose of cocaine still stood. Dazed, Holmes sank slowly onto his favorite chair.
"Is this what happens when you die?" he asked aloud. "You stay behind as something or someone other than who or what you were in your previous life? Are the Buddhists of India correct and this is some type of reincarnation? Is *this* what heaven entails?? Or perhaps more correctly, this is my first taste of hell?"
"Oh," a harsh voice said from the parlor, "I rather suspect that you will find hell quite pleasant by comparison - when you finally arrive there. But for the time being, you are, unfortunately for you, my dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes, quite alive upon this earthly pale."
Holmes spun out of his chair and saw a large figure coming through the door; the intruder's features lost in shadow due to the backlighting of the parlor windows.
"Who *are* you?!?"
Chapter 3. The Professor
"Surely I have not changed *that* much, Mr. Holmes. Certainly not as much as you have," he said with a smirk, "I am deeply hurt. After all, we have been the very *best* of enemies."
"Moriarty? Is that YOU?!?" the last word came out came out in a shrill tone that shocked Sherlock even as he heard it come from his mouth.
The large man gave an exaggerated bow. "At your service."
"But. . .but. . you're dead! I saw you die!"
Grinning, Moriarty made a show of patting his very solid and non-ghostly body. "I don't think so. I am quite alive, Holmes, but I am rather pleased to know that you thought me dead, and that my little entrance has upset you this way."
The man stepped further into the light, close enough to see and be seen clearly. Leaning toward the seated Holmes, his voice took on a sneering irony as he said, "After all, my dear 'Sherlock', it's only fair, don't you think? In our long association, I have so often thought you at last removed from this mortal coil thanks to one of my brilliant stratagems, only to have you time and again rise like Lazarus-from-the-grave to thwart me yet again. This time, however, it is I who have cheated the reaper just as this time it will be *I* who will win our final battle."
"What have you done to me, Moriarty?" Holmes growled.
"Not precisely what I thought I was doing, I can assure you. Even now," Moriarty mused almost to himself as he regarded his greatest enemy, "You quite surprise me. The physical effects have never been quite so radical nor so rapid during any of my experimental investigations."
"I'll not be some damnable guinea pig for you!" Holmes shouted as he leaped from his chair to attack the looming man.
Despite his resolve and the pent-up rage at the changes that had been inflicted upon him, the attack was ineffectual. In fact, it was worse than ineffectual. Although well on in years, Moriarty still had the advantages of size, strength and reach over the now much smaller Holmes - advantages he used to their fullest as he toyed with his arch enemy before brushing him aside. Impelled as he was by Moriarty's strength, Holmes' backside landed hard on the floor and he rolled into the adjoining room.
Inordinately pleased with his ability to dominate Holmes in such a satisfyingly physical manner, the still-laughing Moriarty followed intent on continuing the game, but stopped short the moment he realized where Holmes had led him. Professional curiosity replaced sadistic intent as the man Holmes had so often called "one of the greatest scientific minds in history" began to study the laboratory of Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
Still burning with shame at his loss of physical ability and over the amused ease with which Moriarty had manhandled him, Holmes glared at the criminal mastermind, "What you see here has served my needs quite admirably as YOU should well attest given our long. . . association, Moriarty."
Moriarty continued to explore, almost as if he were a visitor at a colleague's facility. "I suppose," he murmured when his eye fell on a large, amber bottle. "Hello, what is this?" he asked as he picked up the bottle.
Knowing eyes flickered to Holmes as Moriarty read the label, and then took in the apparatus on the table on which he'd found the bottle. "Ah, so that answers the question as to why your change was so unexpectedly rapid, my dear Holmes," Moriarty began to guffaw - a most inelegant and ungentlemanly sound - before turning humor-filled eyes back to his long-time adversary. "Although I would have expected such an overdose to kill you, *this* is just so deliciously ironic. Fate has played many a colossal jest on me where you are concerned, Holmes, but this one goes far beyond my wildest imaginings."
"Perhaps, Professor, you might let me in on your 'jest'." Holmes said in as low a voice as his new vocal cords could manage. The best he could do, however, fell well short of sounding menacing.
Moriarty gave one last bark of laughter before regaining control and turning his mouth up into an odd, almost affable smile crossing his visage. "You know, Sherlock, I have recently been forced to the conclusion that Nature herself has for some reason decreed that I would not be allowed to kill you. Fate has always conspired against me whenever you involved yourself in my business, and I could seemingly do nothing about it. My plans were inevitably foiled from the moment you arrived upon the scene, though the means you used showed no particular genius - certainly nothing to match my own. After a great deal of thought, I concluded that I must find for you a fate worse than death, and so I have. I substituted your "7% solution" with another concoction of my own making."
A tremor of unholy mirth erupted from Moriarty. With obvious effort, he composed himself enough to continue, "And NOW," he continued still chuckling, "I find that, had I instead done nothing at all, you would have killed yourself for me. Oh, this is simply too rich."
Holmes scrambled to his feet and rounded on Moriarty. "What foul potion have you used on me, Moriarty?"
"Foul? Why, Holmes, how can you be so ungrateful when I have done you such a monumental favor! Look at yourself, man. I have provided you with a veritable fountain of youth."
Reflexively, Holmes' fingers flew to his now-smooth face. "Youth? The effect of your potion is not simple youth! You are even older than I, Moriarty. If you had somehow discovered such an elixir vitae, you would surely have used it on yourself and faced me as a young man at the height of your powers, or waited for me to die of natural causes."
Moriarty grinned, and then became overtly pensive. "Well, there is a great deal of truth in that, although I doubt I could have long resisted the gnawing temptation to taunt you with my strong, youthful body. However, I am forced to admit that there are a few. . . side effects that I have not, as yet, been able to eliminate from that potion. Not to worry, my dear Sherlock, I do have hopes of resolving them in the near future."
"Side effects? *What* side effects?"
"The most obvious one will soon become quite apparent, my dear Holmes, but as I must be leaving in short order for the continent I will, sadly, not be here to savor your torment. In any case, the drug you so blithely injected into your body will, over time, systematically and completely change your most basic and essential self in ways not even you could begin to imagine. I had hoped that the changes would have come up on you more subtly, causing you what I dreamed would be a great deal of distress as you realized what was inevitably, inexorably happening to you."
"Time has not improved you, Moriarty, you are still an unprincipled fiend."
"Why, thank you for the compliment, Sherlock," Moriarty replied evenly. "However to continue, if I may? By concentrating the drug as you did, you made its effects immediate and I suspect quite obvious. As I mentioned, I find it rather disappointing that you have denied me that little pleasure, but perhaps seeing you like this makes it worthwhile after all. That was quite a display earlier, Holmes - one I shall dine on with relish for years to come. The greatly intellectual and coldly rational Mr. Sherlock Holmes behaving like a hopelessly emotional and scatter-witted female, shrieking, spitting and clawing - quite ineffectually, I might add - was vastly entertaining."
Holmes felt the rage once again building but managed to restrain himself with pure force of will. "And the other, less obvious effects?"
"Ah, my dear *Miss* Holmes, from your utter lack of reaction am I to conclude that you had perhaps already reached that conclusion yourself? Yes, I can see that you had. What a pity as I was so looking forward to your look of horror when I revealed your fate to you." Moriarty made an insincere clucking sound before continuing. "My congratulations, dear *lady*. Not that the insight will do you any good."
The truth of Moriarty's claim, buttressed by Holmes own deductions from the earlier self-examination, became too much even for the vaunted self control of the world's greatest detective. Burning tears forced their way from *her* eyes as she clenched now-lengthened fingernails painfully into tender palms. In a voice that Holmes now realized was not truly strange, merely a woman's low alto, she managed to choke out, "You said there were other side effects.")
Moriarty shrugged carelessly. "They will become obvious as you continue to take the drug. I will tell you that all of the effects are permanent and cumulative. The more you take, the younger and more female you will become."
"Then I will simply stop taking it," Holmes retorted, giving up and dashing away at the tears now streaming down her cheeks, "It is not as if I have any great amount of the drug left."
"Sherlock, Sherlock, please don't cry anymore, little girl," Moriarty chided mockingly, "but, surely you don't believe it would be so simple as that? The drug is highly and irreversibly addictive. It induces a unreasoning, undeniable need, an unquenchable thirst if you will, for ever more of the potion. The hunger spawned by opium and its various derivatives are mild by comparison. You would have been addicted right now had you taken but the normal dosage, but since you have obviously taken several days' dosage in one night, you are now utterly and irretrievably in the drug's thrall. It would be very amusing to watch you suffer through the withdrawal symptoms I have documented in my researches, but as I said, I have pressing business on the continent which will keep me from watching you directly."
Moriarty turned toward the door leading to the street. "Moriarty, you said withdrawal symptoms. What kind of withdrawal symptoms?"
That terrible smile darkened the old professor's features again. "Oh, those are to be your surprise, so I shan't tell you any more about them. However, I will tell you that my experimental animals often went quite mad during withdrawal particularly when I denied them relief. Only a few were fortunate enough to die quickly. And don't bother wasting your few remaining hours of sanity trying to reproduce the elixir. I concocted it of herbs I discovered during my forced sojourn in the jungles of the Amazon. You won't find their like anywhere in this hemisphere and you don't have time to obtain them from their source. So, I will bid you good day, *Miss* Holmes. We won't meet again. Do try to survive as long as you can possibly manage, won't you?. I would truly hate for your suffering to end too quickly."
With that, Moriarty quietly shut the door, and disappeared into the bustle of London.
Chapter 4. The Hunt Begins
For uncounted minutes, Sherlock Holmes simply stood there, alone with his tears, clad in his too-long dressing gown and gripped by the rage that he'd failed to completely suppress when Moriarty had been present. *I am NOT - I WILL NOT be - merely an emotionally overwrought, irrational female,* he assured himself.
"But aren't you behaving in just such a manner now?" he asked himself aloud in that husky yet not-very-masculine voice. "Are you not giving your emotions free rein and thus clouding your perceptions and mental processes? Get a grip on yourself, man!" he ordered. "I. . .AM. . . HOLMES! I am objective! I am in CONTROL!"
It required a monumental effort, but Holmes ultimately succeeded in regaining at least some semblance of his famous control. Objectivity, on the other hand, proved to be, by far, the more difficult attribute, as this attack had been visited upon Holmes' very self image and most basic identity. Even the great Holmes, champion of rationality and cold logic, found it difficult to be objective about something so personal, something so intrinsic.
Depression yet loomed at the still-ragged edges of his control. He felt a burning need to rail against this foul machination of Fate and to demand to know why something so abominable had been visited upon him, but Holmes resisted that unworthy and useless display. However, even as he won out against that urge, a significant question occurred to him.
"Why now?" Holmes asked, voicing that question aloud, "Why did Moriarty launch this assault now? Clearly, by his own testimony, he has been experimenting with this compound for some time. Surely, he has had ample opportunity in recent years to attack me in this manner. So the key question becomes why move now? Not sooner, not later, but now?" And just as immediately, an answer occurred to Holmes. "Because some other factor, critical to his scheme, must have changed. He has an idea that may help him solve whatever problems he has with the drug and he is taking steps to keep me from becoming involved. But WHAT is he doing, curse the fates?!? How can I stop him if I cannot deduce WHAT he is planning? Facts, man, you need FACTS!"
An almost forgotten habit had the great detective pausing, waiting for another voice to answer his, but none did. Watson was still gone, and Holmes felt more alone than he'd ever felt before. Grimly, Holmes set aside those thoughts, those feelings, and began to reconstruct the events of the past three days. Somewhere, there simply had to be some clue or bit of evidence that he could use against Moriarty.
Lost in thought, Holmes paced aimlessly about his study until he found himself near his favorite chair and sat down. Suddenly, he found himself flailing deep within the chair's embrace, his feet no longer able to remain in contact with the floor. The unexpected, forceful reminder of his reduced stature momentarily startled Holmes out of his reveries, but only momentarily. Instead, the experience served to harden his determination to pursue this case to a final, undisputed conclusion.
The disciplined habits of a lifetime returned to the fore, focusing his powers of concentration and finally quelling the emotional maelstrom of the past hour. Sherlock Holmes was soon completely engrossed in reviewing and analyzing his memories. Without conscious thought, he reached for his famous pipe and the Persian slipper that Holmes used in lieu of a tobacco pouch.
And promptly began to choke. Then he sneezed hugely. Tears began to flood his eyes uncontrollably before he realized what was wrong - an aroma that had once appealed to him was now too harsh - too strong for his now-youthful, newly-sensitized nasal tissues.
Eyes streaming, Holmes was forced to rush to an open window and take several deep, cleansing breaths of the cool morning air before he could again breathe normally. Frowning, he carefully took up and examined his pipe. The stench that emanated from the tar-encrusted bowl nearly made him nauseous. Disgusted, he tossed the pipe and Persian slipper into the far corner of the room. "Even my pipe," he growled, "the fiend denies me even that simple pleasure of my lost manhood. Yet another motivation to find Moriarty and conclude our business once and for all."
There would, beyond any doubt, be such a withdrawal. Moriarty had been too amused by the picture of Holmes suffering through the condition for it to be a decoy. More importantly, Moriarty had to be involved with some very large scheme - one so large in scope that he had been willing to risk exposing his continued existence to Holmes. Moriarty had to know that, even in this. . . incomplete form, a fully rational, unencumbered Sherlock Holmes would prove to be a major threat to any scheme Moriarty might have planned and, more importantly, to the villain's own freedom and safety. Achieving his ends would therefore require that Moriarty put in motion some mechanism that would prevent Holmes from intervening in the evil Professor's manipulations and games. Ergo, Holmes concluded, the withdrawal syndrome had to be real.
That conclusion both greatly complicated and simplified Holmes' plans. Strategically, his time was doubly limited by Moriarty's cursed brew. Even assuming he had enough of the potion to last indefinitely, eventually he'd become so young (and so female) that even his great mind would fall prey to the twin demons of youth and irrationality, whereupon he would no longer be capable of successfully dueling with the great Professor Moriarty. All that aside, if Holmes were to even attempt the battle, he would need some means to blunt the effects of the syndrome and at this juncture, Moriarty's potion was the only agent to Holmes' knowledge that would accomplish this goal.
Holmes checked his bottle of the drug only to find a half to three quarters of an ounce remaining from his concentration experiment. "How much time does this buy me," Holmes murmured thoughtfully. At his typical rate of consumption, Holmes used approximately two cubic centimeters of the drug at a time. "I detest making assumptions, but I have no other avenue open to me," he said. "So, assuming that the ordinarily meticulous Moriarty wanted the new drug to be taken in approximately equivalent dosages as the cocaine it masqueraded as, that scant half to three quarters of an ounce should provide about anywhere from seven to ten withdrawal-delaying doses of the drug."
*How much time does this afford me?* Holmes wondered again as he swirled the contents of the dark, amber bottle. "Probably not much," he breathed, still not used to the musical tones that issued from his mouth. "Normally, I would take no more than a single dose a day. That would mean this," he held the bottle back up to the light, "Might be expected to last a week, perhaps ten days at the most. Depending on the addictive strength of this compound, however, it might also be considerably less."
Holmes slammed his fine-boned fist against the desk. He needed more time! A week simply was not sufficient time to locate, not to mention, stop Moriarty before the effects of the withdrawal killed Holmes. He needed to acquire more of the drug. If he could just balance the withdrawal against the rate of age regression, he might be able to buy enough time to find Moriarty.
But where would he find more of the drug? He didn't have enough time or drug to analyze the compound, and even assuming he could determine its constituents, it very likely required exotic, unobtainable materials.
Idly, Holmes looked down at the bottle clutched in his hand until his subconscious scanning of the label impinged on his racing mind. "A-HA! That's IT!" he cheered, setting the bottle aside. He'd return to the chemist shop post haste and force the proprietor to admit to being in league with Moriarty and to give Holmes more of the drug. At least then he'd have a fighting chance of stopping Moriarty one last time.
Resolutely, Holmes turned to his dressing room. He must have something in his disguise case that would let him move about the city. The chemist shop opened at ten a.m. and Holmes wanted to be the first person in the door.
Chapter 5. A Very Dead End
Holmes' first challenge was clothing himself. Nothing in his austere personal wardrobe remotely fit him anymore. Although his loss of stature was not so much as to preclude him passing as an adult (albeit a very young adult), the reduction was sufficient to draw undesired attention to him were he to appear so attired in public. The cut of the arms of his coats and the legs of his trousers were obviously too long for his new frame. His waistcoat was now unfashionably loose about his torso and fell several inches below his waist. His day-wear hats, he discovered, looked patently ridiculous on his markedly smaller head.
*What does that indicate about the measure of my brain?!?* he wondered in horror as he stared at the reflection of his famous deerstalker riding low on his forehead, nearly covering his eyes.
Yet another effort of will set that fear aside and Holmes focused on the problem at hand. "What I need is a messenger," Holmes mused. "Unfortunate that I have not kept contact with my Baker Street Irregulars . . . WAIT! Bloody Hell, that's IT!"
Animated by the inspiration, Holmes was shortly examining himself in his mirror. A pair of old work trousers had been shortened and strategically holed using a rough hand and a pair of scissors. A piece of manila hemp replaced the necessary belt and held the pants in place. His disguise drawer had given up a rough seaman's shirt and a leather vest that hung on him, but served his needs well enough. A ratty, oversized knit beret hung over his eyes effectively masking his features. For shoes he wore a pair of decrepit work boots that threatened to slip off his feet. Coal black from the now cool fireplace dirtied his features and made him look even more the street orphan that he wished to portray.
It would work, he thought with a touch of satisfaction, this time, in any case. He would need better in the future, however. He'd have to visit a few of his disguise apartments and collect the raw materials - including his sewing kit. If he had any hope of presenting and adult appearance, he'd need to alter his clothing. That would be time consuming, but he'd need at least one suitable set of attire before he could call upon the pawn and second hand shops to complete his wardrobe. The proprietors of those establishments would likely consider a lad such as Holmes now saw in his glass to be a thief and would show him the door rather quickly and rather forcefully.
Another thought struck Holmes. He frowned as he tried to find a suitable argument against that particular course of action, but found none. He'd go to his special apartments and collect his few feminine disguises, too. And he would go to the pawns and second-hand shops for women as well.
"DAMN your black soul to HELL, Moriarty," Holmes snarled, and then strode to the servants' quarters and the back door of the Baker Street apartment. Moments later, he returned to his study. Holmes found what he wanted and quietly slipped into the grimy back alley.
Holmes arrived at the chemist just as Big Ben was tolling the hour. He stayed in the shadows of a building across the way, waiting for the blinds to open, the "closed" sign to be taken down and the proprietor to unlock the front door.
Thirty minutes later he was still waiting. A frisson of anxiety curled in Holmes' chest as he considered the possibilities. Quickly, he made his way to the back of the small storefront shop and located its delivery entrance. Holmes carefully tested the latch and found the door unlocked. Silently, Holmes pushed the door open and slipped inside.
He didn't notice a fine gossamer thread breaking as the door finished its opening swing.
The back of the shop was deserted, but a dim, thin arc of light directed Holmes to the connecting door into the public areas of the establishment. Holmes abandoned stealth and moved into the main shop where he found precisely what his instincts had anticipated.
The body of the chemist lay in a heap behind the service counter, an oval of well coagulated, rusty red blood about him. He'd obviously been dead for some time. *Moriarty must have visited him immediately after leaving my lodgings. And while *I* was wallowing in emotion, Professor Moriarty was dealing with this man,* Holmes thought. "DAMN me for a FOOL!"
A closer examination of the body revealed a cheap, brown envelope pinned to the man's watch fob. Careful not to step into the sticky blood, Holmes reached over and retrieved the envelope. Holmes opened it and was not surprised to find it addressed to him.
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Perhaps he should just give up now. Hadn't he already intended - ATTEMPTED - to end his life? Why not simply do the deed and be done with it?
"Because Moriarty is alive," Holmes growled, "And so long as there is breath in his body and mine, and so long as I have the slightest grip on my mental faculties, I will oppose Moriarty in every way, in any way available to me." Holmes carefully smoothed the now-crumpled piece of foolscap paper in his hand and quickly reread the letter. "Moriarty has the right of it in at least one area. I am still Holmes and he is still Moriarty. There will yet be a reckoning. Somehow, there will be a final reckoning between us."
Holmes made a quick survey of the room, looking for any clues. A sulphurous black smudge on a nearby wall pointed to the likely position of the murderer when the fatal shot was fired. Muddy boot prints indicated that the killer's point of entry was also from the rear of the building. Holmes examined those prints and was surprised to find they did not match with the fashionable footwear favored by Professor Moriarty. The prints were larger, and their wear pattern was uneven. The left foot print was fully formed whereas the right seemed somewhat elongated in the toe. Another anomaly was that the right heel did not fully contact the floor except for the prints closest to the powder mark, facing the counter where the chemist met his end. All of which seeded to indicate a murderer with a distinctly uneven gait - like a limp. But Moriarty, bent with age though he'd obviously been, had not limped.
Holmes stood idly considering those facts when his eyes strayed to the apothecary's wall of bottles behind the counter. Suddenly, his mind slipped back to the last day he'd seen the chemist alive. Holmes famous eidetic memory vividly reconstructed the picture of the shop owner reaching up to . . "That very bottle!" Holmes cheered.
Scrambling up onto the counter, Holmes reached up and pulled down a large, nearly empty amber bottle. The handwritten label read "Mr. Holmes Cocaine Solution" The preparation date was a mere two days before Holmes had arrived for his final, supposedly fatal package.
Holmes removed the stopper and sniffed delicately at the open bottle. The slightly acrid scent of cocaine was not evident. In fact, what little odor that was in evidence was very subtle, almost undetectable and unlike anything in Holmes' long years of investigative experience. "Herbs," Holmes muttered, "Moriarty said it was brewed from herbs."
Carefully, Holmes re-stoppered the bottle and slipped down from the counter. *Amazing,* he thought, *to be so nimble again. If I successfully discover a means to blunt the final agonies of this withdrawal, this youthful suppleness may provide me some small, as yet undetermined advantages. However, I have not lost all my masculine strength yet, either. One cannot expect a female to be this strong or supple.*
Holmes pulled the door behind him as he left, remembering that while closed, the door had not been locked when he entered. However, there was no way he could have realized it had previously been closed with delicate precision. The pressure he used to ensure the door was seated properly was enough to crush a tiny ball of acid lodged in the doorframe.
That acid, though minuscule in itself, started a chain of events that had most dramatic results. A deafening explosion shattered the pre-noon bustle of the block as the front of the chemist shop went up in a huge fireball that rapidly enveloped the two stores immediately on either side.
The concussion's impact threw the unprepared Holmes to the ground where only blind fate had prevented him from landing on and shattering the precious apothecary bottle.
"And so the game is once more afoot," Holmes said as he watched the flames spread up and down the square. Dispassionately, he watched as men and women who'd been caught in the blast rolled upon the muddy street to quench flames that licked at their clothing. Other bodies simply lay where they'd fallen, their motionless grim testimony to the fury of the initial explosion. Holmes felt something burn at his eye, and he raised his free hand to bat away the tears that began to flow. "He must be stopped," Holmes whispered in an oddly ragged voice, "and in all of his infernal career, only I have ever succeeded in that endeavor. So be it."
Holmes resolutely turned his back on the now fully developed conflagration. There was nothing more he could accomplish here, but there was a great deal he could accomplish elsewhere. These men and women would have justice, he swore to himself, even if they never knew the how or why of it. In the confusion and tumult of the out of control blaze, no one noticed one ill-clothed boy disappearing into the shadows.
Holmes was nearly to the back door of his Baker Street rooms when a large hand locked onto his thin shoulder. "'ere now, and where do ye think yer goin', me fine lad?"
The powerful hand spun his thin frame and Holmes found himself facing a huge, filthy man clad in the rough clothes of a London dockworker. His face had seen rough handling - several scars and missing teeth attested to years of hard living and fighting. A nearly overwhelming stench of human waste, bad rum and cooked onions emanated from man, nearly causing Holmes to wretch. "Oi think Oi asked ye a question, runt."
