Wandering around Johnâs room, wrapped in a dark dressing gown, he adds deductions and guesses, scents and mental pictures to his file.Â
His little world of knowledge all about John.Â
When he will decide to go shopping for new dress pants based on the way his socks are curled in the hamper.Â
How many whiskeys he drank at the pub with Stamford by the state of his sweater.Â
Images too, of the way he must have leaned against the closet door when he peeled them off.Â
The tilt of the alarm clock where it sat on the bedside table, and the creases in the pillow were a film reel of the night, and the way he rolled on his side to sip from his glass of water.
The way he buried his head under the pillow at the first glimpse of morning light under his tired lids.
He breathes in deeply, his eyes closed, and he catalogues odors. Rhododendron. The park. Currant scones. The bakery.Â
The tube, the Chanel worn by the secretary at the clinic, and Stamfordâs favorite scotch.
Suddenly, John is in the doorway.Â
At first, John is in the doorway to a room that only exists in his mind, where he is bottling essences, labeling them in unbroken calligraphy and placing them carefully on shelves that stretch to the vaulted ceiling.
Then he remembers that his eyes are still closed, but he knows that John is really there.Â
He can smell him now, and hear him breathing, but most of all he can feel him just like he can feel the sun when it shines on him.
Think of something. Wait until John speaks.
Think of something. Something within character. âTo be fair,â levels Johnâs teasing voice in his mind, âthatâs a rather wide field.â
âAlright?â
He opens his eyes and slowly turns to face John, his internal monologue stuttering unhelpfully as he focuses on Johnâs face.Â
The slight dimple and eye crease of a sardonic smile that John is trying to suppress.Â
Does he know?
âFine,â he replies at last.Â
John lifting one brow slightly seems to unleash reason again and each thought clamors for attention.Â
He tries to behave as if his mind is placid, as if he just wandered in here unthinkingly while he organized his thoughts on some complicated and obscure matter of consequence only to himself.
âWhat time is it?â
Damn! That sounds guilty, suspicious, as if he knows that John was still meant to be on shift.Â
âItâs only two but they didnât need me after lunch, so I got some shopping and came home.â
âAh.â
âSo,â John prompts after a moment.
âYes?â
Both brows raised this time. He isnât quite suppressing the smile any longer.
âWhat are you doing in my bedroom?â
âCataracts.â
âSorry?â
A person can study a problem and not see any answer: the answer must be there.
âThe clouding of the ocular lens.â
Rhododendron. Currant scones.
âYes, I know what cataracts are, I meant-â
âItâs a common problem.â
Unbroken script: John ~ After walking through a February drizzle. John ~ Aftershave and toast with notes of honey and wintergreen.
âRather, yes, but-â
âAlthough easily treated with modern medicine, cataracts blinded many people for life before any treatment was developed.â
John just looks at him for a moment.
The sound of the pipes running hot water to the shower. The silences afterward that meant he was toweling off, shaving.
âYes, I suppose thatâs true.â
âWhen the procedure was first invented surgeons went to rural areas and gave sight to people who had never seen.â
âThat must have been amazing.â
When the newspaper stopped rustling it meant he was listening to Sherlockâs violin. When he stopped breathing for long moments, he was staring.
âThe doctors also recorded their patientâs reactions, and the way their brains adapted to the visual world. They had never seen the faces of their loved ones, or their own faces.â
John walks to the bed and sits. Sherlock begins to feel a bit trapped where he stands by the window.Â
Just keep talking, he thinks to himself as he inches towards the door.Â
Rhododendron. Currants.
âWell,â prompts John, âthatâs quite romantic, isnât it?â
Chanel, scotch whiskey. Keep talking.
âSome of them reacted badly, in fact. They were ashamed of their looks, and that they had been ignorant of the way they had appeared to others for so long. The world had seemed manageable before, but suddenly everything was spread out before them and it was too big, too much.â
Dress pants, whiskey. The way they moved around the breakfast table, so like dancing.
He expects John to speak again, but instead John waits and watches.
