Somehow the fire made you colder ...
My baby boys omg i wanted to draw them as kids for so long, and well the final game is my fav episode so i just had to.

#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#tim drake#batfam#dick grayson#batfamily#dc fanart


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Somehow the fire made you colder ...
My baby boys omg i wanted to draw them as kids for so long, and well the final game is my fav episode so i just had to.
2025 VS 2026
The charming @chriscalledmesweetie has made agenerous bid and donation for FandomTrumpsHate, and as a thank you I have made a cover for their fic about two rascally boys: Disgraceful Behavior
The Ransom of Yellowbeard - Chapter 15 - sgam76 - Sherlock Holmes & Related Fandoms [Archive of Our Own]
https://archiveofourown.org/works/39393057/chapters/215514881
This puppy is finally COMPLETE 🎇🎆
Summary:
The story's complete now, and John wants the last details to wrap everything up. Sherlock's mostly happy to oblige before they move on to the next box. But that box has a really, really big surprise in it. Really.
Mycroft and Sherlock (Kidlock) stories, Coming soon. With a little of Greg and Holmes family.
Hello :)
Do you have any kidfics?? Specifically ones that center around the child and their personality and stuff like that?? One where they're older would be interesting, though I have yet to find one, though I'll read literally anything with that concept regardless since they seem far and few. Thank you! I hope your day is lovely <33
Hi Nonny!
Ooo, not much, honestly, or at least none I've read personally! Did a quick tag search on my MFL list, and came up with these ones. As usual, if anyone has fics to suggest, please do!!
KID!LOCK AU/ KID FICS (MFLs)
See also: Teenlock Fics (June 2024)
A Study in Bwankets by lavvyan (G, 1,576 w., 1 Ch. || Kid Fic, First Kiss) – Wee!John's blanket is gone, but never fear: wee!Sherlock is on the case. Sort of.
Fairy tale Dresses and Bows by remus_bloody_lupin (NR, 3,914 w., 1 Ch. || Kidlock AU || Trans!Sherlock, Child Abuse, Big Brother Mycroft) – Young Sherlock isn't very popular in his preschool. In fact, all of the other students stayed as far away from him as possible. They thought he was weird, his mother thought he was weird- the only person who understood him was his older brother Mycroft who would even give him pretty bows to wear. That is until John Watson is welcomed into school and he becomes the one person who likes the bows in his hair.
A Prequel of Sorts by foxy61 (G, 6,561 w. || Kidlock / Teenlock, Time Manipulation, Big Brother Mycroft) – William Sherlock Scott Holmes was born in a little cottage in the middle of a blizzard January 6th 1977. He was delivered by an ex-army doctor, one Dr. John Hamish Watson who apparently didn’t exist or at least not yet. Part 2 of A Blizzard Started it All
I Don't Need You to Like Me by Ranowa (T, 7,146 w., 1 Ch || Different First Meeting, Autistic Sherlock, Ableism, Papa Lestrade, Big Brother Mycroft, Child Abuse, Kidlock) – Greg's introduction to child abuse cases is a small, surly child with a broken arm named John Watson... and the even smaller, nonverbal boy that won't leave his side. The smaller, nonverbal boy named William Holmes.
O Human Child by Odamaki (T, 7,159 w., 1 Ch. || 1980′s Kid Fic || Familial Abuse, Pirates, POV John) – John doesn't think about what's on the other side of the fence- all he wants to do is get away. Instead he discovers not only escape but friendship, a summer of childhood and a wild, incredible boy, passionate about building a pirate ship.
Friend by esama (G, 7,909 w., 1 Ch. || Harry Potter Crossover || Character Death, Kid Fic) – Sherlock finds the skull when he's five.
Heart on a String by AngelSpirit (E, 23,257 w., 1 Ch. || PODFIC AVAILABLE || Alternate First Meeting, First Kiss / Time, Infidelity, Angst, Fluff, Kidlock/Teenlock, Mentions of Recreational Drug Use) – John and Sherlock got married with Cracker Jack rings when they were 7 yrs old. It wasn’t official, but for their whole lives they took it very seriously.
