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First things first: All of the drabbles have now been posted for the Lent--Day 23 drabblefest. People had some really great prompts, both Chaosverse and Sherlock, so you should go read and enjoy them!

Second things second: [livejournal.com profile] musecroft prompted "Sherlock at a violin lesson," and I honestly was going to write some quick little one-off about it, and, indeed, I did write some variety of a quick little one-off about it, which is posted below, but what you should know is that something about this quick little one-off wormed its way into my brain and now I find myself 20,000 words into an epic young!Sherlock story. I don't even know how this happened, you guys. Seriously. I spent an entire evening reading about the hundred best prep schools in England so I could decide which one Sherlock would go to. I have three tabs permanently open on my browser: the Eton College Wikipedia entry, a map of Central Eton, and the Eton College "New Boy Guide." WHAT IS MY LIFE. So, anyway, know that once I'm done posting the great deal of Scotch-verse stuff I already have written, there's going to be some sort of sprawling schoolboy saga coming your way, for whatever it's worth.

And, as a quasi-preview of the schoolboy saga, I give you the below fic, which is actually pretty much Scotch-verse compliant and has nothing to do with the schoolboy saga but it's where I kind of fell in love with the idea of writing a young Sherlock. (Please excuse the fact that Sherlock is at Eton at the age of 12. I hadn't done any research yet and didn't know Eton started at 13. Oops! I've fixed that for the schoolboy saga, I promise.)



"Violin Lessons"

Sherlock was always at the top of his List of Things You Really Must Do, No Excuses. Because Sherlock never didn’t make messes, Sherlock had made a mess that Mycroft had to hear about by the time Sherlock had finished eating breakfast. Mycroft’s answerphone was nothing but messages about the things that Sherlock had and hadn’t done, none of which were expected or acceptable and all of which needed his immediate attention.

Mycroft loved Sherlock, but Mycroft dreaded Sherlock’s exuberant mess-making ability. Mycroft lived in fear of someone eventually pointing out that a nineteen-year-old was not really capable of taking care of a twelve-year-old, especially not a twelve-year-old Sherlock, who was basically the equivalent of a stable of twelve-year-olds, all of them having ingested nothing but sugar for three straight days and being given loaded guns with which to play. Mycroft didn’t know what might happen if someone were to discover his secret that he had no bloody idea what he was doing. Some days he wondered if it might be better for Sherlock, having someone in charge of him who wasn’t a university student. But those were only on very bad days. Mycroft was aware, the majority of the time, that no one in the universe could be a better caretaker of the impossible Sherlock Holmes than Mycroft was, no matter how many mistakes Mycroft might make and no matter what Sherlock might say about the matter. In the scheme of things, Mycroft’s stewardship of Sherlock was certainly no worse than the benign neglect of most of the rich, distracted parents of Sherlock’s schoolmates, and maybe even, in some ways, better. Or so Mycroft liked to think.

Sherlock’s violin tutor, currently first on his List of Things You Really Must Do, No Excuses, was probably about to disagree.

The violin tutor’s message had been mostly incomprehensible, except for the part where he was displeased with Sherlock. That had been loud and clear.

He rang the violin tutor back, and the man answered with a brusque, “Hello,” as if he were too busy to answer the phone.

“Mr. Kilkenny,” said Mycroft, smoothly and pleasantly, because that was usually most effective with people who were already being unsmooth and unpleasant, it flustered them further until they grew illogical and could be knocked easily off the board. “It’s Mycroft Holmes.”

“Mr. Holmes,” said Mr. Kilkenny, and Mycroft heard the breath he took to power the complaints he was about to launch into. “Your brother is—”

“A very talented violin player,” Mycroft interrupted, blandly. “Or so you have assured me.”

“He has talent, yes,” Mr. Kilkenny agreed, grudgingly, “but he is rude and—”

“Does he practice?”

“Not what I tell him to practice!” exclaimed Mr. Kilkenny, plainly offended by this. “And then he is rude about it. At our last lesson, he was supposed to have perfected Bach’s ‘Ciacconna.’ Do you know what he perfected instead?”

“I cannot imagine,” said Mycroft.

“‘God Save the Queen.’”

This surprised Mycroft, because it seemed far beneath the level to which Sherlock had advanced. “Really?”

“The Sex Pistols version.”

Mycroft tried not to smile, but he couldn’t help it. “Did he play it well?”

“That’s not the point,” said Mr. Kilkenny.

“Sorry. What was the point?”

“He’s disobedient. And headstrong.”

“You cannot possibly mean my brother, he is the soul of cordiality.”

“I am being serious, Mr. Holmes.”

“And I am being quite serious when I remind you that I pay you very well to deal with him.”

“He says the metronome is tyrannical and ruins the emotion of the music.”