âOne person even threatened to blind themselves permanently, in a fit of desperation.â
The park, the bakery, the tube. A three-dimensional world is just too big, too much. The stars, the currants. They rocket away into the distance.
âI was just filing away some notes about emotional reactions under stress.â
âIn my bedroom.â
âApparently.â
Aftershave. Honey.
âI see. Do you always wander into my bedroom to think while Iâm away?â
Sherlock sighs arrogantly as he turns away with a flourish of his dressing gown, hoping that John had missed the panic in his eyes.
âI donât know. How often are you away?â
The sound of the pipes running hot water to the bath. The geranium-scented foam that John borrowed from his shelf, notes of evergreen. Aftershave, honey.
He creeps down the hallway, footsteps hidden under the loud white rush of water. He leans his forearms against the door gently, rests his forehead there, listens. So close.
Breathing deeply, bottling essences.
The way John smells before the bath is the sound of the ocean in a seashell, whispering secrets through a closed door.
The water twists off with a cascade of little droplets, each hitting the water at a different pitch, smaller and smaller.
John sighs, drops his robe on the little bench. Sherlock can hear him. He forgets to breathe.
He knows John is tired, that his back aches from standing at work, that he thinks that Sherlock is still in the kitchen.Â
One foot in the bath, John inhales suddenly. The water is hot. Slowly, he eases in, moaning a little when at last each of his vertebrae is submerged, extending, relaxing. He leans his head back against the edge of the tub. He exhales.
Quietly, Sherlock exhales with him. His mind drifts down past the surface of the water, past the tiled floor.Â
Subterranean rivers, where the acid present in an average raindrop has eaten away at the limestone cave walls over time until the living water and the stone are equally aerated.Â
A froth of water, a froth of stone.
The door opens, and John catches him in surprise.
âSherlock?â
âYes?â
He canât seem to stop blinking, as if traveling back to the surface too fast has shifted the pressure. He has the bends, he thinks, from diving too deeply and waking up only to fall into Johnâs arms.
âWhy were you leaning on the door?â
âForks?â
âWhat?â
Damn. He hadnât meant to phrase that as a question. John smells of geranium-scented bubbles.
âForks,â he declares with a bit more conviction.
He has only a dim notion of where heâs going with this thought, but he clings to an ideaâs wispy edges with every neuron he can spare. Johnâs hair is very wet around his ears and his neck.
He may have lost consciousness entirely for that endless moment when John was actually holding him. Notes of wintergreen, notes of evergreen, and in that endless moment everything was green. Bottle green.
He had been so soothed by the hypnotic sounds of the water, and of Johnâs slow breathing through the thin walls, that to ascend so suddenly into this reality of actually touching John is an electric charge to every synapse.Â
He feels every cell in his body dilate, trying to feel more, to feel everything. John smells of geraniums. Soft, like sea glass is softened by the lapping water, by the pull of the moon.
John is still damp, and very warm, and Sherlock had pressed heavily against him before he regained his balance.Â
âItalian.â
John blinks.
âAre you asking me to go to dinner?â
âWhen an Italian was married off to a French monarch she brought her servants and her chefs. They brought fine dining to France, in fact, although the French can still be credited with what they did with it.â
John looks closely into Sherlockâs eyes. Perhaps he was finally beginning to doubt Sherlockâs sanity, such as it was.Â
An average raindrop. A subterranean river. The ocean in a seashell. Sherlock has doubts as well.
âThe Italian chefs did away with the putrid and medieval spices and sauces they encountered. They also brought forks with them from Italy.â
âForks?â
âYes. The French and English were still stabbing chunks of meat with pocket knives, and thought themselves perfectly civilized.â
âYouâre certainly a wealth of trivia when you pop up in my lap like this.â
Keep talking. Keep breathing. The sound of the surf, the pull of the moon.
âThe French, quite ironically, believed forks to be effeminate in the extreme.â
John considers this for a moment.