The Weaver of Worlds by Jaye Harriet (G, 36,887 w., 8 Ch. || Coraline Fusion / Kidlock || Fantasy, John's Mother, John's Cane, Kid Sherlock, Kid John) – John Watson and his family move out of London and into the barren moors, where John meets a strange child and his not-cat. Inside his new house is a door that calls to him, beckoning him to visit a world beyond his wildest dreams. But not all is well beyond the door, and John soon finds himself in peril. Part 1 of The Weaver of Worlds
The Lost Duke by SelfSameLine (M, 51,395 w., 13 Ch. || Anastasia Fusion || Romance, Kidlock, Royalty, Slow Build, Friends to Lovers) – "We’re looking for him.” John pointed up the stairs to the portrait hanging proudly against the wall. It was blackened and torn in places, but two faces, one of a pretty woman and one of a dark haired boy remained unmarred, staring blankly out into the night. The boy’s eyebrows knitted together. “A royal?” Lestrade huffed. “The lost duke, yes. Haven’t you heard of him?”
A Small Miscalculation by SailorChibi (T, 58,217 w. || Kidlock / Sherlock Turns Into A Kid, Papa Lestrade, Hurt/Comfort, First Kiss, Humour, Minor Character Death) – Thanks to Sherlock's inability to resist satisfying his curiosity, he's been turned into a small child of about seven (or five, depending on who you're asking) years old. Rather than let Sherlock be taken to a laboratory, John volunteers to look after him. After all, he's had to look after a man-child, how hard can a child-child be? Poor John. He has no idea. [Features paternal!Lestrade in small doses and eventual Johnlock after Sherlock grows up again]
Wee Doctor Series by americanjedi (T, 283,224 w. across 9 works || Time Travel / Adult in Kid Body AU || Grown Up John in 8 Year Old Body, Magical Realism, Conspiracies, "Not Kidfic" Kidfic, Paternal Lestrade, Angst, Comfort, Past Abuse) – Dr. John Watson is turned into an eight year old child, dealing with Sherlock who doesn't know him in a world where he was never born. He's a little stressed out, but he's got his priorities straight. Original characters and London as a war zone, and John's accidentally inventing a super genius.
Today's drawing brings you more fluff
I wanted to make something about my headcanon that Jim wanted to be an astronaut when he was a little boy just like Sherlock wanted to be a pirate:'3
So here it is kidlock ;3
No. 349
Fanfics where they met as children give me years of life.
A fun little fic to make you smile. 10 year old Sherlock mid bee experiment, and a grumpy 17-year-old Mycroft with allergies. What's not to love?! 🤣 (Contains my OC character, Eva — middle Holmes sibling. I've removed the AI generated picture, as it has led people to assume that the story is also. It is not. I put a lot of love and work into my writing and love these characters 💔)
Conversation stopped as they entered the kitchen. Triumphantly poised atop a kitchen chair, ten-year-old Sherlock's face held the unmistakable glow of a scientist on the verge of a tremendous discovery
In one hand he clutched a tablespoon. Holding it aloft, he used this to meticulously smear something over the kitchen lightbulb. A glutinous substance oozed down the handle, dripping slowly onto the kitchen floor.
Eva stared, slack-jawed, attempting to assign reason to the scene unfolding before her. Finding none, she gave a small helpless shake of her head and turned – wordlessly – to Mycroft.
Mycroft was edging nearer to Sherlock, eyes fixed on the spoon, an expression of dawning comprehension on his face – unshared by his sister.
Eva watched her elder brother’s eyes widen in realisation – his shoulders tensed. All of a sudden, he ducked – eyes frantically scanning the room as though expecting imminent fire.
Then she heard it. A faint, gentle humming – growing gradually louder.
Her eyes slid sideward towards the open window.
“Sherlock...” She began.
His face was alight with excitement.
“It's working!” He cried excitedly. “Listen! They're coming!!”
The horrified realisation grew in Eva like a slowly spreading heat.
“Sherlock – have you let bees into the house??”
He waved the spoon in the air enthusiastically, like a conductors baton.
“Not let – ” he corrected, “invited!”
Feet frozen in place, Eva's eyes found Mycroft’s. Simultaneously, their eyes travelled towards the open window and back to each other. Understanding shot between them –the unspoken question clear.
