hi, all! welcome to my little corner where i post my writing and ramblings <3 i bounce between interests so you can expect a whole lot of things here. always dueling with writer's block
Did breath of life end? Or the next part is coming?
i plan to continue it one day <3 i have another series over on ao3 that i've been trying to prioritze atm, but i've really been biting off more than i can chew w everything else going on in my life lol
Hiya! I just found your account and I love that you write for James from Young Sherlock! Do you think youâll do another part to your series? No worries if not, I just loved your Part 1 and was ecstatic to see you made a part 2 and Iâm greedy. I hope your day is lovely :)
hi there !! i can totally see adding more to the series eventually tho i'm not sure when exactly.. but it's been awesome seeing how much love the series has and i'm so happy u enjoyed it <333 thank u so much, dear! hope ur doing well too <3
âË⥠ma meillure ennemie part 2 | james moriarty x reader
âpairing: james moriarty x reader
âwc: 9.7k
âsummary: after a passionate night together, moriarty and reader still have a case to solve - and sherlock has another mystery he wants to solve.
âcontent: smut (minors dni!!), 18+, friends to lovers, secret relationship, gunfight, fake engaged/dating (reader and mycroft hehe), jealousy ofc, possessiveness, humor, they're whipped your honor
a/n: this nearly killed me 𫣠thank you all so much for the love on part 1!! đđ«¶ i wasn't expecting it. also thank you for being patient while i wrote part 2 in between my busy schedule. every like and comment has meant the world to me! now i'm going to vanish cuz i have been staring at this for so long and i'm terrified lol
Before one opens their eyes upon waking, the mind seemingly lingers on the precipice of dream-land and corporeality: a hazy, gauzy place where life doesnât quite sink in just yet. The shadows of sleep keep a hold while the slowly waking mind straddles this line. Natureâs soft nurse, Shakespeare said. And thatâs how it feels this morning: comforting, gentle.
Memories of the night before slowly flood in as [Name] stirs, a soft sound escaping her as she turns on the unfamiliar bed, stretching and then tucking back into herself like a quotation mark. Sunlight paints her eyelids red, but the light isnât what warms her faceâno, itâs the sudden, pressing thought of a hand between her thighsâthe muscles sore with the memoryâand a voice whispering bone-shivering obscenities into her hair.
A thoughtless smile presses against her cheeksâuntil a throat clears.
âHello, pretty.â
Her eyes open, lazy and pleased. James is standing by the side of the bed, drinking from a cup with raised brows. Heâs wearing only pants, his chest and stomach bare and refined with little touches of dark hair that, for some reason, dizzy her mind. Itâs all a bit much for so early in the morning. At least let her clear the sand from her eyes first.
She pushes herself up, face burning at this point because the memories are spinning around in her head, haunting her like a ghost. Itâs like remembering things said and done while drunk and wondering, Who the hell was that? I was out of my damned mind. It feels as if she has opened her chest and let James see right through her. Will he think differently of her? Will he toss her aside like she told Mycroft he would?
âWe should put a bell on you,â she says. The sheet is warm from her sleeping body but still, a shiver ripples through her, shoulders curling and nipples pressing against the fabric. She knows how he tastes, yet this is what feels strangely intimate: sitting naked before him, hair tousled, covered only by a sheet.
James tilts his head. Heâs having fun and thereâs a lightness to him, an ease that wasnât ever there before. âHaving a lovely dream?â His voice is a purr, his lips curling. He knows he has her.
âYes,â she says, rubbing her eyes. âI was all alone.â
James beams. âYou wound me.â He touches his chest like she shot him. âWould you like tea?â
âYes, please. A dashââ
âDash of milk and a pinch of sugar, aye,â he finishes for her, already disappearing into what is meant to be a kitchen.
Warmth floods through her as smooth and languid as honey. There is something terribly delightful about being known.
[Name] tucks the sheet against her chest as she leans practically entirely out of the bed, grabbing at the first article of clothing she finds, which happens to be one of Jamesâs button-ups. As she pulls it on, she basks in his smell: masculine and perfumed with wood and neroli. Another strange intimacy that makes her almost giddy: her naked body against his clothing. It stirs something half-awake within her.
When James returns, cup in hand, his eyes seemingly twinkle upon sight of the shirt draped on her, but he says nothing. She sits on the edge of the bed, blushing and biting down a smile, legs dangling beneath his shirt. âThank you,â she mumbles, suddenly nervous as she takes the cup from him. It tastes perfect and its heat settles in the pit of her belly. Heâs silent still, smiling down at her. She wonders what the hell is happening in that head, wanting to gorge herself on every thought he has, then wonders if perhaps she is better off not knowing. She is all too aware of his heat and his nearness, how easy it would be to reach out and pull him to her andâ
âDid you know that you talk in your sleep?â
She peers up at him, squinting and confused. âI do?â
He fiddles with his earlobe. âAye, heard you this morning. Something like, âOh, James, so handsome and clever andâââ
She glares, cutting him off with, âAre you perhaps remembering your dream, James?â
âOr perhaps just remembering last night, darling.â His eyes wrinkle, nearly a wink and just as teasing. He always knows just how to undo her.
(Only you get to see me like this, mo chroĂ.)
âI can hardly remember,â she lies through her teeth, chin tilting high.
âI can jog your memory, if youâd like.â The smile that follows is devastating and only makes her blush more.
It feels good, talking to him like this. Like nothing has changedâexcept that everything has changed and she knows they wonât be the same ever again, and it scares her, this thought. James and Sherlock and Mycroft are her friends, the people she spends every day with. She didnât realize just how much it all mattered to her until right now, worrying at the potential of ruining things.
âYâknow,â says James, and he crouches in front of her, his elbows resting on his thighs, holding his tea very gingerly as he looks up at her, âdespite theâŠconfession of utter adoration,â he continues, waving a dismissive hand and rolling his eyes at himself, âI want to make sure that all isâŠwell.â
Her heart sits somewhere inside of her throat. âWell?â
âLikeâŠâ He tilts his head from side to side like a pendulum, weighing his next words. âThat weâre on the same page. That last night was notâŠâ
Not just some one-time thing? Something loosens in her chest, and she realizes it was her own unease. She has never not felt safe with Jamesâquite the opposite, actuallyâbut itâs mortifying to lay yourself bareâliterally and figurativelyâand wake up to navigate the consequences.
Itâs funny to remember telling Mycroft that James would discard and forget her, that she would just be a prize for him to win. How could she have ever thought that when he stares at her this softly? She remembers his caresses the night before, face aflame, and knows that is not the touch of a selfish, uncaring man.Â
âLast night meant a lot to me,â she says softly because if her voice gets any louder, she may burst into tears.
James smiles, and it seems he breathes more easily.
âItâsâŠstrange, though, isnât it?â she asks, brow pinching as she mirrors his smile, abashed and quiet.
âA wee bit,â he agrees, squinting with a pinched nose.
She laughs a little, barely a breath, but her eyes lower, suddenly shy.
He tilts his head in order to catch her eye, which only makes her smile widen. Theyâre like two schoolchildren blushing on the playground.
James says, âWe can take our time. How does that sound? Weâll be the first folks to go from crime partners to engaged toâŠwhatever this is.â
âCrime-solving partners,â she corrects. âWe arenât committing crime together.â
He makes a doubtful little sound, his mouth turning downward. âDebatable.â A touch of sincerity smooths his face, the weight of his stare heavy. âSo, what do you say? We can figure this out as we go.â
âItâs a deal, Moriarty.â
She offers her hand, which makes James laugh, those little lines by his eyes crinkling, and when they shake on it, James yanks her forward. She squeals, nearly falling out of the bed as James brushes his nose alongside hers, his breath warm and flowery from the tea. Itâs hard to think straight when heâs so near to her, his presence overwhelming and impure.Â
Itâs even harder to think when he kisses her, his lips feather-light but possessive, literally making her melt into him until she almost falls out of the bed again. His hand clasps her neck, holding her still. When he pulls away, her lips follow him without thinking, chasing for more. Slowly, her eyes open, greeted by his soft smile.
The deep rumble of his voice makes her thighs squeeze as he whispers, âCanât get you out of my fuckinâ head. Youââ
Thereâs a very hard, very abrupt knock on the door, so loud that she jumps. Even James seems surprised, pulling away to peer across the room.
Then thereâs a voice, dreadfully familiar: âJames, answer the bloody door! I know youâre in there!â
Sherlock.
âWhat shouldââ
James silences her with a single look. âPerhaps you should hide.â
âHide?â
Sherlock pounds harder on the door. âIâll just keep waking your neighbors if you donât open up!â
âHeâs on the warpath after we ditched him,â says James, bouncing his brows as his mouth presses into a line. He rises, staring down at her. âIâll take the bullet. Here,â he adds, grabbing her clothing from where it lays thrown over the table. Her dress, her corset, her undergarments. âDress in the washroom. Iâll handle our dear friend.â
She doesnât have to be told twice. She would hate to be caught in a state of considerable undress in Jamesâs apartment, especially with how things were left last night. And Sherlock will get far too much enjoyment out of teasing her, she imagines.
These damn boys, her mind hisses as she runs off to the washroom, locking herself in right as James opens the apartment door. She can practically see him leaning against the frame, calm as still waters as he asks, muffled through the wall, âHow are you on this fine morn, Mr. Holmes?â
âHow am I? How am I?â Sherlock mustâve shoved past him because suddenly heâs in the apartment, the floors creaking as he paces. âYou abandoned me at Whitby! They were wondering why I was locked inside of a room with an unconscious man.â
âAye, I did, didnât I?â James has the decency to sound sheepish, probably rubbing the back of his head, but even Sherlock must be able to hear the falsity in it. James is practically grinning through his words. âSee, I was wondering if you couldââ
âMycroft had to explain that I was looking for Moreau and happened to find him unconscious. I spun some story about how he mustâve slipped and hit his head while he was checking on his artwork,â Sherlock says, ignoring James. âFortunately we still had our carriage to ride back inâwhich Mycroft spent the time accosting me for my carelessness, thank you very muchâbut you and [Name]? Vanished!â
âAbout thatââ
âYes. About that,â says Sherlock. She can hear the arms crossing, the patronizing look he must be giving James. âWould you care to explain?â
[Name] is slowly and carefully dressing as they bicker back and forth, and sheâs sliding her red dress on, twisting her hips, when Sherlock says this, and she freezes in the silence that follows. She waits, holding her breath, to see how James can get out of this one.
âShe was sick,â says James flatly.
âSick? Of you, perhaps?â
âYou should really be on a stage with that wit of yours, Sherlock,â says James, and the floor creaks as he separates from Sherlock, maybe even shaking his head a little. She knows her boys so well that she can see it all playing out in her mindâs eye: Sherlock glaring, James taunting. Maybe a little finger wag, too. âItâs a talent that truly shouldnât go to wasteââ
Sherlock overtakes, his voice louder and cutting like a blade with its gravity: âYou promised to leave her be. Then I get to Whitby and what do I see?â
James is quiet, so quiet that she knows he is suddenly very mindful that she is just on the other side of the wall hearing every word. Her own breath quickens, trapped in her chest like a bird in a cage.Â
âLookââ says James, but his voice is so soft that Sherlock has no trouble interrupting with, âI see the way you look at her, James. I know youâve told me itâs not justâŠconcupiscenceââ
âWhat an interesting choice of word,â mutters James.