âWell now youâve got me hungry. Are you sure youâre alright, though? Itâs just normally you⊠use the sofa. For thinking. Not the bathroom door.â
âAh yes, the sofa, sorry. Iâll go to the sofa.â
âSo, Italian, then, for dinner?â
âFine,â Sherlock nods. Then he turns and flees.
Â
The grains of cornmeal swell in the liquid, absorbing the protein and fat suspended in the broth, oils from the woodsy herbs. The constant motion of the whisk, agitating and separating. The butter melting-
âSherlock.â
Sherlockâs gaze flicks up from the spot on Johnâs jawline where he had been staring. Johnâs eyes are questioning, concerned.
âWhat are you thinking about when you zone out like that?â
The state of his sweater, the curl of his socks. The creases in Johnâs lips are slightly red from the wine. Rhododendron. Right now his breath smells of red fruits and red sauce, red pepper flakes. His mouth would taste of red.
âWhat do you mean, Iâm⊠Iâm often quiet. Iâve even eaten a bit.â
John smiles at that.
His smile is sunshine. The clouding of the ocular lens, the smell of spice. The dry sunshine of a dusty archway, an olive grove. Salt. He would taste of salt.
âYes, thatâs good. I really think you should eat an entire plate of food for once, though. Maybe drink some more wine. Whatever it takes to get you to relax, really, because you havenât been your normal kind of quiet, and you know it.â
Subterranean rivers, aerated rock. What might it take to relax? Mornings by the sea. Midnights in the garden. He would taste of wine.
âDo I?â
âYou do. Something is bothering you, and I think you should let it go.â
Sherlock scowls a bit at that but tries to hide it quickly, leaning over his polenta and pork ragu and slowly chewing.
Hotel rooms with expensive sheets of creamy cotton. Meals of fruit on sun-warmed rocks. An entire world brought to life by love. He knows. He has known all along that this is love.
Sherlock slowly lifts his glass of wine so that he can stare at John over the glasswareâs burnished rim.
âMaybe I donât want to let it go,â he growls.Â
John looks at him in surprise.
âFine,â he replies, setting down his napkin on his empty plate.Â
So many shades of blue. Marble in the shade, juniper in the sun. Johnâs eyes in the shade. Johnâs eyes in the sun.
âYou donât have to tell me what it is that youâre obsessing over. I just think you should try to relax. Iâm a doctor, remember, stress is harmful-â
âYes, John, Iâm aware. I am potentially damaging my hippocampus, which any veteran with traumatic stress experience would obviously understand. I canât imagine that obliging your medical advice of drinking wine will alleviate the source of my stress, but, if it makes you feel betterâŠâ
With that he drains his wine, and pours the rest of the Cabernet in the bottle into his glass. John would taste of red. John would taste of wine. This very wine.
John sighs, then watches him for a long moment.
âItâs anxiety.â
Sherlock sets down his glass, already half-empty again. If John tells him to drink he will drink. He will eat. He will follow, he will stay. He knows it. He will even try to listen.
âIâm sorry?â
âYou donât like repetition. Your mind is clouded by anxiety. I can see the tension in your neck. You pace in my bedroom. You fall asleep leaning on the bathroom door while Iâm in the tub-â
John stops then, as if suddenly hearing it all laid out in his own voice makes it sound⊠different.
âI just mean⊠It couldnât hurt to relax. A little wine. To relax. Thatâs all.â
Unbroken script: John ~ Tasting of red fruits and hot pepper. John ~ Dropping his robe onto the bench. John ~ Suspecting the truth.
Sherlock can feel his cheeks glowing in the yellow light of the restaurant.
âItâs the histamines in the grape skins.â
âWhat?â
âThey make my cheeks⊠inflamed.â
John smiles.
âA bit, now that you mention it. If you donât want-
âNo. Itâs⊠A good idea.â
Geraniums. Sea glass. The moon.
âPerhaps we can pick up another bottle on the way home.â
The lights are a bit more vivid, now.
Violet, the neon glow. Pooling indigo: the night.
John comes out of the shop with a few bottles in a paper bag. Perfect. His face is always so perfect. Aftershave. Honey.
