John Watson (
ihadabadday) wrote2018-02-01 12:21 pm
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In Plain Sight - AU - Locked to
seaweed_writes
No one knew how long Gods had walked among the mortals. They just knew they had. Some remained in their country of origin, some branched out and traveled. Others started business or charities. Some just went through existence simply being. Belief didn't have much to do with how the Gods chose to lead their lives.
This tale though, it focuses on the Greek Gods of old and Mount Olympus (which is a real place and traditionally is where Zeus is said to live with Hera).
John Watson didn't care for the politics of the Gods that surrounded them every day. He had other things to focus on, to pay attention to. Like medical school, and then the military. It wasn't until he was shot and laying in the desert, bleeding, did he whisper things to the God of Death, to Hades. To a god he didn't believe in. Blood whispers they were often called. And gods hardly paid attention to them, most believed they were the whispers of dying men.
But John Watson survived when others with the same injury had died. What was different about him?
He returned to London on an army pension and a cane. He shuffled through his life, a constant ache in his chest, like there was something missing. Though he had little to no idea of what was missing. He helped others where he could, donating his time and what little money. A homeless veteran (it boiled him so to see those who helped their country be left behind) once called him a beacon of light.
A beacon of light huh?
Most days he didn't feel like one. Most days his mood was dark and everything was shit.
One night when he was limping slowly back to his dismal bedsit, something caught his attention. He glanced down an alley and saw a tall man dressed in black, being mugged by some ratty youth. The man was far too posh for this neighborhood. So why was he here? But that didn't matter. John, on two strong legs, charged into the alley and used his cane to knock the criminal away. He didn't notice, but there seemed to be a light around him, an otherworldy aura to him.
He held the cane like a sword and pointed it at the would be thief. "You need to leave here." John commanded. It had been easy for some to forget that he had been Captain John Watson of the Fifth Northumberland Fusiliers in Her Majesty's Army.
This tale though, it focuses on the Greek Gods of old and Mount Olympus (which is a real place and traditionally is where Zeus is said to live with Hera).
John Watson didn't care for the politics of the Gods that surrounded them every day. He had other things to focus on, to pay attention to. Like medical school, and then the military. It wasn't until he was shot and laying in the desert, bleeding, did he whisper things to the God of Death, to Hades. To a god he didn't believe in. Blood whispers they were often called. And gods hardly paid attention to them, most believed they were the whispers of dying men.
But John Watson survived when others with the same injury had died. What was different about him?
He returned to London on an army pension and a cane. He shuffled through his life, a constant ache in his chest, like there was something missing. Though he had little to no idea of what was missing. He helped others where he could, donating his time and what little money. A homeless veteran (it boiled him so to see those who helped their country be left behind) once called him a beacon of light.
A beacon of light huh?
Most days he didn't feel like one. Most days his mood was dark and everything was shit.
One night when he was limping slowly back to his dismal bedsit, something caught his attention. He glanced down an alley and saw a tall man dressed in black, being mugged by some ratty youth. The man was far too posh for this neighborhood. So why was he here? But that didn't matter. John, on two strong legs, charged into the alley and used his cane to knock the criminal away. He didn't notice, but there seemed to be a light around him, an otherworldy aura to him.
He held the cane like a sword and pointed it at the would be thief. "You need to leave here." John commanded. It had been easy for some to forget that he had been Captain John Watson of the Fifth Northumberland Fusiliers in Her Majesty's Army.
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"He won't be the same, he won't look the same or act the same, he won't be the same John, even if he does get the memories back." Sherlock argued.
"Why would I have to relocate out of Hell to make John remember again?" It made no sense. He had no want to go back to the Overworld. "Besides, I can only go back and forth from Hell once a year. It wouldn't be very .. convenient to ferry souls."
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He explained it would take time to build it, to transfer everything. And when someone was reborn, a descendant, they would eternally look the same as when their power first manifested.
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It wasn't like his job was particularly hard, but he didn't really relish taking on additional responsibilities.
"What could Hades do in the Overworld that would interest those... humans?" A smile filled his face.
"A crematorium." It would be a nice way to get the dead bodies' souls and then dispose of them as well.
If he had to do this to get his John back, so be it.
"What do I have to do?"
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"Whatever you decide, I will be there to support you." The Fates was eternally wound with Hades. Over and over they would rotate around one another. Each other's support.
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"So I could give people what they want, and then collect thier souls after they die. Which I am going to do anyways." He said. He gave Greg the first real true smile while his mind pondered all of the possibilities. "Are the humans really that stupid to offer thier souls for a quick fuck or a quick buck? And.. would I have the powers to actually grant thier wishes? It would certainly be easier than cremating. I wont need any machinery or such to give those greedy bastards what they want."
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"Shall we?" he asked.
Mortals were desperate. Always so desperate for everything, for things they didn't have, couldn't have, yearned for.