ââbut IâŠâ
A silence follows, thick enough to cut through. A breath comes in deeply through a nose and out of a mouth, and she knows itâs James.
âAm I so bad, Sherlock?â Itâs meant to be something of a joke, but itâs betrayed by the flatness of Jamesâs voice.
âNo,â says the other, so quickly that it must be the truth. âYouâre my friend, James. But to me sheâŠsheâs like a sister. Thatâs what worries me.â The last words deflate in his mouth, like he hears himself and feels vulnerable, bare.
Sherlock has lost one sister; he is fearful of losing another.
âSheâs a big girl, Sherlock. She can take care of herself against the big bad wolf.â
âThat is not what I meant,â says Sherlock in a voice that brooks no argument. âAbout her or about you.â He pauses, then softly adds, âI know she isâŠfond of you, too.â
Blood rushes through [Name]âs ears. Has she always been so obvious? Has everyone always been able to see what even she couldnât?
âScared Iâll turn her against you?â James asks.
This time the pause is broken by a short laugh from Sherlock. âNow that I could see.â
The tension shatters like glass. James chuckles, too, and [Name] feels she can breathe a little more easily. She would hate to see them fighting, especially about her. She has half a mind to burst from the washroom and throw herself into Jamesâs arms just to prove a point, but she stays put. James can handle himself. She rests her forehead against the door, hovering in her unlaced dress.
âWe have Bernard to track down, still,â says James, an attempt at redirection. Nothing can steal Sherlockâs attention better than a mystery.
It works. The two discuss the case as [Name] steps away and attempts to lace up her dress, her arms twisted around to her back. A huff escapes her, feeling a little claustrophobic and trappedâin the room and in the dress. How in hell did she wear this all of last night?
From the footsteps, James must be leading Sherlock towards the door. Heâs telling him about how heâll find her and the three of them can decide their next move. The two of them are adamant about finding her first, wanting to make sure she is well before they continue on, which she would be appreciating more if she werenât beading with sweat as she hops up and down, trying in vain to get the laces rightâand then she stumbles.
She doesnât entirely fall, but she accidentally kicks a wastebasket and sends it onto its side with a dreadful clatter, and the boys fall silent.
âWhat wasââ
âI have mice,â says James. âLook, Iâll go deal withâŠthatâŠand we can meet at the university library at, say, noon. Sounds good?â
His voice has quickened, rushing Sherlock out the door.
âSure. I may have to bring Mycroftââ
âWhatever you need, sure. Alright, then. Goodââ The door swings shut. ââbye,â finishes James with a relieved sigh. He waits a moment before calling out, âNow, how much did the little mouse hear?â as his steps come closer to the washroom.
The door swings open.
Her hair is tousled about her face, her breasts hiked up to her chin, the dress half-done as she holds the laces out on either side of her, and itâs all quite silly, but the look she gives James through the strands of hair is pure consternation. âWhat did you promise?â
James sighs deeply, holding the door open. âSherlock asked me not to try anything with you. It wasnât so much a promise as aâŠsuggestionâŠearly into our friendship.â
She has a few questionsâmore than a few, reallyâbut they seem to dissolve in her mouth before she can say them.Â
âSeems Iâm so obvious with my feelings for you that I may as well be wearing a sign,â he says.
âTo everyone but myself,â she agrees, softly.
Jamesâs lips press into a line, humble and sympathetic. Never did she think humble would ever describe James Moriarty, but itâs not the first surprise sheâs had this morning. Sheâs quickly learning that anything is possible when it comes to James.
âCan you help me with this bloody dress?â
Jamesâs head hangs as he smiles. He twirls his finger and she spins around, holding her hair out of the way as he jerks her laces tight, a yelp escaping her. âAre you angry with Sherlock?â he asks as his deft fingers work.
âIâm not mad,â she says, holding her stomach, and itâs only in saying the words that she realizes the truth in them.
He may be an idiotic man, but at some point that is to be expected. She will have to give him a frank talking-to about her capabilities and independence, but in the meantime, she is flattered to know he thinks so highly of her. That he wishes for her safety and happiness. There are much worse things to learn about a friend behind your back.
âAs tricky as this has suddenly become,â says James, and just from the purr in his voice she knows sheâs in trouble, especially when his mouth finds the shell of her ear and whispers, âitâs a little thrilling, aye? We might have to hide this from him. Since weâre not allowed.â
âIs that so?â she says a little breathlessly, still holding her hair up and out of the way.
James tucks his nose against her bare neck. His breath is ticklish, enticing. âPuts us in a tough spot, doesnât it?â
Trust James to find a way to make anything sound so alluring. And itâs hard to argue with him when heâs pressed against her back, his soft lips brushing against the nape of her neck as he ties up her corset. He knows just what thread to pull to make her unwind.
Her eyes flutter shut. He will make this as difficult as possible, she knows.
Once again, here they are: the game is afoot.
ââââââââ
When [Name] gets home, slipping out of the dress feels a bit like how a snake must when it sheds its skin. It truly is a beautiful, rich garment, but she canât wait to feel a bit more like herself after so much pretending. Not to mention the looks she drew when walking home; perhaps the eye-popping evening dress was a poor choice for her morning stroll home, but now she knows.
Bruises trail along her arms, the inside of her thighs. Her fingers brush over them, fascinated by the memory they leave with them. Proof that what happened the night before isnât all in her head.
[Name] opens a window for some fresh air.
It isnât until she has dressed againâattired in her normal affair: a brown pinstripe dress that she often wears around Oxfordâthat she discovers she is missing something: her engagement ring.
Well, her fake engagement ring.
When did she last see it? She has no memory of taking it off. She offers the room a cursory glance, even kneeling and looking beneath her bed in case it happened to slip off and roll away, but it is nowhere in sight.
It was worth a pretty penny, surely. That will have to be a problem for later, though.
She smooths out her dress and leaves her place almost as soon as she arrives and takes a carriage to the school. She arrives at the Oxford library about twenty minutes before planned, so she sits on a bench and waits, pulling a book from her bag to pass the time.
Mycroft finds her first a handful of minutes later, ever the punctual. âMiss [Name].â Just from the way her name rolls across his tongue, she knows sheâs in a spot of trouble with him. Perhaps being abandoned at a party in a strangerâs home alongside an unconscious man isnât the most ideal circumstance. Sheâll have to remember for next time.
âMycroft,â she says kindly, rising and offering a hugâa meager attempt at placating his iciness. She does hate to be in trouble with him.
It seems to work, judging by the pink in Mycroftâs cheeks. He clears his throat and adjusts his tie after they separate. âYou had us rather worried last night,â he says. âWe had no clue where you and Moriarty had run off to.â
âA bit too much to drink for me, unfortunately,â she says. âJames was ever the gentleman and helped me home.â
Mycroft hums, more like reluctant acquiescence than complete agreement. His eyes venture about, seemingly looking for their companions. âI hear that you may have need of me again?â He doesnât hide the nervous skepticism, his brow tilting as he looks back at her.
âI know nothing of the sort,â she admits, hands behind her back, âbut itâs always a delight to have you around, Mycroft.â
Mycroft falls into another fit of clearing his throat when James and Sherlock arrive together. When she meets Jamesâs eye, something in her feels like she has come home. Heâs wearing a rich brown, crosshatch-patterned suit, and cutting a rather imposing figure, his legs looking a mile long, his shoulders broad. The smile they share is soft, meant only for them, and then he winks.
The game is afoot.
âWe need to discuss our next move,â says Sherlock, all business.
âHow about over drinks?â proposes James, the image of ease with a hand in his pocket.
But just then Sherlock seems to really see [Name], eyes alighting, and he asks, leaning in, âAre you feeling well?â
âMuch better.â
âIâm glad to hear it.â
âYou did look a little peaked at the party,â says Mycroft unhelpfully, gesturing towards his cheek.
Her head tilts to accommodate Mycroft, her mouth pressing flat. âThank you for that, Mycroft.â
Mycroftâs eyes widen. âYou looked lovely. IâI only meantââ
âDrinks, for the love of God?â asks James again. Unamused. If she didnât know any better, sheâd think he was jealous.
ââââââââ
The pub is unusually raucous, especially for the middle of the day. The foursome somehow find a table in the corner, fortunately. The chaos of the pub is perfectly suited to the secrecy of what theyâre planning, the sound so loud that there is no way for anyone to possibly overhear what is being said. [Name] sits across from James, the Holmes brothers on either side of her like a human wall. Every time James catches her eye, a firework seemingly bursts in her chest.Â
When did she fall for James? When did she know she was in trouble?
The moment she first met him: his outstretched hand, that handsome face, the sonorous Irish lilt. When she helped them crack a clue with their first case and his eyes had nearly twinkled when he looked at her and said, Well done, darling. Just those three words made her flush with the joy of pleasing him, which didnât usually happen to her. She has no interest in pleasing menâbut James has always been different. He can make her laugh like no one else, and he is endlessly surprising. She has always liked puzzles, and James was just made for her.
Or maybe it was the first time laying in bed after a night spent solving crime with James, and her hand had slipped between her legs as she remembered his smile, his hair, his voice.Â
Sherlock sputters, his drink nearly spewing from his mouth. âJames, youâve just kicked me.â
James looks at [Name]. âApologies, lad.â
She rests her elbow on the table, hiding her laugh behind her hand. No doubt that foot was meant for her. Scoundrel, she thinks with adoration.
âWhat do we do about this?â asks Sherlock, and he slaps the business card onto the table. Mycroft takes it up and tilts it at every angle beneath the bulb that hangs over their table. âWe have an address, but I discovered last night that it leads to a shop, not a home.â
âDid you truly think it would be that easy?â asks James. He takes up an English accent, presumably in imitation of Sherlock, and knocks thrice on the table. ââOi, sir can I get a spot oâ tea? Also, have ya murdahâd anyone?ââ
She sighs through her nose. âPerhaps if you had let me get to know Moreau a bit betterââ
âNo,â barks James.Â
âI canât believe Iâm saying this,â says Mycroft as he tosses the card back onto the table, âbut Iâm in agreement with Moriarty.â He sits back in his chair, legs crossed. He levels his gaze with [Name] and says, âThat Moreau seemed like a proper rogue.â
âMore than these two?â she asks, tossing a thumb towards James and Sherlock.
Mycroft considers this. For a bit too long, seemingly, because James snaps, âAlright, then. We have a way to contact Bernardâbut now what? The man is still elusive as all hell. Unless we try planning a meeting with him to buy some shite antique vase.â
âWhat shop is this address, Sherlock?â asks [Name], tapping the card.
âSome high-end dress shop. I wonder if thatâs how he finds his victims.â He poses this last bit to James, who merely shrugs.