“I imagine the metronome is especially unforgiving when it comes to the music of the Sex Pistols.”

“Do you think this is a joke?”

“Not at all. I never think anything Sherlock does is a joke. He would tell you this is my most annoying trait.”

“I don’t think he takes his violin seriously.”

“That isn’t true,” said Mycroft. Sherlock was an enigma in many ways, but Sherlock loved the violin, it was one of the few things Mycroft was sure he knew about him. Well. Reasonably sure.

“It was irresponsible of you to buy a reckless boy a Stradivarius,” said Mr. Kilkenny.

Mycroft stiffened. “You told me he was unusually talented,” Mycroft pointed out, coldly.

“He is. If he would focus on it.”

“You told me he needed a better violin.”

“He did. I didn’t mean that you should buy him a Stradivarius.”

“I was led to believe that it was the best I could buy for him,” remarked Mycroft. Plus, he had thought it would appeal to Sherlock, the eccentric outrageousness of having a Stradivarius. Mycroft thought, in a way, it was the sort of treasure a pirate would like.

“No one is debating the merits of the violin. It’s a gorgeous violin.”

“Then I don’t see what it is we are discussing.”

“You cannot buy a twelve-year-old a priceless antique! You cannot give it to him for a toy!”

Mycroft recognized that tone. You would know that, if you weren’t a child yourself. “I didn’t give it to him for a toy, I gave it to him to use as a violin.”

“He is using it to play the Sex Pistols. On a Stradivarius.”

Mycroft had no special fondness for the Sex Pistols. He thought that Sherlock didn’t, either. He thought that Sherlock had probably just grown bored with the Bach piece and challenged himself to something completely different and unexpected. That was Sherlock: different and unexpected. Willful and blunt and irreverent and impossible and, undeniably, his responsibility.

“I’ll speak to him,” Mycroft said, on a sigh.

***

When he said he was going to speak to Sherlock, he did not, at first, think that he meant in person, and then he found himself driving to Eton the following day.

The headmaster was surprised to see him and said it was “most unusual, Mycroft.” Mycroft correct him: “Most unusual, Mr. Holmes.” It wouldn’t do for the headmaster to still see Mycroft as the boy who had been there a few short years before, not when he was supposed to be the adult here, and he insisted on the “Mr. Holmes” in the interactions. The headmaster consented to the “Mr. Holmes” and to Sherlock being called out of his classes, and Mycroft met him in his dormitory, where Sherlock flopped on his bed, his riot of dark curls quivering about him with the dramatic movement, and said, “What are you doing here?” in his most imperious tone of voice.

Mycroft leaned against the wall and crossed his legs at his ankles. “I had a conversation with Mr. Kilkenny,” he remarked.

Sherlock flopped even more, which was a feat, since he was starting from a point of having already flopped. “He,” he said, firmly, daring Mycroft to challenge him, “is a wanker.”

“Which is doubtless why Mr. Kilkenny complains that you are rude.”

Sherlock made a dismissive sound. “Don’t be so boring, Mycroft.”

“You can’t say things like that to people.”

“Why can’t I?” pouted Sherlock, and rolled onto his side and propped himself up on his elbow and gave Mycroft the condescending look he’d perfected as a toddler. Just one of Sherlock’s more charming features. “Just because you don’t.”

“You find it your duty in life to be the truth-teller among the Holmes brothers, is that it?” asked Mycroft, dryly.

“You won’t let me be a pirate. Or a sheikh. Or a genie. So I suppose my new calling is to be truth-teller. Only you’re going to forbid me that, too, and then there’ll be nothing for it but to be, I don’t know, a tailor.”

“A tailor?” echoed Mycroft.

“Or something like that.”

“Sherlock Holmes. If you end up ‘something like a tailor,’ I have no doubt that I will end up farming flying pigs.”

“You could never be a farmer,” said Sherlock. “Not even of winged pigs.”

“You could never be a tailor.”

“Well, that settles it,” decided Sherlock, annoyed. “I’m definitely going to be a tailor.”

“Your calling in life is probably to be a madman, and I will spend my life telling you perfectly logical things like ‘You cannot call your violin instructor a wanker’ and ‘You cannot be a genie.’”

“I could be a genie, you just wouldn’t let me do the scientific experiments necessary!”

“Sherlock,” sighed Mycroft. “Did you really call Mr. Kilkenny a wanker?”

“Not to his face. I knew you wouldn’t like it. So there. Even when I try to be like you, I still get in trouble. Conclusion: No point in trying to be like you.” Sherlock flopped back onto his back.

“What exactly did you say to him?”