âBetter?â
He had told John he needed a bit of air. Really, he just wanted to let John choose the wine.Â
He would choose the labels he thought Sherlock would like. The colors, the shapes, the weight of the paper.Â
A wealth of information. Lilac: Johnâs hair in the neon glow.Â
So many shades of blue.
âMuch.â
The paths home are easy, thawed from the sudden warmth of the spring weather. John glowing in the pooling indigo of the night.Â
âWhat are you thinking about?â
Rhododendron, geraniums. Currants, scotch.
Itâs Johnâs smile that makes him laugh: it looks nearly smitten. John ~ Adolescent in the streetlights.Â
The butter melts. His joy surfaces, it is lighter than everything around it, it bubbles up. Scented bubbles. Subterranean rivers.
John seems a bit bemused by his laughter. Happy.
âI suppose I was thinking that March rather snuck up on me. It feels balmy after just one afternoon of sunshine.â
Sunshine: melting butter, juniper, dusty sun-warmed rocks. Geraniums ~ The way John smells after his bath.
âThe weather? I expected something more than that after all your quiet.â
Light, happy. John is teasing him.
âWell I suppose eating an entire plate of food and drinking wine as my doctor advised has slowed my faculties.â
Midnight in the garden: small white lights in the trees, millions of suns drowning in the pool of the sky.Â
John would taste of wine.Â
John would taste of red.
âSherlock?â
âYes, John?â
There is a flicker of doubt on Johnâs face. So many shades of blue.
âWhat were you really thinking about?â
Sherlock smiles. Breathing deeply, bottling essences.
âI thought your medical advice was to eat and drink wine and subsequently be merry. In what capacity are you so interested to know?â
âWell, I stand by that advice but Iâm still just wondering as⊠as your friend.â
Pooling lilac. So many shades of blue.Â
âWeâre home.â
The night is a forest: Home is a beacon.
Small white lights in the trees. Love is a winking light in the wild darkness. Holding you close, allowing room for boldness.Â
Room for courage.
He is smiling to himself on the way up the stairs, because John is, also. John thinks that he canât see, but he hasnât taken into account⊠that he can read the muscles in his back, the weight of his steps.Â
Sherlock can feel Johnâs happiness like he can feel the warmth of the sun. Millions of suns.
John suspects the truth, but he is smiling. Melting butter. John would taste of salt.
âIâve had a brilliant idea.â
The paths home are easy.
âReally?â
John ~ Smiling in a perfect circle of light. John ~ A sky full of stars.
âDonât sound so surprised, Iâm not just here to help you conduct light.â
âDid I say that?â
John ~ The sun.
âYes, but listen. Since youâve been responding so far to my course of treatment, Iâm going to continue following the most banal stress-relief regimen possible.â
âJohn-â
âNo, truly. Youâve eaten an actual meal and had a bit of wine and you look much better already. By the time Iâm done with you, youâll be soft as putty and youâll sleep for twelve hours.â
John flushes a bit as his last words echo in the vast space between them. Sherlock stares, his lips parted slightly, and tries to relearn how to breathe.Â
âSo, Iâll open this wine and weâll carry on. With my plan.â
Violet. Lilac. Rhododendron.
âCertainly. Only a fool argues with his doctor.â
âThatâs right,â John calls over his shoulder as he rummages for the wine key, âand youâre a card-carrying genius, which makes my word law.â
Sherlock takes off his Belstaff and hangs it on a hook. He unbuttons the jacket of his bespoke suit, shrugs it off and folds it over a chair.Â
Keep breathing. Keep talking. His skin is hot: He can feel every button on his silver-gray shirt.Â
He can see every pore in the surface of this dream-world. John ~ A spark of sunshine, living flame in the indigo forest of the night.Â
âYes,â he agrees.Â
His voice is a whisper in the garden.Â
Rivers of sunlight beneath the ground. âAnd we both know how fastidiously I observe the law.â
Olive groves, the moon.Â
The wines are all red, from several different grapes. The pattern is in the labels.Â
Fleur de Lis ~ The symbolic lotus of the living room paper.Â
Royalty. Tartan ~ The blanket over Johnâs chair. Johnâs throne.Â
Warp, weft, twill.Â
Heliotrope notes ~ Sherlockâs favorite shirt.Â
âWell, tonight you can observe me.â
Geraniums. Sea glass. The moon.