The moment the first few words leave Sherlockâs mouth, something must shift in her face because James looks at her with a deep suspicion. With eyes only for her, he asks, âDo I dare ask what is happening in that pretty head of yours?â
âProbably not.â
Something sunny rises in his eyes. âShould we reprise our roles, darling?â
âI had someone else in mind,â she says, relishing in the thunder that suddenly rolls into Jamesâs eyes. Then she turns to her right. âWhat do you think, Mycroft?â
ââââââââ
The foursome stand across the street from the dress shop. Business seems to be bustling, couples coming and going as they keep an eye on the front door. Through the window, [Name] sees women in beautiful dresses twisting and turning for a mirror, looking absolutely delighted.
Thatâs when a thought occurs to her, one she shouldâve had much sooner.
She holds her palm out for James.
âAm I meant to pay you?â he asks, brows raised.
âI do require a ring," she says, leering.
Jamesâs mouth curls into a devious little smirk. He digs into his pocket and produces her fake engagement ring, just as she suspected, and drops it into her open palm. Her fingers close around the ring, warming the metal instantly.
âWere you afraid I would pawn it off and run with the money?â she asks.
James ducks his mouth to her ear. âI needed to give you a reason to come back.â
Damn him, she thinks, face hotâespecially when James steps away to reveal Sherlock looking between them, his brows low as he inspects them like a case to be solved. [Name] steps back even further, desperate to keep distance between them because God knows what will happen if they get too close. Can Sherlockâthe great detectiveâsee everywhere James has touched her?
She knows her body will betray her. Now that she knows James in such a unique way, it is harder to deny the familiarity. And she feels like anyone, not just Sherlock, can read her like a book.
She stares daggers at JamesâHow dare youâand says in a much-too-sharp voice, âMycroft. Let us go, shall we?â
âWhatâs your angle?â asks Sherlock, teetering. He wants to keep her there. He wants to get a better look at the pink in her cheeks and figure out what the hell happened last night.
And she wants to run away. She grabs the sleeve of Mycroftâs stately navy blue coat and drags him away from the two scoundrels, stepping off of the curb and onto the cobblestones, ready to dash at a momentâs notice. Mycroft, all the while, seems dreadfully flustered but ready to go along with whatever is happening.
âWell, weââ Her voice catches, mouth agape as she tries to elaborate, but she knows the boys have her: she has no clue what she is doing, and only one of them knows why she is desperate to run off.
âHow about me and Sherlock join you two lovebirds?â James proposes, a clever little grin dancing across his face. He buries his hands in his pockets, standing tall beside Sherlock. The two boys inspect her with a scrutiny she doesnât appreciate: Sherlock with the mind of a detective, doubtless lost somewhere in his overactive imagination, while James basks in keeping her on her toes, always three steps ahead at any given time.
âYes,â says Sherlock in such a way that she knows he has an ulterior motive.
Good Lord.
âIn what regard?â she asks, tilting her chin up.
âA brother and friend of the groom,â says James. He seems much too pleased with himself. âYou two can distract the shopkeep while Sherlock and I get a good look around the place.â
Unfortunately, it makes perfect sense. âFine.â
James shoots her a wink.
Two can play at this game, it seems to mean.
Amazingly, it is Mycroft who makes the first move: he holds his arm out for her. Smiling like a villain, she takes Mycroftâs arm, smiling up at James on the sidewalk all the while. His own smile sharpens with venom, and she knows she will pay for this later. Terribly, she feels immense delight at the very thought.
âCome,â says Mycroft. âLetâs get this over with.â He leads her from the curb and across the road, dodging a carriage as they go.
âI couldnât have said it better myself,â she mutters under her breath.
Once they step inside the dress shop with a tinkling of the bell hanging over the door, there is an endless flurry of movement and fabric. It is abruptly overwhelming and calls to mind the party at Whitby the night before: a cacophony of voices, the pressing of bodies. The storefront is deceptively small, but the inside is long, stretching back farther than she can immediately see. Racks of utterly divine dresses line the walls. Patrons stand before mirrors wearing some of these dresses, twisting and turning this way and that. There are workers crouched beside them with tape measures, others assessing with a finger to the lips.Â
She finds herself tucking closer against Mycroft, intimidated by the busyness.
âHello,â chimes an employee, a man with a mustache to rival Mycroftâs. âWhat a fine couple you are. How could I be of service?â
âMy congratulations,â says the man as Mycroft peers at her from the corner of his eye, stifling a cough. âMay IâŠoh, my,â he says, holding a hand out to inspect her own, her engagement ring glinting in the daylight. âSuch a handsome ring for a beautiful woman.â He leans closer, wiggling his glasses to see the jewel better.
âIâm quite pleased,â she gushes. Her teeth may rot out of her head if she keeps piling on the sweetness.
Mycroft says nothing, seeming utterly baffled by the entire performance. She would never tell the man himself, but a part of her misses having James for a scene partner.
Perhaps more than just a part of her.
âWell, let us get you to a stationââ
The man leads the two of them away, his attention stolen as James and Sherlock stroll about the place, inspecting dresses as if they have a personal interest, blending in with the chaos and going utterly unseen as Mycroft falls into a chair and [Name] stands on a pedestal before a mirror. The man falls to a crouch as he measures seemingly every corner of her: her ankles, her hips, the swell of her arms. He mutters numbers under his breath like a gifted mathematician, working at a swift pace that utterly baffles her. He could give James and Sherlock a run for their money.
She holds her arms out at her sides as he measures her waist and she turns her head just enough to catch James and Sherlock deeper in the shop, swept up in conversation with another worker. James has a big smile, which can only mean they are attempting charm to learn more about the shop. Sheâs desperate to be in the thick of the investigation, but she needs to keep the man preoccupied.
âNow, precisely how many shades of white do you do?â
The manâs eyes glint like he has been waiting to be asked this question all his life. âWellââ
Mycroft pulls back his sleeve to peer at his watch. He drums his fingers on the sides of the chair, his chest rising with a deep breath.
The bell over the door chimes just then. [Name] hardly hears through all of the noise, but something makes her turn. And standing there, donning a hat and a pristine suit, is Algernon Moreau.Â
ââcream is a popular choice in recent years, although ivory is a personal favorite of mineââ
[Name] whips back to the mirror. In her own eyes, she sees the panic, like a mouse caught in a trap. Does he know they are here, or is this some terrible coincidence? What is most likely is that he woke from his unfortunate punch, searched his own personâaided by the vague memory of leading a woman to a room full of artworkâand discovered his card for Lucas Bernard missing. Of course, his first step would be to come to the address on said card.
Perhaps to find a familiar faceâŠ
âOi!â
Jamesâunaware of the manâs entranceâwhips around at the voice that is, unfortunately, meant for him. Silence falls like a cloak over the shop. Also unfortunately for James, his handsome face is much too memorable for a man like Moreau to have forgotten, even if he had only seen it for a split-second the night before.
And it is made worse when, like a magnet, Moreauâs eye is drawn to the pedestal where [Name] stands, and as soon as he sees her, all else is lost.Â
There is no escape.
âThieves! Crooks!â Moreau shouts.
All heads in the shop spin towards [Name] and Mycroft, even as Moreau points at James, who is coming slowly closer with Sherlock at his side.
Mycroft rises from the chair, rebuttoning his jacket with one hand, and asks, âWhat seems to be the problem, sir?â
Moreau is red in the face, his stylish hair falling out of place and in disarray around his face as he sputters, âTheâSheâShe stole from me! That woman!â He spins towards James. âAnd him! The two of them!â
âThere must be some mistake,â starts James, his Irish lilt cool and unassuming.
âWhat was stolen from you, sir?â asks the employee working with [Name].
âThey tookâTheyââ He is indignant and losing his last traces of control.
Then he reaches under his jacket.
All within a single second, several things happen: Sherlock shouts, âGun!â which causes an outburst of screeching amongst the patrons of the shop; Mycroft stumbles back and knocks over his chair, which goes clattering to the ground; and hands slip around [Name]âs middle and pull her behind a solid, familiarly warm body. Wood and neroli meet her nose, and for some reason that is all she can think about when the gun goes off.
More screaming. The sound is deafening and echoes in her ears with great pain, but then people are running and the body that shields herâJames, itâs Jamesâtakes her hand and he runs to the back of the store with her. She has no problem keeping up. Everything narrows like she is inside of a tunnel and all she can see is what is right ahead of her. She looks back and finds Mycroft and Sherlock followingâthey arenât hurt, thank Godâthe smoke from the gun drifting to the ceiling, but Moreau is right there.Â
Heâs coming.
James slams his shoulder into a door at the back of the shop and it bursts open as if a bull hit it. They skitter, a slight stutter-step, and with a hand on her waist, James pushes her in front of him and then theyâre running again, the clop of their shoes filling the dirty, gray alleyway they race down, splashing in puddles as they go. Another gunshot rings out, and James and her instinctively duck their heads, a yelp involuntarily slipping out of her. Never has she felt more like her heart might just burst straight out of her chest.
They come to the end of the alley and James shouts to the people standing confused in the street, âGun! Thereâs a man with a gun!â right as another shot goes off, chipping the stone beside Jamesâs head. The mere sight makes [Name] the one to grab his hand this time, leading him down the road right as Mycroft and Sherlock reach the street, too.Â
It is utter chaos in the street now. Jamesâs warning not only alerted them, but it caused a scene, making it harder for Moreau to find them in the throng.Â
James whips around. âSherlock!â
âHide!â calls Sherlock, and he and his brother slip into the closest building right as Moreau spills out of the alley.
âFuckinâ hellââ breathes James, stunned, right as Moreau raises the gun, staring down the barrel through the running mob.Â
âMore running,â she instructs sternly, grabbing James around the forearm and yanking him away. She is so mixed around and has no clue where in Oxford they have spilled out from, but her feet do all of the thinking for her. The panic within her is choking her, fingers trapped around her throat and her chest, constricting and unthinking until she is merely a thing that runs. How a hare must feel against a fox.
Two more shots follow them out of sight. She can only hope that nobody has been hurt.
Jamesâs palm is slick against her own. They shove through people inside of a department store, unaware folks that yell at them to slow down, show some decorum. Somehow, even with everything blurring past, she spots a cleaning closet. [Name] pulls James there and, mercifully, the door is unlocked. They slip inside and slam the door shut.
The small, dark space fills with their heavy breathing, the smell of their fear. Hands come up to her cheeks and she waits, expecting James to say something, but instead, his forehead tips to hers and they stand there like that, coming down from the adrenaline in each otherâs arms, just grateful to see the other still alive.Â
Voices rise, some confused and then turning to panic, but no more shots ring out. Either the man is out of bullets or he, too, is sapped of energy.
She swears she hears Moreau yell, asking some question or another. Hopefully no one points him to their hiding place.
But everything sounds so far away, like it all doesnât even exist. For a moment, it doesnât. This strange, smelly closet is their own little world.Â
James holds her close still, like he canât bear to be separated from her. âAre you alright?â he whispers, and his voice in the darkness is all she knows. Like she is engulfed by him.
Their foreheads still together, she nods. âAre you?â she asks, even softer.
âA little fuckinâ panicked,â he says, âbut Iâm in one piece.â
âGood. Thatâs how I prefer you.â
A sigh escapes him, but it is one of immense relief and a bit of madness. He grasps her face more tightly, their noses brushing as he tips her face up. In the darkness, where not even God can see them, they can be themselves. No performance, no game. Just them. Just like in the garden at Whitby: the only two people on the planet.