Swallowing hard and trying to look frightened. "I'm runnin' errands for the housekeeper here," he gasped out. "She sent me to the doctor's for some potion for her master." He held up the bottle, but then became afraid the bounder might think it something that might fetch him a copper or two. "She tells me tis a frightful wicked physic, as the old man she works for can't seem to do it fer 'imself natural anymore."
"Well, ye listen ter me, youngin', and ye might manage ter grow into a man someday. I'm here for a fine young gennulman."
"Ye wants to talk ter this gennulman, sa'ar?" Holmes asked, very deferentially.
"No, runt, Oi want's ter grab 'im. Mother Hell over on the docks will pay five guineas in silver for such a fine, tender little pullet for her whorehouse as some of her customers like it that way, ya see? Oi been told there'd be jest such a one for the 'avin' at this 'ere place if'n Oi was to wait real patient-like - nice an' skinny, with pretty skin and hair."
"I ain't seen the like of that, sa'ar." Holmes quavered.
"Well, ye'll keep yer eyes open and yer mouth shut, lessen ye wants me to close both for yer real permanent like. Ya got that, boy?" Holmes swallowed hard to keep from vomiting in the man's pockmarked face and managed to nod his acquiescence. "Good. Oi'll be around, laddie. Yer see anythin', ye'll be tellin' Old Ned, and Oi might just give ye a coin for it. 'Course, ye don't tell me, and Oi find out?" He shoved Holmes to the ground and turned back to leave the alley. "But then, ye'll be tellin' me so there's no need to go into that."
Holmes watched the man walk away. Only later, back in the relative safety of his room, did the great detective recall that his assailant had walked with a pronounced limp that forced him to drag his right foot.
Chapter 6. Experiments In Time
Shivering uncontrollably, Holmes repeatedly thrust the heavy black iron poker into the dancing flames, attempting to coax more heat from the burning coals. He was so bloody cold. He felt as if his internal organs had been somehow transmuted into ice. Nothing he'd done since his headlong flight into the house following his unexpected confrontation with the villain calling himself "Old Ned" had in any way relieved the fierce bone chilling cold.
"Is this yet another of those side effects of Moriarty's damnable brew?" Holmes asked himself through chattering teeth when another more ominous thought occurred to him. "Or is this the onset of withdrawal?"
Holmes wrapped a blanket about his body and moved over to his worktable where the two apothecary bottles stood side by side. Taking a deep breath in an effort to control his still shivering hands, Holmes carefully removed the stoppers from each bottle. He waved a hand over the top of one bottle towards his nose. Delicately, he sniffed at each bottle, but was unable to discern any significant scent. Emboldened by that, Holmes brought each bottle to his nose and carefully inhaled. There was just a hint of scent from the original bottle, and a stronger scent from the new one. *I think these are the same concoctions,* Holmes thought, *But I cannot be certain of that. The scent is simply too subtle.*
Holmes re-stoppered both bottles, and set them in the center of the large table for safety. He began to pace the room, considering his options. Slowly, a plan started to take shape in his mind. Holmes retreated to his bed chamber and returned with his medical kit from which he removed two hypodermic needles. These were thoroughly sanitized using the latest methods of sterilization approved by the British Journal of Medicine. Once the needles had cooled, Holmes meticulously filled each needle, one from each of the two amber bottles, and the set the needle in front of the bottle from which it had been filled.
His preparations complete, Holmes picked up his experimental journal, a pen and ink, and then strode back to his favorite chair. Holmes reconsidered his planned course of action as he settled himself in the chair's comfortable depths. *If I am to live with this withdrawal curse, I must first understand it in the fullness of its effects," he said aloud, "The only way to do so is to permit its onset and then study it for as long as I can endure it. Only then will I administer the potion from the new bottle. If that eases the symptoms, then I can be relatively assured that it is the same as the potion the chemist dispensed for me earlier in the week. If it does not ease the symptoms, I will use the other needle and the time it gains to decide upon my course of action.*
That certainly appeared to be the best option available to Holmes for, at the very least, it would provide him with a more complete understanding of his current circumstance. Holmes tried one last time to think of some way by which his plan might be improved, but could not. All that could be done was being done, so Holmes stretched and settled himself to wait.
Holmes hated waiting. In his line of work, patience was necessary, even vital to the execution of a successful investigation, but waiting implied idleness which was something Holmes' great mind could ill abide. In the old days, it had been the genial Dr. John Watson with his usually incorrect suppositions and hypotheses about the case at hand, or his endless, overly simplistic questions for his historical compilations, who had distracted Holmes during such periods of enforced inactivity. In more recent times, such inactivity had driven Holmes back to the cocaine habit that had ultimately resulted in this current sad state of affairs.
*Bloody hell*, he thought sadly, *but I do miss Watson. Quite painfully, if I am being completely honest about the whole damned situation.*
Only then did Holmes realize that the cold and the shivering had passed.
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 2, 1911
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End Journal Entry.
Holmes marshaled his formidable will, and set himself about the task of documenting his symptoms. His hand shaking, Holmes took up his pen, and began to write.
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 3, 1911.
Time: 4:23 A.M.
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End Journal Entry.
Holmes' pen trailed off down the page as he turned nearly-palsied hands to the first needle. Injecting himself, he sat back to await the effects of the drug, wondering if he would have to use the original solution, or whether the quantity he had obtained from the dead chemist was equally effective.
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 3, 1911.
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End Journal Entry.
Moriarty looked about him and was pleased by what he saw. The sea was calm, for the Channel, with freshening winds that indicated that pleasant situation would not last long. They would arrive in Calais in short order. *Soon,* he thought, *Soon my plans will come to fruition and Europe will be mine.*
The only negative aspect of his adventure so far had to do with, as seemed only natural to Moriarty, Mr. Sherlock Holmes. A missive from his man of affairs had been delivered to the professor just before sailing. The letter had described how the brutish oaf, Old Ned, had apparently recruited some young guttersnipe to help watch for Holmes. The guttersnipe was, in all likelihood, Holmes himself disguised as a boy instead of a young man as the professor had anticipated when he'd set that trap for his old enemy.
Moriarty had not honestly believed that the foolish oaf had any chance of capturing even a greatly diminished Holmes, but the thug would pose a visible and viable threat that Holmes would be forced to contend with before he could take any other more direct action against Moriarty. That in itself would be useful, and besides, the blundering fool might get incredibly lucky. The thought of Holmes forced to live out the remainder of his days as a white-slave prostitute was simply too delicious for words.
Moriarty truly wished he could have taken the time to watch and fully savor the imminent self destruction of Holmes, but time was something he needed to carefully hoard, at least until his youth potion was perfected. Until then, his own age was a factor to be considered. Surely Fate would not grant him so great a victory over his arch nemesis only to have him die of old age just as his final triumph was at hand.
*No,* Moriarty reassured himself, *Fate MUST have far greater plans for me, otherwise why would I have been gifted with this great intellect and the will to use it fully?*
No other answer fit the data. Moriarty was great, would be greater still, because Fate had so decreed it. He would perfect his drug for both its potentialities, extending his own life in the process so that he could use the other potential of the drug to secure his rightful place as ruler of mankind.
Perhaps when he'd finally succeeded he'd go back to London and see if Holmes still lived. If so, the stubborn fool might still afford him some small amusement. And there was always the Mother Hell option, too, once he had tired of tormenting the little slut.
Chapter 7. Planning, Preparations and Provisions
The clock tolling eight o'clock roused Holmes from his sleep - that and an urgent need for the facilities. Moments later, Holmes was giving heartfelt thanks for the wonders of indoor plumbing and Mr. Crapper's commode. He would never have made it to the old outdoor facility without again seriously embarrassing himself.
Holmes cleaned himself up and realized that he was positively ravenous. *Not surprising, Holmes,* he told himself, *Given that the last time you sustained yourself was nearly five days in the past.* Soon, Holmes was back in his favorite chair, heartily consuming a simple breakfast of bread, cheese and tea. Unfortunately, the soup Miss Hudson had prepared for him during her last visit had long ago petrified in the bottom of the pot.
The bread was actually somewhat stale, and he'd been forced to trim mold from the chunk of country cheese Miss Hudson had left for him, but Holmes found himself hard pressed to recall a more satisfying meal. It simply tasted wonderful. *Another side effect of the drug? Increased sensitivity of the senses? Might that explain my violent reaction to the scent of tobacco and tobacco residue in my pipe?* It was a strong possibility, Holmes decided.
As he ate, Holmes mentally reviewed his current situation. All too soon, he would need to pursue his investigations in locales where his street urchin persona would be decidedly unwelcome. Unfortunately, the bulk of his disguise attire was not stored at Baker Street. Holmes would have to visit a number of the other establishments he maintained about London as repositories for the various costumes and other masquerade tools he had used as a matter of course in many of his more sensitive investigations.
That posed an immediate dilemma for the master detective. On the one hand, the risk of being overcome by the vile withdrawal symptoms whilst out in the city presented a danger that he dared not underestimate. Yet, the other hand was the remorseless march of time - clearly his most limiting resource. Holmes knew that he could ill afford to simply sit about waiting for the next attack.
His hunger sated, Holmes set aside his tray and went over to stand in front of his mirror. He ran his hands over his face and then down his torso, carefully assessing the person he saw looking back at him from the silvered glass. His initial inclination was to take up his journal and carefully measure his entire body, but he resisted that impulse. *There will be time enough for that later,* he assured himself, *but the first priority is to assure my freedom of movement in the face of Moriarty's henchman.*
Holmes returned his full attention to the reflection in his looking glass. The street urchin disguise would still serve, he decided after a long moment, although to his experienced eye, his visage appeared slightly more feminine than he had the day previous.
*Thank God the changes are sufficiently subtle that I still may pass for a callow youth. The cap to hide my eyes, a bit of lampblack applied judiciously to simulate dirt, and these scruffy though masculine clothes and I should still appear sufficiently boyish to pass what little scrutiny I cannot otherwise avoid.*
*If the clothes are loose enough,* he thought as he slid his hands down his torso again and shook his head in disgust. His waist was definitely smaller than it had been the day before - he was sure of that - while his hips seemed unchanged if he read the fit of his trousers about his lower abdomen correctly. The loose fit of the shirt and vest would disguise that today, but if only one very recent application of the drug changed his physique this significantly, it was only a matter of time - and very little time at that - before the Baker Street Irregular would find himself in serious danger of becoming one of Mother Hell's unwilling employees. Clearly, other options were required and not solely to provide Holmes access to places his current disguise could not.
Holmes sighed. If he but had the right materials at hand, then he could work on his alternative disguises while he waited for the onset of the withdrawal symptoms. That, at least, would be an effective dual use of his severely limited time.
Holmes strode from his dressing room, intent on checking the alleyway for signs of the man who'd accosted him the night before. The way appeared clear, but Holmes decided to take no chances. He walked into the bedroom which had been Dr. Watson's for the last years of his life, and found what he needed. Carefully, he checked the revolver over, ensuring it was clean and that the action worked smoothly. Then he loaded the weapon, carefully aligned the hammer with the single unloaded chamber, then gingerly slid the weapon beneath his makeshift rope belt.
Only to have the gun's butt dig painfully into the tender flesh just beneath his ribs. "Bloody hell," Holmes cursed as he realized what was causing the problem, "I don't have time to deal with this properly just now!" The barrel of the gun was being forced outward by the swell of his pelvis, levering the gun's handle painfully into his side. *At least that confirms my supposition that my hip-to-waist silhouette has become decidedly more feminine since yesterday. Calculating precisely how much more feminine is something that must wait until I have spare time to take a proper set of initial control measurements.*
The scientist in Holmes looked longingly at his laboratory, his curiosity about this aspect of his transformation piqued, but the detective in him firmly rejected the notion. *I will definitely need quantitative data on this so that I can predict how quickly I am changing and how long before attempting masculine disguise will be pointless AND dangerous.* Holmes thought as he extracted the pistol from the rope belt and slipped it into one of his deep pockets. *However, there will be time in hand for those inquiries after I've retrieved what I need from my various hideaways.*
Holmes made one final check of the alley from the upstairs windows, then left the house and quickly melted into the back-street-shadows of London.
After some thought, Holmes decided to retrieve whatever emergency funds he had cached at each of the flats he visited. *This will not meet all my needs,* he thought grimly as he counted out the thirty odd pounds in coins and banknotes of various denominations, *especially given my other obligations and commitments. I am going to need access to more of my funds. Somehow, I must develop a stratagem that will provide me access to my accounts at the Bank of England.*
As a hedge against another encounter with Old Ned, Holmes decided to carry only a few of the least valued coins in one of his pockets as a diversionary tactic, while keeping the bulk of his funds hidden in his heavy boots. Holmes' plan was simple. Old Ned would take sadistic pleasure at stealing the few paltry coppers from the supposedly 'helpless' orphan, believing that sum to be the whole of the boy's money. All Holmes would have to do would be to slink off, looking afraid and crying, and Ned would be never be the wiser.
Surprisingly, Holmes managed to complete his journey without any contact with Old Ned. However, the return trip was not completely uneventful, punctuated as it was by several near spills. Part of that was due to Holmes' lack of familiarity with his recently-changed body. His brain remembered his "old" body, and tried to move his current one as it had the old. That did not always work since his center of gravity and center of balance had changed significantly in a very short period of time.
The far greater problem, however, was the increasing tendency of his hips to over-rotate as he walked, causing the track of his feet to converge as though he were walking on a circus tightrope. More than once, the combination of this unusually narrow support base and London's rough, uneven cobblestone streets sent Holmes tumbling to the pavement.
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 3, 1911.
Time: 4:37 P.M.
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End Journal Entry.
Holmes laid down his pen and reread the journal entry. Even now, after all the time he'd had to adjust to what was happening, to what had been done to him, it read like one of George Wells' fantastic, pseudo-scientific works of fiction that Watson so enjoyed reading. Except not even H.G. Wells could have conceived of such an idea. No, only one man had the imagination, the knowledge and the will to have conceived something like this. The question was how did one go about stopping such an individual?
At that moment, even the great Sherlock Holmes had to admit that he had no idea. Sighing, Holmes pushed aside his journal and reached for the pile of clothes laid out on his table. Perhaps he'd think of something while he resized these garments.
Chapter 8. Miss Hudson Calls
The hearth clock was tolling one o'clock when Holmes finally set down the last piece of altered clothing. Grimacing, he flexed his aching fingers and tried to relax the tight, cramping muscles of his sewing arm. He'd been wielding that damned sewing needle for the better part of the night, but now at last, he was done. He had what he needed for at least the next phase of his scheme. With a sigh, he gathered up his work and trudged into the bedroom only to be brought up short by the foul stench that filled the room.
"Curse me for a fool," he swore, "I completely forgot to change the linen and it has been fermenting almost six days." Holmes carefully hung his new clothes up in his armoire and set about changing the linens and airing the room. He would need the room at least habitable when Miss Hudson arrived. Holmes deposited the soiled and reeking bed linens in the laundry hamper in the servants' rooms and then went back to his study. He'd slept well enough there the previous night and would, no doubt, do so again especially if he wished to draw a breath without gagging.
It was worse this time, Holmes thought as he fought against the acute discomfort and tried to keep track of the time for his journal entries. This time, he knew what to expect, and that anticipation somehow heightened the experience. That, and the memory of how quickly that single injection had assuaged the hellish torture.
Finally, he could stand it no longer and grimly made his way back to his workbench where the second hypodermic still lay fully charged. Holmes bit his lip as he tried to quell the spasmodic tremors long enough to safely drive the needle and its torment-relieving contents home.
He missed on his first attempt, and his second. Fortunately, his third time was the charm, and he managed to sink the point into the meaty part of his upper arm. As it had the previous night, the drug took effect almost immediately. Carefully, Holmes withdrew the needle, and began to relax.
Holmes glanced back up at the clock. 6:36. The drug had held off the withdrawal a little more than twenty four hours. He'd have to remember to enter that data in his journal, he thought wearily, but later. He'd do that later.
She made a quick survey of the front rooms and saw no sign of Mr. Holmes. Was he still sick, she thought guiltily? She'd meant to come back on one of her off days just to check up on him, especially seeing as how sick he'd been that last day, but then her Mum had come down with one of her attacks of the lung fever and it had been all Maude could do to tend to her own.
Maude was terribly worried about her Mother's declining health. The doctor had told her that she needed to get Mum out of the city and into the cleaner air of the English country, but Maude couldn't see how she could accomplish that. What would they do for money, she'd like to know? It wasn't as if they had much, and what little they did have came from Maude cleaning other people's houses, or taking in laundry and mending and the like. It was the only work she and her sister knew how to do. How much of that type of work would there be in a poor country village - that's what Maude Hudson'd like to know. "Doctors!" she exclaimed with mild disgust.
And it wasn't as if she'd be allowed to abandon Mum's "darlin' Mr. Holmes," either. If Maude had heard it once, she'd heard it a thousand times about how Mr. Sherlock Holmes had taken her Mother in as his housekeeper after her Father had died. Maude believed her Mother might expire at the very thought of leaving Mr. Holmes with no one to see to his needs properly.
Miss Hudson gathered up the dirty dishes Mr. Holmes had left in the main sitting room, and carted them off to kitchen. She found the fouled linens and had immediately dunked the lot of them in a strong soap and hot water solution. The strong odor of human waste quickly had her deciding to take care of the other rooms and letting most of the stink soak out those sheets.
Miss Hudson was marching purposely toward the water closet, mop and bucket at the ready when a soft "Pardon me, Ma'am, but are you Miss Hudson?" stopped her in her tracks.
Maude spun towards the unfamiliar voice, her trusty mop at the ready. She was totally unprepared for the sight that greeted her in the doorway to Mr. Holmes' sleeping chambers.
A remarkably . . .ummm. . plain young woman with more than a fair share of nose and somewhat heavy features was standing there looking up at Maude, a somewhat quizzical look on her face. She was perhaps an inch or two shorter than Maude's own height, and was dressed in a serviceable gown of gray cotton broadcloth with a large, floor length apron covering her from the shoulders down. A white cap covered her hair, although a short, stray dark curl had escaped just above her right eye. That errant curl belied the initial estimate of this intruder's age based on her angular features - an estimate Miss Hudson revised downward yet a second time when she assessed the fine skin texture revealed between the gown's high collar and the white cap. *A very odd looking sort of female,* Miss Hudson thought unkindly.
"Excuse me, please," the girl said again, "But are you Miss Maude Hudson?"
*Well, someone taught this one proper manners, whoever she is,* Maude thought. *Talks like some of the fancy, she does. Wonder where she was in service before this?* "I am," Miss Hudson said staunchly. "And just who might you be, Missie? If you don't mind me askin', that is."
"Oh no," the woman replied with just a hint of a smile. "I am Visiting Nurse Joan Hanks, Miss Hudson. I am here to care for Mr. Holmes."
A shot of fear sliced through Miss Hudson. She needed this position! "What's wrong with him?" she asked quickly, craning her neck in an attempt to see around the girl and into the bed chamber, "He'll be all right, won't he?"
The girl made a shushing noise of her finger to her lips, quietly closed the bed chamber door, and then motioned Miss Hudson into the front sitting room.
"Mister Holmes should not be disturbed. We're trying to keep him as comfortable as we can while we. . . wait."
"Wait for WHAT?!?!" Miss Hudson demanded.
Miss Hanks lowered her eyes and shook her head. "He's very ill, Miss Hudson. After you left from your last visit, Mr. Holmes became worse. He managed to summon Dr. March, an old friend and colleague of Dr. Watson's. After examining Mr. Holmes, he summoned me to . . ," Miss Hanks voice broke and then recovered, "to ease his time as much as is possible."
"Then. . . . then. . he's going to . . ?" Miss Hudson tried to ask the question, but was cut off by a gentle hand on her own. All Miss Hanks did was nod, and Miss Hudson began to weep.
Miss Hanks offered the older woman a handkerchief and then rose from her seat. She walked over to the hearth where she picked up a small packet and then returned to sit beside the silently sobbing Miss Hudson. Miss Hanks let Maude cry through the initial shock of the revelation.
"Miss Hudson? When Mr. Holmes realized that he'd soon be. .. be leaving, he put together the contents of this envelope. He had originally hoped to present it to you in person, but sadly, that simply isn't possible." Miss Hanks passed the packet to Miss Hudson and motioned for her to open it.
The envelope contained a piece of official-looking parchment, three train tickets and a thick stack of banknotes. Stunned, Miss Hudson could only stare at the contents, look up wide eyed at the nurse, and then back down at the money and papers in her hand. Finally, she managed a weak, "What is this?"
A smile softened the features of the nurse, making her almost pretty. "Mr. Holmes said it was your pension, Miss Hudson. The paper is the deed to a solid, well maintained cottage in the Scottish Lowlands. Mr. Holmes said that he'd chosen it because the air would be good for your Mother. The tickets are passage for you and your family to journey there. The rest of it is 250 pounds which should take care of you, your mother and your sister quite comfortably for the rest of your lives."
"So much money. . ." Miss Hudson said dazed.
"Mr. Holmes said that he would have seen to this sooner, but he was a selfish man and did not want the bother of trying to find another housekeeper who was half as effective as you and your Mother. Now, he wishes to know that you and your family are well taken care of before. . " Miss Hanks voice fell away.
"Before?" Miss Hudson prompted.
"We both know what before means, Miss Hudson." Miss Hanks said gravely. Then she rose, taking Miss Hudson with her. "Now, Mr. Holmes would like you to go home and see to the preparations to leave for your new home. I will be here with Mr. Holmes and will see to what little cleaning and cooking he will be needing from now on."
"Could. . .could I just see him one last time? To thank him, you see?"
Miss Hanks smiled sadly, but shook her head. "Mr. Holmes is not awake right now, and it would be a shame to disturb what little sleep he can get nowadays. I'm sure you understand."
"Oh, no, I wouldn't do that. Do you think I might return at a later time?"
"I couldn't say, really. It would be hard to predict when he might be able to receive visitors. He's not . . . entirely himself, either. I'm afraid he might not appreciate the visit."
"Oh, dear. How sad. How very, very sad. He always took such pride in his mind."
"Just so, Ma'am, just so."
"Well, if that's what you and the doctor think best," she said finally as she picked up her cloak and bonnet. "You're young for this kind of work, aren't you, Miss Hanks?" Miss Hudson asked as she unbuttoned her bodice and carefully hid the precious envelope in her impressive bosom.
"I have more experience than you might think. I have worked with a respected colleague of Dr. Watson for many years."
Miss Hudson re-buttoned her dress, started to put on her cloak, only to abruptly stop short of that. She turned a concerned eye on the young nurse. "You're sure you won't be needing any help? I noticed that you didn't clean up those sheets he soiled the day I was here."
There was a touch of censure in Miss Hudson's voice and Miss Hanks flushed at the rebuke. "Dr. March called me in yesterday, Ma'am. Mr. Holmes was in tolerable bad shape, and I had to clean him and see to his needs first. It was very late when the Doctor said all was done and he told me I was to get some rest as I would be needing it today," she hung her head. "I'm ashamed to say I forgot them this morning, Miss Hudson."
The girl's obvious remorse touched Miss Hudson's heart. "Well, it being the case that you was following the Doctor's orders, I can understand how seeing to Mr. Holmes personal needs would be more important than those sheets." Miss Hudson nodded and finished donning her cloak. "Take care of him, Miss. He's a very good man for all his odd ways. My Mum and me. . . well, we'll miss him something fierce."
Miss Hanks watched Miss Hudson leave, closing and locking the door behind her. For several long moments, she simply stood there, her eyes unfocused, and perhaps, just a little over bright.
Then, she reached up and slipped off the white cap. "And he . . . or rather, *I* shall miss the two of you as well, Miss Hudson," Sherlock Holmes said quietly to the locked door, "something fierce."