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The next couple of years were mostly a blur. Thankfully, Sherlock needed very little staff, as he had a hard time keeping people for long with his personality. He found a little building in London to work out of. People were hired to advertise and run the actual business part of the business. They were selling their souls, but there was still money involved as well. They had power bills to pay, after all.
And in the basement of the building, behind two locked rooms that only Sherlock could get to, and magically sealed, was a door back to Hell.
He often went back to Hell, sometimes several times a day to watch the reincarnation of John Watson grow from a loud, annoying crying baby, to a toddler, taking his first steps and saying his first words.
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His name was still John Watson. It seemed the Fates was right that every incarnation would be John Watson through and through.
He was a dynamic child, vibrant and curious. He grew up to be an equally dynamic man. One who defended those weaker, less able. He rose above circumstance and worked hard to get into medical school, a good one. He wanted to help people.
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Sherlock was patient, but the more that he watched John become closer and closer to the man that he had known now coming close to a century before, he decided that the time was coming nigh to.. introduce himself again.
But how to do it?
And how was he going to unlock those memories?
One night after work, Sherlock cornered Greg.
"John Watson, his 30th birthday was soon. I believe that he was about 35 when I met his first incarnation. It will soon be time for me to meet him again. You said that I can unlock his memories, but you never told me how. How do I do it? How do I make him the John Watson that I knew?"
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"I have his address for you. You can scope out the pubs that he likes to frequent and perhaps you can seduce him there."
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He took the piece of paper from Greg. Since he had lived in London for almost 30 years now, he knew the city like the back of his hand. He knew where this group of flats were, and knew of a few bars around. Since coming back, he had slaked with libido by having a few little anonymous flings with men in back alleys and dark rooms. They never meant anything, but it kept his lust at bay, for now.
"Do you have the address of where he works? I will need to break into thier computers and get his schedule. "
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He stepped back and winked. "Have fun and don't scare the poor man too badly just yet."
John was in his element in the busy A&R at the hospital he was employed at. There had been a building collapse, those involved rushed to hospitals across the city. He was currently working on a patient that had his arm crushed in the collapse, working to save the arm.
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And this was a time.
It wasn't too hard to find John. As soon as he came into view, Sherlock stopped dead in his tracks. It was John... HIS John.. He was a little younger, less worry lines around the eyes, a little lower hairline, but this was HIS John.. He wanted so badly to reveal himself, but that would have been a terrible idea, so he watched the man work.
This was one soul that Sherlock was not going to get today, John saved his life and his arm.
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He picked up the beer and took a sip. He wasn't hungry, but he knew he needed to eat something. Maybe.
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When John went into the pub, Sherlock stopped outside. He waited for a while, made himself visible in an empty alleyway, then walked in, taking the seat next to John.
One other good thing about being a god, he could get John drunk and he would always be fine.
"Pint of stout, please." He told the bartender getting the same thing John had.
He looked over to John and nodded his head, giving him a little smile, a nod of greeting. It was what humans did, apparantly.
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"You remind me of someone." John told the strange man sitting next to him. The handsome man sitting next to him.
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"This guys tab is on me." He told the bartender, then turned towards John. "You look like you could use a drink or two, or three." He told the doctor.
"Sherlock." He offered a hand to the man.
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The blonde chuckled and then ordered another beer.
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No. He couldn't think about that now. This was not his John. Not yet, at least.
Sherlock raised an eyebrow at that. "Oh, was he a devastatingly handsome tall bloke as well?" He asked with a little smirk.
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He nodded his thanks to the bartender for the second beer.
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"As a child, your imaginary friend was Hades?" He asked, trying to sound incredulous. "That seems like a pretty odd friend to have. I've heard that the only people that see him are the people who are about to die. I've... studied the gods a bit." he smiled. It wasn't a lie, really.
Sherlock finished his beer and got a second, not wanting to seem like he was trying to get John drunk, though he really kind of was.
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But it felt right. Comfortable.
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He had never come up to the Overworld when John was a child, he had never physically been there, but he had watched as often as he could, sometime shirking his duties, which of course roused the ire of Zeus- who knew this man was a reincarnation of Sherlock;s lost .. well whatever they had been.
"This.. imaginary Hades. Did you talk to him?" He asked. He knew it was a bit dangerous to try to get to personal an pry too much, but he had had 2 beers (almost) and his tongue was getting a bit looser, it seemed.
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He let out a breath. "Sometimes. Until my father caught me and beat me for it. Saying boys shouldn't have imaginary friends. Did I want to end up like the gays on the streets?" There was a bitterness to his tone. And a spark of gold across him.
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But that actually made him catch his breath, that flash of gold. There was still some of Ares, that buggerer, inside of him. Oh course The Fates said that he would, but this was physical proof.
"I... am sorry to hear that." He really was trying to be like a human, a human would feel bad about that, he figured.
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