âClever as your mind might be, your body and your brain react to stress just like anyoneâs, and thatâs just how weâll treat your stress. Like anyone elseâs.â
Sherlock sits in the chair John pulls out for him. He lifts the glass of wine John pours him.Â
Tempranillo, creamy label with a bronze script. Johnâs favorite jumper. Johnâs skin ~ sun-warmed rocks. Johnâs eyes ~ the night sky.
âMore wine, and also music, and Iâm going to rub the kinks out of your shoulders.â
Breathe. Raindrops, cataracts. Wintergreen. Breathe.
âNo, donât go all tense again, or your doctor will have to roll a joint and draw you a bubble bath.â
Sherlock draws a breath, imagines the air (notes of evergreen, notes of honey) spreading to the end of every nerve.Â
A breeze blowing through the room with the vaulted ceilings.Â
Unbroken calligraphy.
âYes, doctor.â
âHope.â
Sun-warmed rocks. So few atoms whirling in the emptiness. Creating warmth in the emptiness, sparking like fire in the garden of midnight. The forest of night.
âSorry?â
âWhen all of the suffering rushed out of the jar, only hope was left.â
An entire world transformed by love.
They are both on the sofa, shoes discarded. Honey. Pepper. Wine.
âJar?â
Their feet keep touching, and neither try to stop it. Notes of evergreen: the oils of woodsy herbs. Melting butter.
âYes. Pandoraâs jar.â
John began to giggle, having valiantly succeeded in keeping them both thoroughly soaked in wine. Heavy paper. Heliotrope. Shades of red bleeding into blue.
Boldness. Courage.
âAre you still on about Pandora? Itâs just the radio. Isnât it a box?â
âNo, pithos means jar, itâs a common mistranslation.â
The clouded lens is replaced with an artificial lens. Allowing light to pass through, allowing you to see tiny changes. The answer must be there.
âDo you like the music?â
Raindrops. Rivers of sunlight.
âYes. Rhythm and blues.â
Johnâs eyes, up close. So many blues.
Marble in the shade. Juniper in the sun.
âSoul music. Itâs the best thing to ever come from America.â
The paths home are easy. Warp, weft, twill.
âThere is something soothing about it. Like⊠Happiness and sadness mixed up together."Â
"I think they call that nostalgia.â
John ~ A conductor of light.
âOr hope.â
âRight⊠Speaking of music, I almost forgot the last bit of my plan.â
âYour medical treatment for stress.â
âCorrect.â
John stands up and takes Sherlock by the hand, leads him to his chair and stands behind him. He will follow, he will stay. He knows it.
John sings softly along with the music.
âI see my light come shining⊠From the West down to the East.â
âJohn. Do you think that inanimate objects have souls?â
If you throw your soul to the mountain, it will fold it. He read that somewhere. The mountain will keep it. A froth of stone.
âSherlock. You are not an inanimate object.â
âVery clever.â
âJust let me rub your shoulders, youâve worked yourself into knots lately.â
Rhododendron. Geranium. Red.
âAnd you want to know why.â
John pauses.
âWhat do you think about when you drift off? Today, when I was in the tub and you⊠Nodded off, leaning on the door. Were you really thinking aboutâŠâ
âYes?â
âWell⊠Forks? Really?â
Sherlock frowns a bit, but John canât see him.Â
Can he tell by the muscles in his back? The pattern of his breath. Changing pitch, like droplets, like the twisting of a tap.Â
Smaller and smaller.
âJohn.â
âYes?â Almost too quickly.
âWhat do you think about?â
âWhen?â
âWhen⊠you soak in the bath. What do you think about? When you listen to me play my violin. What do you think about, John?â
Genus: Pyrus.