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 4, 1911. Time: 5:11 P.M.
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End Journal Entry.
Chapter 9. Moriarty's Lairs
A freshening dawn breeze had blown in from the sea, clearing away the morning fog and for the moment, cleansing the normally ever-present coal-smoke haze from London's skies. Holmes was again out and about in his Baker Street Irregular disguise. His objectives for this day's venture were three-fold. First, Holmes wanted to examine two of Moriarty's old haunts that were within reasonable walking distance from Baker Street. Perhaps Moriarty had elected to use one of his old headquarters while in London. Holmes thought that unlikely - Moriarty knew those would be the first places that Holmes would look for clues - but it would not have been the first time that someone as clever as the Professor had tried hiding something in the most obvious place. Holmes did not dare overlook such a possibility.
His second objective was to reconnoiter the streets about his Baker Street lodgings and, if possible, locate Old Ned and any other watchers Moriarty might have left behind in the area. Eventually, Holmes knew, he would have to deal with Old Ned, especially if he harbored any hopes of disguising himself as an adult male. Besides, it was always better to know the terrain and the full scope of the forces one was dealing with before undertaking such a campaign.
Finally, Holmes needed provisions. The kitchen cupboards at Baker Street were bare, and he no longer had the services of Miss Hudson to replenish his supplies. Holmes was positively ravenous.
The night before had gone much the same as had the previous two nights. The withdrawal attack had struck just before dawn, approximately twenty-five and one half hours after the previous attack. Holmes had administered the drug and fallen almost immediately back to sleep only to reawaken a bare three hours later with the urgent need to relieve himself. Once that necessity had been dealt with, the hunger had made itself known. Holmes had devoured the last crust of bread and bit of cheese, but that meager offering had scarcely made a dent in his appetite.
Holmes thought that the problem might be related to some specific nutritional need that was exacerbated by the radical changes Moriarty's potion induced in his body. Unfortunately, modern nutritional research was not a subject Sherlock Holmes had ever considered of any practical use to a consulting detective, so he had never bothered to clutter his mind with the results of such research. However, he knew that the young, particularly the very young, drank quantities of milk - even as infants suckling at their mother's breast - and he deduced that milk might be a solution to his current needs. Certainly the cheese had seemed particularly satisfying the previous morning, so perhaps milk and milk products provided something his new and uniquely changing physiology required. He would visit the dairyman just before returning to his rooms.
*Still,* Holmes mused as he picked his way around the fallen structure, *I am not the only master of disguise in this little melodrama. Moriarty is well able to camouflage a subterranean hideaway somewhere in this apparent destruction.*
Holmes began to move within what had once have been the walls of the warehouse, attempting to discover a hidden access or door. He kicked at one sheet of galvanized tin roofing, dislodging it and then screamed in horror as a veritable explosion of *huge* rats erupted from beneath the panel. Holmes' screams went up in both volume and pitch as several of the beasts scurried about and between Holmes' legs, their coarse fur brushing roughly against skin left bared where the cut-leg trousers ended. Jarred by the contact, Holmes ineffectually batted at the mindless hoard, trying to divert their furry bodies away from him.
The final straw fell when one particularly terrified creature literally scaled up Holmes' shrieking body and then launched itself from his shoulder, its long, whip-like tail lashing at Holmes throat as it flew away. That was more than the self-image that Holmes had been maintaining through pure force of will could cope with. The masculine Holmes, the Freudian 'id' that had, to that point in time dominated the personality of the conflicted body, vanished beneath an onrushing avalanche of unadulterated panic.
A now-wholly feminine Holmes screamed in terror and fled from the room, intent only on escape. She may have stepped on one or more of the damnable animals, but she didn't care nor did she slow her headlong charge. Moments later, all signs of the repellent animals had disappeared, leaving only their memory and the sour taste of fear in their wake.
Still shaking and frantically waving ineffectual arms at threats no longer present, Holmes finally slowed when she had made her escape from the rubble pile that had once been a building. With the recognition that her escape had been achieved, the panic receded and Holmes, now different in a fundamental but invisible way, collapsed to his knees on a clear patch of grass, his breathing hoarse in his abused throat.
Never in his entire life had Holmes been in the grip of such a paralyzing emotion. He'd felt fear before - only a fool would have not been afraid during the struggle with Moriarty at the Reichenbach Falls - and Sherlock Holmes was not a fool. Certainly, there had been situations in the past when he'd been caught unawares by some unexpected and unwelcome surprise, but never had Holmes felt anything remotely like what he had just experienced nor reacted as he had in the past ten minutes. "Bloody hell, but I am still trembling," he said with disgust.
That recognition seemed to break through the emotional grip Holmes was under. Gradually, his breathing slowed, his pulse ceased racing, and the roiling of his stomach eased. "All this?" he asked himself as his control reasserted itself, "because of a few rats? I am nearly incapacitated because of those vermin? NEVER!" he roared, ignoring the high toned shrillness of that oath. "I am HOLMES and I will not surrender to mindless EMOTION!"
His voice echoed off the old rundown buildings that surrounded the warehouse site, but Holmes did not notice. His mind had turned to other things. *The rats are significant,* he thought quickly. *Moriarty is nothing if not fastidious. The rats might well have been here, but if he'd used this site, he'd have poisoned them. The living rats would have consumed their dead brethren and been poisoned themselves, and yet, I saw no signs of dead rats in my admittedly short examination of the site. Still. . . *
Holmes made a more careful reconnaissance of the perimeter than he had originally, but saw no sign of dead vermin, not even bones. Holmes decided to go on to the other hideaway and see if there were any clues to be had there.
As he slipped back into the shadows, Holmes attempted to analyze the experience with the rats, but was interrupted by a loud, rude rumbling from his stomach. *Perhaps it is lack of nourishment,* he thought. *Watson was forever pontificating on the physical and emotional problems that result from malnutrition. And it has been well over a day since I had any substantial food. Why, combined with the stress this forced reconstruction of my entire body has placed on my reserves, it only stands to reason that I would not be fully under control when dealing with additional stress. Such as all those rats.*
Holmes permitted himself a pleased smile at the logic of his explanation, and ignored the slight shudder that snaked down his spine even the thought of the word "rat". With an abrupt turn, Holmes decided to delay his inspection of Moriarty's other hideaway, and went off in search of the nearest dairyman.
Holmes found a bench where he could rest while he consumed his meal. Hopefully, he was right about the milk. Later, Holmes would be profoundly embarrassed as he recalled the utter greed with which he inhaled his food. Milk spilled from the corners his mouth as he tried to literally pour it down faster than his still raw throat could accommodate. *Well, at least the behavior is, in all likelihood, more in character than my usual impeccable table manners,* Holmes mused as he took a huge bite from his wedge of mild, golden cheese.
All too soon, the cheese and milk had disappeared, and Holmes was still hungry. For a few moments, he thought about going back and getting more, but decided against it. That might well make the storekeeper suspicious, and besides, Holmes thought it might be a good idea to make sure that he kept what he'd just consumed inside him. The last thing he needed to do is overeat and become violently ill. Later, when he had finished his tasks for the day, he could find another dairyman and buy enough milk and cheese for his dinner and breakfast. Thankfully, the iceman was still keeping the icebox at 221B Baker Street stocked. Holmes would be able to store the milk overnight safely.
A stray shaft of light illuminated the floor in front of the work table. Holmes went to one knee for a closer look. The thick dirt had been recently disturbed. Two sets of footprints marred the otherwise evenly dusted floorboards - one approaching the work table, one departing. By the degree to which the dust had reclaimed the footprints, making their outlines soft and diffuse rather than sharply outlined, Holmes deduced that whoever had made the prints had done so several days in the past - perhaps as much as a week.
The prints were distinct, however, and showed no signs of a limp which indicated that these prints had not been made by Old Ned. The shoes did not show any signs of unusual or uneven wear either.
Holmes located the hidden mechanism that controlled the door and activated it. The work table and the wall it was attached to swung outward with a loud creaking of poorly lubricated hinges. He crept into the small alcove, following the prints. They stopped at the next door, and then seemed to turn around, going no further. Holmes examined the door and saw that it would swing outward, into the little alcove. However, no dust had been disturbed indicating that the door had not been opened at the same time these prints had been made. Frustrated, Holmes began looking for the latch to open the door anyway.
Then he saw it.
A brown envelope had been pinned to the door - a brown envelope with writing upon it. Holmes moved closer to door and peered at the writing, and was stunned to read his name on the envelope. Holmes took down the packet and went back into the main factory space where he found a relatively well lighted area. His curiosity thoroughly aroused, Holmes opened the envelope, extracted a piece of foolscap from it and began to read.
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Holmes crumpled the paper in his hand and cursed softly. Moriarty had anticipated him and had left this calling card to taunt him. Holmes was inclined to believe the letter as the other evidence supported Moriarty's claim that he had not, in fact, done more than plant that damnable note. Moriarty was unlikely to have turned his scientific mind to something so mundane as spreading dust evenly. Ergo, the footprints proved that Moriarty, or one of his henchmen who did not limp, had only been here once to plant the note.
The sound of the great tower clock tolling twelve noon in the distance broke Holmes concentration. He folded the note and put it into one of his pockets before slipping back out the way he'd arrived. He still had to find Old Ned.
In the far back of the blind alley, Holmes found a door recessed into the soot-covered brickwork. He was trying to decide whether to proceed when the door slammed open and a huge, hairy paw reached out from the inside and grabbed him before dragging him inside bodily.
Holmes barely had time to realize he was inside the building when he went flying into the nearby wall, landing hard and falling to the filthy floor. A huge shadow loomed above him. "So ye was lookin' fer Old Ned, was ye, boy? Well, little Tom knows to stay bought when 'e's been paid fer 'cause 'e knows Oi'd 'ave to 'urt 'im if'n 'e didn't. You ain't so smart, are ye, boy?"
Holmes had to think fast. "But. . .Oi was tryin' to find ye, sa'ar," he lied, "on account of Oi gots somethin' to tell ye. . .about that gennulman ye was lookin' fer."
Old Ned reached down, grabbed Holmes by the throat and jerked him bodily to his feet. He lifted Holmes up to eye level, his fetid, rotten breath making Holmes stomach turn. "Oi don'ts believe yer. Oi think maybe ye've sold Old Ned out, and that makes Old Ned right mad. Oi thinks ye needs to learn what 'appens to a bit o' nothin' like you what decides to cheat Old Ned."
Old Ned's free hand came down in a thunderous slap that sent Holmes flying across the room. Holmes rolled to his feet, his head reeling from the blow only to see the villain closing on him with a vicious looking knife in his right hand. "Oi thinks ye needs to bleed a bit, boy. Maybe Oi'll take an ear so's ye'll know just 'ow easy it'd be fer me to cut yer throat next time."
Holmes rolled to one side, just barely avoiding Ned's grasping hand. When he came out of the roll, Watson's service revolver was in his hand. Ned's eyes went wide, and then he charged at Holmes, the knife raised for an obvious killing stroke.
The first shot took Ned squarely in the chest. Holmes emptied the revolver into the man's body even as he fell, the last bullet disintegrated the back of Ned's balding skull.
For the second time that morning, Holmes was overwhelmed by unfamiliar emotions that he could not even stand. There was just so much blood - everywhere! On the wall, on the floor, on Ned. . . on Holmes.
Holmes stifled the urge to scream as he tried to wipe Old Ned's blood from his vest and instead ended up with it covering his hands. Still on his knees, Holmes ripped the vest from his body and tossed it aside. The sickly sweet scent of hot blood mixed with the sharp taint of burnt gunpowder and cordite made Holmes feel lightheaded and nauseous. For a brief moment, he feared he might faint or vomit, but in the end did neither. Holmes managed to quell the upheaval in his stomach and to remain conscious by sheer force of will. Finally, he struggled to his feet and staggered toward the door and escape. At the last instant, he stopped, remembering to retrieve his vest and Watson's revolver before finally slipping out the door and into the alley.
Holmes made his way directly back to Baker Street, forgetting to stop and purchase foodstuffs. He simply wasn't hungry anymore.
So, Holmes had decided to take direct action. Moriarty had anticipated this, if not quite so soon. According to Moriarty's informant, someone, most likely Holmes, had retrieved the letter he'd hidden in the secret passage at the old factory. Moriarty smiled as he considered the consternation that note would cause his old enemy. The smile was not a pleasant sight.
The other item discussed in the letter was the sudden, unexplained disappearance of Old Ned. He had not reported to Moriarty's informant in over twelve hours which, given the fact that the old fool was only paid when he reported, indicated that Ned was likely no longer among the living. Again, Moriarty had expected Holmes to deal with Ned, but this soon?
Holmes was a strategist by nature - a thinker - and he would not have had time to have determined Ned's habits and patterns in order to exploit Ned's many weaknesses. Nor would Holmes have had time to locate a suitably advantageous site for this final confrontation. Such impulsive, immediate action was not like the Holmes Moriarty had come to know and hate. This was out of character.
Moriarty put his head back against the seat and closed his eyes in relaxed concentration. Yes, these behaviors were definitely out of character. Had the youth potion changed something intrinsic to Holmes' mind along with transforming his body? Something Moriarty personally needed to be concerned about, especially since he fully intended to use the drug on himself once he'd been able to perfect it by eliminating the gender changing side effect. This other possible side effect had not been noted during his earlier researches using the lower animals. Moriarty wanted to be young, but he wanted to be a young Moriarty at the height of his powers. The last thing he wanted was to become some youthful, yet irrational fool.
Or perhaps this sudden unpredictability or impulsiveness was not intrinsic to the age regression aspect of the drug, but rather was a feminine-based characteristic that even the great mind of Sherlock Holmes could not control. Moriarty would need more data. It was too bad that his informant would no longer know where to send his reports. He'd been unwilling to take the chance that Holmes might locate his main informant and force information concerning Moriarty's whereabouts from the man, so the itinerary he'd provided to his man had been a fabrication.
That was, in part, why Moriarty had gone to Calais instead of directly to his final destination. There were many ways to hide his trail in France, and he'd had too many misadventures with Holmes to believe the detective would not discover where Moriarty had departed from and where he'd been bound when he'd left England. Holmes still might track him down, but it would take far more time with Calais as the starting point on the Continent. And while time was limited for Moriarty, it was far more so for Holmes.
Moriarty set the note aside and sighed. It was done. As for the concern about the mental changes wrought by the drug, Moriarty could deal with that problem without watching Miss Sherlock Holmes. He would simply have to be careful with his final testing once the drug no longer changed males into females. He, unlike Holmes, at least had enough time to be cautious.
Chapter 10. Recapitulation of a Day Gone Bad
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 6, 1911.
Time: 6:16 P.M.
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End Journal Entry.
One of his informants at the Institute had reported that the Professor's soon-to-be guest had scheduled a fairly long holiday beginning at the end of classes tomorrow. That had been a primary reason for Moriarty making his move at this time. The great Professor Haber would disappear, and no one would think to look for him for several weeks at the earliest. By then, Professor Haber would be safely tucked away in Moriarty's specially prepared hideaway in the Swiss Alps.
Moriarty smiled that mirthless smile and turned to walk back to his hotel. He was tired and would need his rest. Tomorrow would be a momentous day, and everything had to go as planned. Which it would, since Mr. Sherlock Holmes, by now truly Miss Sherlock Holmes, was no longer a potential problem in his plans.
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A Study in Satin
Part 1: Semper Cogitus Chapters 11-20
Copyright © 2000, 2013 Tigger
All Rights Reserved. |
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Caveate Emptor! This story is a work of fiction, intended for mature individuals who enjoy stories with transgender and erotic themes and who are legally permitted to read such stories under the laws of their location. If this does not describe you, then this story is not for you and you should check elsewhere.
In addition, this story drastically departs from what is commonly referred as "The Canon" among Sherlock Holmes enthusiasts. Should this offend you, please read no further. ~Tigger.
Characterizations: This story is based on situations and characterizations found in the Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. However, the Irene Adler character is also based on the characterization presented in the Irene Adler novels by Carole Nelson Douglas.~Tigger.
Artwork: Original Artwork graciously donated by Brandy Dewinter.
Acknowledgements: A story of this magnitude (over 1 megabyte of text, 56 chapters in three parts) is not solely the effort of one person. My sincere thanks to:
Brandy Dewinter - Simply stated, without her help, support, guidance and every so often a well intentioned nag, this story would not have happened. I think that about 85% of the words are mine, and the rest are hers, but all of them (mine in particular) are better for her eagle-eye for detail, grammar, theme and plot.
DanielSan - who kept me (almost) honest insofar as my characterization of the main characters and who caught more than a few glaring typos and manglings of the English language (American or English).
Paul1954 - who read my words to ensure that, in my attempt to make my characters sound English-Victorian, I did not make too much a hash of it. I am sure that it was often a painful experience. ~Tigger.
He was standing outside a small shop on the fringe of fashionable London - Madame Jeanne Marie's Quality Couture - dressed from the skin out in women's clothing. In the past when Holmes had found it necessary to pose as a woman, such as in the case Watson had glaringly titled the "Adventure of the Mazarin Stone", he'd always dispensed with the voluminous and exceedingly uncomfortable undergarments English Society mandated for women in favor of more comfortable attire. Unfortunately, Holmes was here to buy women's clothing which meant he would undergo that torturous and barbaric custom known as a fitting.
Holmes had chosen this shop for two reasons. First, it was a fair distance from Baker Street so it was unlikely anyone here would run into him in the near future. Second, he knew Madame Jeanne Marie from an old case that had never been told in one of Watson's anthologies. It had been a momentarily diverting case involving blackmail and royalty. One of the blackmailer's victims was the former Mistress of a Duke who had, in turn, asked Holmes to deal with the situation.
Jenny, or rather, Madame Jeanne Marie had been another of the blackmailer's intended victims. Furious, she'd immediately offered to cooperate with Holmes in setting a trap. The villain of that piece had been the Duke's younger brother, a complete wastrel who had needed funds to pay off gambling debts incurred to some very dangerous people.
In the course of that investigation, Holmes had been very impressed with Madame Jeanne Marie. She was a very intelligent woman who had, in her youth, invested her only marketable asset carefully and wisely. In an earlier time, the young, witty and gorgeous Jenny Deaver would have been described by London Society as being a member of the Demimonde, or perhaps less kindly as being some man's "bit o' muslin". The fact of the matter was that she, like the Duke's blackmailed friend, had been a professional mistress, a kept woman for whatever wealthy man was willing to house her, clothe her and provide her with "gifts" such as fine jewels in return for her intimate favors.
Unlike many of her peers who had lived lavishly for the moment and then became destitute when their looks began to fade, Jenny had ruthlessly hoarded her "gifts" and had then used that accumulated wealth to escape that lifestyle. One day, she'd simply disappeared from the London scene completely.
A year later, Madame Jeanne Marie had opened her dress shop. Since men rarely attended their ladies on their shopping trips, the chance of the Madame Jeanne Marie nee Jenny Deaver meeting a former protector in her new guise was highly unlikely. Her little shop prospered which was another reason she'd been targeted by the Duke's brother, and while it was not quite as lucrative as her former profession, the fact that she did not have to pander the egos of doddering old fools or submit sweetly to arrogant young rakehells more than compensated for the difference. She was well content with her new lot in life.
Madame Jeanne Marie was well known among the less affluent nobility for selling quality, fashionable dresses and gowns at a fair price. She was also known among the somewhat more affluent ladies of Society for buying dresses and gowns that these estimable women no longer wanted or that they could no longer corset themselves into. She would then turn around and sell such 'secondhand' finery to her customers at a fraction of what a Bond Street "modiste" would charge for comparable new garments. Many young debutantes, whose financial situation might otherwise have forced them to forego a London Season, made their entre into English Society's infamous Marriage Mart having first passed through the doors of Madame Jeanne Marie's shop.
That was the second reason Holmes had sought out this shop. Holmes needed stylish dresses that fit properly if his plan to gain access to his accounts at the Bank of England were to succeed. Those could be obtained here, and Madame had a staff of qualified seamstresses, most of whom were highly skilled with Mr. Singer's sewing machine, who could quickly alter a new day gown to fit Holmes properly.
Unfortunately, the part of Holmes that was still male was finding the concept of having a gaggle of chattering, giggling women with sharp pins swarming about him, sticking said pins into cloth that was very tight about his body, rather daunting. Holmes had never much cared for visiting his tailor, and *this* promised to be far worse than that mind-numbingly boring experience.
Holmes was trying to build up his courage when a bell ringing announced the opening of the shop door. "May I help you, Miss?" a pleasant voice with a slight French accent asked. Holmes closed his eyes and nodded. Silently, he reached into Mary Watson's black reticule he had borrowed from his old friend's rooms at Baker Street, and withdrew a note which he passed to Madame Jeanne Marie. She looked at the envelope and her eyes went momentarily wide.
"Well," the older woman said briskly and without a trace of a French accent, "Don't just stand there out in the cold, Miss. Come in, come in."
Holmes was motioned to a small table where tea and cakes were laid out. Madame indicated that he was to serve himself as she opened and read the letter. Holmes knew the contents since he had written it personally, careful to ensure that his handwriting looked as much like his old neat and precise script as he could manage with his new, smaller fingers.
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Madame looked up from the stationary, and there was a suspicious brightness about her eyes. She dabbed at them delicately with a lacy handkerchief and then coughed to clear her throat. "Should I infer, Miss Hanks, that based upon what Mr. Holmes has not said in this letter that his condition is very serious?"
Holmes nodded gravely. "Mr. Holmes directed me to answer any of your questions, otherwise I would be unable to answer such a personal question. Mr. Holmes condition is extremely serious, Ma'am. He will not be among us much longer."
"I see," Madame answered, the tears now flowing freely and cutting dark tracks through her face powder. "That is very sad for he was. . .*is* a remarkable man."
"He spoke very highly of you, Ma'am, and asked me to tell you that he was most sorry he is not allowed visitors for he would have enjoyed seeing you one more time."
"Really?" Madame asked. Miss Hanks nodded. "I wish I had known that. I . . .well, I would have tried just a bit harder to lure him into a bit of pleasure that time in . . " She stopped herself short, blushing. "Well, no need to go into that. Suffice to say he wasn't interested in me, nor I suspect, in any woman that way."
Holmes was momentarily stunned to find out that this woman had once tried to seduce him. Even now, in her late forties, she was still a very attractive woman. How could he, the great Sherlock Holmes, the finest observer of detail in the known world, have not realized that this experienced, sensual woman had wanted to make love with him? *Perhaps because you never thought about such matters of the flesh, Holmes?* he asked himself rhetorically, and then continued, *and more interestingly, why do I think I would notice and be rather responsive to the idea now? Most peculiar.*
In the meantime, Madame had shaken off her tears and had begun to assess the young woman across from her. *Well, she might be halfway attractive if she knew what she was doing, but she obviously doesn't. Bit of a little brown wren. Much too plain for any really colorful plumage, but that isn't what Holmes asked for in any case. "A young woman of business" he said. Well, we'll see what we can do to make her a bit more taking in her looks. She has nice eyes if you can just get past that nose. What about her figure?*
"Well, come along, girl," Madame ordered. "Let's measure you and see what you've got. Give me your bonnet and reticule and I will lock them up in my desk," she held out her hands to take the requested items and then turned her head toward a bead-curtained passage at the back of the shop, "MAISIE?!" she bellowed.
A small, cream complexioned redhead put her head through the hanging beads. "Oui, Madame?" she responded in a pathetic attempt at French.
"Oh, don't worry about those French airs, Maisie, this one is a friend. Get your measuring tape and pin cushion. I'm going to repay an old debt by helping Miss Hanks here with her wardrobe."
"Back in a jiff, Miss Jenny," the redhaired pixie said with a huge smile, and then disappeared back through the curtain.
"And bring my decanter of medicinal French brandy, too." Madame yelled after the girl. Then, with a smile that Holmes found very unnerving, she turned back to face her customer. "So," Madame Jeanne Marie said, "Let's see what I have in stock that will suit you, Miss Hanks. . . Oh, may I call you Joan? And please, do call me Jenny."