Then James kisses her forehead, a lingering, sweet kiss, before he wraps his arms around her waist with a firm but careful reverence and her own slip around his neck. Perhaps this is all nothing but a dream. That strange place before waking up, buried in the darkness of sleep with her greatest joy. The way her heart calms when she is near to him. Like magic.Â
A swell of adoration fills her when she remembers James putting himself between her and the gun. It astonishes her. So simple, yet it means everything.Â
She hugs him tighter. Words wonât come close, but she still whispers, âThank you.â
âFor pissing off a madman with a gun? Youâre welcome, I suppose.â
In the darkness, she smiles, just to herself. Her eyes shut, strangely content in this fetid closet.Â
ââââââââ
A second day in a row of abandoning the Holmes brothers at a moment of great peril doesnât sound very appealing, so when it is safe to, James and [Name] emerge from the closet. With their heads on a swivel, Moreau is nowhere to be found, but one can never be too safe. They make their wayâslowly and cautiouslyâto where they last saw Sherlock and Mycroft. On their way, they find only the aftermath of the chase: chipped stone and bullet holes, but nobody is hurt. The relief nearly makes her burst into song.
The brothers are nowhere to be seen, but there has always been a rule that if they are ever separated, you return to the last decided meeting place.
The library.
Minutes later, there are Sherlock and Mycroft, a little wild-eyed and disheveledâalthough Mycroft was quick to put himself back together as best as he could, she notesâand when the brothers spot the couple coming toward them, they donât even question why James and [Name] are holding hands. Sherlock closes the distance and sweeps her into a hug, hounding her with questions about if she got hurt, if she is alright. This, finally, is what makes a tear slip down her cheek.
âLet the poor woman down,â says James, chuckling to himself.Â
Sherlock sets [Name] back to earth. He looks into her face and she can see the pain leashed within him, that constant fear of something going wrong yet again and him unable to stop it. So she gives him a little smile of reassurance, one that transcends words. Her and Sherlock donât need them: Iâm safe. So are you.
Sherlock nods once. He steps away, letting her breathe.
âWhat on Godâs green earth is wrong with you three?â shouts Mycroft, practically stomping a foot.
The trio stand together, having the decency to look sheepish.
âNow, Mycroftââ says Sherlock.
But Mycroft has only just begun. âYou three have to be the most puerile and hazardous group of people I have ever had the misfortune to know. Running straight into danger like it is calling your name! Is there not an ounce of sense in any of you? You play with your lives likeâlikeââ His hands wave around, grasping for the right word.
âYouâre causing a scene, mate,â says James, goading the poor man with a devilish smile.Â
âAs much of a scene as a bloody gunfight?â insists a steadily-reddening Mycroft. Her brows rise; Mycroft must truly be mad if heâs cursing. âI would say that you are the problem,â he says, stabbing a finger at James, âbut Sherlock has always been an absolute animal to control. He has dragged you two down with him! His damned cleverness has doomed you!â
âThatâs rather kind of you, brother.â
âIt is not a compliment!â
[Name] would say something, but thereâs no arguing with Mycroft when he gets this way. Heâll scold them for all theyâre worth, but the next time he catches wind of whatever shenanigans theyâve got themselves into, heâll suddenly be there to help and make sure they donât accidentally kill themselves.
âI am going to return to my office and try to forget this day ever happened,â he says. He fixes his hair, which is threatening to slip out of place. He takes a short, quick breath, like a weight has lifted from his shoulders. âI suggest you three do the same. Now, if you will excuse me.â
And with that, Mycroft spins on his heel and vanishes from the courtyard, shaking his head and grumbling as he goes.
âWell.â Sherlock turns to his friends. âThat was almost as exciting as being chased by a madman with a gun.â
âAye, about that. WasnâtâŠideal,â says James, rubbing the back of his head.Â
âNot at all,â [Name] says. âDo you think heâll be looking for us?â
âPossibly,â says James. âWeâve slipped the man twice. Itâs personal now.â
âKeep your heads on a swivel. We will find some other way to track down Bernard. Itâs enough that we all live to see tomorrow.â Mischief twinkles in Sherlockâs eye. âI have solved one mystery, though.â
âAnd whatâs that, mate?â asks James.
Sherlockâs stare drops downâto James and [Name]âs clasped hands.
Her stomach drops. âSherlock, itââ
But Sherlock shakes his head, interrupting her. Unbelievably, a lonely smile dances across his face. âIt was only a matter of time, wasnât it?â and itâs not a question, not really. Where she was expecting an interrogation, perhaps some bickering, instead there is a peculiar contentment in Sherlockâs face. Like seeing the proof before him has shown him all he needs to know.Â
Perhaps he can see the devotion radiating from them.Â
His face is soft. âJust promise not to abandon me on a balcony again.â
âCanât make any promises, mate,â says James, still recovering, but his smile puts the sun to shame. He squeezes her hand.
ââââââââ
May I walk you home, madame? and a proffered arm. Thatâs how her terribly eventful day ends and she wouldnât have it any other way. She tucks against James, basking in his solidity, his closeness. With the shenanigans they get into, she knows never to take it for granted. Even if he does happen to annoy her on occasion.Â
Her apartment is cool, the curtains gently whispering against the floor as they blow in and out of the room.Â
James tucks his hands in his pockets, looking around the room with fresh eyes as she digs out a stash of whiskey from her kitchenette. He has been here a handful of times with Sherlock, but they never linger for long. âThat surprised me,â he says. âSherlock.â
âHeâs a strange man,â she says offhandedly, crouched and reaching for her bottle.Â
âAfter this morning, I thought he would give me the noose if he ever found out.â
âHe is all bark, that one.â She pours a finger of whiskey for each of them and returns to James as he hovers, dazed yet focused. He takes the glass gratefully. âA reward for our survival,â she says, lifting her glass. He does the same, and they sip.Â
âWhat changed his mind, do you think?â
The whiskey burns in her throat, leaving a trail down to her chest. It warms her from within. âYou.â
âMe?â James snorts a laugh, shaking his head. âCertainly not.â
âHe knows youâre a good man.â
James makes a face. âStop, or I may hurl.â
Tryingâand failingâto suppress a smile, she does stop. There is nothing worse to an Irishman than to applaud him, particularly for heroic acts.Â
She looks down into her drink, swirling it around the glass.Â
Something must cross her face because James says, âLetâs sit.â
The two of them perch on the edge of her bed, his hand coming to her knee. She knows he wants to talk about it, but she doesnât. Not now. She wants to forget the rest of the world is out there for the moment. She wants to pretend sheâs back in that closet, cocooned in the darkness with James.Â
âHave you ever hurt someone?â James asks in a different voice than she has ever heard from him.Â
She looks at him. There is no smile, no light. He is still her James, but something is happening behind those eyes that she knows she will never get a look into. âAccidentally, perhaps,â she answers slowly.Â
âHave you ever wanted to?â
Their eyes hold.Â
âIâm not sure,â she breathes out.Â
James swallows. Heâs the first to look away, and he watches his thumb rub the edge of the glass. He tells the whiskey, âToday, I wanted to hurt Moreau. For trying to hurt you. Still do, really,â he mumbles as an afterthought.Â
âThereâs nothing wrong with wanting to protect the people you care for.â
âYes, butâŠI want him dead.â The rage that has always sat buried within James snaps at the end of its leash for a moment, gnashing its teeth: she can hear it in the tightness of his voice.Â
His jaw clenches after the words escape. Like he didnât mean for them to.Â
She touches his hand. He looks at her.Â
âIâm ok, James.â
His pretty brown eyes are wet. âIf something happened to you, I donât know how I could survive it.â
The words kick her in the gut. She stares at him, her own eyes watering, and she swallows the sadness threatening to rise in her. Her clever, sweet James has never been so serious before. It has knocked her off of her own axis, like suddenly a curtain has been pulled back to show everything making the play work.Â
Sheâs here. So is he.Â
She doesnât want to think anymore. She doesnât want him to either.Â
So she kisses him. A firm, sweet kiss that seals an unspoken promise: Iâm right here. Iâm not going anywhere. Her hands clasp in her lap, unsure of what to do with themselves, afraid of her own desire.
James breaks the kiss just to put his whiskey on the nightstand beside them. The glass clinks on the wood. His heavy-lidded eyes never leave her, his nose pressed beside hers. He kisses her again, and desperation has possessed him.Â
His hands come to her cheeks and he pulls her in, his thumb parting her bottom lip so that his tongue can fill her, dizzying her. She melts, helpless and satyric, and falls into Jamesâs arms.Â
Sounds from the outside world whisper into the roomâa bird calling, voices down below, a chiming bellâbut it strikes her as unreal, like none of it is happening and only this is: Jamesâs mouth, Jamesâs hands, Jamesâs body.Â
Clothing starts hitting the ground. First he slips out of his jacket, then she undoes his tie with shaking fingers, then he finds the lacing of her dress. Without a word, James yanks her up and helps her out of her dress as she unbuttons his pants. Excitement shoots like lightning through her and she canât help smiling against his mouth, like she canât believe she can be so lucky. It makes her head spin when James smiles, too. Sheâs happy to make him happy.Â
The cool afternoon air raises goosebumps all over her as James takes off her clothes. It is perfunctory, but there is a slowness to their undressing, basking in the resplendence of being together, right here, right now.Â
James takes her up into his arms and he lays her on the bed. His fingertips whisper across her ribs, into the divot of her waist, then the swell of her hip. Memorizing her. Watching keenly as she shivers against his feather-light touch. Her nipples harden as her shoulders bunch, staring up at James with wonder. The things he does to her.Â
His hot, wet mouth lowers and captures a nipple. A soft moan leaves her chest as her head falls back, trembling beneath him. She is so wet that itâs almost painful. Like he knows this, he touches her: slippery, soaked. She gasps, fingers slipping through his curls. His mouth works at her nipple as his thumb flicks the other, clasping her breast, all the while he slips two fingers inside of her and slowly fucks her with them.Â
âOh,â she gasps out, hips rolling to bury him deeper. She didnât know she could feel this good. The heel of his palm grinds into her clit, the skin just rough enough that it makes her shiver.Â
His teeth pinch over the hard bud and she cries out, a soft keening cry that makes James groan, the sound muffled. She can hear his fingers fucking her and her cheeks warm, embarrassed and unbelievably aroused all at once. Sheâs soaking wet and squeezing him so tight, especially as he adds a third finger, stretching her more and more. His thick, calloused fingers.Â
James releases her nipple with a wet sound, then heâs kissing her breasts, her chest. He sucks on the skin, teeth holding her in place, until dark spots blossom like roses. Memories for later.
