The Aquatic Equation: Sherlock Holmes is called in by his brother to investigate the disappearance of an important researcher. When Sherlock unknowingly encounters what this person was researching, he finds himself changed forever. Now, he's searching for a cure and a missing person while hiding some very interesting anatomical changes from his best friend, Dr. John Watson. While John might not be the genius detective in the relationship, he's never been one to ignore a puzzle where Sherlock's behavior is concerned. He makes it his new mission to find out what Sherlock is hiding. Problem is, they're both out of their depth.
The Thalassic Delay: The worst part of grieving someone is that it sometimes hits you when you least expect it. Grieving Sherlock Holmes is exhausting to John, so when he receives and invite from an old Army buddy to visit him for a weekend, he jumps at the chance to escape his everyday existence. Between mysterious emails from a woman named Lucy and the secret that John's friend Bill seems to be hiding, it looks like it's John's turn to play detective.
This is a mini-case/ghost story set between The Aquatic Equation and The Pelagic Solution.
The Pelagic Solution: It had been years since John witnessed Sherlock Holmes plunging off the side of the Ben Franklin Bridge, locked in combat with James Moriarty, and he needed to move on with his life. He was over this sick limbo of grief and wishing that Sherlock would just come back from the dead. It was over.
Except, Mary and Sherlock's friend Langdale Pike wouldn't let him forget his old friend, no matter how hard he tried.
When one of Moriarty's most powerful soldiers makes an attempt on John's life, he has no choice but to take up Mary's latest case- helping Pike's boyfriend (and Sherlock's ex) Victor find out who is poisoning his father. It's a race against time to see if he can solve it before he's killed… only he's started having the strangest symptoms. Not to mention John is now getting cryptic texts from an unknown number that sound suspiciously like his dead roommate. This time, John Watson might end up swimming with the fishes.