The first notes strike a staccato beat.
Home is a beacon. Leaves may be oval, broad or lanceolate.
The music (Johnâs soul) adds bits of dialogue, lyrics projected on the walls of his mind.Â
You want to take me to a doctor⊠To talk to me about my mindâŠ
âAlright. Iâll tell you, or try. But⊠I asked you first. So first, you tell me. Tell me if you told me the truth about what you were thinking about. Or try.â
âPear tree.â
John pauses in his slow kneading of Sherlockâs shoulders, the top of his spine.Â
Trouble in me is not related to things I say or doâŠ
âWhat?â
Field surgeonâs fingers. Softened by the pull of the moon. Family: Rosaceae.Â
âPear tree.â
âHave I gotten you so drunk that youâre singing Christmas carols?â
Iâm really not that complicatedâŠ
White, five-petaled flowers. Early Slavic tribes believed pear trees to be the home of kind little gods.Â
Night is a forest, white lights in the trees.Â
Your good doctor friend, he oughta talk to youâŠ
âI donât know. Exactly how drunk are you trying to get me?â
John says nothing, but Sherlock can feel him smile.Â
Blossoms opening to the sun. The rarest ones may be stained with the barest hint of yellow. Pink.
ââOh to be a pear tree! To be any tree in bloom.â Itâs from a book, John. Spring transforms the pear tree, and the pear tree waits.â
Family: Apidae.
Pliny said that pears were best simmered with honey.
I got to take a tone of lies⊠Just to get an ounce of truth from youâŠ
âIt waits for the bees. The vanilla orchid, too. It relies on a single native pollinator. If a local bee never arrives, the vanilla planifolia can bloom in vain but never create a new life, never transform.â
Genus: Melipona.
âJohn⊠I will tell you, but sometimes even I donât see. You ask me what Iâm thinking of and I admit sometimes I may make something up but⊠itâs never as clever as I think.â
The wood of the pear tree does not warp. Tartan ~ Warp, weft, twill.
âNot a disguise. A self portrait.â
âCataracts, cooks. Learning to see, learning to taste. Cataloguing scents.â
John ~ With notes of whiskey. John ~ In the rain.
âNo, I mean⊠I have rooms for things, in there. Things I want to keep. The more important the- category, the bigger the room gets.â
Vaulted ceilings. Every dust mote clear to him in the sunlight.
âSometimes, I even find myself looking out the windows.â
Rhododendron. Violets. Bees.
âYou see, when you find me elsewhere, Iâm not, exactly. Elsewhere. I am here, Iâm just⊠too present, Iâm trying to observe everything.â
The wood of the pear tree does not splinter. Vanilla. Honey ~ Aftershave.
âIâm trying toâŠâ
Breathe. Vanilla.
âExplain. Now you.â
Honey.
âTell me the truth.â
Aftershave.
âOr try.â
Candytuft. Larkspur.
The music is softer, soothing.
ââŠthank you for the sunshine bouquetâŠâ
Sherlock knew the names of all the flowers in his grandmotherâs garden.
The answer must be there.
ââŠthank you for the love you brought my wayâŠâ
âSometimes,â John begins, his fingers just resting on Sherlockâs shoulders now, âI think about a garden.â
Blazing Star, Sweet William. A self-portrait.Â
Johnâs thumbs rub small circles, just below his neck. Bee Balm.Â
Red-Hot Poker.
âA garden where the music plays.â
Violets, bees. Family: Apidae.
All the quaint, half-domesticated wildflowers outside the window.Â
âWhen youâre playing something sweet-sounding, on your violin.â
John is soaked with wine. This very wine. Babyâs Breath, China Aster. Catchfly.
His smile is sunshine: the smell of spice.
Rejoicing with the bees, butterflies, hummingbirds. Maiden Pinks.Â
Showy Evening Primrose.
Pollinators. Transformation.
Lemon Mint, Lavender Hyssop.Â
He had never deleted their names. Had never even wanted to.Â
They had been so like friends.
Spurred Snapdragon, Yarrow.