Her hips are thoughtlessly rolling, chasing her pleasure, and James rides with her, letting her use him. The pressure builds and builds until she is wriggling beneath him, moaning and sweating as the thread grows tighter and tighter. She knows sheâs close. James knows sheâs close.Â
So when he suddenly pulls his fingers out of her, right before she trips into oblivion, it feels like the worst betrayal. She gasps, eyes fluttering open to stare at him, confused. Her body hums with need, burning with an animal desire for what she wants. âWhââ
âI never want to see you hanging off of Mycroft fuckinâ Holmes again.â
Her chest rises and falls with her frenzy. Heat pools between her legs. She can feel her wetness seeping into the sheet beneath her, her heartbeat throbbing in her cunt. Her hand, with a mind of its own, moves to touch herself, but James is too quick. He catches her wrist and holds her hand at her side. The other one, too.Â
She whines, bucking against his hold. âJames.â
âYouâre mine, mo chroĂ.â His brown eyes are almost black. His cheeks are flushed and his cock is hard against her thigh, dizzyingly close to where she wants him. âSay it.â
âIâm yours,â she cries. âYours, James.â He could get her to say anything right now.Â
âThatâs right, pretty.â He noses at her cheek. Her eyes shut, basking in the touch. He stills for a moment. His ruined voice recites, ââI do love nothing in the world so well as you.ââ
Then he yanks her up.
James pulls her into his lap. He sits with one leg dangling over the side of the bed, the other stretched out. Her thighs fall open as she straddles him, her body trembling. She feels oddly vulnerable like this, breasts under his nose, hovering inches from his cock.Â
âBe a good girl for me,â he whispers as he runs a hand through her hair. The Irish lilt, husky with his arousal, only makes her tremble more.Â
She wants nothing more than to please James.Â
Her fingers wrap around his cock. His lips part, staring at her with heavy eyes, a whisper of a smirk. Her fingers donât quite meet around him. She runs her hand up and down the velvety length, and perhaps she does know what sheâs doing because a soft sound leaves James, one she would very much like to hear again and again.Â
A hand holds him up while the other finds her back. He touches her, pulling her close until she nearly falls into him. âSit,â he says, like heâs being kind. Such an innocuous thing to say with an entirely new meaning now. Just that one word and sheâs a goner.Â
She sitsâslowly. His cock stretches her open and she somehow forgot just how good it felt, like her mind couldnât handle the memory. There are no words for the relief she feels as he fills her. He curses as he buries his face against her neck, his hands moving to her hips as he helps her lift them before sinking back down.Â
The last dregs of coherence leave her.Â
She is nothing more than a body seeking pleasure from a man she loves. James meets her thrusts, his hips rolling, and he buries himself deeper and deeper as she moans, calls his name, begs for more. He holds her waist until there are bruises. He tells her she is doing so good, taking him so well.Â
She holds his shoulders and grinds down on him, Jamesâs hands all over her as his mouth explores her neck, his mouth greedy and hot. She moves a hand to his hair, pulling on his soft curls as she rides him.Â
The pleasure builds and builds again, her clit rubbing against him every time he sinks into her. James has his face in her hair, his mouth right beside her ear, when he asks if she can come for him.Â
She shudders, gasping and holding him tighter, and James holds her down, thrusting in and out of her until a broken moan leaves her and heat flushes through her.Â
She comes with stars behind her eyes. Her body quivers as her back arches, pushing deeper and deeper. âJames,â she moans, loud and begging.Â
âI know,â he breathes out, a wild look in his eyes. âIâve got you, pretty girl.âÂ
He holds her as he softly uses her, burying himself and caressing her as he fucks her, like she is a piece of glass he canât help wanting to shatter. Her arms circle his neck and he kisses her breasts, smothering her in adoration as he comes, warmth filling her.Â
She falls into him, spent and tired and content, as her cheeks rests on his freckled shoulder. Her eyes linger on the curtain as it sways, dancing from the window before falling back into it. She catches her breath, coming down from her pleasure as James traces shapes against her spine, soft and caring.Â
After the chase and making love, she wants nothing more than sleep. She doesnât know she has drifted off until she feels James laying her against the pillows. He curls in beside her, kissing her forehead and her cheeks, his fingers dancing along her sides. He loops an arm around her, his chest against her back. Heâs so solid and warm that it instantly relaxes her.Â
As sleep tangles her in its web, she hears James whisper one last thing: âStay, mo chroĂ.â
taglist: @bravo4iscool, @cipheress-to-k-pop (thank u sm for the love!!)
finally got to sit and write this afternoon and i have 3.2k for 'ma meilleure ennemie' part 2 so far đ€ i'm having so much fun every time i write for this story omgggg
finally got to sit and write this afternoon and i have 3.2k for 'ma meilleure ennemie' part 2 so far đ€ i'm having so much fun every time i write for this story omgggg
i havenât had time to write recently with work and school but i promise im writing part 2 of âma meilleure ennemieâ itâll be out as soon as i can get to it đ
the thing with ashford is the targaryens are showing up to this tourney in the middle of nowhere for good pr and hopefully a fairly chill weekend. they are making a Public Appearance as a ruling dynasty that can no longer just bring out the dragons when things get dicey on the political front. this is a good opportunity to show how normal and fun they can be. then aerion kills a horse, instigates a minor riot, assaults a random woman because he was kinning too hard, gets punched in the face, calls for an ancient ritualised trial to try and avoid getting punched in face for a second time and then baelor DIES there. worst targaryen family holiday to date
âË⥠ma meillure ennemie | james moriarty x reader
âpairing: james moriarty x reader
âwc: 8.2k
âsummary: james and reader pose as an engaged couple to find a man who can lead them to solving a case.
âcontent: smut (minors dni), 18+, friends to lovers, fake engaged/dating, jealousyyyyy, humor, james is a total flirt, slow dancing, tension, reciting poetry??, everyone knows they're in love except them hehe
part 2
a/n: i think i blacked out when writing the freaky bits đ”âđ« i had wayyyy too much fun writing this and i really hope u like it! donal finn is a beautiful man so i had to do something about it
The carriage rattles on the dirt road. The golden gleam of the streetlights guide them away from Oxford and into a night that is pure dark, especially out in the country. Trees hang with their canopy of leaves over the road, grass meadows stretching for miles beyond the cobblestone walls on either side of the road. [Name] has never been in this part of the country before, but it seems lovely, even in the darkness.Â
Itâs a beautiful night, really: a cool spring air, the moon full and high. It lights the road ahead of them as [Name] occasionally glances up through the window as the horses and their driver push them on. With so much to see, it is hard to forget James beside her, rendered in outline in the shadows of darkness: his strong nose, the ever-mischievous tilt of his mouth. Much to her annoyance, she keeps looking over at him, but she tries not to linger long; heâll enjoy it far too much, and the last thing she needs is a cockier James Moriartyâif thatâs even possible.
[Name]âs thumb slides along the smooth, gold band on her ring finger. The simple diamond set in the band catches the moonlight. James claims to have bought it, but she knows him too well: surely he stole this lovely ring from some poor, unwitting individual. She can only hope that they donât miss it too much.
She fiddles with the ring as her hands sit in her lap, lost in thought. âWhat are you, again?â she asks.
James is straightening his cuffs, his suit jacket. Heâs in his black pinstripe suit with not a speck on him. Perhaps he stole the suit, too. One can never know when it comes to James. âA banker,â he says. His voice is low and rumbling, as biting as stone. He glances up like heâs pondering something. âPerhaps I took it over from my father.â
A shiver passes through her, undoubtedly from the night air. Sheâs squeezed into an evening gown that is only a shade darker than blood: itâs bold and it shows off her figure in a way she normally doesnât dress, but she has to stand out tonight. Her arms are bare and every breeze makes her shoulders hunch, which certainly doesnât help the corset she is tied into. She feels like a Christmas present, meant to be unwrapped.
Her chest, too, is bare with a scooping necklineâsave for a glittering necklace. This jewelry came from Sherlock, and he claims to have procured it from Mycroft. Again, she isnât sure if that is the truth, but being friends with James and Sherlock has made her come to expect that most things they darn her with have likely come to them through unfortunate circumstances. There is only so much they can throw together at the last minute.
âIs that how we met?â she asks.
James pouts, thinking. âSecretary?â
She scoffs and looks outside. âSo very original.â Through the trees, lights wink at her. They must be getting close to the manor.
âThatâs usually how it goes, darling,â says James, leaning towards her as he fixes his cuffs.
âIt is much too overused.â
âPerhaps thatâs what makes it so believable. Occamâs razor and all that,â he adds, waving a dismissive hand.
Persistent, she says, âIf we are to be convincing, James, we have to feel real. We havenât spent nearly enough time on our stories.â
âI do best when I improvise.â
She canât help the snort that escapes her. âYes, Iâve seen you improvising in the past.â
âWere you not impressed?â
âAre you referring to the time that you told that poor shopkeep that I was Sherlockâs wife whom you had stolen without his knowledge? All to find the owner of some hat.â
James shrugs a shoulder. âI thought you were ratherâŠstirred at the time.â
âMortified, more like.â The weathered stone of Whitby Abbey rises over the trees as they get closer and closer. There are more carriages ahead of them now, other guests waiting to be dropped off. âOnly God knows whatever will come out of your mouth next,â she says. âI donât think even He knows half the time.â
âI love to keep my captive audience forever on their toes.â
She shoots him a look that says Oh, I know you do. âI would at least like a hobby,â she insists after a momentâs silence. âSomething to make me stand out.â
It was the wrong thing to sayâespecially to James, of all people.Â
Before he can speak, she blurts out, âPerhaps I write poetry.â
That damned smile. Those teeth may very well cut her one of these days. âOh? Are you any good, mo chroĂ?â
âOf course,â she says, offended he even has to ask. James is smiling at her as she adds, âI can lift some Browning if Iâm questioned. I doubt anyone there knows a lick of poetry.â
Their carriage rattles as they sweep through the gravel in front of Whitby. The historic home sits with golden windows and the distant whisper of string music playing from within. There are many folks in their resplendent eveningwear wandering the groundsâsmoking their cigars, sharing whispersâwhile the rest vanish inside. Not for the first or last time, she wonders why she lets Sherlock and James convince her to do these things with them. Her life used to be so quiet and simple and she resented it, but these men are terrible influences, even if she does love life a bit more with them in it.Â
Sheâll never tell them that, though.
James sighs deeply, resting his head back against the seat until he is nothing more than a silhouette again, calling to mind a Roman marble bust: hard, strong lines. His Adamâs apple shifts as he recites in a rough voice, ââHow do I love thee? Let me count the ways.ââ
Staring up at the manor, almost wistful, she breathes, ââI love thee to the depth and breadth and height / My soul can reach.ââ
Her voice is so soft that she thinks James didnât hear, but the silence is heavy. She turns and finds James looking at her, the smile lingering even if it doesnât quite reach his eyes. He looks to be somewhere else, dazed and a little distracted, and her immediate thought, for some reason, is Take me to wherever it is youâve just gone.
The carriage comes to a stop, and the door swings open, startling her. A small gasp and she spins around.
But it is only a valet in a tailcoat, a white-gloved hand extended towards her. âWelcome to Whitby Abbey, madame.â
âHow kind,â she says, a hand to her chest, still recovering, while the other slides across the palm of the valet. Her ring winks at her.