"I. . . I would be honored, Mada. . I mean, Jenny," a slightly bewildered Holmes replied. "Thank you."
"Oh, thank me in a couple of hours, Joanie," Jenny Deaver said with a mischievous grin, "If you still want to, that is.'
Disguised as Joan, and fully rigged out by Jenny and Maisie, Holmes was amazed by what he saw in the mirror. He barely caught himself - for the tenth time - almost releasing a decidedly un-feminine expletive. Holmes was forced to conclude that this masquerade that had seemed so trivial when he had begun it, would require the most complete exercise of his impersonation skills.
Holmes peered pensively at his reflection. Perhaps the brandy had something to do with the problem in performing adequately while limiting the impersonation to an intellectual exercise. In any case, Holmes decided that for the duration of the fitting at least, *he* would need to accept the mental mind set of a feminine persona - one that *she* would have to study as thoroughly as any other skill required for a consulting detective.
The second thing Holmes had discovered, was that trying on clothes was fun. Jenny seemed to have an endless supply of such lovely dresses and gloves and bonnets and even shoes - and she insisted that Mr. Holmes' little nurse try them ALL on so that she and Maisie could pick what looked best on their new friend. Holmes changed outfits more times during her time at Jenny's than her old self would have done in a normal week. And after the first hour (and all those sips of Jenny's EXCELLENT French brandy) she'd loved EVERY minute of it.
Well, almost every minute of it. Madame. . .that is, Jenny, had been shocked to discover that her new very dear friend Miss Hanks was not properly laced into a corset under that drab, ugly dress she'd been wearing. No wonder the girl looked like she didn't have any figure to speak of. Jenny had taken care of that little problem immediately. In no time at all, she and Maisie had their friend Joan in a lovely white satin corset complete with a real whale bone busk, and had it laced down to an honest twenty two inches.
"But, Mada. . I mean, Jenny," Holmes had protested, "I can't be fitted like this. There's no one to lace me up at Mr. Holmes establishment."
"Now, don't worry about that, dear, we'll give you one of these corset levers," Jenny had responded holding up an odd contraption of two wooden handles connected by a stout hinge. "See these hooks in the front? That's how you undo the corset, leaving the lacings nice and tight. You just attach the levers to the front of the corset like this," she said demonstrating, "And pull the front together so you can undo the hooks, or connect them if you are putting it back on."
"But I don't think I should be laced quite this tightly, Jenny," Holmes protested, "Not for everyday wear." The last thing Holmes wanted was to have to wear this corset just to put on the new clothes she'd planned on using for her disguises.
"Nonsense, dearie," Maisie said blithely as she looked the now wasp-waisted Holmes up and down. "Why, look at what it does for your bosom." she stated as she reached over and started to plump up that part of Holmes' increasingly feminine physique.
Holmes was totally unprepared for having herself fondled in that manner and had squealed in shock - only to be scolded by Jenny. "Now, Joan, don't carry on so. Let Maisie see to that lovely bosom of yours. She's right, you know, a little pat here, and a little pull there gives you a lovely figure. Why, I would wager that you'll show some lovely cleavage in the right gown now.
That had been the point at which Jenny had begun plying her little subject with yet more brandy. The girl had real potential, she'd decided, now that they had her properly corseted. Jenny thought she might even be able to make the girl halfway attractive if they could just get past the little prude's inhibitions and dress her properly.
And, in large part thanks to the brandy she'd gotten into the girl, so she had. Four hours later, Jenny had the pleasantly inebriated Holmes preening in front of the three sided mirror in a ball gown made of green satin, with a rather daringly low cut decolletage. Maisie had even managed to get some expertly applied cosmetics on the girl's interestingly odd little face and to do something halfway attractive with that uncontrolled mop of black hair.
Madame Jeanne Marie cast a critical eye on Joan Hanks. Even with three snifters of medicinal French brandy in her, Jenny Deavers could still assess another woman's looks with cold precision. It was a skill well honed in her days as a professional mistress. You always had to know when your protector's interest had been piqued by another woman so that you could either counter what was catching his attention, or begin looking for a new situation.
The girl's nose was too long and prominent for real beauty, but Maisie's cosmetic artistry had almost hidden even that flaw. She'd made the girl's mouth seem a little fuller, and drawn attention to the girl's incredible dark eyes. There was something arresting about those eyes, Jenny mused as she swirled her fourth snifter of brandy, something that transfixed anyone caught in their gaze. Her smile helped, too, now that Joan had fallen deeply enough into her cups to smile. And of course, now that she had a real figure, well, the girl would do all right for herself. All she needed to do was find herself a nice young man, preferably one with a good financial position, and hit him square in his manhood with those eyes, that cleavage and that smile.
Holmes was, at that moment, smiling happily at the elegantly dressed young woman in the mirror. *My god, I am almost pretty,* she thought, again through the haze of brandy fumes. She lifted the skirts and did a slow pirouette while trying to keep her eyes on her reflection in the mirrors. Tipsy as she was, she would have fallen on her bottom had not Maisie and Jenny leaped forward to catch her. Holmes giggled as they helped her back to a stool.
"Now, Joan," Jenny said with a smile, "Maisie has finished altering the two day gowns and the traveling dress. You can wear the corset and the new under things home. The other dresses will be ready for the final fittings in a few days."
"How. . " Holmes unexpectedly belched in a most unladylike fashion and blushed prettily, "I beg your pardon," she apologized, and then blurted out, "How much will I owe you?"
"The money Mr. Holmes gave you will be just fine, dearie," Jenny reassured her. "Now, I want you to stop by the shop every day at lunch time so that Maisie and I can teach you how to do your face and hair properly."
That almost brought Holmes out of his alcohol-induced bliss, and for just a moment, he forgot his vow to remain mentally and physically in role as Joan. And yet, he couldn't very well commit to being here everyday, could he? He had things to do and places to be . "Ummm. . . Jenny, I don't know if I can get away everyday. Mr. Holmes might need me, or have errands for me," he hedged.
Jenny nodded sagely. "Just so, dear, you're right, of course. You just come here when you can, even if it isn't lunch time and we'll work with you. You have lovely eyes and we can teach you to do them up to best advantage. You won't be young forever, and you don't want to spend your whole life taking care of other women's families. You'll be wanting children of your own, after all."
Holmes felt his cheeks burn. "You don't have children," he accused petulantly.
"Because I couldn't," the older woman answered quietly. "I was pregnant once, but something went wrong. I lost the baby and nearly died."
A rush of a new and wholly unfamiliar emotion washed over Holmes. Once again, the femininity of the situation overwhelmed the masculine Holmes and she felt an undeniable need to comfort her new friend. "I am so sorry, Jenny," she said softly, as some force beyond her ken drove her over to embrace Jenny.
"It's in the past, dear," Jenny said as she returned the hug warmly and then smiled over at Maisie. "and I make up for it by taking care of my girls. Now, you need to get home to Mr. Holmes. You run and change into that blue day gown while I send a boy for a cab."
The ride home was filled with yet more revelations for the still-dreamy Holmes. She sat snuggled into the plush upholstery of the uptown cab Madame had ordered for her. As she was still well over the hatches from all the brandy, Holmes thought it vastly amusing to blow at a bonnet feather that kept drooping down to tickle her nose.
On a whim, Holmes slipped off one of her gloves and stroked sensuously along the fine material used in the making of her gown. The cab hit a bump, momentarily discommoding her, but she grinned happily and shimmied herself back into the comfortable cushions. As she did, she realized that the wonderful tactile experience extended to the scandalously soft, wonderfully smooth cloth of her new undergarments as well. Holmes sighed in pure sensual appreciation as the silk of her new chemise slid teasingly over her nipples, and then she realized that the terrible itching had all but disappeared only to be replaced by something infinitely more pleasurable.
"How positively delightful," she sighed before nodding off into a slightly drunken catnap - a happy and gentle smile shaping her colorful lips.
Holmes fell asleep shortly after arriving at the Baker Street lodgings. She did not even remember to remove her new corset.
Chapter 12: Man Enough to be a Woman
Holmes woke up choking. He couldn't take a deep breath. He spat fiercely to clear his mouth and then tried a slow, deliberate breath, but found he still couldn't get much air in.
*That infernal corset,* Holmes realized as he concentrated on getting air in and out. He felt himself growing lightheaded because he wasn't getting in enough oxygen. Deliberately, he unbuttoned the dress he had been too far inebriated to remove when he'd arrived home and then found Madame's corset tool. In moments, he could fully expand his lungs again.
Holmes then became aware of a positively vile taste pervading his mouth. *The brandy?* Holmes wondered as he went to the water closet to rinse his mouth. Holmes rinsed several times and found that the foul taste remained. Concerned, Holmes went to his mirror and opened his mouth. What he saw was as disgusting as the taste.
His teeth had become so yellowed that Holmes was certain there was a greenish hue to them, and a veritable spider's web of minute cracks embossed the surface of each tooth. Holmes touched one tooth with the tip of his finger and found it even more loose than it had been earlier. Stiffening the slender finger, Holmes pushed at the tooth and felt it shatter beneath his touch. He steeled himself for the agonizing pain he understood such destruction entailed, but none came.
Shocked, Holmes moved a lamp nearer the mirror and looked at the broken tooth more carefully. There, beneath what was left of the brittle green-yellow shell was a smaller, perfectly formed, white tooth. "Remarkable," Holmes breathed in wonder. Now caught up in the wonder of investigation and discovery, Holmes repeated the experiment on another tooth, and then another, and then yet another.
In each case, the yellow-green shell shattered to reveal a small, perfectly formed white tooth, much more in proportion, if a little undersized, to his current dimensions. Thoroughly engrossed now, Holmes took up the small, soft bristled brush he'd taken to using for purposes of oral hygiene and began to brush vigorously at his teeth, brushing away all of the encapsulating material. Amazingly, at no time was there the slightest hint of pain from this cleansing, and much to his relief, the action finally cleared the foul taste from his mouth as well.
Holmes spent several minutes examining his new dentition when he realized that, in his haste to clean his new teeth, he had missed something equally significant. Once, during a case, Holmes had been struck by one of the villains hard in the face and had lost one of his canines. Apparently, whatever else he could say against Moriarty's potion, its effects worked to correct health problems. He'd already noticed that numerous old scars were fading, but to have a tooth regenerate? *Remarkable,* Holmes thought again.
The fiery pleasure of discovery began to fade as Holmes went into the main rooms and up at the clock. *Nearly four a.m,* he thought with a sigh. *Within the next two hours, I will again suffer from the attack of Moriarty's drug.*
Sighing, Holmes settled in his favorite chair and began to ponder about what mechanism might have resulted in the transformation and regeneration of his teeth. "Most likely the same mechanism by which my bones are apparently shrinking. The excess calcium is somehow being removed and excreted from my body during those daily and violent trips to water closet. Only with my teeth, the calcium external to my gums could not be absorbed and somehow it became reactive and bonded with whatever that plaque-like material that seems to form on my teeth overnight. That further embrittled the old enamel. That doesn't explain how the teeth became smaller or how the canine regenerated, but I don't know if that will ever be understood fully."
Holmes tried to pursue the problem more deeply, but whether it was the residual effects of the brandy or lack of sleep, he found he couldn't concentrate. He'd have to worry about it in the morning.
"I suppose I will wait for the withdrawal attack and then go back to bed," he told himself before another thought struck him. "Why should I wait? I know the characteristics of the drug well enough by now and the symptoms will strike within the next forty five to ninety minutes in any event. Why should I wait when all I want is to go to sleep and forget this ever occurred?"
The thought became deed, and within five minutes, Holmes was back in his bed, soundly asleep.
Holmes couldn't resist taking another look and opened his mouth to the mirror.
And promptly did a double take. His teeth were now fully restored, perfectly formed and fitted to his mouth. Even the missing canine was fully grown.
*I must record this while it is still fresh in my mind,* Holmes nodded to himself as he replayed that thought back in his mind. *but first, sustenance. I am quite famished.* He then made his way to the kitchen to obtain his milk from the icebox before sitting down to write in his journal.
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 8, 1911.
Time: 10:32 A.M.
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End Journal Entry.
"But, Jenny," Holmes protested with a pained squeak as the corset suddenly began to tighten. "I didn't. Heavens, I fell asleep with it on last night thanks to you and Maisie conspiring to get me foxed on brandy."
"Ladies don't get foxed, dears, they get nicely tipsy, and don't fib to me, girl. These laces are loose." Jenny growled as she efficiently tightened all the laces. She was just finishing knotting off the corset laces when Maisie walked in with the dress.
"Goodness, Miss Jenny, but isn't taking her in a whole 'nother inch a little mean for someone who ain't. . .I mean, isn't used to stays?"
"Another inch?" Jenny asked confused.
"Yes'm," Maisie replied. "Why, yesterday, you could barely touch both sides of the corset by putting your hand up and down her spine. The sides are much closer together now."
Jenny took another look and then slowly nodded. "Give me your measure tape, Maisie," she ordered. Maisie complied and moments later, Jenny was reading the tape. "Twenty and three quarters?" she said in disbelief.
"Guess I'll have to alter this here dress again, Miss Jenny," Maisie offered.
"Well, let's get it on her and see what we are dealing with," Jenny ordered.
Ten minutes later, they knew precisely what they were facing but except for Holmes, they didn't understand any of it. Essentially every major measurement had changed, and become smaller except for the volume needed to contain Holmes' bosom. Her breasts had become obviously rounder and fuller since being corseted, even if the measure of her chest beneath her bosom was over an inch smaller.
"Maybe it's because I've never been corseted before," Holmes offered meekly, sensing the distress emanating from the other two women.
"P'raps," Maisie said not sounding quite convinced. "But that don't explain why your hem is too long now."
Finally, Jenny smiled. "Well, I must have measured her wrong yesterday, Maisie. You can fix that dress this afternoon and I'll have a boy deliver it to you at Mr. Holmes' rooms later today, Joan. Is that all right?"
"OH, yes, Jenny," Holmes replied. "I don't need it until tomorrow morning, but I will need it then. Mr. Holmes wants me to go to his solicitor's office for him at ten a.m., and I want to look very. . .very. . " she struggled for the correct word.
"Polished and in control, dear," Jenny offered.
"Exactly," Holmes beamed.
"Umm. . Miss Jenny?" Maisie interjected sheepishly, "There might be a problem getting this done this afternoon."
Jenny turned to her helper, a frown on her face. "Why, dear? It's just a hem adjustment."
"Miss Jenny, that's not lace on the hem of this dress. That is hand embroidered. I won't be able to do it with the machine. I'll have to do it by hand."
Jenny saw the problem. "And even then you'll have to sew around all the embroidery stitches or it won't hang correctly."
"You did say Miss Joan was to look special in it, Miss Jenny." the little seamstress offered. "I could work on it all night, but this isn't the kind of work to do when you're tired."
"No, of course it isn't, Maisie."
Maisie turned to Holmes. "If I start, Miss Joan, I can't stop until I am finished, and I can't promise to have it done in time for you to dress and get to that solicitor's office by ten."
"Now, what do I do?" Holmes asked, feeling defeated by the vagaries of women's wear. She couldn't postpone the trip to the solicitor another day because in all likelihood, she'd be shorter still after another dose of the potion. The bloody dress still wouldn't fit!
"Well, we do have another option, dear," Jenny offered with a wicked little smile. "Maisie? Go get those shoes with the Cuban heels, please? It is time our Miss Hanks learned the fine art of walking on her tip-toes, especially since she has such a well turned ankle to show off in any case."
Holmes looked baffled. "Heels, Miss Jenny?" she asked.
"Heels, dear. Trust me, you'll hate them until you see how lovely they look on you."
Holmes, however, wasn't quite so sure about that.
February 8, 1911
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End Journal Entry.
Chapter 13. A Woman of Business
Holmes examined his disguise in his mirror, and firmly resisted to urge to give that surging mane of his one more brushing. It would not do much good, in any case. Thankfully, when he'd gone into Watson's rooms in search of the other items this stratagem would require, he happened upon the personal grooming kit of Watson's wife, Mary. Now Holmes finally had a hairbrush suitable to his feminine needs. Certainly, the brush that had been sufficient for the aged and thinning scalp of the old Sherlock Holmes had proven completely inadequate to the task of taming the young and lush tresses of Miss Joan Hanks.
So intent was he on pinning the unruly mop up into something at least remotely resembling what Maisie and Jenny had taught him the day before, that Holmes never noticed the pink tongue peaking out between pert, pursed lips. An objective observer would have thought it cute, and in keeping with the look of a young miss not long out of the schoolroom, still learning the grooming tricks of a young woman.
The hair arranging, however, required his full attention. It was not until after several attempts, and multiple rebrushings to groom away the loose wisps that marked Holmes' many failures as a hair stylist, before dogged determination finally prevailed. Holmes had elected to dispense with the cosmetics Jenny and Maisie had pressed on their new friend, primarily because he considered it highly unlikely he would look like anything better than a circus clown. However, he also thought that a visiting nurse would not have the time to worry with such things and that he would be more in role, so to speak, clean faced.
He had been practicing in the broad-heeled, Cuban-styled shoes since rising that morning. While he hadn't killed himself by taking a header, it had been a very near thing on several occasions. The shoes' tall heels increased Holmes stature by almost an inch and a half, which was a good thing since that morning's dose of Moriarty's potion had reduced his height still further. As it was, Holmes' eye for detail told him that the new shoes raised the hemline of his "business dress" just slightly more than was considered "politely fashionable". *Well,* Holmes thought wryly, *I may be showing a shade too much ankle right now, but by tomorrow I won't have that problem with these shoes. May need even higher heels tomorrow. Won't that be simply wonderful?*
Carefully, he perched the small, round, box-like hat that Jenny had given to him on top of the mass of pinned up hair. Holmes thought the thing looked like a child's version of a top hat that someone had sat upon. Worse yet, he was certain the perfectly circular item had a front and a back with all the feathers and other frou frou stuck haphazardly about its brim, but he couldn't for the life of him figure out which was which. Given the way his life was going at that moment, Holmes was certain that he would manage to put it on precisely backwards. He was about to simply give up and wear it whichever way, when he recalled his somewhat inebriated ride home the previous night. Those damn feathers kept tickling his nose, so he positioned the hat so that the feathers were at their most annoying, and then pinned it in place.
Holmes twirled in front of the mirror to check his gown and was satisfied with how he looked. *Thank beneficent Providence that it was Jenny who selected this ensemble. I never did manage to put two pieces of clothing together so that Jenny felt they suited.* The dress itself was a dark wine color that Jenny insisted showed off Joan Hanks' dark hair and eyes to advantage. Gold embroidery highlighted his corseted waist and of course, his hemline.
His dressing complete, Holmes walked over to the chair upon which he had laid his matching cloak and slipped it over his shoulders and fastened it down the front. Finally, Holmes slipped on his gloves, picked up his reticule and made one last check to ensure that all the required items were inside.
Holmes moved toward the door, but stopped in front of his foyer mirror. With a last delicate gesture at a still-errant lock of hair, Sherlock Holmes cloaked himself in the persona of a young woman.
With a last, somewhat tremulous smile to her mirror, Joan Hanks swung about and out the door.
Joan quickly gathered her skirts to keep the finely embroidered hems out of the mud and entered the office. A young male clerk greeted her from an ominously large desk set precisely in the center of the reception area. "May I assist you, Miss?" he asked in what Joan thought was a rather condescending tone."
Her back went ramrod straight and her chin tilted up forcefully. "Yes, my good man," she said stiffly as she pulled off her gloves, "I am here on business on behalf of Mr. Sherlock Holmes and I have a ten o'clock appointment with Mr. Carroll. You *may* announce me *now*, please."
The voice of command, even when pitched in such light, feminine tones, brought an immediate response from the pompous young fool. "Immediately, ma'am," he said as he scurried off to one of the heavy oak doors behind his desk.
Moments later, he returned with a tall, older man in tow. "Hello, Miss Hanks, I am Jason Carroll," the older man said as he strode forward, his hand extended.
Instinctively, Joan extended her own hand to shake hands in greeting and so was greatly surprised when Carroll took her hand in his, bowed over it and kissed her fingers. She nearly snatched her hand back, and likely would have had she not been so shocked by the gesture.
Carroll smiled at the girl's disoriented look and said, "Won't you join me in my office, please, and we will see what Mr. Holmes would like me to do."
Still bemused, Joan followed almost meekly in the man's wake, and took the chair offered, but shook her head at the offer of tea. Much to her dismay, she had to stand and reseat herself when her gown billowed in front and bunched beneath her causing her momentarily to show an unsuitable flash of slender ankle and bit of calf.
The display was not lost on Joan's host. Realizing that she had made an immodest display caused Joan to be reminded of the soft and oh-so-feminine undergarments that continually caressed her body. Suddenly, very private parts of her anatomy all began to itch fiercely and she practically had to grip the chair arms to stop herself from scratching herself. Still, she felt her face flame under his obvious scrutiny. "How may I be of service, Miss Hanks?" Carroll asked once he'd seated himself behind his chair.
That, at least, was something Joan could deal with. "Of course," she hedged, opening her reticule and removing a large envelope and a card. She passed the card to Mr. Carroll. It was one of professional calling cards of Mr. Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective.
"Mr. Holmes directed me to give you that," she said, "and this envelope, sir."
When Carroll accepted the envelope, his fingers inadvertently collided with Joan, but her focus was now totally on the task at hand and did not notice it.
Carroll frowned as he opened and read the letter it contained. Since she'd written, Joan was already aware of what it directed the solicitor to undertake on Joan's behalf and found herself watching him as he scanned the letter. *Odd that a man of his consequence cannot seem to sit still,* she thought as Carroll shifted back and forth in his chair. *Hemorrhoids, perhaps?*
|
"You must be a most remarkable young woman, Miss Hanks," Carroll said as he raised his bespectacled eyes from the letter.
"I beg your pardon, sir?" Joan asked, somewhat startled by the comment.
"I have known Mr. Sherlock Holmes for almost fifteen years, Miss Hanks, and think I know him rather well. This is the first time I have ever seen him involve a woman in his life, let alone his business affairs. You must be rather . . ." he hesitated and smiled winningly, "special to have won the approval of so particular a fellow."
Joan flushed, and looked down at her hands folded about her reticule in her lap. "I hope Mr. Holmes has learned that I am trustworthy and honest, sir," she said quietly.
Still smiling, Carroll waved the paper toward her with one hand. "So, you are aware of the contents of this note?"
"Not the details, sir. Mr. Holmes said he needed you to call on him this afternoon so that he could deal with several issues that have gone wanting since he was afflicted by this illness. Will there be any problem with you accommodating Mr. Holmes' requests, Sir?" *And there had better not be any given the exorbitant fees you demand for your services, Carroll.*
"No, no, my dear. None at all. Will I have the pleasure of seeing you when I come to call, Miss Hanks?"
Joan stood. "No, Mr. Carroll. Mr. Holmes gave me specific instructions that I was not to be about when you called. He said he needed to discuss issues with you in private and that I was to see to my shopping and other necessities this afternoon after helping him prepare for your visit."
Carroll rose and came around the desk. He put his arm about Joan shoulder and gently directed her from his office. "Then I shall look forward to seeing you again some other time, Miss Hanks. I shall look forward to it," and his voice dropped into a very low register, "Very much indeed."
Something seemed to crawl up Joan spine and a frisson of what might have been panic curled her stomach. She quickly donned her gloves before the solicitor could again capture her hand, made her farewells, and all but fled the offices.
Ah, his face - Holmes was particularly proud of his face just then. Two hours with his stage cosmetics had succeeded in restoring a reasonable semblance of his former masculine and aged visage - at least one that appeared debilitated by illness. Using the thick, waxy substances, Holmes had succeeded is sculpting the familiar aquiline nose and the prominent brow ridges. He'd hollowed his cheeks and then added powder and other, less pleasant pigments to give his face a grayish, unhealthy cast.