Tall Verbena. Elder Flower.
âAn old-fashioned country garden, crossed with little stone pathways.â
The paths home are easy.
Lights in the trees.Â
John has gotten expansive, with the wine. With the undivided attention of those eyes, so like the sea.
The sea whispers a secret.Â
ââŠyouâre my spark of natureâs fireâŠâ
John ~ The Sun.
âSometimes, if youâre playing something sad, I imagine that itâs raining in the garden."Â
ââŠyouâre my sweet complete desireâŠâ
John ~ In The Rain. Hair wet around his ears and neck.Â
The clouding of the lens.Â
The sky is a vaulted ceiling.Â
Borage. Bergamot.
"With sunlight breaking in through the clouds."Â
Lemon Queen Sunflower.
ââŠyesterday my life was filled with rainâŠ'Â
Nasturtium, Lupine.
"I suppose⊠Sometimes my mind wanders from the garden.â
When he stopped breathing for long moments, he was staring.
Shooting Star, Pentstemon. Foxglove.
âSometimes Iâm just watching you.â
Phlox. Standing Cypress.
âIn the bath⊠I start feeling a bit dreamy there, too. A bit melancholy, even.â
Nostalgia: Hope. Joy and grief, all mixed up together.
ââŠyou smiled at me and really eased the painâŠâ
"I mean, usually Iâm happy but sometimes still a bit⊠Lonely, I suppose.â
Baby-Blue-Eyes. Johnny-Jump-Up. Carpet-of-Snow. Winter Thyme.
âProbably because all of my romantic relationships have failed.â
He tries to make it sound like a joke.Â
He fails.Â
Coral Bells. Bluebells.
Sherlock doesnât want Johnâs fingers to stop moving in little circles on his shoulders.
John ~ In the perfect circle of the streetlight.
John ~ The Sun.
But he needs to say something.Â
Do not just stand beside the sea.Â
Forget-Me-Not.
Love-in-a-Mist. Cosmos.
âJohn⊠Were you joking about that joint?â
Mornings by the sea.Â
Midnights in the garden.
The sea is a secret. Leap.
Photosynthesis.
Sweet William, Catchfly, Elder.
The energy in the sunlight: Cosmos.
âWell, I wasâŠâ John begins, ââŠand I wasnât.â
Reactions in the green pigments.
Evergreen: bottle green. John ~ In the garden where he thinks of me. Whiskey, wine.Â
In that endless moment, everything was green. John ~ Smelling of the rain.
The flowers open to the sun.
âJohn?â
John is staring. Standing Cypress.
Spurred Snapdragon, Yarrow.
Blue eyes⊠A bit more vivid now.
âJoking, that is. Itâs a funny story, actually, Mrs. Hudson-â
Sherlock stands quickly. John blinks.
Courage.
Johnâs eyes travel quickly down and back up a gleaming line of buttons, mother-of-pearl.
They glow in the shade thrown by the lamplight, the streetlight.
Johnâs light.Â
John licks his lips, his gaze moving all over Sherlockâs face.
âCome upstairs, Iâll just- show you.â
John is blushing. His perfect face is glowing with the wine.Â
The music ends. They stand in silence.
Small breaths. Smaller and smaller.
âAlright,â Sherlock answers.Â
Maiden Pinks. Love-in-a-Mist.
Vanilla. Coral Bells.
This very wine.
âBut first-â
The music changes: a new song begins.
A tentative little swing. Breathe.
Boldness. Courage.Â
âDance with me?â
Do not just stand beside the sea.
Tall Verbena. Lemon Mint. Green.
âDance?â
Sherlock feels blood rush to his face, his ears. His throat.Â
Five-petaled flowers. Family: Rosaceae.
He can feel Johnâs eyes everywhere on his face.
âDancing⊠relaxes me,â Sherlock answers, looking away. âIsnât that what you wanted?â
ââŠif you need me⊠call meâŠâ
John licks his lips. âYes.â
ââŠdonât wait too longâŠâ
John comes closer and takes Sherlock by the hand. Electricity. Shooting Star.