There she is, standing in her blood-red dress and similarly painted lips, a mere ant beside a home she has no right stepping inside of. In those handful of seconds, all she can think about is the little girl she used to be: so lonely, always on the outside. She had grown used to it, found comfort there. Lately it seems as if life has done what she can only compare to shoving her from behind the curtain and onto the stage.Â
The melancholy threatens to drown her, but then a hand slides across the small of her back and her shoulders rise, turning to find James. He smiles at her, and it is such an honest, familiar smile, one that she knows better than anyone elseâs, that when she smiles back, it is like their own little language.
âAre you ready, mo chroĂ?â
He refuses to tell her what that means. She only hopes it isnât some joke heâs sneaking by her. âLetâs.â
ââââââââ
[Name] hasnât been in a home quite like this before. They glide through the foyerâgray stone, curved archways, five-figure vases and marble bustsâand into the ballroom, which opens up before them like a cloudless sky. A neck-breaking ceiling with shimmering chandeliers, white-draped tables with elaborately arranged centerpieces: flowers and flickering candles. Thereâs a stage off to the right-hand side of the ballroom where a string quartet plays.
âFuckinâ hell,â mutters James, staring all around.
She was thinking the same thing. âSherlock will be here soon?â she asks.
âSo he claims.â He slips back his sleeve just enough to peek at a watch. He pauses for dramatic effect, then adds, âHim. And Mycroft.â
She can hardly hide her surprise. âMycroft?â The only reason he would possibly be coming along is if his hand was forced.Â
âHeâs the reason Sherlock procured our attendance. I believe he wanted to be here to make sure we donât humiliate ourselves.â
James, smiling like the cat that got the cream, tucks a piece of her hair back, his fingertips ghosting across the shell of her ear. Itâs a mere whisper of a touch, yet she almost forgets to listen as he says, âI gallantly offered to take the role.â
âWhy am I not surprised?â she asks, her voice breathy and trying to hide the very fact.
His eyes drift down to her painted lips, and she doesnât want to even imagine what is stirring behind those dark eyes. âWould you have preferred Mycroft?âÂ
âHe wouldnât have been so lascivious,â she says, her cheeks warming. Thank goodness her face is buried beneath so much makeup. âHe would have been a perfect gentleman about the whole thing.â
âAh, but thatâs the thing, darling,â says James, taking a step closer, and then his mouth leans into her ear, his hand slipping around to the middle of her back, caging her there. Just being near him, she can feel the warmth of him. Her eyes flutter, especially when his breath touches her ear: hot, ticklish. âI donât think you want a gentleman.â
When James pulls away, she glares at himâor what she prays looks like a glare. If she thought she was blushing before, she certainly is now. She resists the urge to stamp on his foot or some other such childish thing.
This may be the worst idea theyâve ever come up withâand thatâs truly saying something.
âHow about a drink?â asks James, and he winks.
Right then, a servant passes with a tray of whiskey. James sneaks two from the tray, his naturally quick fingers making the glasses vanish in a blink. He turns, handing her her glass, and he makes a point to glide his fingers over hers, reveling in the way she scowls. His hands are much larger than hers, calloused from his schoolwork, but soft still, like he takes care of them.
She tries to put any thought of his hands out of her mind as she sips the whiskey. Itâs harsh, but she relishes the way it helps her think more clearly.Â
âHave you seen Fontaine yet?â
Damn. Sheâs been so distracted by James and his games that she hasnât even looked. She does now, turning with her whiskey glass tucked against her chest, trying to cool herself down, appearing as if she is only taking in the sights. There are so many people, at least a hundred, and at times the voices rise right over the music, their own chorus. So many faces and smiles and laughs and beautiful clothesâand she doesnât see their mark.
âNot yet,â she says, still looking. She cranes her neck. How in hell will they find him in this sea?
As if reading her thoughts, James says, âDonât worry, love. Heâll find us.â
Moreau is a mere stepping-stone in their planâthey believe he is acquainted with a murderer and thief they are hunting down; they know they work together and he may have something on his personâbut tonight must work without a hitch if they are to get anywhere.
âShould we split up?â she asks.
James makes a doubtful sound. âIt would be best if we stick together, I believe,â he says. âWe have to be a convincing couple, eh?â
âThis wonât be enough to tip him off?â she asks, holding up her hand and showing off her ring.
James squints at her, his nose wrinkling as he leans close. âJust to make certain, darling.â He finishes off his whiskey as another servant passes, and he replaces his empty glass with a fresh one. He downs the new glass with his head tipped back and when he finishes that one, he asks, âCare for a dance?â
So they make their way to the floor. They slip in among the couples, careful to stay visible on the edge of the circle, and her heart trips as she nearly does when James reels her in, his hand falling to her waist as the other takes her own hand, holding her fingers so delicately. Her arm goes around his neck. Has she ever danced with James before? No, she realizes, because she wouldâve remembered this panic in her chest: like a bird in a cage.
James, of course, is a great dancer. How he learns all of the things he knows, she cannot begin to understand, but he seems good at everything he sets his mind to. Itâs incredibly annoying.Â
Whatâs more annoying is how their bodies move like water together. The space she has put between them shrinks as they step and turn with seemingly one mind. All the while James smiles down at her, like he has her right where he wants her.Â
âDo you try to drive me to madness, or does it just come so easily to you?â she asks.
James laughs, his cheeks and the lines around his eyes bunching. And most annoying of all is that James is handsome and he knows it. He has a way of making one feel special and he often directs this superpower towards her. She wishes he wouldnât, but she knows she would miss it if it were gone. She would never tell him any of these things; itâs embarrassing enough to think it in the privacy of her thoughtsâbut even then she wonders if he can see those, too.
âCanât a man just dance with a beautiful woman?â
âThere you go again,â she says, rolling her eyes as she looks beyond his shoulder. âAlways there with a comment in hand. Ready to flatter at a momentâs notice.â
âDo I flatter?â he asks. His breath whispers past her ear, stirring the hair. âOr do I tell the truth?â
âI think,â she says, looking him in the eye, âthat you show flattery to anything that draws breath.â
âIf it gets the job done,â he agrees.
She guffaws. âSo shameless!â
âHave I ever lied to you, mo chroĂ?â
âI would have no way of knowing, so Iâm inclined to say yes.â
James spins her underneath his raised arm. Her heart spins with her, weightless as a feather, and then she is reeled back in just as quickly, nearly collapsing against him. Her hand falls on his chest to steady herself.
âEvery word I say to you is true. I would swear my life on it.â
A little breathless, she says with a slight laugh, âYou have told me some rather incredible things, Moriarty.â
Thereâs a sudden sobriety in his eyes. âAs I said.â
She has only his word to take, and how good is the word of a thief? For she knows how good of a thief he is: he steals her heartbeat with a single look.
ââââââââ
People mingle amongst themselves, enjoying finger foods and drinks; others greet acquaintances and share stories, laughing together. Eyes catch on [Name] as she passes, some curious, others intrigued. She lets her gaze linger over themâall men. That feeling returns: a present to be opened.
Moreau is nowhere to be seen, though, and neither are the Holmes brothers. And she is boredâwell, as bored as she can be with James. He flirts and he flatters and she parries every word with an acuity that has become their custom.Â
At some point she wanders off, obtaining a little sandwich and a fresh gin, and when she returns to Jamesâonly ten minutes have passedâhe has found himself an audience. He stands there, one hand in his pocket, the other holding whiskey, and he waves the glass around as he speaks. When [Name] approaches, the crowd has just started laughing. He flashes a winning smile at them, and his eyes alight when he sees her. âAh, here she is,â he says, extending an arm.
Confused, she comes to him. His hand falls to the small of her back as he says, âDarling, I was just about to tell the story of my proposal to you.â
âOh, please do!â says an enthusiastic and very pretty redhead. The man at her side seems utterly bored. As a matter of fact, the women seem most delighted by James, while their men stand there, some looking rather angry at James for distracting their partners.
âYes. Do,â says [Name] with a sickly sweet smile.
âWell,â he begins, and they fall silent, only the string instruments accompanying his story, âI made sure to cancel any prior engagement she had, and I told her we were spending the day together. I took her on a tour of the city. With my job and her writing, we are so very busy. I wanted to treat her to a day of no obligation or worry. Anyways, I brought her to the university library where I read some Shakespeare to herââ The women coo, some clutching their chests; [Name] fights not to roll her eyes at him. ââand got into some business I would rather not share at the moment.â The audience laughs, gasping and scolding. [Name] wonders if perhaps she should vanish into a ghost about now.Â
âWe went to eat after, and then we went for a walk through the park,â he goes on. âI didnât tell her where we were going, but Iâm sure she could guess.â He looks down at her with such soft reverence as he says the words that she wonders, again, how he can be so good at lying. âThe gardens. I knew it was her favorite place in the city, so I made sure to end things there. There were butterflies, more than I had ever seen in one place, and they were of every color under the sunâand perhaps some new ones. The look on her face wasâŠâ Jamesâs voice drifts off, staring at her, seemingly lost in a memory that doesnât exist. All breathing seems to stop, waiting for him. âShe was beautiful.â James clears his throat. âWe hardly said a word as we walked through the flowers. I was scared to ruin the moment. But eventually we found a bench and I recited some of her poetry to her. I had found a piece she had written privately. I recited it from memory and thenâŠI asked her to marry me.â
The words flow from him as if they are real. How could he improvise such a story with so many eyes on him? Her face warms under the adulation they receive. The story is all a bit saccharine and certainly meant to flatter the audience, but itâs the sentiment that renders her speechless. How easily he toys with her and his flirtations.
Two can play at this game.
When a woman asks, âWhat was the poem?â [Name] jumps at the chance.
Turning to James, she warns him only with a devilish smile of her own as she recites, ââI love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I am with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out.ââÂ
Somewhere in saying the words, her smile vanishes until she is just standing there, staring into James Moriartyâs eyes, and declaring her love to him.
She hardly hears the fawning of their captive audience with their hands clasped, mouths falling into perfect oâs. Itâs at this moment that some of the men slip away, tugging their wives along behind them, and there, just for a second, she sees him, watching with keen interest.
She stands on her toes and presses a kiss to Jamesâs cheek, which seems to leave him rather flummoxed, judging by the way his fingers dig into her waist. She whispers, âMoreau is here.â
ââââââââ
The battle wages on. For every flirtation that slips past Jamesâs lips, [Name] is shooting back. Itâs as if all of the months of dealing with James have bubbled over within herself. She is sick of being the business end of all of his jokes and teases, rendered speechless and flustered by his practiced advances. She hates the way he affects her, and she is determined to put him in his place.
All the while, Moreau is circling. The dress has done its job, but it was Jamesâ and her performances that caught him like a fish on a hook. He is here with his wife, but he lingers and he leers, trying to catch [Name]âs eye. She needs to encourage him to make the first move.
Thatâs when Sherlock and Mycroft arrive, looking utterly dashing in their spotless suits. Sherlockâs eyes roll practically to the back of his head when he sees Jamesâs arm around [Name] as they sit at their table. âTruly selling the part, are you?â asks Sherlock.
âAye. Itâs the best role Iâve ever played,â says James, beaming.
[Name] jumps up from her seat. Moreau has been staring at the foursome like a hawk; this is the perfect opportunity. âMycroft, would you mind sharing a dance with me?â
The elder Holmes pauses as he unwinds his scarf. âReally?â asks Mycroft.
