Joan Watson (
formersurgeon) wrote2021-05-31 08:13 pm
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Vanished
Sherlock had been getting used to having Malcolm in Watson's life, and, consequently, in his own. The profiler had more than proven his worth as an investigator, even if Sherlock still maintained his doubts about profilers as a group. And Sherlock had come to accept the relationship between Malcolm and his partner. It was clear she loved him. The notion that Watson would soon be moving out of the Brownstone and into another home with Malcolm was still difficult to accept, but he was starting to get used to the idea, however grudgingly.
However, there was still doubt. Doubt about this man. He had a tendency to run into danger, and was sufficiently volatile that the FBI expelled him. Was he dangerous to Watson? Would he, wittingly or unwittingly, bring harm to her, or allow her to be harmed? Sherlock still wondered. Still worried.
So when he comes back to his computer with a cup of tea and sees an alert on the screen, his worries kick into fear. Back after Watson was kidnapped by French terrorists and nearly killed, Sherlock installed a tracking device on her phone so that if it ever happened again, he and the police would be able to find her. The device would work even if the phone was powered down. Even if the SIM card was removed. Even in water. Even underground. The tracker would have to be either physically destroyed or placed in a lead bag for it to fail.
The red box flashing on Sherlock's screen tells him that the unthinkable has happened. The signal had ended half an hour ago.
Sherlock grabs his phone and tries calling Watson. It goes instantly to voicemail. He leaves a terse message. Then he stares at his phone. Watson had been on her way to meet with Malcolm, had some vital information for a case he was working, something that involved very dangerous people.
What has he gotten her into?
Sherlock hears the door open upstairs, and immediately heads up, hoping it's Watson.
However, there was still doubt. Doubt about this man. He had a tendency to run into danger, and was sufficiently volatile that the FBI expelled him. Was he dangerous to Watson? Would he, wittingly or unwittingly, bring harm to her, or allow her to be harmed? Sherlock still wondered. Still worried.
So when he comes back to his computer with a cup of tea and sees an alert on the screen, his worries kick into fear. Back after Watson was kidnapped by French terrorists and nearly killed, Sherlock installed a tracking device on her phone so that if it ever happened again, he and the police would be able to find her. The device would work even if the phone was powered down. Even if the SIM card was removed. Even in water. Even underground. The tracker would have to be either physically destroyed or placed in a lead bag for it to fail.
The red box flashing on Sherlock's screen tells him that the unthinkable has happened. The signal had ended half an hour ago.
Sherlock grabs his phone and tries calling Watson. It goes instantly to voicemail. He leaves a terse message. Then he stares at his phone. Watson had been on her way to meet with Malcolm, had some vital information for a case he was working, something that involved very dangerous people.
What has he gotten her into?
Sherlock hears the door open upstairs, and immediately heads up, hoping it's Watson.
no subject
Sherlock is surprisingly grounding. Malcolm follows him down the stairs.
"Do you think they'll evacuate her or try to take her somewhere else?" he asks. "It needs to be something relatively innocuous or Skerritt will see through the ruse. No bomb threats." That would be an obvious ploy.
Malcolm pulls out his phone again. "I'm going to get my team to work on finding everything they can about Agent Skerritt. I need to be able to profile him."
no subject
He pulls out a plastic bag containing a white powder and holds it out to Malcolm.
"Anthrax," he says.
no subject
"I feel like that's still too extreme," Malcolm says. "They'll suspect something's up. Plus I don't want to use anything that might actually hurt someone." He eyes the bag in Sherlock's hands. He's handling it pretty casually. Maybe it's just flour? "Maybe we can force some kind of required fire drill? Or at the very least make the fire alarm go off?"
no subject
"Do you truly believe I would have anthrax in my home?" He lifts the plastic-wrapped powder. "Baby laxative. Used by unscrupulous cocaine dealers and federal agents conducting test runs of biological warfare protocols."
He steps closer, lowering his voice slightly, his tone urgent.
"It would be easy enough to ignore a fire drill. And pulling an alarm will be useless if there is no actual fire." He holds up the "anthrax." "The physical presence of a white powder substance in a federal building will not be dismissed. Anthrax acts quickly and is one of the worst ways to die. What is more, it will take time to test the substance to determine it is not actually anthrax. How we proceed would depend on whether we want the building evacuated or want the occupants to shelter in place. If we arrange for a letter containing anthrax to be found in a mail room, the building would be evacuated, and we would monitor the exits. If there were to be an envelope accidentally ripped open in the lobby of the building, the occupants will shelter in place. Then you and I enter in hazmat suits and find Watson."
no subject
He has to admit, Sherlock's plan is a good one. He kind of hates that he didn't come up with it himself, but his brain feels like a scrambled egg right now.
"Fine. You work on setting it up. I'm going to see what information I can get on Skerritt. You get us in there and I'll be able to take him down."
no subject
Sherlock works quickly. He arranges for one if his street urchins to deliver a package to the field office and accidentally rip the envelope, spilling the powder in the lobby. He then calls in a major favor with a member of the NYPD hazmat unit, and gets the promise of two hazmat suits and an in with the team when everything goes down. He considers calling Gregson to alert him of the plan, but decides the Captain would probably rather not know for the sake of plausible deniability.
Sherlock then takes the battery and card out of the phone and breaks it in two for good measure.
"The trap is set," Sherlock says as he comes to Malcolm having put the plan in place. "We are to meet my contact in half an hour. Have you had any luck?"
no subject
"Yes," Malcolm replies when he and Sherlock reconvene. "I've got a basic profile that's workable for now."
no subject
"Let's go get our girl," he says.
***
Joan has bent the paper clip into a serviceable lock pick by the time Skerritt comes back, and she hides it as he returns, slipping it into her pocket.
"Here," he says, holding out a tshirt that says FBI on it. "All I could find."
"It will work, thanks," she says, standing up. "Can I go into the bathroom to change?"
"That's okay, I'll step out."
He does, and she hears the door lock behind him. She wonders if the other agents even know she's still there, if he's keeping her hidden. She pulls off her coffee-stained shirt and pulls on the tshirt. It's a little big, but comfortable enough. She thinks of trying the lockpick out, but decides against it, sure that Skerritt is probably right outside. So she waits.
no subject
With a nod, the two of them head out of the brownstone. "Where are we getting the hazmat suits from?" he asks.
no subject
no subject
They settle into the back seat of a cab. "Skerritt has been an agent for 15 years. He's very devoted to his job and to doing things by the book. He's also several hundred thousand dollars in debt."