Holmes donned a pair of thick house gloves and proceeded to the sitting room. He smiled at what he saw there. *Fortunate that remembering the cases where I had needed to impersonate a woman recalled to mind the Count Sylvius affair in the Case of Marazin Stone. Otherwise I would not have remembered this fine fellow,* he thought with satisfaction.
The figure in the chair had once been a decoy dummy Holmes had used to fool a jewel thief into confessing and revealing the location of a fabulous stolen diamond. Watson, the arch-packrat and collector that he was, had saved the thing in his little museum of Holmes Memorabilia. *And a good thing he did, too.*
Still smiling, Holmes opened the "chest" of the dummy and then slid his legs into those of his avatar. Holmes then seated himself and slid his arms into place before closing the front of his costume. Holmes had experimented earlier and had therefore thought to bolster himself by placing several thick books down where he sat so that the combination of Holmes and his dummy looked to be of nearly normal stature.
The disguise was completed by an artful positioning of the stocking cap over the back of the chair and then bundling a large, thick comforter about him. Holmes had thought to position this chair so that he could examine himself in the mirror once he'd completed his preparations. What he saw there pleased him.
An old man, dressed in a nightshirt and evening robe seated in a chair. Except for his face and the toes of two very disreputable house slippers, he was swathed head to foot by a heavy quilt-like comforter. Holmes would even have fooled himself.
At least for two, maybe three minutes, in any case.
The door bell chimed just as the clock struck four p.m.
"Come in," Holmes said in a querulous, old man's voice, "it's open."
The door opened to admit Jason Carroll, a hand size portfolio tucked under his arm. "Good day, Mr. Holmes. I hope you are feeling better."
"I'm feeling old, Carroll, and there is very little that can be done to make that better!" Holmes snapped in his best curmudgeonly fashion, all the while thinking about the awful irony of that statement. "Well, sit down, sit down. Let's get this over with before that damned girl gets back here to badger me back into bed."
Carroll opened his portfolio and removed a series of papers. "You mean Miss Hanks? She seemed like a very pleasant young woman. Rather . . . umm. . shall we say decorative, as well? A young woman like that could do a great deal to keep a man young, eh?"
The last comment was said with a "man to man" tone that brought Holmes up short. *What does THAT mean? And why does it put my back up?* "Hmmmph," Holmes snorted, "If you're in the petticoat line, I suppose. Do you have my papers, Mr. Carroll?"
Carroll stood and brought the papers over to Holmes. Using his portfolio as a writing board, he presented a pen to Holmes. "This first one is the requested Power of Attorney, Mr. Holmes," Carroll told him before presenting two other forms for his signature. "These authorize Miss Hanks to sign checks and account forms for your accounts at the Bank of England, and this form, is the withdrawal form for the five hundred pounds you requested."
"What?" Holmes growled testily, "Does that mean you didn't bring my money?"
"I couldn't take that much out of your accounts, sir, without your signature, so I took the money out of accounts held by my office which I will, in turn, replace with the money you just authorized to be withdrawn."
"I see. Very thoughtful of you." Holmes took a few moments to thoroughly examine the other man when something caught his trained eye's attention. *Odd about his mouth,* Holmes thought, *unusually full lips for a man of his coloration and background. Unusually dark ones for his skin tones as well. Not at all what my studies into anthropological body types would lead my to expect.*
"Thank you, Sir," Carroll said, interrupting Holmes' line of thought, "If you don't mind my asking, Mr. Holmes, does Miss Hanks get any evenings off?"
Holmes frowned. "Eh? No, of course not. She is on duty every night since that is when I have my hardest time."
"So she stays here, not at home?"
"She stays here, otherwise she lives with the other nurses at the local hospital, but she doesn't have any time for any dalliances, sir, as she will be accompanying me to my country estates as soon as Dr. March says I am again fit to travel."
"I see. Well, hopefully you will soon be back in the first bloom of health, sir," Carroll said with somewhat less bonhomie than he'd previously evidenced.
*So you can pay your addresses on Miss Joan Hanks without offending her employer who also happens to be your richest client, eh? So sad, you old fool, that Miss Hanks and Mr. Holmes are one and the same.* "Well, I am told that with a few weeks of clean, fresh air in the country, I will be as good as new. We may be back in the city in two or three months." *Which should give you more than enough time to forget Miss Hanks, providing I and therefore *she* can survive that long.*
"Yes, well, I am afraid I must be on my way, Mr. Holmes. Do have Miss Hanks call on my office tomorrow to sign the papers herself. I have also scheduled time in my day so that I may introduce her to your account manager at the Bank of England's London Office."
Holmes nodded and then lifted a gloved hand to Carroll in farewell. Carroll took the proffered hand with some reluctance, shook it once and then with a final farewell, took his leave.
Holmes watched the door close and heard the downstairs door open and close as well, then he began to laugh. "You were much more enthusiastic about taking that hand in yours this morning, you old goat."
With another, very unladylike bark of laughter, Holmes extricated himself from the body of his dummy and set about moving it to his bedroom. "Might be useful to have a conveniently sleeping Holmes available to deflect the next uninvited visitor who comes calling."
Date: February 9, 1911.
Time: 7:41 P.M.
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End Journal Entry.
Chapter 14: A Damsel in Distress
Holmes sighed as he brushed out his hair in preparation for visiting the solicitor's office again. The withdrawal symptoms had been particularly harsh this morning, and moreover, seemed to be having heretofore unobserved residual effects. He felt . . edgy, and perhaps a little off-balance. His body felt wrong in a way that Holmes did not have words to describe. The culmination of all this was that Holmes was running late and making mistakes - two conditions that were all but guaranteed to place the very punctual, very fastidious Sherlock Holmes in a thoroughly black mood indeed.
Worse yet, Holmes was unable to set aside an increasingly prevalent feeling that something was wrong, or that something bad was about to occur. Staunchly, for perhaps the tenth time since he'd begun to prepare for this day's outings, Holmes mentally turned his back on the unwelcome premonition. For all he was almost completely female now, he was still a man of the modern times, a man of science, and premonitions, intuitions or unformed feelings had no place in his world.
Holmes pinned his hair up and donned his hat. At least those two tasks seemed to go more easily today than they had the day previous. He'd only made himself wince pulling at his hair with the brush twice today.
Holmes gave himself one last critical look at himself in the mirror. His increasingly experienced eye could see where the gown no longer fit as well as it had. He could see where the bodice and waist were no longer as snug as they had been when Jenny had fit him for the gown, and the hem was again in imminent danger of being muddied on the street. Briefly, Holmes had considered using his new Spanish heeled ankle boots, but his attempt to walk in them this morning had been unsuccessful in the extreme. The Cuban heels were still high enough - barely - and would have to be sufficient until he could get back from the Solicitor's and Jenny's whereupon he would practice in the new footwear.
Holmes reveries were shattered when he realized he was scratching rather insistently at the skin just above the top of that infernal corset. He thrust his offending hands to his sides, all the while mentally upbraiding himself about how such a misstep would be received in public.
He returned his attentions to the mirror and sighed at what he saw there. *I also still need at least one other gown, more likely two or three,* Holmes thought as he reached for his cloak and gloves. *This one is becoming filthy and the gray one I wore to Jenny's won't do until I have time to alter it again. Just another task that will consume time I should be expending in the search for Moriarty.*
Again the feeling of impending danger enveloped him, actually making the hair on the back of his neck prickle, only this time, the feeling was accompanied by a flash of memory. Carroll, asking all those relatively personal questions about Miss Hanks, so very off handedly, as if it really didn't matter. And yet, if it didn't matter, why ask at all? Carroll was a man of business, a man to whom time was a scarce and therefore vital commodity. Why would he expend such a valuable resource attempting to gain such information about Joan Hanks? Then another memory flashed into his mind - Carroll's little, supposedly inadvertent touches and brushes while he was supposedly assisting her. Again, why?
*And yet, I have no substantial, non-deductive evidence that this man intends to do me harm,* Holmes told himself firmly, *and yet, I can't shake the feeling I need to be prepared to deflect some form of violence.*
Setting aside his cloak and gloves, some instinct pushed Holmes to reach for an old friend - his lead shot loaded walking stick. *How many times in the past,* he mused, *Have I been forced to use this tool to stop a villain who was about to attack or injure Watson or myself?* Holmes reached over and hefted the heavy stick and sighed. It had never felt so heavy before. *But before, you were not a female, and you were several stones heavier as well. In any event, it will not serve my needs in this instance. Women, particularly young women, do not use walking sticks or canes.*
Holmes sighed as he stepped out of his dressing room and into the hall where his eyes fell upon his, or rather, Joan's small reticule. It was little more than a fabric covered, lidded wooden box supported by two heavy, fabric covered hand straps with which to hold it. Thoughtfully, he hefted the hand-purse. *Not quite heavy enough.* he thought before an inspiration hit him. Part of the five hundred pounds Carroll had delivered the day before had been in coin of the realm instead of banknotes. Holmes rushed to his sitting room and found the bag of coinage which he then transferred to the bottom of the reticule. He tested its weight and smiled. *It will wear on my hand carrying it after a while,* he thought, *but it is now well suited to be a replacement for my walking stick.*
Nodding his satisfaction, Holmes returned to the foyer, retrieved and donned his cloak and gloves, and then took one last look into the foyer mirror. As he had the day before, Holmes consciously took on the mental outlook and mannerisms that completed his disguise as Joan Hanks.
Then she turned and walked out the door.
"Ah, Miss Hanks," Carroll said rising from his desk and offering her his hand. When she pointedly did not respond, he smiled and offered her a seat. She was more than a little pleased when she managed not to billow her skirts this time. *Practice does make perfect,* she reminded herself. "Now," Carroll continued, "let's get these documents signed and then I will take you around to the Bank and introduce you to Mr. Holmes' account manager."
Carroll came around the desk with a sheaf of papers in his hand which he placed on his desk near Joan. He then offered her a pen and began to explain each document in detail. Since Joan, as Holmes, had already read and understood each document yesterday, her mind was not occupied when Carroll began his little game. Throughout the explanations and signing, Carroll would "accidently" brush against Joan's arm or glide a hand filled with paper along her bosom or nudge her thigh with his when he bent over to show her precisely where to sign.
Unfortunately, Joan did not know what to do about the bounder. She was so close, his very odd cologne was well nigh to overwhelming, but she couldn't think of any way to make the man back off. She needed his introduction to her account manager if she was to regain control of her funds, so she could not afford to anger the man by retaliating. *The bastard is taking advantage because he believes I do not have any one to turn to for assistance or protection,* she realized. *We'll see about that once our business is concluded!*
Unfortunately, Carroll's increasingly unwelcome touching and fondling continued throughout the morning as he escorted her to the Bank of England for a meeting with Mr. Alfred Stone who managed Mr. Sherlock Holmes' accounts with the Bank. Joan was surprised that there were several other documents that Mr. Stone required signed in addition to those Carroll had required. These she read with more care since this was the first time she'd seen them. That process took almost an hour, so it was after one o'clock with the pair returned to Carroll's offices. Part of the delay was due to Joan's need to beg the use of the lady's facility at the Bank. Evidently her bladder was shrinking just as quickly as the rest of her.
Joan noticed that the clerk was not at his usual station, but Carroll indicated that the man took his luncheon between one and two o'clock because the office tended to be busy during the more traditional luncheon hour of two to three o'clock.
Joan decided that the set down she had been planning for the damned rogue would wait for another day, and began to take her leave, only to be physically stopped short. Once again, Carroll took advantage by putting his arm about Joan's shoulders and half leading, half forcing her into his office.
Joan's immediate reaction was a sudden, seething rage that this fool had dared to manhandle him. . . *her* in that heinous manner. Caught up in a fury unlike anything in her past experience, Joan shook herself free of Carroll's arm and decided that this state of affairs was just fine with her. She had more than just a few tart words she wished to lay upon Mr. Jason Carroll and his office was as good a place as any and better than most. She was just beginning to marshal herself for the attack when she was rudely interrupted by the sound of a key rasping in a lock. Joan spun on her heels just in time to see a smiling Carroll slipping a key into his vest pocket.
"What the he. . " she started to scream but Carroll, moving with unexpected speed, was immediately on top of her, binding her arms to her sides in a fierce bear-hug and sealing her mouth off with his own. Joan was so surprised by the suddenness of his attack, that her mouth had been open when Carroll had forced himself upon her and his tongue into her mouth.
Joan struggled hard, but Carroll was a much larger man, and moreover, with her arms restrained had a significant advantage in leverage. For an instant, it was Moriarty toying with her all over again, but then, she felt his hand lifting her skirts and petticoats and forcing his leg between hers. Stark realization of what he intended hit Joan and her mind went momentarily blank.
A rudely intrusive finger probing none-too-gently about her genitals brought her wits back with a vengeance. Still unable to fight him off physically, she did the only thing she could think of - she bit down on his tongue as hard as she could.
A hot, almost sweet, coppery flavor assailed her senses as Carroll began hitting her, trying to make her break her hold on him. A particularly hard blow to her head rocked her and she fell away, rolling as she hit the floor. She came to rest near Carroll's desk.
"So you like to play rough, do you, Miss Hanks," Carroll asked with a positively demonic look on his face as he swiped blood from his mouth, "Well, so do I - particularly with virginal little teases like you!"
The solicitor began to move slowly towards the still recumbent Joan, his hands fisting and unfisting, with an almost insane smile on his face. Joan bided her time, waiting as he approached. From deep inside her fear-fogged mind, the part of her that was Sherlock Holmes examined her situation, predicted probabilities and plotted stratagems.
And Joan acted on them.
She waited, looking terrified, until Carroll was nearly on top of her, until he lifted his fist to strike down on her yet again, and then - only then - did she move. Her right hand flashed out, swinging her coin-loaded reticle with all her strength like a mace.
The sharp corners of the wooden purse caught Carroll midway between his ankles and his knees, squarely on both of his shins and snapping both carry straps. *Obviously not designed for such abuse,* some idle part of her mind commented.
The scream that issued from Carroll's throat as he fell was almost inhuman. He had not even finished when Joan snatched up the reticule in both hands and brought it up into her assailants solar plexus with all her strength. Carroll fell to the floor gagging and gasping for air that simply would not oblige him.
Joan began to shake as she struggled to her knees. She hand walked her way up his quivering legs and retrieved the key from Carroll's vest pocket. Her eyes fell on a strange stain about the cuff of his pants leg, and noticed that it seemed to be particularly redolent of that strange, half remembered cologne scent of his, but did not let herself dwell on that. She needed to make her escape before he recovered his wind. She reached down, gathering up her broken reticule, and then let herself out of the office. She was halfway to the main door of the office when a last a vestige of Holmes fought through the maelstrom of her wildly swirling emotions. Joan stopped, returned to the office door, and used Carroll's own key to lock the office before departing. She took the key with her.
Knowing she must look a sight, Joan fought against the uncontrolled shaking as she hailed a cab, and then directed the driver to the only people she knew in all the world that might care about what had happened to her. The cabbie saw the incipient terror in her eyes, and hastened to follow her orders.
Jenny was just standing up when a hansom cab raced up to her shop and stopped suddenly at her doorstep. She watched in amazement as the driver hastily got down from his driving box in a futile attempt to help his passenger disembark his cab. A young woman in a very familiar brandywine colored day dress practically jumped from the high cab and promptly fell to her hands and knees in the muddy street. The cab tried to help her to her feet, but she seemed almost limp in his arms. That was when Jenny recognized Joan. "Maisie!" she yelled. "Get out here! Something has happened to Joan!"
The emotional purge was well-lubricated by several refillings of Joan's brandy snifter. Jenny and Maisie simply listened while the held the shaking girl between them on one of the shop's sofas. "I. . . I don't even know why I came here," Joan said almost to herself as the emotion ebbed. "I don't understand what made me tell the driver to come here instead of to Baker Street."
"Pish and tosh," Jenny said with a glint of humor in her gentle eyes, "And what would Mr. Sherlock Holmes know about such things, I'd like to know? Probably just say something about deducing what had happened based on something no normal person would ever notice and that it was elementary. Which is nothing of any use at all just now. What you need is seeing to, and in times like this, women see to women - friends see to friends. Your heart knew that even if your head might have been all mixed up."
"I wasn't sure I had earned the privilege of calling us friends yet, but I am glad you were here for me. I do feel better now, thank you," Joan said very quietly.
Jenny nodded. "If we are not yet friends, we are friendly acquaintances Joan. And we are women. I am glad you came here so that we could be here for you. And now,," Jenny said, deciding it was time to get the girl focused on something positive again, but first they had to get a few things out. "Tell me, dear, do you always carry coins valued at nearly fifty pounds in your reticule?"
*As if I have ever carried a reticule before this week,* Joan thought barely suppressing a hysterical giggle. "No, Jenny. I did it because. . well, something Mr. Holmes said made me think of it."
"Holmes, again? I don't understand."
*Think fast, Joan Hanks!* "Well, Mr. Holmes had concluded that Mr. Carroll might have . . . inappropriate intentions toward me."
"Well, Holmes always did see things others missed, but did he ever stop to think that sending you to meet with that fool might have been dangerous? Goodness, girl, didn't YOU think it would be dangerous?"
*Nothing I couldn't easily control - or so I thought,* Joan thought. "Well, that was when he told me about that walking stick of his - the one he filled with lead?"
"I know about it. When I was involved with Mr. Holmes before, I even saw him use the bloody thing. Damn him, anyway! I am surprised the man didn't offer it to you," Jenny muttered as she took a large swallow of her own brandy. "Some men are just so intelligent they are stupid."
Joan wanted to jump to Mr. Holmes' - that is her own - defense, but resisted the urge. "I couldn't carry it - it was too heavy," Joan said with the first sign of animation since her arrival. "Besides, it didn't go with my dress."
Jenny acknowledged Joan's attempt at humor with a half smile. "So you decided to load your reticule instead?" Joan nodded. "Jenny, Mr. Holmes is a very impressive man, but he *is* MERELY a man. That cane, and that reticule which is essentially the same thing, are men's weapons. You are very fortunate you got to use it, but in most other situations like that, you'd probably have lost it before you got in a single swing with it."
"What should I have done, then? Carried Mr. Holmes' revolver in the reticule?"
Jenny threw up her hands in exaggerated disgust. "Didn't your mother teach you ANYTHING when you were a girl?? You shouldn't have gotten in the situation in the first place, dear," Jenny said with heavy emphasis. "As soon as all the papers were signed at the bank, you should have left then. Once you were back in his office and you knew you were alone, you should have tried to get out again. . ."
"But I did!" Joan protested. "And if the reticule wasn't the answer, what should I have done?"
"First, you shouldn't have lost your temper. You were in deep trouble and you wasted valuable time thinking about berating him instead of thinking about getting away from him. That's how he had the time to lock you in."
"So what should I have done? Especially since he immediately immobilized my arms and practically choked me with that excuse for a kiss."
"Biting him was good, but the move that would have freed you and given you time was to knee him."
"Knee him?" Joan asked with a squeaky break of shock in her voice. She was certain she hadn't understood Jenny. Surely, Jenny did not mean Joan should do something so cowardly as . .
"You have a knee, Joan, and he has a groin with that lovely and very vulnerable male organ that men are so damned proud of. Well, it may be their bloody pride and joy, but is also their greatest weakness. Men with their stupid "Marquis of Queensberry Rules" have made blows to that part of their anatomy something less than manly, something terribly dishonorable. Women cannot afford that artificiality when a man intends to rape her. Next time, hopefully you'll learn from this and there won't BE a next time, but if there is, position yourself carefully, and then plant your knee in his groin with every ounce of strength you can muster. Don't hold back anything because you may get only one opportunity, but you *will* get that one opportunity. If he's going to rape you, he has to get those tender little balls of his in range of your knee."
*She's correct, now that I think of it. Carroll is almost half again my weight, and he had me dead to rights before I could make a move against him. I caught him by surprise or the reticule would never have worked.*
"Do you understand, Joan," Jenny said with the impatience of someone who has been forced to repeat herself.
Joan smiled sheepishly. "Yes, I understand, Jenny."
"Good, then we need say no more on the subject. No real harm was done although if you are going to have to do business with him for Mr. Holmes, we will need to come up with a means of preventing this in the future. Perhaps have the accounts transferred to his partner?"
"Perhaps," Joan murmured as she thought about all that had happened. Suddenly, several things fell into place. "I simply don't understand why he would attack me in such a manner in any case. . . given his evident preferences. . .or what I deduce to be his preferences."
Jenny's eyes went hard and she demanded, "What do you mean, preferences."
"Mr. Carroll has a marked preference for male. . . . lovers," Joan declared with the same certainty that had revealed many a villain during the career of Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
"Male lovers? How can you conclude such a thing? Moreover, how would you, such a milk and honey country miss know of such deviancies?" Jenny interjected.
*In the mental satisfaction associated with deduction, I forgot who I was. . . or rather, who I appear to be which is not Sherlock Holmes,* Joan thought furiously, *Better think of some reasonable explanation for knowing what you know, Miss Joan Hanks,* then an inspiration struck, *Oh, yes, that should do nicely.*
"As to how I know of such things, I did my training at a hospital down on the lower East End. Several times we'd get patients. . .men whose. . .bottoms had been badly cut by a whip or a cane - sometimes with. . .hemorrhaging . . .ummm. . about the orifice from which they eliminate. ." Joan looked up and saw Jenny nodding slowly. "As to Mr. Carroll's involvement in such activities, that is ele. . .I mean, simple. Several facts point to Mr. Carroll's involvement in such activities. First, his trousers were stained with a bath oil whose scent I just recalled as being similar to that of the men who were injured. I originally thought he merely had atrocious taste in cologne, but then I saw the stain when were on the floor after I struck him with the reticule. The injured men who carried that scent always came from these . . .bathhouses."
"You might have mistaken the bath oil's scent, dear," Jenny cautioned.
"Unlikely," Joan said authoritatively, "It is QUITE unforgettable. However, the second fact is that he always sat down rather carefully, - as if he was trying to keep weight off his buttocks, and once seated, could not sit still in one place for any length of time. The final piece of the puzzle, though I didn't credit it properly at the time I first noticed it, is that his lips were oddly discolored and unusually full - almost swollen. What they were, in actuality, was bruised, much the same as those men at the hospital were."
"You do realize what you are implying, don't you," Jenny asked, her opinion of the girl's intelligence taking a marked step upward.
"That's why I said I didn't understand why he wanted to rape me. The evidence indicates that he prefers other men."
Jenny shook her head. "Not quite all, dear. Your assessment is mostly correct, but what he truly prefers is submission. . .*rough* submission to the will of other men who beat him and use him as a sexual plaything. I suspect that he preys on young women such as you in a sick attempt to convince himself he is still a true man. However, that does give me an idea of how we can ensure that Mr. Carroll turns over Mr. Holmes' business to his partner and that he will not attempt to do you any further harm as well. MAISIE!?!" she called out suddenly.
"Yes, Miss Jenny?" the little seamstress answered as she stuck her head through the beaded curtain to the workroom.
"Get Miss Joan's other dresses so we can final fit them to her. She needs something to wear home while we get this once cleaned. Also, is that black satin day dress we designed for that opera singer still available?"
"You mean the one that looks like it was painted onto the dress form? Yes Ma'am. She was so petite, no one else who might want it could fit in it. 'Specially in the bosom. She was a little thing, 'cept there."
"That one. I think it would fit Joan if we can tighten her corset another inch or two. Fetch it and my make up case, please."
Joan watched all this with some confusion. "What are you doing? Why a black satin day dress? Isn't that a little unusual."
"Very unusual, but perfect to our purposes. *You*, dear girl, are about to learn about fighting with a woman's weapons. Now, pick up your brandy and follow me."
"It still took you too long. Clean it off your face and do it again. Once you can apply the cosmetics for that particular facial look in ten minutes or less, I will let you go home to rest. Now, use the cream and cleanse your face."