ââŠdeep down in my heartâŠâ
John rests his other hand on Sherlockâs waist. Blazing Star. They begin to sway.
ââŠI can imagine in my mindâŠâ
Turning in a slow circle. John seems unable to look away.Â
âYou never asked me to dance before.â
It is a whisper, a tremble. He tries to make it sound like a joke: he fails.
The way they move around the breakfast table, the silences: Dancing.
ââŠdonât wait too longâŠâ
âNo,â Sherlock agrees. âI never did.â
Sherlock rests his head on Johnâs shoulder. Aftershave.Â
Whiskey. John slides his hand around to Sherlockâs back.Â
He exhales. Sherlock exhales with him.
ââŠIâll hurry homeâŠâ
The surface of this dream-world glows, a deep green ocean reflecting a sky of velvety stars.
ââŠwhere I belongâŠâ
He slips below the surface.
âVega.â
Upstairs on the fire escape, underneath the cold fire of the stars.Â
âVega. Constellation: Lyra.â
John laughs. âI thought you didnât care.â
The music drifts in through the window.
ââŠI donât need no doctor to get my prescription filledâŠâ
âI do care.â
John had taken him by the hand, when the music had stopped.Â
He had kissed him once on the cheek.Â
âThe fifth brightest star in the night sky.â
John had lead him upstairs.
âWhen I was a child I believed in animism."Â
Through the window, to the little fire escape. Throw your soul to the mountain.
The mountain will fold it.
Hudderâs herbal soothers: "Helps with nightmares,â she had said.
Reactions in the green pigments: photosynthesis. John ~ The Sun.
Wintergreen, evergreen.Â
Lemon mint. Verbena.Â
âThat I could hurt⊠or comfort- things.â
ââŠall I need is tendernessâŠâ
Favorite rocks. Stars. Flowers.Â
Sweet William.
Trees: the homes of kind little gods.
âIs that what you were on about before? Objects?â
Lights in the trees: lights in the sky.
John is slurring now, just a little. He brought the last bottle of wine, and as they share it back and forth they move closer together.Â
Johnâs words are wet around the edges. Softened by the pull of the moon. A million suns drowning in the pool of the sky. Pooling indigo: the night.
âVega is used to calibrate the brightness of all the other stars."Â
Blazing Star. The stars are more vivid: they are closing in.Â
Sherlock can see all the tiny changes. Softened by the wine. Heliotrope label, matte paper. Merlot.Â
Their thighs are touching, and neither tries to stop it. Plums, cinnamon, pepper. Vanilla.Â
Throw your soul: the moon will keep it.
Objects, like friends, can feel slighted.
A breeze blows through the garden with the vaulted ceilings.Â
Unbroken calligraphy.
"Truth or dare.â
Even objects can feel love.Â
âThis is childish.â
Flowers: Stars.
When all the suffering rushed out, only hope was left. Honey, pepper, wine.
âPeople only play these games if they have questions. I dare you to ask your question.â
ââŠall I need is my babyâŠâ
âCoward.â
John ~ Suspecting the truth. Boldness. Leap into the sea.
âYes, doctor.â
So like friends: a garden.Â
Red-Hot Poker. Carpet-of-Snow.
âI dare you to deduce my dare, and then do it.â Aftershave, honey.
âDo whatever you deduce is my dare.â
Whiskey, wine.
âThen Iâll tell you if you were right.â
Breathe.Â
Raindrops, cataracts. The moon.Â
Too big, too much: The stars close in.Â
He stumbles through the window.Â
John follows him inside.
âWhy?â Sherlock asks John.Â
Breathe. So few atoms. Creating warmth in the forest of the night.Â
John comes closer.Â
ââŠbaby wonât you please come on homeâŠâ
Vega: from the Arabic root.
Sherlockâs back is to the wall.Â
The silences when John is staring.
Vega: Falling. Shooting Star.
He will follow, he will stay.Â
He has known all along. Love-in-a-Mist.
The pear tree waits.
âWhy, John?â