Is there time to shut the window?
Even as the question formed, the first few bees drifted lazily through the window pane.
Eva just had time to state the obvious — but none the less key point.
“Sherlock, Mycroft is allergic to bee stings!”
Before an ominous, buzzing cloud raced into the sunlit kitchen, causing Mycroft to back against the far wall, in soundless horror.
Sherlock let out a triumphant whoop, clapping his hands together delightedly, his eyes wide with excitement.
Automatically, Eva moved sideways, positioning herself slightly in front of Mycroft. Snatching a tea- towel from its hook, she brandished it like a whip in front of her. Mycroft’s hand — buried in his pocket — clutched tightly around his epi-pen.
“Don't worry,” Sherlock told them — entirely unconcerned. “They will only sting if you provoke them. Besides,” he added, with a brief nod towards Mycroft, “he has an epi-pen.”
The look Mycroft bestowed on him was equal in its incredulity and exasperation.
“That does not mean I've made my peace with anaphylaxis, Sherlock! It simply means that — despite your best efforts to the contrary — I am marginally less likely to die!!”
“Oh don't be so dramatic,” he responded, dispassionately.
At any other time, Eva might have been tempted to point out that neither she nor Mycroft were currently standing on a chair exuberantly conducting a swarm of bees with a honey-covered spoon... but there seemed more pressing matters to attend to.
The bees — no doubt disoriented by their new kitchen residence — were behaving increasingly erratically. The swarm — reasonably small in size, Sherlock assured them, consisting of only around 10,000 bees — bounced unpredictably off of walls, cupboards and kitchen surfaces.
“If I die here Sherlock —” Mycroft vowed murderously, cautiously edging his way along the wall, “I will haunt you. I swear to you, I will find a way!”
Sherlock ignored him. A number of bees had landed upon the honey-coated lightbulb, which immediately drew his attention away from his brother’s threats and onto more important matters.
“See!” He exclaimed, enthusiastically, “I was right! They’re responding to food and light source.”
Peering intently at the two-dozen or so bees that had settled there, he —inexplicably — began circling his hips in a figure-of-eight pattern, pausing only to wiggle side to side.
Eva — rendered temporarily speechless — watched him through the swarm of bees, wondering how this had become her life.
“It's called a waggle dance,” Sherlock answered, in response to her quizzical gaze. “Bees use it to communicate when they've found a food source —”
“You're not a bee, Sherlock!” Eva shouted — her tolerance hanging by a thread — “You’re a LUNATIC!”
Mycroft, meanwhile, was busy scanning the exit points like a general assessing a battle scene. Seeing both doors and the window still covered in bees, he sank slightly down the wall.
“Sherlock,” he began, “know this. If I survive this, I am going. To. Kill. You.”
Still waggling, Sherlock tilted his head fractionally.
“Statistically,” he replied, “my odds of surviving this outnumber yours.”
Mycroft’s reply was not meant for 10 year old ears, though — mercifully — the sheer volume of the buzzing bees meant he didn't catch all of it.
The bees, it transpired, were beginning to adjust to their kitchen environment — their flight patterns less unpredictable, more and more were starting to settle on the lightbulb. Sherlock, of course, was delighted.
“Look!” he exclaimed happily, pointing with his spoon and flicking honey everywhere. “They're establishing a flight path!”
Eva was done.
“Right!” she snapped, brandishing the tea towel, grabbing Sherlock by the arm and dragging him off the chair. “Enough! Get them out!”
Landing on his feet, like a cat, Sherlock looked up into Eva's face — his expression thoughtful.
He blinked.
Eva’s fingers flexed.
“Please tell me,” she said, in a voice of forced calm, “that somewhere in the planning stage you considered how you’re getting them to leave.”
He quite clearly had not.
Pressing his lips together, his brow furrowed for just a moment then his face suddenly glowed with inspiration and he bounded towards an opposite window. Flinging it open with a dramatic flourish, he pointed the spoon towards the gap, as though directing an army.
“Exit route established! Fly forth my sisters!”
Nothing happened.
“That's your grand plan??” Eva shrieked. “Open a window and bid them good-day?!”