"But I can't go any faster, Jenny. I can barely breathe now that you and Maisie have tightened the corset again. And that damned thing itches infernally! It bids fair to drive me insane."
"Hush. If you'd just take the corset off at night, you wouldn't chafe your skin so badly. I'll give you a cream that will soothe the irritation."
"Well, every time I take it off, you accuse me of loosening it. Why can't you just alter the dress so that I don't need the corset to wear it!?!"
"Because even if we had the time to alter the dress to fit you that way, which we DON'T, the dress doesn't have sufficient spare material to let out the darts to fit you uncorseted, girl. Therefore, we needed to reduce your waist some more. And the corset can't loosen now because we've laced you to the point where the edges meet all up and down your back. That let me connect the hooks and eyes along the back so it can't loosen anymore. Besides, tightening up the corset like that lifted your bosom enough that you fill that bodice perfectly and show a delightful cleavage. It's perfect."
Joan sighed, but the unrelenting force of the corset stays stopped her in mid-breath. Frowning, she began to cream away the heavily applied, exotic make up from her face. "You're sure this will work?"
"Trust me, darling. I had more than one protector who played rough in hopes of making me angry enough to punish him like a naughty little boy. What you need to do is get his attention and then keep him off balance so that you can get that threat in."
"Well, that dress will do it, Jenny."
"A woman's weapons, darling."
Chapter 15: Counterstrike
Holmes grimaced as he stared at the face reflected in the silvered glass of the small makeup mirror he'd erected on his laboratory workbench. Not that he wanted it in here, in his special private place of contemplation and rational thought. He'd planned on setting it up in his dressing room, but as fate would have it only his laboratory had sufficient artificial light for this particular task. The irony of having this very feminine makeup mirror standing next to the now-idle concentrating and distilling apparatus was not lost on Holmes - a fact that only made what he had to do all the more difficult for the Great Detective.
Holmes had risen at three a.m. that morning, administering Moriarty's youth elixir a full two hours earlier than the withdrawal should have made that necessary. This would, hopefully, ensure that Holmes, or more accurately Joan, would not be dealing with any lingering aftereffects of the potion when it was time to face Carroll again. Unfortunately, that stratagem did not seem to have been very effective. Holmes did not feel well. His stomach had rebelled violently when he'd attempted to eat a modest breakfast and his mouth still tasted vile as a result. His lower back and abdominal muscles were cramping quite vigorously, and it was only by dint of his fabled and phenomenal will that he wasn't on his bed groaning and curled into the fetal position.
Still, for Sherlock Holmes, master detective and scientist, the worst aspect of this experience was his growing inability to control his emotions. One reason he was *still* in front of this thrice cursed mirror, *re*-doing his cosmetics was because he'd just been possessed of a rather amazing fit of crying - all because he'd smudged the enamel he'd been oh-so-very-carefully painting on to his finger nails. It had not even been all that significant an issue - correcting the smudged surface would have taken no more than a minute or two to clean the nail with the solvent before repainting it. Not significant at all, except that Holmes had first lost his temper and then his composure because of it, and had finished the debacle by bursting into tears. Tears which had, naturally, destroyed his already-made-up face.
Holmes swiped the lip rouge carefully about his full lips and set down the brush. *Done,* he thought with some relief. He turned his attention to his hair and was again relieved to see it had suffered no damage during his crying fit. *Thank Providence,* Holmes mused, for getting his hair into that ridiculously tight bun had taken four tries and had cost him uncounted hairs jerked from his scalp by their roots. Jenny had insisted that every hair had to be precisely in place for the full effect, and he'd almost given up on the whole thing after the third try. He would have given up, except the hat Jenny had provided would not fit on the wild mane his hair had become when let free of pinned constraint.
Rising from his stool, Holmes set aside the bed sheet he had used to protect the dress and strolled carefully back into his dressing room. Carefully, because he was now wearing the Spanish heeled boots. His stature this morning was such that the damned inconvenient skirts of this unpetticoated gown were too long for the Cubans. He'd nearly fallen face first into his mirror when the toe of the Cuban had caught on the hem of this infernal dress. Still, he had no other options if the plan were to work as he and Jenny had agreed it would, so he'd gotten out the shoe button hooks and had wrestled the much taller Spanish-style heeled boots onto his feet. He'd been walking in them ever since, removing them only when he recalled he'd forgotten to put on his stockings.
Holmes now regretted his forethought to purchase a pair of shoes that had been too tight and perhaps a half size too small when he'd selected these high heeled relics from Torquemada's Inquisition. Putting the shoes back on to feet that had already begun to swell was unpleasant in the extreme. *Would have been far easier to insert some tissue paper into the toes of a larger, more commodious pair, or to wear thick cotton ankle stockings beneath Jenny's black silk stockings. I can only hope I will still be able to walk when this day was done. By all that is holy,* Holmes growled as his left foot nearly slipped out from under him on the slick, hardwood floors, *the bindings inflicted on the feet of Chinese noblewomen could be no less tight and crippling than these damned shoes.*
He managed to make it to the dressing mirror without further incident and sighed as he took in the picture he saw within its depths.
The dress Jenny had pressed upon Joan covered every inch of him from wrist to shoulder and from throat to floor. The gown's design was utterly simple, and yet, utterly devastating - nothing but stark, unrelieved glossy black satin except for specially-chosen, highly-dramatic, blood-red accents that seized the eyes and forced them into sharp focus. One accent, a rose corsage, rode lightly on the gentle swell of his left breast, rising and falling with the softly exaggerated breaths forced by the tight corset. The second attention demand took the form of a large paste ruby sewn to the front of the gown's chin-high collar, emphasizing the elegance of Holmes' slender neck while enforcing a regal hauteur.
The virtually unrelieved black of the sleek gown would make even an ordinary complexion appear cold and colorless, but Jenny's special makeup application had taken that even further with deliberately pale tones everywhere except for the bright slash of matching red on his lips. Lips that seemed to grow more full every time Holmes examined himself in a mirror.
Looking at that image, there could be no doubt as to the gender of the person reflected. That was, Holmes mused, perhaps the most negative aspect of this whole enterprise, for there could no longer be any pretense. The person reflected in the mirror was not Sherlock Holmes. The person was female.
The figure, while not sufficiently voluptuous to have drawn the sculptor Rodan's interest and attention, was still very finely and femininely shaped. Slender, but with a well rounded bosom, an extremely tiny waist *Thanks to Jenny and her damnable corset!* and subtly curved hips and bottom. And the damned gown did not, in *any* way, attempt to disguise that fact. Rather, it shouted *FEMALE* to anyone who might be within range of its power.
But Holmes knew it was not just the dress. He would soon be having trouble NOT looking feminine and attractive. The dress merely emphasized what he'd been fighting to deny to himself since he'd first deduced this effect of the potion just before Moriarty had appeared on the scene. What the revelation of that truth, and more importantly, his sudden acceptance of it meant for him in the near and long term, Holmes did not know. Unfortunately, with the confrontation with Carroll looming, he did not have the time to spend analyzing those issues. He'd have to deal with all that entailed more completely once this day's adventure was over.
Returning his attention to his appearance, he sighed. "I look like a bizarre combination of one of Madame Hell's bawds and a paid governess arrayed like this," Holmes growled, a sound totally incongruous to his current visage. "Not only, that, but this gown is also very tight in very uncomfortable places," he complained as he resisted an urgent need to relieve an itch immediately beneath that blasted rose.
The clock tolled nine thirty, recalling Holmes to his schedule. He picked up the bit-of-nothing hat Jenny had provided and carefully placed it on his head. The hat was a half-bonnet, designed to conform tightly to the skull and just barely rest upon the top of the bun. That was why Holmes had been forced to stay at his hair until it was tamed. Also black, the hat sported pair of red silk roses that seemed to be pinned in his hair just above his right ear, and a fine black lace-mesh veil that just covered his eyes. Holmes positioned the hat and then pinned it on, and nearly stabbed his scalp doing so. "Curse these damned clothes to the farthest halls of HELL!" Holmes cursed. "How in God's name do women tolerate them? WHY *do* women tolerate the infernal things?"
No one answered, but Holmes felt a bit better for the cursing. *At least the hair was not disarrayed by the pin. . only my scalp - but I won't have to rip any more hair out recreating the bun.*
Satisfied that all was done as well as could be, Holmes strode to the foyer and picked up his cloak. Actually, it was more a cape than a cloak. From the outside, the cloak was the same unrelieved black satin as the dress, but the lining was bright red silk, of the same tone as the roses, ruby and lip rouge. Holmes slipped his arms through the slits provided for that purpose and buttoned the cloak before reaching for the gloves. Oddly enough, they were red, not black. "Contrast" was all Jenny would say when Joan had questioned her on this. Holmes slipped them on. They fit like. . . well, like gloves, which had been a point of concern for Jenny the previous day.
"Are you sure you'll be able to fasten them, dear?" she'd asked very solicitously, "Button hooks can be the very devil to manage one handed and those gloves are perhaps just a bit too small for you. That is too bad, because the color is simply perfect."
Joan, knowing she would likely be just that much smaller in the morning, had assured Jenny that all would be fine. And so it was, Holmes mused holding his fine fingered hands splayed in front of his face. The gloves DID fit perfectly and while he had had the tiniest bit of trouble fastening them, the result was clearly worth that effort. The soft, warm leather clung to his hands and fingers so lovingly that Holmes could even see the faint outline of his long, lacquered nails beneath the tips of the finely sewn gloves.
He looked around and found the small reticule Jenny had given her and the other longer, narrower case as well. Once he had those in hand, Holmes turned to the foyer mirror and frowned. Jenny had repeatedly impressed upon Joan the importance of a stern visage, and to that end, they had attempted to design a cosmetic look that was a bit older than Joan ordinarily appeared. Now, however, he felt that he looked neither old or stern enough for his mission. *How old, physiologically speaking, am I at this point?* he asked himself. *Mid twenties at the most - a very young looking mid twenties. How am I going to manage 'stern' with a face like this?!?! Even all these cosmetics can't disguise my apparent youth.*
Holmes thought about it for several moments and then recalled his earlier comment about a combination bawd and governess. He recalled his own governess - a German woman selected by his brutal father for her strict approach to child rearing and for her well known and, unfortunately, well earned reputation for refusing to coddle her charges in any way. Holmes closed his eyes and cast his mind back, forcing himself to remember her on one of her less pleasant days, and then tried to imitate that look.
Holmes opened his eyes and looked at his reflection. The face that looked back was harder - certainly a woman not to be taken lightly. *Still young,* he thought, trying to be objective, but pleased with the look nonetheless. *No longer quite so dewy-eyed or virginally vulnerable. It will have to do.* With that, Joan completed the donning this day's disguise with a haughty toss of her head.
Joan Hanks gave the mirror a positively chilling smile, then turned to the door and left the rooms; her only thoughts on obtaining her rightful justice from Mr. Jason Carroll, Esquire.
Joan Hanks stepped carefully from the carriage onto the first step, stopped and rose to her full height. With her head held regally erect, she gave her free hand to the footman and permitted him to hand her down the steps and onto the paved walk. Once there, her face fixed in a stern mask, she nodded her approval. "You may walk the horses to see that they cool down properly, but remain close by." she ordered quietly. "This will not take long, perhaps no more than ten, fifteen minutes at the most."
"Yes, ma'am. The driver will take them just off the street, and we will remain here. When you come out, we'll fetch him." the footman reported quickly.
Again the austere lady nodded her approval. "Very well. I shall expect to be on my way within sixty seconds of my readiness to depart. Each of you shall be rewarded if I am not kept waiting beyond that."
The footman made an abrupt bow. "Yes, ma'am," he said, bowing yet again.
Satisfied with this reaction, Joan permitted herself a momentary cold smile before turning to the door. *Well, I would say I must have the role down fairly well if that reaction is anything to judge by. If that footman had been anymore respectful of my August personage, he'd have injured himself with all that bowing and scraping. Now, for Mr. Jason Carroll!*
Joan entered the office and strode purposefully up the clerk who looked up at her wide-eyed. She settled Jenny's case and her reticule under one arm as she unbuttoned her right glove. Eyes snapping, Joan turned her full attention on the already overmatched clerk.
"Tell me, young man," Joan directed in quiet, chill tones, "Has Mr. Carroll arrived at the offices yet?" The clerk started to look away, in the direction of Carroll's office, but Joan brought her gloved right hand up under the young man's chin and jerked his head back around to face her. "LOOK at a lady when she deigns speak to you!" she ordered, "Now tell me, is he IN his OFFICE?!?"
"Ye. . ye. . . yes, ma'am," he finally managed to stutter. "If you wi. . will wait just a moment, I would be happy to announce you."
Joan rose back up. "No thank you. I shall announce myself." she replied as she dropped her reticule and a strange long, very slender carrying case on to his desk. "Watch those for me. I won't be but a moment."
The clerk watched in silent awe as the frighteningly beautiful lady in black unbuttoned her cape and strode to Mr. Carroll's office. When the door latch clicked, he drew his first deep breath since she'd stormed into his area. Then he took a closer look at the odd, now-empty case. On it, he saw an engraved metal plate. It said, "Tattersall's Leather Goods Ltd: Purveyors of Fine Saddlery and Tack. Madame Jeanne Marie D'evere."
And he couldn't help but wonder, what had fit inside that case's finely-worked, velvet-lined interior?
For an instant, Carroll did not recognize the vision in black who was bearing down on him. A cape parted to reveal a crimson lining that only served to make her stark gown seem all the more ominous. "Miss Hanks?" he finally blurted out just as the woman reached his desk.
"Just so, whore-boy." Joan said airily. Her rich ruby lips smiled playfully, but the depths of her dark eyes seemed to be a window into a hell beyond darkness. "And I am worse than any nightmare *your* pitiful perversions could possibly conceive."
The vile name she called him shocked him out of his immobility, and he began to rise from his seat, outraged. "You can't . ."
Whatever Carroll had intended to say to Joan died instantly in his throat when Joan drew a wicked-looking riding crop from beneath her cloak and brought it forcefully down on his shoulder. The impact, though dulled by the padded shoulders of his suit coat, had the startled Carroll falling awkwardly back into his desk chair.
If anything, Joan's smile grew larger. "Stand if you will," she purred, twirling the crop in front of his face in a manner that drew his eyes like a bird fascinated by a snake. "But my next little tap," Carroll flinched as Joan playfully traced his face from cheek to chin with the slapper of the crop, "will leave your face marked in a way that will not be as easy to hide as those stripes on your so well-rounded bottom."
"I beg your pardon," Carroll choked out, feeling the crop's thick leather stinger tickling beneath his chin. Fearing this black-dressed bitch might decide to drive it into his soft throat, he sat very still indeed.
"And well you should, Mr. Carroll, but then, you do so like to beg, don't you?" Joan asked, mild interest coupled with an undercurrent of disdain in her voice. Her eyes, though, never wavered from their implacable stare. "I can arrange things so that you will do more begging than you could possibly desire."
Joan let the end of the crop dance lightly on his ear, moving it at the last moment when he tried to grab it. "Naughty, naughty," she said with a hint of a laugh that never touched her stormy eyes. "I only grant *true* men the opportunity to play with *my* toys, and then only with my permission and at my direction. You do not qualify for that privilege on *any* count, now do you?"
"You have no right to say things like that about me!" he growled as he reached for the shoulder and tried to rub away the sting of her blow.
Joan laughed, a true laugh this time, as she watched him try to tend his hurt shoulder, but only for a single moment.
The easy smile that had been playing across her full red lips vanished into a cruel sneer that made it appear that the blood color was more than merely cosmetic enhancement. "Would you instead prefer that I say that you are a foul rapist?" she asked.
Joan leaned over his desk, the crop in her hand pushing into his sternum hard enough to cause an arch up that pressed against his chin. "Enough of this, little whore-slut. I know that you prefer men. I know that you think you enjoy being abused, and that you think you can hide your desires. But you are wrong. Just as your so-obviously bruised lips and the way you cannot sit comfortably on your fat arse reveal your secrets to a knowledgeable observer, so also are you mistaken as to the nature and horror of *true* abuse. Trust me, you would *not* find the experience with *me* in *any* way enjoyable. If you doubt me and intend to test my resolve, then consider carefully the needs of your heirs and ensure that your affairs are in order."
"You would not kill me," Carroll said, trying to recover his bluster. "For god's sake, you are only a woman!"
Just as quickly as the sneer had appeared on her face, a taunting smile now replaced it. Once again Joan twirled the crop in her hands, the contrast of the whip's black leather and her red gloves seeming to imply that the tool had often been touched by the brighter color. After a long pause, where once again her eyes revealed a formless glimpse into something beyond fear. "Ah, and so I am a woman," she agreed easily, "Therefore, when. . .or rather if I do decide to see to your death, it will not be something that will be done quickly, nor gently."
She slipped the crop under her arm and snapped the blood-red glove from her right hand with an audible pop that caused her victim to nearly jump in alarm. The sickeningly sweet, utterly terrifying smile was firmly in place as Joan reached out to where Carroll sat in his chair. At first, she simply caressed his cheek softly, pleased to see his rigid posture and to feel his attempt to slide as far from her touch as he could manage. Then, without warning, her nails arched into claws and one - the one she to which she had previously glued a tiny sharpened wire - scratched his cheek just deeply enough to leave a line of the same red her gloves had promised. Carroll reached for his cheek, then drew down a hand smeared with the evidence of her touch. He stared at it, not noticing until it was too late the movement of the crop. It slashed down upon his open palm, causing him to cry out in shocked anguish.
When he looked up from his temporarily useless hand, the playful smile still beamed from Joan's face. The crop was back under her arm, and she was tugging the tight red glove back on to her hand with sharp, quick movements.
"This is what I require you to do," she said with quiet authority and confidence. "Unless you want to experience far worse in the future. First, you will transfer all of Mr. Holmes' accounts and business interests to your partner, Mr. Nickleby."
Too thoroughly browbeaten to argue any further, Carroll simply acquiesced. "And the second thing?"
"Cease preying on supposedly defenseless young women. You do not want them in any case, and trust me, Mr. Holmes has highly skilled people watching you. The next time you fail to treat any young woman, particularly one who comes to you for help, with absolute respect will herald the revelation of your little pleasures with other men to your colleagues and clients"
"But damn you, you have no proof! You WOULD have no proof! You cannot prove any of this! I cannot believe any of this is happening to me!" he wailed, now nearly in tears.
"Believe it or not, Mr. Carroll, at your own peril," Joan said quietly, the smile gone for the moment. "I am fully aware - *fully* aware," she said with heavy emphasis, "of the activities in certain male-only bathhouses on London's east side and could easily hire a consulting detective to obtain all the proof I would need," Joan's smile blossomed anew, cruel and full, "but we both know that proof would not truly be needed, would it? A few whispers here, and a hint or two dropped in the right, or in your view, the wrong ears, and soon all London will be whispering about you. "Terrible about that solicitor fellow -what's his name? Oh yes, Carroll - the one who likes other men, canes across his arse and being sodomized." By the time the gossips were done with you, you'd be completely without clients within the week."
Joan began to fastened up her cloak, hiding all color but her seemingly-bloody hands and lips. Carroll watched her avidly, all the while praying that she was, at last, leaving. His prayers were to go unanswered though, when instead of moving to the door, she stepped around the desk to stand very near to Carroll. Without warning, the crop speared down to press painfully at the front of his trousers, literally pinning him to his seat.
She leaned down and whispered in his ear, as though softly sharing the sweetest promise, "Mr. Holmes has the contacts throughout London. I work for Mr. Holmes and Mr. Holmes is very, very unhappy that *I* am unhappy. If you don't believe me, go ahead and molest another woman you think lacks the protection of a family." Joan then kissed Carroll's cheek, leaving a vermillion imprint that seemed to taste of the blood still welling slowly from his scratch, "but only after, as I said earlier, you put your affairs in order."
The crop floated back up under her arm as she moved to the door with languid grace, pausing just before she opened it to look back with a mocking smile that . . . almost . . . drew his glance from the pits of darkness that smoldered in her eyes. With a disdainful sniff she turned to the door and left without another sign that she knew he existed.
Nor did she deign to acknowledge the existence of the still-intimidated clerk as she snatched up the crop's case and her reticule as she sailed through the outer office. Moments later, she was walking up the steps leading into her carriage. She gave directions to Jenny's shop, and then settled herself into the plush, leather-upholstered seat.
Only then, with the danger finally past and her opponent utterly defeated and routed from the field, did the shaking begin.
Chapter 16. Variations on Reflective Themes
Entry in the Journal of Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Date: February 11, 1911.
Time: 10:48 P.M.
|
End Journal Entry.
The most significant problem was that *he* was in no way 'most men' - *he* was Moriarty and his dreams went far, FAR beyond the accumulation of mere wealth. While money was power, it had its limits, and what Moriarty thirsted for was power without any such barriers to its use. Moriarty wanted whole countries - the entire world - to live and exist only at his continued sufferance. There wasn't sufficient wealth on the planet to purchase that type of power. He needed another way to attain the power for which he lusted.
And in the meantime, it amused him to know he had discovered this treatment for arthritis pain that was benefitting no one else but Moriarty. That was power of a sort, as well.
The professor turned his attention back to the large one-way mirror that looked into the state-of-the-art laboratory he'd provided for Dr. Haber's efforts on his behalf. The professor was unusually diligent today. *Only to be expected,* Moriarty thought with a dark smile.
Progress on the twin projects had not been going as well as Moriarty had anticipated. Each seeming breakthrough had ultimately proven to be a dead end - literally. So far, any avenue of investigation that had shown promise of correcting either the addictive or gender changing property of the formulation had resulted in a deadly toxin. That might ultimately prove useful - Moriarty had no difficulty with discovering new, more effective methods of murder - but it did not bring a solution to Moriarty's immediate problem any closer.
The contact (non-injected) formulation for gaseous weapons was not progressing either. For the most part, that was a conscious decision on the part of both Haber and Moriarty to concentrate on the non-addictive, non-gender reversing formulation as their top priority. Once Moriarty was young and strong again, then they'd develop his gender-changing terror weapon.
And use it to gain the power he truly desired.
As to Dr. Haber's current assiduous flurry of industry, that could be laid at Moriarty's door. He had grown concerned that, perhaps, the good Dr. Haber might be dragging his experimental feet in some futile hope that he might avoid his destiny of assisting the Great Professor Moriarty achieve immortality.
The solution was pure Moriarty. Haber's food at the noon meal had been liberally seasoned with a drug that simulated the early symptoms the laboratory dog had suffered when Haber had first arrived at the Riechenbach facility. The doctor had passed out certain that he was dying. When he'd regained consciousness that morning, Moriarty had been there holding an empty hypodermic needle.
"Unless, my dear Haber," Moriarty had said grimly, "I see progress in your assigned tasks, the next time I will not administer the antidote. I will, however, administer another potion which will ensure you are fully alert for the grand moment of your death. Do I make myself clear, Haber?"
Fritz Haber had all but blathered assuring Moriarty that he understood and would comply. Moriarty rose from his chair, satisfied that Haber had indeed been sincere in his assurances.
As he walked from the room, Moriarty's mind drifted to another man he had recently tricked through the use of a potion. "Are you going insane yet, old foe?" he asked into the dark night air as he walked toward his personal living quarters. "Have you learned yet that there is no escape when your prison and your jailer are one and the same? When they are, in fact, you yourself?"
A soft chuckle, self-satisfied and mirth-filled, rolled over the otherwise tranquil lands, and the cold alpine winds themselves seemed to shiver in response.
Chapter 17. Revelations
Jenny Deavers stepped down from the cab without waiting for the cab driver to offer to assist her. Once on the street, she looked up at the small building immediately in front of her. The windows of the second floor rooms were shaded and dark - much like her roiling emotions.
She'd been thinking about this fateful meeting ever since yesterday when *that* girl had left the shop. For the third day running, Maisie's hemlines had been too long and also for the third day, they had needed to tighten the laces on the corset. Maisie was the best, most conscientious seamstress she'd ever employed. She *might* have made an error measuring the hem once, perhaps even twice although Jenny could scarcely credit that possibility. Three times? No way on God's green earth!