âReally?â asks James, leveling his gaze.
âIâd love a dance,â she says, tucking her arms behind her back, her chest pitching forward.
Mycroft keeps his eyes firmly on her face, his mouth tight. He looks over her shoulderâat Sherlock? James? Whatever he sees there must help convince him. âIâd be honored.âÂ
As she takes his hand and leads him to the floor, she hears a chair scrape back and an Irish voice bark her name, but she doesnât dare look back.
There is a tinge of pink in Mycroftâs cheeks as he takes her into his arms. His touch is much more delicate than Jamesâs: James is firm and so sure of himself and what he wants, while Mycroft is the consummate gentleman, plagued with nauseating politeness and concern. She takes his wrist and raises his hand higher until he is right in the divot of her waist. The look he gives her is of pure shock. â[Name]?â
âItâs all a performance, right?â she asks, meaning to jestâbut it comes out drenched in quiet resentment.
âAre you well?â asks Mycroft. She nearly steps on his toe as they twirl around the floor.
âPerfectly fine, Mycroft,â she says. She smiles at him, and wonders if she is trying to convince him or herself. âAn evening spent with James Moriarty can fray the nerves.â
âI know exactly what you mean,â grumbles Mycroft. âSpeaking of, my apologies that we were so late. Sherlock got himself into aâwell, a bit of trouble, as he often does.â
âOh, goodness, what was it now?â
âWellââ And here he dives into a story of a night of errors, constant delays, and nonsensical trouble hindering their arrival to the party. Mycroft says it all with a straightfaced, despairing tone that makes her smile, basking in the pure enjoyment of having a friend that is so utterly himself. She laughs at some parts, and they shake their heads about the chaos of Sherlock, even if they love him.
âYour brother is a handful,â she says.Â
âI am well aware.â
âHe is a good man,â she says softly. Tucking her cheek against Mycroftâs shoulder, she is suddenly so tired. She stares at the couples dancing all around them, wondering what their lives are like. âIn his own crazy way.â
Mycroft breathes in sharply, his chest rising beneath her. âYes, he is.â He clears his throat and asks in a clearer voice, âHow is the business with that man going?â
âHeâs rather like a gnat: constantly lingering,â she says. She casts her head about, wondering if she can spot him. âIf he doesnât make his move, Iâll have to.â
âAre you so sure about all of this?â
âWhatever do you mean?â
âYouâreâŠwellââ The pink returns to Mycroftâs cheeks.
âLuring him in?â she asks. Itâs the kindest way of putting it.
Mycroft seems grateful. âYes,â he says through tight teeth.
âWell. There are some other ways Iâd rather spend my Thursday evening,â she concedes, âbut if it will save lives, Iâm willing.â
âDonât let these boys make you a martyr.â
She laughs. âI can handle myself, Mycroft.â
âOh, Iâm well aware,â he says, nodding to himself as he stares over her head.
âIâm sorry to involve you, Mycroft.â
He meets her eye. He really is very handsome; she wouldnât have minded playing as his betrothed. âItâsâŠnothing. Somewhat.â His mouth presses into a line. âThe less I know the better,â says Mycroft, but he smiles kindly. His eyes lift beyond her and into the crowd. âThose boys are trouble.â His brow knits, eyes narrowing. âGood God,â he mutters almost to himself, dropping his head. âIâm being glared at.â
âMoreau?â She forces herself not to turn; she doesnât want to look too interested.
Mycroft loosens his touch. âNot him.â
Oh.Â
Her eyes drop between their bodies, suddenly fascinated by the way her dress sways against the floor. Now that it has been pointed out, she can practically feel the hole being burned into her back. She wonât dare look. âYes, heâs been playing his role rather well all night.â
Mycroftâs mouth pinches. âHeâs always like this.â
She doesnât know she has her jaw clenched. âLike what?â
The look that Mycroft gives her can only be described as: oh, poor thing. âDear, he looks at you like he wants to eat you alive.â
She hates how those words move through her: in the way honey pours from a spoon; the way water flows through a river. But she knows James. He loves the thrill of the chase, the satisfaction of winning. He knows he is handsome and he knows she finds him so.Â
She wishes she didnât.Â
âHeâs a cad,â she says, scoffing. Trying not to care. âHe would tire of me the moment he has me.â
Mycroftâs brow is tight. He stares at her, confused. âI donât thinkââ
A finger taps on Mycroftâs shoulder. The two of them turn and there is Moreau: heâs about Mycroftâs age, handsome enough, with slicked blond hair. His blue eyes donât leave [Name] as he asks, âMind if I step in?â
ââââââââ
All they know about Algernon Moreau is his notoriety in the art world: supposedly he is a highly regarded dealer. Their interest is his connection with Lucas Bernard, an antiquarian who works with a select fewâincluding Moreau. The two men and several others are all connected to an underground market. Bernard doesnât deal to just anyone.
They found a woman who spent some time with Moreau. She told them that Moreau has cards on him for all of the men in this little gang.
Youâll need to get him alone, Sherlock had suggested. They had stood around the table, looking at blueprints of Whitby Manor. He had his closed fist to his chin, staring down at the map as he pondered.
That should be easy enough, sheâd said. Would [Name] a mere year ago have been so willing to do any of this? Probably not. But getting tangled up with these two boys had brought out a piece of herself she never knew was buried within her.Â
Then what? asked James. He had looked across the table at her, hands buried deep into his pockets. He looked up at her through his lashes, his brow framing his suddenly serious face. She wasnât used to such a grim James Moriarty.
She had met his eyes like it was a challenge. Iâll get the card.Â
How, though? He said the words slowly, circling the table until he was standing beside her. He could be imposing when he wanted to be, and he was right then. Are you going to ask for it? Or do something else to convince him?
Whatever it takes.
Jamesâs stare was hard enough to cut a diamond. Without his eyes leaving her, he told Sherlock, Iâll follow them. I can take care of it.
Do you have no faith in me, James? She had a hip cocked, a hand resting on the table.
He looked her up and down. The opposite, actually. Thatâs what worries me.
She thinks of that night and Jamesâs faceâthe flickering candlelight, the low rumble of his voiceâas she dances with Moreau. Unfortunately for her, Moreau is a dreadful bore. It amazes her, sometimes, how men like this can secure such lovely women and reel them into their net. But she laughs and flatters like he is the most fascinating man in the world.
As Moreau blathers on about selling a painting overseas, there is James, waiting. He is sitting at the table where she left him. When their eyes meet, he gives her a small nod.Â
(I can take care of it.)
âIâm holding a few paintings here,â Moreau is saying. âThereâs an auction in a few days' time. Would you like to see them?â
Her eyes alight. âIâd love to.â
The pair separate from the dancefloor. Moreau lets his hand fall to the small of her back as he guides her through the crowds, an innocent enough gesture if she didnât know him.
[Name] holds her dress to keep from tripping as they mount the stairs.
âHow far is the art held?â she asks, suddenly realizing she will be alone with this man.
Moreau turns, looking down at her heels. âDonât worry,â he says, waving a dismissive hand. âYou wonât hurt your feet.â
She laughs. âIâd hate to have blisters.â
He tuts at her. A red and gold carpet softens their steps as they reach the second floor. Nobody is up here except for them, the music and voices dissipating with every step. âI saw you dancing all night,â he says. âThe stairs shouldnât be an issue.â
Boring and condescending. What dreadful company. Heâs walking ahead of her, so she lets her eyes roll. Then she softens her voice: âI know you saw me.â It mustâve been convincing enough because Moreau turns as he approaches a door, giving her a lingering look before opening the door.Â
Light spills out from the room. Across the way, a balcony door hangs open, a cool breeze wisping inside. There are about a dozen paintings of various sizes spread around the room, all of them in heavy gold-filigreed frames. These paintings must be hundreds of years old and even though she knows nothing about art, they are undeniably beautiful. She allows a gasp, not entirely fake, and steps into the room. He closes the door behind them with a soft click.
âOh, these are beautiful,â she says. She tilts her head, approaching the first one in front of her. Itâs a seascape with crashing waves, the whitecaps so realistic that she has to resist the urge to reach out and touch them. Moreau stands by her side, a little too close, with his hands clasped behind his back. âAbsolutely beautiful.â
âI thought the same.â
She finds him looking at her. Gross. But she feigns a blush, turning away as if to hide her reddening cheeks. âThese will be up for auction?â
âThis Sunday,â he says, nodding. âYou should come.â
âI donât know if I could afford these,â she says with a self-deprecating laugh.
âPerhaps a generous benefactor can lend aââ
Thereâs a knock at the door.
Moreau stops mid-word, his mouth hanging open. Casting her a look of confusion, Moreau goes to the door. Right as he opens it, he says, âHow may Iââ but unfortunately, a fist shoots out and meets his nose. Immediately stunned, Moreau collapses back and hits the ground with a thump that makes [Name] wince.
James steps over Moreauâs body. âFancy meeting you here,â he tells her.
James hooks his arms beneath Moreauâs pits and drags the man farther into the room. Moreau is out cold, his mustache practically twitching with his snores. James kicks the door shut as he crouches, digging through Moreauâs pockets.
âI couldâve done all of this,â she reminds him, a hand on her hip.
James glances at her before returning to Moreau. He says nothing.
She smirks at the top of his head. âIt wouldâve been so easy toââ
âPlease stop speaking.â
Another knock. Her brow pinches, ready to panicâtheir plans never do go well, do they?âwhen the door opens and Sherlockâs head pops in. âDid youâoh my. So you did.â He slips inside and shuts the door, lazily leant against it. âWell done, [Name]. Anything of note?â he asks James.
James lifts up a wallet. âJust this.â He stands, picking through the sleeves. He pulls a note from the billfold and when [Name] scoffs, he shoots her a wink before pocketing the money. âIâll use it to get you dinner.â
âHow romantic.â
âThere,â says Sherlock, pointing at a card buried within the wallet.
James pulls out a stack of business cards. Heâs grinning as he picks through them, until finally he says, âHa!â Between two fingers, he holds a white card with a looping black script. The two men cock their heads as they read the card, slow smiles spreading across their faces. âGood work, folks. Weâve got the bastard.â
[Name] stands on her toes to look. James hands it to her, dropping back down to drag Moreau farther into the room. Sherlock stands before her with his hands on his hips, saying, âThis might just be our cleanest heist weâve everââ
Thereâs another knock on the door. Jamesâs head snaps up, still carrying Moreau, whose head lolls drunkenly. Sherlock stops mid-word. [Name]âs eyes widen, her hand coming to cover her mouth. Please be Mycroft.
ââEllo? Monsieur Moreau?â
Oh, no.
âSherlock,â hisses James. He nods his head at the body. âTake him.â
âWhere?â whispers Sherlock, spreading his hands. There were no secret passageways in their blueprints.