A puzzled crease formed on Sherlock's brow. His arms extended slightly from his sides, palms up, in a gesture of mild bewilderment.
“They're highly intelligent creatures,” he replied, defensively. “I assumed that they would gather their data and leave.”
“They're not data analysts, Sherlock!” Mycroft shouted from his position against the wall. “They're bees!!”
“I think they're settling,” Eva cut in, her eyes on the ever increasing swarm jostling for position on the lightbulb. “My,” she looked to her brother, “I think we need to try and get you out.”
“Yes,” he agreed, faintly — his face rather white.
“Move slowly,” Sherlock advised, helpfully. “If you startle them you'll trigger their defensive response and the entire swarm will target you.”
“Yes, thank you, Sherlock!*” Mycroft responded bitingly. “Most helpful.”
The savage irony was lost on his brother, who gave the self-satisfied nod of someone who clearly felt he'd been supremely helpful.
Slowly, keeping his back to the wall and his eyes on the bees, Mycroft edged towards the back door. A few stray bees still flitted around the room; his fingers tightened around the epi-pen in his right hand. Eva hardly dared to breathe as — ever so cautiously — he reached for the handle, inching the door open. As soon as the gap was wide enough to permit a person exit, Mycroft fled as though propelled from the room, leaving the door open behind him.
Sherlock watched him in perplexed judgment.
“He's hugely overreacting. His own panic is statistically the greatest risk factor in the room.”
“And nothing to do with the 10,000 bees you invited for breakfast?!!” Came a incensed voice from outside.
Three hours later, the bee-keeper informed an incredibly disgruntled Mrs Holmes that her kitchen was now bee free.
Sherlock had been dragged off by their father for ‘words’ and Mycroft — who had set up camp on a garden chair outside — was flatly refusing re-entry of the building.
“I will take my chances in the insect-infested garden thank you very much,” he told his mother, whose initial sympathy and understanding was draining exponentially with each failed attempt to get him to return to the house.
With a huff of impatience, she returned to resume the removal of honey from the kitchen light and surfaces.
Mycroft watched her go, his face impassive, when there was a gentle nudge on his shoulder. He started slightly, fingers still clutching the pen, to see his sister standing there.
Eva gave a reassuring smile.
“Here —” she said, holding out a cup. “I've brought you tea. And — She continued, “biscuits.”
The corner of her mouth drew up slightly in a mischievous smile, a slight twinkle in her eyes as she slid him the pack of chocolate bourbons.
“Thought you'd need supplies of the essentials if you're out here for the long run.”
He gave her an arch stare over the rim of his cup, but accepted the biscuits nevertheless.
Pulling up a chair beside him, they sat without speaking, sipping their tea — Mycroft staring fixedly ahead of him, his right hand still clutching his epi-pen.
“Hey —” Eva’s voice was warm. She reached out a hand and placed it lightly over his clenched fist, her thumb lightly stroked his fingers, feeling the grip loosen fractionally.
“Relax,” she told him, kindly. “Operation Bee was a resounding failure and he's being so thoroughly berated in there that I think we have a while before he moves on to wasps.”
He shot her a significant stare, however — upon catching the gleam in her eyes — he felt his mouth twitch in spite of himself. He gave a small exhale of wry amusement and felt the tension in his shoulders disperse just a fraction.
“I was scared,” he admitted.
“10,000 bees and an allergy, My. You'd have been an idiot not to have been.”
A sound behind them caused them both to look around. Sherlock shuffled sheepishly towards them, stopping short when he caught their raised eyebrows — their identical stony expressions.
“Yes?” asked Mycroft, acidly.
Sherlock squirmed under the intensity of the gaze, looking at the ground and scuffing the toes of his shoes against the grass.
“Well —” he began, awkwardly, “If we're looking for a positive, I’ve learned a lot!” He looked up earnestly “If I were to try again —”
Eva threw a well-aimed biscuit at his head, to a nod of approval from Mycroft, who casually returned to his tea.
“One day, sister,” he told Eva later that day, as they watched the sun slowly sink below the horizon, “we may even laugh about this.”
He paused and took a slow sip of his drink.
“But not yet.”