Goodness, as for that damned corset, they should have replaced the appliance the day before because they'd been able to draw the two sides together. Yesterday, the girl could have stood another half inch or more and hardly noticed it. Corset-training simply did not work that way! And then there were those incredible heels she had worn trying to pretend she was the same height - she'd never gotten those things at Madame Jeanne Marie's shop. Not a bit of it! Why, Jenny hadn't seen shoes like *that* since. . . . well, since she'd been in a much different line of work for that one gentleman that had inspired Joan's and her plan for that bastard solicitor. . . well, that was a completely different time and place - and a very different Jenny.
Something was very, very wrong, and Jenny feared she knew what that something was. Whoever this "Joan Hanks" truly was, Jenny was convinced she was taking advantage of Mr. Holmes. Well, Jenny Deavers *owed* Mr. Sherlock Holmes a great deal, and Jenny Deavers ALWAYS paid her debts. There was NO WAY she would permit some thieving little bitch take unfair advantage of him - particularly if he was truly ill and unable to care for his own needs. So she would, by God!
The symptoms were all there as they had been from that first night. Over-sensitivity, over-emotionalism and a harsh cramping tightness in her lower abdomen. Only those were far more prominent this time than they had been at any other withdrawal onset - and the other symptoms were there, as well, if somewhat less intense, or even somehow different. The burning heat was now a fever alternating with chills. She still had bouts of dog-like (or was that bitch-like?) panting but this time, that symptom always seemed to portend a violent bout of nausea. That *was* notably different from anything she had been forced to deal with thus far.
She had already administered two doses of the precious drug trying to dispel these withdrawal symptoms. One when she had awakened at just past two A.M. in the morning and another when her need to relieve herself had roused her a little more than three hours later, only to find the symptoms recurring before she had managed to leave the water closet. Now she was awake again, suffering again, and not at all certain that she should use the drug again. It was the same, and yet it was different. Grimly, Joan tried to analyze the situation and determine a course of action.
Her concentration was broken by the jarring report of her doorbell. Joan determined to ignore it, but whoever was outside simply would not take the hint and continued pealing the bell. When Joan's overly acute senses and pounding head could not take anymore she roused herself from her nest and went to the door. A check through the peephole revealed her visitor was "Jenny?"
Joan opened the door and an angry-visaged Jenny swept into the room. She came to a stop inside the foyer and rounded on Joan. "All right, Missie, where is your sister?" she demanded furiously.
Caught completely off guard by that attack of this avenging Valkyrie, Joan momentarily goggled at the other woman before managing a weak, "My sister? What sister, Madame?"
"Oh, just stop the playacting, Missie, because I know everything."
"You . . you do?" Joan stuttered in disbelief.
Jenny sighed and gave the girl a sardonic smile. "I am a dressmaker, you silly girl, and have been for a good many years. Only rarely before have my customers grown smaller in the waist, but *never* have any of them grown shorter. Something that *you* have supposedly accomplished every day you've visited my shop for fittings. For god's sake, girl, why are you and your sisters taking advantage of Mr. Holmes when she has given Joan fair employment?"
"But I am Joan," Joan tried one more time, "and I don't have any sisters."
Jenny only shook her head. "Stuff and nonsense, Missie! Look at yourself in the mirror, girl. You are much prettier than Joan. Not only do you lack her unfortunate nose, the rest of your face - your eyes, lips and cheekbones - is much more attractive than hers. For another thing, you are a good two, perhaps even three inches shorter than the woman who came to my shop a week ago and your figure, with the exception of that lovely bosom, is much more petite than Joan's. Good lord, Missie, even your hair is longer, fuller and more richly colored than hers. The pair of you are simply too different in appearance for you to hope to carry off this charade."
*Well, I knew she was intelligent,* Joan thought ruefully, *And as I deduced in my journal last night, in her business, she needs to be able to assess the female form quickly and accurately. I never should have gone back there yesterday, but it was in all likelihood already too late. She had to be suspicious before that if she is this upset and certain now. Now what do I do?*
Unfortunately, Joan never had time to reach a solution before her stomach rebelled against the bit of milk he'd just forced down into it. Frantically, she put her hand to her mouth and ran to the water closet.
Bemused, Jenny Deavers followed in Joan's wake, but at a more sedate pace. She had just turned the corner in the hall when a horror-filled feminine shriek bid fair to deafen her. "Oh God, I am bleeding! Down THERE??!? That means. . . God DAMN you, Moriarty, to the darkest pits beyond HELL!"
Jenny was inside the water closet in an instant and saw the terrified girl, holding up her skirts and petticoats to reveal a pair of drawers stained a bright, wet red. Relief and then disgust flooded Jenny. "Oh, have done with it, girl," she ordered. "By the size of your bosom, I would say you are well old enough for this not to be your first flux."
Somehow, the words penetrated Joan's emotion-ridden mind, and she looked at her in confusion. "Flux?" she somehow got out.
Jenny shook her head. The girl simply did not know when to give up a bad game. "Your monthly flow, as you very well know, you little schemer. Your little act is not accomplishing anything so just stop this foolishness now."
But Joan never heard Jenny. All she could think of was that the transformation had actually reached the point where she was subject to a woman's lunar cycle. "My god, it's really happened. I am menstruating. Now, what do I do??!?" Joan almost shrieked in her complete dismay.
*She certainly sounds as confused as she is trying to appear,* Jenny thought, *Well, I won't get anything more out of her until she's dealt with this so I might as well move her along.* "Oh, come along," she huffed. "Let's get you cleaned up and then I am going to see Mr. Holmes and get to the bottom of this."
Fifteen minutes later, Joan was back on the settee, cleaned up thanks to a rather ruthlessly applied scrubbing from Jenny, with a cup of weak tea in her hand, some dry toast on a plate in her lap, and a hot water bottle on her still cramping abdomen. And she did not even like to think about the wad of clean rags Jenny had oh-so-very-carefully showed her how to position between her legs.
"All right, young lady," a stern faced Jenny said as she swept back into the sitting room, "where is Mr. Sherlock Holmes? The figure on that bed is nothing more than a very clever wax dummy image like those at Madame Tousseau's museum. Tell me quickly, girl, for I am about one minute away from calling in Scotland Yard and sending you and your thieving sisters to the dock.
Joan sighed, and gave in. She trusted Jenny - always had for some reason she never quite understood - but she had not wanted to confide in her because there had seemed to be no point. After all, how could Jenny. . .ANYONE. . . possibly believe her? And beyond that, she did not want to make Jenny known as her accomplice to any of Moriarty's still unidentified henchmen. There was certainly no way Joan could possibly protect her friend if those villains decided Jenny would make a suitable hostage against her. But now, there appeared to be no other course, at least none that presented itself to her in her current mentally reduced condition of feminine overload.
"I will tell you everything, Jenny, although there is every reason to expect that you will not believe me." Jenny stood there, waiting without comment. "Please, sit down, and pour yourself some of this lovely weak tea. This will take a while."
Jenny sat quite primly, Joan noticed, in one of the straight-backed chairs he'd always kept for female clients. "Do you trust Sherlock Holmes, Jenny?" she asked gently.
"What kind of question is that," Jenny retorted, her color rising furiously.
"A very simple question, Jenny," Joan replied, "for example, do you trust that Holmes would keep a confidence for you, once you asked him to guard your secret?"
A sharp nod of her head gave emphasis to Jenny's immediate reply. "Mr. Holmes is the soul of discretion. His word is worth more than gold."
"Very well. Then let me tell you how you and I actually first met. Then you may ask me any questions you like and I will answer them honestly and completely."
"But we never met until just a few days ago," Jenny retorted firmly. "No, that is not correct. The person I met then had to be your older sister, Joan. You and I met only yesterday!"
"Not so, Jenny," Joan said, "let me tell you a story - a story that only you and one other person should know . . "
"In 1891, you, along with the former mistress of the Duke of Connamoragh, were victims in a blackmail scheme hatched by the Duke's younger brother. The youthful fool had been gambling in the wrong gaming hells and unless he somehow managed to pay his rather large debts very quickly, his life was in grave danger. Instead of going to his brother for assistance and a well deserved tongue lashing, he used certain information gleaned from his brother's diaries to locate and blackmail women who had at one time been mistresses to his brother and his brother's friends, but who had since become respectable members of Society in one fashion or another."
"How do you *know* that?" Jenny asked, her face no longer stern.
"Let me finish," Joan asked. "You were afraid for two reasons, Jenny. First, if it became known what you had done before becoming Madame Jeanne Marie, you would likely have lost a significant portion of your more class-conscious high society clientele. The second reason was you did not want the name of your last protector made public knowledge because you feared for his marriage to an American Heiress if that became common knowledge. Since the Duke and his brother have both passed on, only you and one other person know the name of that gentleman."
Jenny looked at the young girl laying upon the settee. "And you want me to believe that *you* know that name? Not bloody likely, Missie. Mr. Sherlock Holmes would die before betraying such a promise."
Joan drew herself up into a very erect posture, her face very solemn, "And so *I* would," she said quietly and very distinctly, "though in many respects, one might say that 'dying' is precisely what *I* have done."
Jenny's eyes drew sharply together as she looked at the disheveled girl before her. Something in that voice - despite the high register, and something in those eyes - *something* made that outrageous claim she had just heard seem imbued with the very integrity that had so defined Sherlock Holmes.
And then Joan, again employing that same precise, clipped manner of speech, told Jenny the name of the popular and well known English Lord whose marriage would have ended had the facts of his youthful infatuation and liaison with a young Jenny Deavers become public knowledge.
Shocked beyond words, Jenny gasped, for once cursing the usually-comforting constriction of her own corset, and said, "YOU are Sherlock Holmes?"
"At your service, Madame," the girl replied, the formal words so at odds with her appearance. And yet . . .
"You ARE Sherlock Holmes," Jenny declared, as much to herself as to the woman who she had just been convinced was in fact the great Sherlock Holmes. "But. . but. . ."
"Jenny, ask me any question you wish about that case. Let me prove to you that I am in possession of information that only Holmes could possibly know."
For almost a minute, Jenny stared at the young girl who claimed to be Mr. Sherlock Holmes. *Well, we'll just see about that!* she thought grimly, and began firing off questions only to have them answered in their turn - concisely, precisely and without hesitation. "And where did Mr. Holmes and I make love to celebrate his victory," she finally asked.
That brought forth a burst of laughter from the girl - quite unfeminine laughter, and at the same time, hauntingly familiar laughter. "That's not a fair question, Jenny, since just a few days ago you told me the answer to that question. We never made love, Jenny," Joan said in a more gentle tone. "In all truth, I was so absorbed in the case and the thrill of the chase, I never noticed that you had evidently made the attempt to offer me the great gift and pleasures of your bed. I apologize for that, for I now see that my indifference hurt you and I never intended that."
Jenny's mouth opened and closed twice before she finally managed to find her tongue. "I almost believed you until that last line, girl. Mr. Holmes apologizing?"
"I am a rather different Mr. Holmes, would you not say, Jenny? While the gentler human feelings are often still quite alien to my nature, I have, in recent times, become on a somewhat more familiar basis with them. Thus, I know that, without meaning to have done, I hurt you."
"You certainly don't talk like a young lady just out of the school room," Jenny said wonderingly, "but if you are really Mr. Sherlock Holmes, and I find that I truly believe that you are, what happened to you?"
Joan quickly recounted Moriarty's scheme, leaving out the part about his intention to take his own life, and the events up to that very day.
"Well," Jenny said with just a hint of smile, "That certainly explains you damning this Moriarty fellow to the. . .how did you put it? To the darkest pits beyond hell when you found out you were suffering from your flux."
"Damn you, Jenny, don't you dare smile at me like that. This is definitely NOT funny!" Joan said with exaggerated bluster, "And suffering is precisely accurate, Jenny. Not only that, but I evidently expended two of my precious doses of the drug to no real purpose. That will cost me at least a day of searching time - once I am physically able to take up the search again."
"Well, I hear tell the first flux is always the hardest, even on girls who have been taught what to expect by their Mums. Must be really hard on a fellow who thought he'd slip through life without ever tasting that little gift of Nature's."
"Just so," Joan replied dryly, earning a not-very-sympathetic laugh from Jenny.
The older woman's smile became thoroughly wicked as she considered the possibilities. "Ah, Holmes, if only you knew how many times I had wished this exact condition on one of my former protectors. The arrogant, strutting little peacocks, calling *me* unclean when they'd leave me disappointed after arriving at my door unannounced and wanting a bit of sport during my time of the month. It was as if they were convinced I did it on purpose," Jenny snarled and then smiled, a very female, very devious little smile. "So, Holmes, that potion really does what you say it does? Each time you get a little younger, a little smaller and a little more feminine?"
"Yes, although since this is, in fact, a woman's cyclic response to the moon I am suffering through at the moment, I am hard pressed to come up with any changes that would be more feminine than this." It was said with a weak smile that surprised Joan.
"Pregnancy is said to be the most feminine of conditions," Jenny offered ever-so-sweetly.
"Which, praise the merciful providence, requires the physical intervention of another person - an intervention which I can assure you will not take place."
Jenny shrugged before smiling again. "So, about that formula, Holmes. Know how to get more of it? I really do think I have a use for some of it."
Joan managed a laugh, hoping she'd meant that as a joke. Still, she wasn't truly certain because she simply kept smiling that very unnerving smile. "Sadly, Jenny, I do not have the recipe nor the ingredients - only that one small bottle that has barely a week's worth of the drug left. And since I cannot reproduce the formula for you, I wouldn't recommend you go hunting for your former protectors with a hypodermic needle in your reticule."
"Too bad," Jenny grinned in gentle commiseration. "I guess that is true enough, Mr. Holmes. . . Lord, but you being so small and pretty laying there, calling you Mr. Holmes feels. . .well, cursed strange."
"Joan is fine for now, if you prefer that form of address, Jenny. Actually, I made a promise to myself to become as womanly and feminine as possible in the future - especially when I am with you. My thinking being that you and Maisie could, unwittingly, help me perfect my disguise."
"I don't think this is the disguise anymore, Joan, not if the changes are really as permanent as you say."
"Much the same conclusion I arrived at last night myself, Jenny. However, it is not as if I am going to have to live with it much longer in any case. As I said earlier, I wasted a dose of my paltry hoard of the drug today because I thought this 'flux' was another flare up of the withdrawal symptoms," Joan said resignedly before something peaked her interest. "I must say, Jenny, that you were easier to convince than I would have been in your place."
"Nonsense, dearie. As I said, Mr. Holmes' word was always good as gold. Only two ways you could have known the story and the name you just told me. Either because Mr. Holmes told you the story or because you are, as unbelievable as that sounded, Mr. Holmes. The thing is, Joan, I simply found it more unbelievable that Mr. Holmes would have dishonored a promise like that."
A tear formed and ran down Joan' cheek. *The effects of an over actively female constitution,* she scoffed mentally as she batted the tear away. "You humble me, Jenny," she said quietly.
"So, what happens now, Joan?"
"Time is running out for me and I have found nothing here in England to further my investigations. At some point, I will have to give up on my inquiries here and go to the Continent," Joan laid her head back. "Somehow, I need to get papers - and a passport. And I just don't have much time left."
"Papers aren't difficult," Jenny said firmly.
Joan eyes shot open and she looked at Jenny sharply. "I beg your pardon?"
"Now, now, we'll have none of that, if you please, Missie!" Jenny scolded with a mischievous smile. "What about your promise to be womanly in my presence? In any case, what I said was that obtaining papers is not difficult. I have some friends in the Home Office. Actually, I have some friends whose husbands are in the Home Office. Who do you want to be?"
The quiet confidence in her voice convinced Joan who remembered how many women owed the kindly shop owner who had made them beautiful when they ventured into the Marriage Mart. "Well, I have a plan, such as it is, that might permit me to reclaim my home and property if I survive this experience." Joan said hesitantly.
"You mean there is a chance you might survive? I thought you said the withdrawal was ultimately fatal."
"Moriarty is trying to perfect the drug and eliminate the side effects and the addiction problems. There is a chance that, if I can find him, I might be able to survive."
Jenny heard the barest hint of hope in the softly feminine voice. "All right, Joan. Tell me what to do."
Joan nodded and managed a smile for her friend. "My final will and testament has not changed since Watson died, Jenny. He was my primary heir. His wife died, leaving him only a brother. Suppose that brother had a heretofore unknown daughter."
"By the name of Joan, Joan-dear?" Jenny said with a smile.
"Just so, Jenny."
"Well, that might work, if Watson did not have any other relatives, Joan, either real ones or believable frauds."
"None at all," Joan replied with certainty, "I have checked through my own sources."
"Come now, dear, you are a man. . .err . . woman of the world. The Holmes estate, thanks to your brother Mycroft, is substantial and many a fortune hunter will be looking for ways to get his or her hands on it before the government can become involved and tie everything up for years."
"So?" Joan asked, "there really isn't much I can do about that, is there?"
"It seems to me that the state would be your executor, then, would they not?" Jenny asked?
Joan puzzled over that for a moment. "As I understand English law, Jenny. Why do you ask?"
"If you, as Mr. Sherlock Holmes, were to write a letter to Watson, or in his death, your legal executor, acknowledging paternity of your unacknowledged girl child, a Miss Sherla Joan Holmes, and directing him to ensure that she is granted her just birthright? If there were such a document, would they not comply with your wishes?"
Joan snapped upright, sitting up and staring at the grinning Jenny. "Explain yourself," she ordered, just barely remembering to speak with Joan's soft, feminine lilt."An unacknowledged girl child, Jenny? Confound it, Madame, what are you talking about?"
"Bear with me, Joan, and please *do* remember to behave like a lady and not some crude male. Would the government be required to comply with the wishes in such a letter?"
Something in the nature of a hidden codicil to my final will?" Joan mused. "That would need to be witnessed and sealed, in much the same way as the will to work."
Jenny's lovely face fell. "Oh, that is too bad."
"Ah, but that's not the real problem, you see, for the solicitor who wrote my will and the witnesses thereto, my brother Mycroft and Dr. Watson, are all deceased. As to the existence of such a signed and witnessed document, I am, or rather, I was, a rather skillful forger when the situation demanded it in the past."
"But can you do it now, Joan?"
"Well enough, I suppose. My eye is still good enough to tell if it s a good forgery. I suspect that I can manage quite handily. Mother unknown?"
Jenny's eyes twinkled merrily as she smiled at Joan. "Well, let's just think about that, Miss Sherla Joan Holmes, shall we? Would not the existence of a maternal parent who could provide corroborating evidence be useful as well?"
"This is becoming too bizarre, Jenny. Just what are you proposing?"
"Well, Sherlock Holmes and I were together, dear, twenty years ago. You could almost pass for twenty years old now, and presuming you continue to take that drug, you will do so easily in the very near term. We will say that Holmes and I had an affair, and I, Madame Jeanne Marie became enceinte."
"That won't pass muster, Jenny. The only man with a more misogynistic reputation than Sherlock Holmes was my brother Mycroft."
"Foolish boy. . . I mean, girl, of course it will be believed. Misogynist or not, that was the height of the Victorian era - a period of English history known for public morals and private debauchery. Of course Society will believe you are his daughter because that is what Society will want to believe, regardless of the facts. Especially if I say you are my daughter by Holmes. Then, when they search your papers for your will, if they also find records such as a ledger of you making child support payments to me or paying tuition to some Swiss boarding school, or a copy of a birth certificate with your and my names on it. . . oh blast!" Jenny broke off.
"What's the matter," Joan asked, greatly amused by Jenny's enthusiasm.
"The papers will be brand new. They won't look twenty years old. And besides, that bastard Carroll would have had a copy in the records turned over to him by your old solicitor, wouldn't he?"
Miss Holmes chuckled deep within her throat. "Not necessarily, if it was a secret codicil of a very special nature -which this one would have been. As to the aging of the documents, let me worry about that. There are chemical processes available to me that will age those papers so that not even another expert will be able to discern any difference between them and actual documents of that time frame. It does seem odd, however, that I, that is, *Sherla*, would turn up suddenly without anyone knowing about me through my father or through you," she noted.
"Nonsense, dear, that is how many children born on the wrong side of the blanket are dealt with in Society. After all, the great Sherlock Holmes had no interest in raising children, and my reputation would have been utterly ruined by having and then raising some man's love child. We'll say you were raised from infancy by a nanny and a governess in the country - some nice remote place like the far reaches of Cornwall - and then you were sent to a foreign boarding school on the Continent when you were old enough. Of course, as your Mother, when I heard that Mr. Holmes, *your* father, had died, I, of course, summoned his daughter to come and collect her inheritance. We could even say that is why you went to his apartments, disguised as Joan, so you could take care of him in his last hours."
"And you believe we could pull that off?" Joan asked warily.
"With the right papers?" Jenny reposited, "yes, I do." She stood and walked over to Holmes and cupped the younger woman's chin in her hand. Jenny turned Holmes' face to the right, then to the left and then looked directly into her eyes. "You even have the look of a younger Holmes," she mused aloud, "If one looks hard enough for him in your visage. Although, the resemblance does seem to be less each day, doesn't it? You are really becoming quite lovely."
Miss Holmes jerked her head back and glared at Jenny. "Thank you ever so much."
"Oh, don't go on like that. If you are going to be a woman, and you evidently are, my dear, it is far better to be an attractive woman than an ugly one. You gain much more power that way, trust me."
Sherla snorted, then realized how unladylike that sounded and managed a little sniff. *Well, I had already concluded much the same things in my journal last night. Still, it won't serve to let her get too much of an upper hand in this partnership. "We'll see. As to this little disguise, haven't you forgotten one thing? Won't this little scheme unmask you as an immoral woman to Society? Won't that endanger your business?"
"It might," Jenny agreed, "but then again, it might not. It really doesn't signify at this point in my life as I don't need to work any longer, Sherla. I have more than enough blunt put aside with Mr. Nickleby to last many more years than I have left on this earth. Besides, being the Mother of Sherlock Holmes' daughter just might make me the toast of the town."
"You're quite sure you are not only willing to do this," Miss Holmes asked softly, "but want to do it?"
Jenny nodded, a suspicious sheen in her eyes. "I told you, didn't I, that I always wanted to be a Mother?"
"Yes, but I am a little beyond the age of needing one, Jenny," the newly named Sherla smiled.
"There you are wrong, dear. You are like a baby you know so little about being a woman. You need Mothering now more than you ever needed it as a young lad."
"Well, that would not be difficult since my mother was a weakling who had been beaten into submission by my bastard of a father."
The tears did flow from Jenny's eyes now. "Then you definitely need a little mothering, dear. Both of you do.
"If you say so, Mother - Jenny."
"I say so, Sherla. Now, let me get something to write with and you can tell me what papers and other credentials you are going to need me to obtain for you."
Chapter 18. Decision Points
Eventually, Jenny decided she would spend the night at the Baker Street rooms. "A girl's first flow is always a challenge, Sherla, and more than just a little frightening. Most girls have their Mum to help them through it."
An small grin flitted across the other woman's face. "I thought we decided you *were* my Mum, Jenny."
Jenny went very still. "I believe we have already had this discussion," she said very softly, almost fearfully."
"Oh, Jenny, I am sorry," Sherla said quickly, before she had a chance to be surprised at how much Jenny's sad reaction bothered her "I didn't mean to hurt you! I was just trying to let you know that I like the idea as well. If you don't want to be called Mother or Mum, then I won't."
Jenny closed her eyes tightly, and then took a deep, slightly shuddering breath to calm herself. "I'd like it a great deal, Sherla," she said, her voice breaking audibly once, "I'm just not sure if it would be a very good idea. Given your current status and plans, that is," Jenny added hurriedly.