âTo the balcony. Hurry.â
The pounding on the door grows louder and more insistent. âMoreau? Moreau!â
As Sherlock drags Moreau away, grumbling to himself, James returns to [Name]. âMess up my hair,â he tells her. She hesitates for only a heartbeat before she ruffles his hairâsoft, so thick between her fingers, good lordâand he takes her face in his hand, cradling her jaw. Her breath ceases in her chest, wondering if he is about to kiss her, the knocking at the door long forgotten. Can he feel her pulse beneath her jaw? But he only smears his thumb across her bottom lip, spreading her lipstick onto her cheek. As he goes to open the door, he undoes a couple of buttons on his suit and rubs his thumb across his own lip.
James opens the door. He stands there with a drunken grin, leaning against the frame and looking rather ravished: his tousled hair and the open suit paired with a look of absolute lovesickness on his face. âEver heard of privacy, man?â
âWhatââ The man cranes his neck to look around James. The man is tall and lean, dressed in a nice suit like any other guest. Did Moreau have a guard they didnât think to keep an eye out for? âI thought I sawâIs there an Algernon Moreau in here?â
âI hope not,â says James, practically pitching forward. âJust me ân my girl.â
âYourâ?â The man sees [Name] for the first time. He turns away just as quickly, no doubt stunned by the state of the pair. âThatâs the woman I just saw with Moreau. Is it not?â he asks James.
âSheâs witâ me, mate,â says James, pointing at his own chest.Â
âHow did you two get in here?â
[Name] says, âThe door was unlocked, sir. Weâre very sorry.â
âGet out of here,â snaps the man, finished with them. âThere are absolutely no guests allowed in here.â James hooks an arm around [Name]âs waist and follows the man out of the room. The man pulls a key from his jacket pocket and locks the door. He pockets it again, staring them down. âBecause you two are so young, I wonât say a word. But you damned lovebirds better find somewhere else to doâŠwhatever the hell you were bloody doing.â
âWe will, we will,â says James, miming a drunkardâs slow nod. [Name] has to hide a laugh behind her hand. âCâmon, girl. Letâs leave the man alone.â
James seems to gain his sobriety the moment they hit the stairs, dashing hand in hand down the steps as they both fight to keep their laughter down. [Name] is practically shaking as they return to the party.
James rests his hands on his hips and looks back up the stairs, his teeth glinting as he raises a hand. âFuckinâ hell, Sherlock is stuck up there,â he says, and hardly finishes the sentence before he bursts out laughing. She tries shushing him, even as she trips over her own hysterics. Has she ever seen anything funnier than a ruffled James Moriarty, her lipstick across his mouth?
Some eyes land on them, shooting curious looks, so she takes his hand and runs again, holding her dress up as they run out of Whitby Manor, pushing past people. âWe have to find the balcony,â she says, giggling. She goes from dragging along James to hustling with him alongside her, their shoes crunching on the gravel the moment they step outside. The night air brings shivers, but she can hardly feel them through the heat in her chest.
They find the balcony after a few minutes of searching. âSherlock,â she calls, and James snorts. She elbows him before daring to shout louder. âSherlock!â
When his head pops out over the railing, James bursts into laughter again. He stumbles away, a hand on his chest, as she says, âSherlock, you got locked in!â
âYou donât say!â says Sherlock.
âIs there a way for you to get down?â
Sherlock hits his hands on the railing. âWell, there isnât a damn ladder!â
James regains himself enough to say, ââWherefore art thouâââ
[Name] reels on him, smiling despite herself. âYouââ
âJames, do you thinkââ But Sherlock stops, his eyes going wide before retreating from the balconyâs edge.
Sheâs about to call out his name when James shushes her, a hand on her bare arm. Goosebumps rise at his touch. âSomething tells me our dear friend has been found out,â he whispers. âItâs best we find somewhere else to be.â James slips his fingers into hers and they run deeper into the yard, towards the gardens.
ââââââââ
Moonlight leads the way. The trees around them seem to shimmer as if painted with silver. The golden glow from the windows beckons to them, but there is something oddly cozy about being on the outside looking in, trapped in their own little world. James doesnât let go of her hand as they stroll through the garden, accompanied by the occasional hooting owl or yip of a fox deeper in the forest beyond the property.
âDo you thinkââ
ââSherlock will be fine? Sure. Heâll give them some story,â answers James flippantly. âHe has his brother.â The moon casts shadows across his face, just as it had in the carriage. Was that really all tonight? The carriage ride feels like a thousand years ago. She only knows now, here, with James.
She feels drunk: she hasnât stopped smiling. She trips over her own feet, stumbling and knocking into James, and his arm comes around her like it belongs there, his own bashful smile so big and bright that her heart swells with warmth: theyâre so young and beautiful. James stares into her eyes for a long moment, teetering on the edgeâshe knows not whatâs at the bottom, but she knows she wants to fall.Â
âJames?â
âYes.â
âWhat does mo chroĂ mean?â After hearing those words in Jamesâs raspy, deep voice, they sound softer in her own mouth, timid and unused to shaping the sounds.Â
Has he ever looked so handsome? The moonlight sands down his hard edges. His soft black eyes and his just-as-black hair and his beautiful nose and the tilt of his roguish lips. And the way he looks at her. Has it always been right in front of her? She doesnât see James look at anyone the way he looks at her.
âMy heart,â he breathes.Â
Much too enticing.
[Name] kisses him with a desperation like she has been left without air. She holds his cheekâsoft, shavedâas she fits her mouth to his, and James meets her with equal enthusiasm, his hands circling around her middle and tucking her in until she knows nothing but the firmness of his body, his touch. Her fingers slip back into his hair, digging in and pulling him in as if he can get any closer. Jamesâs teeth brush her bottom lip, threatening to bite.
When she spreads her lips, the press of Jamesâs tongue is dizzying. She falls against him, her knees weakening. In a hurried, breathless voice, James whispers, âAbout fuckinâ time, woman.â She laughs against his mouth, her teeth brushing his lip, then his nose. James dives in to press his open mouth against her bared throat, and [Name] stares up at the stars and the moon, praying to be consumed.
ââââââââ
James kicks the door to his apartment shut, his hands never leaving her face. He kisses her like she is about to vanish. His feverish hands work at her skirts, shoving them off and out of the way. âDo you have any idea how often Iâve dreamt this?â he whispers against her lips. The excess fabric spills from her waist. Still in her corset and inner skirt, she feels even lighterâand James lifts her into his arms, carrying her to the table.
He lays her down after sweeping everything off of the surface with a sharp clatter. He buries his mouth against her neck, making her shiver with his hot breath. He is a man undone: his ruffled hair, the flush in his cheeks. He canât keep his hands off of her. His mouth traces down to her heaving chest, her breasts pressing against the corset. His teeth graze against the swell of her breast and she wriggles, begging, âJames.â
âPatience is a virtue, mo chroĂ,â he says with a villainous smile before burying his hands beneath her skirts, drawing them up around her trembling thighs. He kneels at the end of the table and sheâs blushing. âBe good,â James warns as he opens her legs, and then his mouth finds her aching, weeping cunt. The first touch of his tongue leaves her lightheaded, her lips falling open as she cries out. He gathers her wetness from bottom to top, licking her up so thoroughly that her hand claps over her mouth, moaning as her fingers find his hair and pull.Â
James groans against her cunt, which only makes it better. He blindly reaches up and pulls the hand from her mouth, holding it hostage by her side, burning bruises into her wrist. His noseâthat damn noseârubs so nicely against her clit and her hips move with a mind of their own, chasing the pleasure he provides her. His tongue is relentless, like heâs kissing her all over again. The very thought makes her face burn.
Never has she felt so good. Her fingers have never brought her such joy, nor has anyone else. It feels like James knows every inch of her and can read her every thought, knowing just what to do at just the right time to get her whining and moaning beneath him.Â
Without removing his mouth, James releases her wrist and slips free of his jacket, tossing the clothing somewhere in the room. She grinds up against his nose, relentless, as James undoes the buttons of his shirt, the fabric falling open to expose dark chest hair and firm muscle. The sounds of his mouth against her wet core would be humiliating if she didnât find it so provocative.
âJames,â she begs. She needs to be full of him. She has never wanted anything more in her life. A finger, his tongueâanything.
Her fake engagement ring shines with her hand in his hair.Â
James kisses her thigh before rising, the sudden loss of his mouth devastating. She gasps, hands reaching up to slip beneath his shirt, desperate for contact. His skin is hot enough to burn, but she pulls him in, greedy for more of him. She worries itâll never be enough.
He works at unlacing her corset as she pulls on his pants, slipping the button free and drawing the pants down. Her nails trace along his ribs as she loops her arms around him, forcing him nearer. James sheds his shirt. âYouâre beautiful,â heâs saying, his voice slurred, and when he kisses her, she tastes herself on his tongue.
[Name] sits up from the table, dizzy. She scoots to the edge of the table and loops an arm around his neck, fingers returning to his hair as they kiss, James slipping his cock from drawers. He falls hot and heavy against her thigh and sheâs already shaking, desperately impatient, and James laughs, the sound aching, before he lines himself up and presses into her.
They gasp, their kiss halted by the sudden intrusion. Their lips brush, open-mouthed, as she adjusts to the size of James, steadily pushing deeper and deeper. Heâs thick and long, stretching her open until every thought has left her. Her head falls back with a soft, âFuck.â James buries as deep as he can before stopping, letting them catch their breath.Â
Then he moves.Â
He rocks out of her before bullying his way back in, leaving her a trembling mess. She clutches his bicep as she meets his every thrust, the next somehow always better than the last. They move in a rhythm that comes naturally, like their bodies have waited an eternity for this. Like a dance.
âDoing so well,â he whispers. Heâs groaning at the slide of her. âJust made for me, darling.â
That fucking voice really isnât helping her regain her sanity.Â
With her corset loose around her middle, Jamesâs mouth lowers to her breast, catching a nipple between his lips. She moans, her thighs trembling, hardly able to think. He knows just what to do, how to undo her entirely. He smiles around her nipple, the pleasure blinding. She grinds harder.
James lifts her from the table and she gasps, clutching onto him. His cock stays in her as he carries her to and drops her onto the bed, the mattress creaking beneath their weight. His fingers clasp with hers and hold her hand beside her head as he fucks her harder, whispering in Gaelic the entire time. She flushes at his attention and the thunderous rumble of his voice. When he rubs her clit, urging her to oblivion, it is all too easy.
Her back arches and her nails dig into his back, leaving red marks as she squeezes him tight, moaning and crying out his name. James fucks her through the blinding pleasure, telling her just how good she feels, how beautiful she is. How long he has wanted her.Â
Tears slip down the sides of her head as James finishes moments later, a beautiful sound slipping from his mouth as warmth fills her.Â
She doesnât know if she has ever been happier.
They catch their breath for a couple of minutes, recovering. Jamesâs nose brushes against hers as he stares into her eyes, his own half-lidded, pleased and tired. His smile is lazy, and achingly beautiful. âWhat is it again?â His voice is a wreck. He swallows, clearing his throat. âââTo the depth and breadth and height / My soul can reach.ââ
She wonders if her smile is just like his: besotted and dazed. âWait until I tell the world how much of a romantic you are, James Moriarty.â
His smile widens. The tip of his nose teases hers. âAye, but theyâll never believe you,â he says. âOnly you get to see me like this, mo chroĂ.â Brushing a fresh tear from her cheek, James canât help stealing another kiss.