Something inside Sherla felt and responded to the wistful hunger in Jenny's soul. "Well, I think that I am more than capable of handling such things," she said with an intentional arrogance that had Jenny gaping at her. "My suggestion is that I can call you Mother or Mum in private until I am in possession of papers identifying me as the daughter of Miss Jennifer Deavers by Mr. Sherlock Holmes."
That had both pleased and concerned Jenny. She truly yearned to mother this girl with the brain of an old man, and yet, part of her worried that Sherla, still posing as Joan, might err in the presence of other people. Sighing softly, she said as much.
"I have been disguising myself in one way or another, since I first escaped from my harpy of a governess - when I was not yet out of the nursery, Mum. I have always prided myself on my ability to stay in role. Many's the time that ability has saved my life. I won't make that type of error."
"If you're sure then, yes, having you call me Mum would make me very happy." And so it had been agreed. Jenny was as good as her word, staying home with Sherla throughout that traumatic and messy first experience with a woman's cycle. Even the Holmes' mind was not inured to the humiliation of having its body's hygienic needs explained and then demonstrated upon its person. Sherla had blushed from hairline to toes, but Jenny had been gently firm, and they had managed to get through the day in a good humor.
That evening, over the first decent dinner Sherla had eaten since the night Sherlock Holmes had concentrated a solution of what he'd thought to be cocaine, the two woman chatted about the next step in Miss Holmes plans.
A small flicker of emotion had flared in Jenny's dark eyes. "What about your . . . what did you call it? Your mission? Won't that be dangerous?"
Sherla frowned as she considered the implications of that and finally nodded. "You are correct, of course. I don't want you to become of a target for Moriarty's men. In fact, when I arrange for the surveillance on Carroll, I will also arrange for discreet security for you. As for me? That mission is something I must do if I at all can. In the past, I was the only one who was able to stop Moriarty, and by his own words, he believed I was the only one who might possibly stop him this time, as well. It would be false modesty on my part not to agree with him."
Jenny became very still and then continued, "It is not just you and me, Sherla, involved in this situation. Should I send Maisie away? You have decided this course for yourself, and I have lived a full life, but she is just beginning to live. I do not want her harmed in any way."
"I don't think that is a problem, Mother," Sherla said quietly. "I will see to both your safeties before I depart for the Continent. In truth, I believe the greatest danger we will face is during the period before I leave London, or in other words, during the days when the world still believes Sherlock Holmes to be alive."
"You have decided how you are going to arrange the death?"
"Some details remain to be worked out yet. It has to look like an accident, but at the same time, the incident must also be something that Moriarty can interpret as a suicide disguised to look like an accident."
"You'll need a body, won't you? One that looks like you enough to fool the police? How will you do that?"
"Haven't decided yet, Jenny. Suicide at sea, perhaps? Or in a fiery conflagration. For enough money, it is fairly common for medical students to purchase cadavers unclaimed by any family members for surgical and anatomical studies. One of those would do nicely if it comes to that. That might be more acceptable for Moriarty. I could arrange an explosion that would cause the fire. The body would be all but cremated if I do it correctly. If I do it in a fairly rural area, the local constabulary will have neither the tools nor the interest to explore the case further. In fact, the most difficult part of the scheme may be getting Holmes' name in the paper."
"I see," Jenny said very quietly.
"I could simply disappear - Sherlock Holmes has done that in the past - and leave a suicide note. Eventually, given my . .. or rather, his age, they'd have to accept that and probate the will, but it might take a while. I don't trust Carroll not to try and. . . benefit unduly from my supposed demise."
"When?" was all Jenny could ask.
"Soon," Sherla said quietly. "I am running out of the drug and therefore out of time. I have to go to the Continent as soon as possible. I prepared the way for Holmes to go to the country when Carroll called on me here. The accident should occur en route."
"How will Holmes be seen leaving Baker Street?"
"I have an idea on that score, too, Jenny, but it may involve some risk to you. And I still need the identification papers."
*She calls me Mother or Mum when we are just chatting,* Jenny thought with fond amusement, *but when she is worried about my well being or concerned for me, she calls me Jenny. A holdover from Holmes-the-man? Should I call her on it? No, better to just let her be as natural as possible.*
"All right then," Jenny said. "Tonight I shall send personal notes to certain women who owe me favors asking if I might call upon them tomorrow. That will start the process of your new papers as Sherla Joan Holmes."
"How long?" Sherla asked.
"Not long," Jenny said assuredly. "I have done similar things before to get one or two of my girls into or out of England. Day after tomorrow - the day after that at the very latest."
"I have some things I wish to check on tomorrow around Whitehall. I think the day dress still fits well enough, doesn't it?"
Jenny grinned. "I will adjust some of the seams and raise the hem so that you can go back to the Cuban heels tonight, dear. You have grown sufficiently short that I can turn the embroidery completely under the hem this time."
Miss Holmes sighed gratefully. "Well, that was a wonderful dinner, Mum, but I have this strong urgent compulsion to offer you port and cigars."
"I wouldn't do that, if I were you, Sherla," Jenny said with an impish grin, "although I will admit that during my younger, wilder days, I rather delighted upon intruding upon that male bastion and demanding my own glass and smoke. Of course, that only made me more of an original and more highly in demand. Very desirable in my former profession."
"I unconsciously tried to smoke my pipe that first night and found that Sherla is incapable of ingesting tobacco in any form. My formerly beloved shag rough-cut very nearly caused me to become violently ill and I did not even fill, let alone light the cursed pipe. And then *you* taught me about my recently acquired, very low tolerance for alcohol. You got me quite foxed that first day, Mother."
"Did you good!" Jenny affirmed. "Now, why don't you get ready for bed and I will see to cleaning up from dinner. I am sure you are fatigued. I know that I am and I only watched as you went through your first Penance of Eve."
Sherla rose from her chair and then, very deliberately, pressed a kiss to Jenny's cheek. "You did much more than simply watch, Mum. I like to think I would have survived on my own, but you made it much less difficult for me. Thank you."
"You're very welcome, dear," Jenny said just above a whisper before firming her voice. "Now, to bed with you and don't forget to cleanse yourself as I taught you. Call if you need help with the padding."
Another fiery flush blazed across Sherla's face. "Thank you, but I believe that won't be necessary. Good night, Mother."
"Good night, dear," Jenny said, turning her head toward the remnants of their meal in order to hide the small grin that she could not seem to stop.
Jenny drew on a robe and hurried out of the room. She discovered she was better than half right - it was Sherla and she was in trouble, but it had nothing to do with her menstruation - at least not directly. Sherla was struggling to fill a hypodermic needle from a small amber bottle, but with very little success.
For a few moments, Jenny simply observed, unsure what to do. Clearly, the withdrawal Sherla had told Jenny about had struck and struck hard. Sherla's breaths were coming in rapid, shallow pants, leaving her lips too dry for her tongue to moisten. She was seated at her desk, her bosom straining against her nightgown as she wedged her breasts onto the table top in an evidently vain attempt to help control the shaking of the hypodermic long enough for her to fill it.
*Those symptoms she told me about, and by the look of her, they are very harsh today. Why can't she sit still?* Jenny asked herself. *She is shifting about in that chair as if her bottom hurts. Why didn't she tell me about that symptom? Likely she has always been too busy trying to treat herself with the drug to notice something that doesn't directly affect her ability to inject herself. Well, she can't hold her hands steady either. She needs help.*
Her decision made, Jenny stepped into the room and gently put her hands over Sherla's. "I'll do this," she said softly. "You just tell me how."
Slowly, Sherla relaxed her knuckle-whitening grip on the bottle and the needle. Her voice shook with the force of her effort to control herself as she slowly and deliberately explained how to fill the needle and administer the potion - which Jenny did with remarkable aplomb.
As always, the effects of the drug were immediate; the fiery heat in her abdomen swiftly subsided, the cramping eased, and the almost painful sensitivity of her skin dulled. "Thank you," Sherla said in a rasping whisper.
"What happened?" Jenny demanded.
"I tried to extend my time between doses," Sherla replied. "I have so little of it left and I wasted a dose yesterday. I started shaking at about three o'clock. I was determined to overcome this. . . this abomination by sheer force of will, but finally just couldn't take it any more. I almost didn't get the dose this time. Thank you again, Mum."
"So, now we can go back to bed?"
"I will certainly have to," Sherla said with a hint of a smile. She quickly explained the immediate effects of the drug even as she made her way back to bed.
*Sounds like I need to use the water closet for myself now, and make certain I am not in her way when she awakens,* Jenny thought with a smile.
The result of three doses in two days had been a measurable acceleration in Sherla's rate of reduction in both size and age. She was almost an inch shorter than before her menses began - nearly down to five feet, two and three quarters inches, and between the drugs and the elimination of fluid during her monthly, down to nearly 115 pounds in weight. Jenny had been disgusted with the corset since she hardly had to use any force at all to close it up during lacing. "You get a new one of these, my girl, today!" She had said, the words a promise and not a threat.
When they left the room at Baker Street, they did so by separate cab. They did not want to have to explain things to Maisie.
Entry in the Journal of Miss Sherla Joan Holmes
Date: February 13, 1911.
Time: 6:02 P.M.
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End Journal Entry.
Chapter 19. Escape!
The hansom cab clattered to a halt in front of 221B Baker Street just as the sun was sinking beneath the horizon. Jenny Deavers paid the driver and hurried inside to escape the chilly, damp February night. Things had not gone as well as they might have done this day, and she felt the need to be with Sherla to support her just then.
As she removed her muffler and bonnet in the downstairs foyer, Jenny heard a soft, sad, but almost-sweet sound issuing from the upper rooms. She stopped to listen for a moment, trying to put a name to source of that sound. She was halfway up the stairs when a particularly sour note intruded on the otherwise haunting tones. A stern "Damn!" followed that note, whereupon the music, for that is what Jenny realized it was, resumed.
Violin music, but not any composition Jenny recognized, and she considered herself something of an afficionado of such things. It was a taste she'd developed as a gentleman's mistress. Going to the symphony had been one of her great pleasures in those days gone by, and music continued to be something she greatly enjoyed now that she was a modiste.
Jenny let herself into the Holmes establishment and immediately saw the source of the music. There, seated in the large comfortable chair, feet pulled up in front of her, was Sherla playing on an obviously fine and expensive violin. Her eyes were closed and there was as soft, utterly sensual smile playing on her full, angel-bowed lips. Jenny could almost forgive the girl her grossly unfeminine posture for the lovely sounds she was making with that beautiful instrument.
Another sour note broke the spell and was followed by another "Damn!" Sherla opened her eyes and stared at her left hand poised over the throat of the instrument. The look would have frozen water and Jenny wondered how those fingers would DARE misbehave in such a manner ever again.
"Ahem!" Jenny called out.
Sherla's head came up in surprise. "Jen. . I mean, Mother!" she said with a smile of welcome, "I did not hear you enter."
"Obviously, or you would be seated like a lady in that chair instead of looking like one of the apes on display down at the Tower of London."
Sherla managed a creditable blush, but hurriedly put her feet down on the floor, stood up to shake out her skirts, and then reseated herself with the grace and care Jenny had taught her that morning. "I've been practicing," Sherla said with a gamine grin that surprised Jenny almost as much as the music.
"Not enough if that is how I find you when I get home," she said trying to be stern, but in the end, her curiosity got the better of her. "How long have you played? What was that beautiful, haunting melody? Where did you get the violin - it is beautiful."
"It is a Stradivarius," Sherla replied as she rubbed her tender fingertips together. *Hmmm, I seem to have lost my playing calluses as well.* "It belongs to me. . .I mean, it belonged to Mr. Sherlock Holmes. I have played since childhood. The melody, that I was not playing very well thanks to fingers that are smaller than I am used to playing music with, is not really from any known work. I was simply playing to try and help me think."
"I see," Jenny said quietly, "About what?"
"Options," Sherla replied, "and how few of them I have. I looked up the paper-aging process in my chemical monographs today, Mother. It takes a minimum of twenty four hours. I cannot leave until all the documents are completed and where they belong. That delays my start for the Continent another day. Time is running out for me and Moriarty will win, damn his black soul."
"There is no hope for more of the drug, or better yet, an antidote?" Jenny asked
Miss Sherla Holmes shook her head. "None. I have no idea what the ingredients are, and therefore, no way of attempting to concoct an antidote. By the time we can leave here, day after tomorrow, I will be down to approximately four doses, perhaps five if I can stretch the drug a bit, but no more."
"So what were you thinking of so musically, dear?" Jenny asked gently.
"I've been racking my brains, ever since I returned to Baker Street from my oh-so-fruitless trip to old Moriarty sites, to come up with the name of a man, *any* man to whom I could give the onerous task of stopping that Napoleon of Crime.
"And you can think of none?"
"Nary a one, Mother. I have heard some very positive reports about one or two fellows, but I have never met them to assess their mettle to my own satisfaction. And while I have met several very good, honest policemen in my years of consultation, I have never met one with the brilliance to stand a chance even against an age-diminished Moriarty. Not that I can safely assume that he is or will be all that diminished.
Jenny sat quietly for a long time, saying nothing, her eyes focused on something far away. Finally, she spoke. "And I don't suppose, that in all of your years, you ever met a woman who might have such capabilities?" Jenny shook her head angrily. "Of course you haven't. Not only does Society frown upon intelligent, powerful women, other than Queen Victoria, of course, but you as Holmes would not have recognized such attributes in a mere woman."
Taken aback by Jenny's outburst, Sherla sat back in the deep cushioned chair. "I recognized them in you, Jenny," she eventually said, then her own eyes became unfocused. "Come to think of it, there was another - Irene Adler."
"Who?" Jenny's head perked up.
"An opera singer with a talent for investigations. At least twice that I know of, she bested me in a battle of wits."
"She was a criminal?" Jenny was clearly appalled that a woman, an EVIL woman, might have defeated Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
A chuckle relieved her fears. "Nothing like that. In both cases, it was only honorable that she overcome, and well done of her to have done so. Still, she did best me. . . I wonder. . "
The violin came back to her chin and soon, the eerie, sweet music again filled the rooms. Jenny was content to listen, and watch her friend submerge herself in the joy of playing the violin. This went on for nearly a half hour when, quite suddenly, the music changed to something that sounded very much like an Irish jig.
"By Jove, Mother, you are in the right of it. I must go to Paris, find Irene, and task her to the stopping of Moriarty. By Heavens, it is perfect. If he uses the same potion on her, he will only be creating his own worst enemy. Irene is magnificent as a woman, but were she to be changed into a man - a YOUNG man - she would be practically be equal to me at my best!"
Still not certain she trusted a woman who had found it necessary to "best" Mr. Sherlock Holmes (and not really entirely convinced this opera singer actually could have done so), Jenny's response was obviously lukewarm.
Sherla heard the uncertainty, and quickly gave Jenny the particulars on the Bohemian King case during which, Holmes had met Irene Adler.
"And she dresses in men's clothing?" she asked incredulously. When Sherla nodded in the affirmative. "Lord, that is something I always wanted to do, but never quite had the courage to try in my youth."
"Odd you should mention that, Jenny. Day after tomorrow, I have a task for you as part of my plan to escape.
"Oh really? Aren't you going to tell me what that task is?" Jenny asked, only to smile when she got the expected negative response from her foster daughter. "Oh very well, then, be that way. Then you might as well deal with these," she added, tossing a small bundle to Sherla. "Those are the papers you asked me to procure for you from my friends and contacts."
Sherla quickly scanned through the various documents, a smile forming that quickly grew radiant. "Well done, Mother. Thank you. I will start aging these while you prepare dinner.
For all his inadequacy as a driver, using him in that role did provide additional protection for the mission's secrecy. The would-be doctor had a great deal riding on the successful outcome of this mission. Jenny now had written authority to withdraw the Holmes Estate's financial support that would put the young man through medical school in some degree of comfort. If he talked imprudently about this little adventure, his dreams of a medical career might as well go up the nearest chimney as smoke.
"Everything is in readiness? All three special cargos are here?" Sherla finally asked.
"Yes, Ma'am," the young would-be doctor replied. "Two in the back and the other thing in the main compartment. Good thing it's chilly, though, Ma'am."
"True," Sherla might have said more, but just then the Baker Street door opened again to allow a very old, bent man to make his painful way up to the landau. Sherla, as nurse, hurried to assist her patient into the carriage. "Let us be on our way," she ordered as she herself ascended into the cab, "I wish to be at the way-station by noon."
The suddenly spritely old man hurried into the mens' room while Sherla went into the ladies' convenience. They met outside but a few moments later. "All clear," they both said simultaneously. Quickly, the three opened the after baggage compartment. Working together, they strained to remove two long, narrow and relatively heavy bags from within the baggage compartment whereupon the two "men" carried one bag into each of the two restrooms while Sherla kept watch.
Each bag was then perched upon one of the seats provided inside the outdoor facilities. Then Sherla opened her portmanteau and removed a large paper-wrapped package with a clock device affixed to the top of it. The box was set immediately in front of the larger of the two bags in the men's side of the privies. In the meantime, the driver and the "old man" carried in the "third package", a costume-dummy dressed in women's clothing. Quickly, the "old man" stripped off the clothing and the makeup to reveal Jenny.
Sherla helped Jenny don the dummy's more normal feminine attire. "You are sure everything will burn," Jenny asked one last time.
"Yes, the explosive includes substantial portions of white phosphorous and magnesium. The explosion will become incendiary almost immediately, and there is nothing known to science, short of allowing it to burn itself out, that can extinguish that type of fire. The dummy was specifically constructed of particularly flammable materials and these old buildings are redolent with highly combustible hydrocarbon compounds. This place, and everything in it will be reduced to ashes within minutes. Now, you and the driver must go to the inn and demand meals for four. I will give you two minutes to get inside the inn, and then I will set the timer for two minutes and go hide in the woods as we planned."
"As YOU planned, Miss," Jenny said caustically. "I still believe I should accompany you - young ladies, such as you are *now*, are expected to travel with companions to protect their virtue."
"And female though I am *now*," Sherla retorted with a gentle smile, *I am not traveling as a Lady, Jenny, but as an underpaid companion on my way to France to meet with an English lady living abroad who wishes to hire me. Such women as I will purport to be *do* travel alone. In fact, it might raise suspicion if I were *not* traveling alone." Sherla saw her arguments were having as little effect on Jenny as the last time they had this . . . "discussion". "Mother," she finally said in a very quiet voice. "This could be dangerous. I cannot do what I MUST do if I am worried about you. Please," she finally added.
Jenny stared at her for a long moment, and then swept the girl into a fierce hug. "You damn well come home safely, girl!" she ordered intensely. "I don't want to lose the daughter I have always yearned for just days after I finally meet her."
"God speed, Mother," Sherla said.
"God speed to you as well, daughter," Jenny said before she stepped out of the room.
Sherla heard the springs of the landau creak, and the horses' shod feet clank against the stone drive. She mentally counted off one hundred twenty seconds while she made one last check to ensure no one was approaching the privies, and then set the timer on her explosive device. She snatched up her portmanteau, and hurried into the woods, away from the Inn. *Thankfully, there isn't any snow and this stone will not give the local police any footprint clues.*
One hundred twenty seconds later, the outdoor privy building exploded in a blaze of white light, red flames and black smoke. As Sherla had predicted, in less than five minutes, the walls of the building collapsed under the hellish heat. By the time anyone from the inn arrived on the scene, there was little left but ashes.
However, a high pitched feminine squeal told Sherla, that perhaps something recognizable might have survived from the two cadavers the medical student had procured and helped them plant on the scene. *Good bye, Mr. Sherlock Holmes and unknown nurse,* she thought grimly. *Rest in peace.*
Without a backward glance, Miss Sherla Holmes turned away and started walking parallel to the road towards Dover. She'd flag down the next packet along the way. With any luck, she'd be in Dover by nightfall.
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Well, he had anticipated this. Holmes, like Moriarty himself, was a creature of pure intellect. Eventually, the creeping consumption of femininity had eaten away at that magnificent mind, slowly destroying its power and reason. Naturally, Holmes must have reached the point where he could no longer tolerate such a diminution of powers, and had elected to end it all. Much as he had planned to do before Moriarty had inadvertently interfered. A chuckle broke the silence. That merely delayed the death, and it meant Holmes had been forced to deal with his loss while trying to come up with a means to carry to fight to Moriarty.
So, in the end, the great Sherlock Holmes had failed, and the Professor had won. He looked down and read the article once again. *I wonder how Holmes managed to get the male body to burn? The driver's comment about dead weight is a dead give away. Holmes must have set the explosive device himself, and then went to the women's facility to make it look like an accident,* Then, another thought struck Moriarty. *It would appear that it is just as well that I resisted the temptation to leave any clues or false trails to tease Miss Holmes. Waste of time I did not and still do not have. Most particularly if doing so would not have added substantially to Miss Holmes' feelings of ill use and torment.*
Moriarty raised his glass in toast. "To Holmes, my old enemy. Even in your madness and in the method of your death, you were brilliant. You were almost a matchless foe, but I am Moriarty. Ultimately, it had to end this way." He finished his drink and threw the glass into the fireplace. "Good Riddance, Mr. Sherlock Holmes."
Chapter 20: Adrift on a Sea of Memories
Sherla stood upon the open weather deck of the small sailing ferry that was making its way through the English Channel. She was grateful for the small favor of clear if chilly weather for she had not purchased a first class ticket that would have granted her access to the interior compartments of the small vessel. That would have been inconsistent with her role as an impoverished, traveling gentlewoman, and she preferred to deviate from that guise as little as possible until she could lose herself in the French interior.
As fortune would have it, this small but fast ship was actually the best imaginable solution to Sherla's current problems. The graceful little sloop permitted her to follow her original plan of staying in character until she'd arrived in France without sacrificing the speed she urgently required.
Sherla had already been forced to take some liberties with her carefully thought out strategy after arriving in Dover the previous night. She'd hoped to be able to sail for France immediately upon her arrival in the city, but none of the sailing schedules were compatible with her drug administration schedule. That had necessitated taking a private (and rather costly) room at the White Cliff Inn.
Her planned course of action to maintain as low a profile as possible during the English leg of her voyage had been, at least temporarily, abandoned. The unrelenting demand of her body for Moriarty's drug and the equally vital need for privacy when she dealt with the potion's aftereffects had ultimately taken precedence. If bespeaking the room had called her to the attention of some Moriarty underling, then so be it. She would deal with that when the consequences arose as best she could.
Staying the night in that room had, however, cost Sherla twelve critical hours she did not have to spare. That morning over breakfast, she had decided it was time to abandon her disguise completely and to make a decisive move. Sherla had looked into chartering a boat, but as it turned out, none of the available vessels would have gotten her to France any sooner than this ferry.
Alone in her thoughts, Sherla made her way around towards the bow of the ferry. Most of the other second and third class customers were crowded in behind the deckhouse, trying to stay out of the wind and thus stay as warm as possible. Miss Holmes decided that she required privacy more than comfort at that moment.
Happily, she found a small bench set behind the forecastle which blunted the wind well enough for her purposes. Carefully, she set down the her small reticule in which she carried the second set of papers Jenny had provided for her. These identified her as a Miss Daphne Barnstable of Sussex and had been procured against the fear that some easily bribed customs official might find the name "Miss S. Holmes" just a mite too memorable. Additionally, she laid down a small, brown paper-wrapped parcel that contained a letter of introduction from Mr. Sherlock Holmes as well as certain memorabilia that Sherla fervently hoped would help establish her true identity with the indomitable Irene Adler.
From her portmanteau, Sherla removed her journal and, after checking for prying eyes, Mr. Sherlock Holmes' prized reservoir fountain pen. She had, of necessity, left the violin in Jenny's keeping, but the pen had seemed too important to leave behind. It had been a birthday gift from Watson. With a soft sigh for that memory, Sherla opened the journal and began to write.
Date: February 16, 1911
Entry in the Journal of Miss Sherla Joan Holmes
Location: Aboard the English Channel Ferry-Sloop, Dover Princess.
Time: Approximately 11:00 A.M.
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End Journal Entry.
February 16, 1911
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End Journal Entry.