Sherlock made a sound of pure disgust in the direction of the ceiling. “He persists in telling me about such minutiae, Mycroft. It’s dreadfully boring. I don’t need to know about the fact that they’re painting the hallways next week, as if I didn’t already know from the fact that it’s obvious they’re painting the hallways. He’s always telling me things I already know and don’t need to know even if I didn’t already know them, and that cannot possibly be what you are paying him for, and I told him that.”

“Sherlock,” said Mycroft.

“What? It’s true. Wouldn’t you rather pay him to teach me than tell me about his wife’s grandparents’ summer home in Nice? Which he is clearly hoping to inherit, only he hasn’t a snowball’s chance in hell of that because his wife is shortly going to run off with her aerobics instructor.”

Mycroft ignored all of this. “Mr. Kilkenny says he’s trying to teach you but that you don’t practice as he requests.”

Sherlock waved his hand about. Mycroft could tell he was losing interest in this conversation.

“He says you hate the metronome,” persisted Mycroft.

“Who likes a metronome? Don’t be ridiculous,” said Sherlock.

Mycroft looked at him for a long moment, and then he said, knowing that it must be true, “You’re better at the violin than Mr. Kilkenny is, aren’t you?”

“Of course I am,” Sherlock scoffed.

“You should have told me that.”

“When? I’ve always been better than he is.”

“Then why take the lessons at all? And don’t say because I make you, we both know I never make you do anything, I merely try to make you do things.”

Sherlock regarded the ceiling. “I like playing the violin,” he said, eventually. “I don’t like the metronome, and I don’t like stupid Mr. Kilkenny and his stupid, sodding house in Nice. But I like playing the violin.”

“I’m told you taught yourself how to play a Sex Pistols song,” commented Mycroft.

Sherlock’s posture turned defensive, and he narrowed his eyes in Mycroft’s direction. “What does that matter?”

“It matters to me, because it makes it quite evident to me that you do not need lessons in order to continue playing the violin. You like playing the violin. And you have quite a beautiful violin. So. Unless you’d rather not, you may discontinue further violin lessons and teach yourself whatever you wish to know.”

Sherlock sat up slowly and regarded him as if this were a trick. “What if I keep teaching myself more Sex Pistols songs?”

“Then I would be quite impressed with your determination,” said Mycroft, confident in the fact that Sherlock actually normally preferred classical music and had merely been having a fit and making a point.

“You’re being quite reasonable,” said Sherlock, suspiciously. “You must want something.”

“I want for you to ask me for things that you want instead of throwing fits this way. If you didn’t want to take lessons anymore, you could have just talked to me about it. Instead, you must always choose the most dramatic way of doing anything, and I suspect you are condemning me to a life spent apologizing on your behalf.”

I always chose the most dramatic way of doing anything? When you came swooping in here and calling me out of class over a minor issue with a violin instructor? You are a terrible hypocrite, Mycroft, and I suspect you are condemning me to a life spent apologizing for being related to you.”

“Shall we accept our mutual life sentences cheerfully?” proposed Mycroft.

“Not,” said Sherlock, flatly but with a gleam in his eye that could almost be something close to affection, “a chance.”

Sometimes, thought Mycroft, smiling across the room at his little brother, he was quite convinced that they would, the two of them, completely conquer the world, each in their own way, and without ever admitting to the other that they were doing it together. He knew his plan for conquering the world, but he couldn’t wait to find out what Sherlock’s was. It was going to be something completely insane and utterly unbearable and painfully Sherlockian and it would frustrate him beyond belief and if Sherlock turned out any other way Mycroft thought he would consider himself to have done something wrong.

“Perhaps you could play this Sex Pistols song of yours for me,” Mycroft suggested, instead of saying anything he was thinking.

“Do you even know the song?” asked Sherlock, skeptically.

“Sherlock,” said Mycroft, with an even smile. “I know everything.”

***

He rang Mr. Kilkenny later that evening.

“Your services as Sherlock’s violin instructor are no longer needed,” he announced to him.

“You cannot be serious,” said Mr. Kilkenny. “After the cheeky, insubordinate, completely unacceptable way he spoke to me and—”

“I’ve talked to him, and we have made a mutual decision that he no longer needs lessons,” Mycroft interrupted.

“You realize,” said Mr. Kilkenny, hotly, “that he will never learn how to behave if you don’t teach him. Do you think you will always be there to clean up his messes for him?”

Mycroft paused and looked out his window and said, evenly, “Yes. I do. Your wife is about to leave you for her aerobics instructor.”

“What?” sputtered Mr. Kilkenny.

“And I thought Sherlock’s rendition of the Sex Pistols was quite good,” Mycroft concluded, and hung up the phone.


Date: 2012-03-18 06:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] leenah.livejournal.com
yay more sherlock fic!!!!!!!

love all of it so far. thank you.

Date: 2012-03-20 02:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank *you*! I'm so glad you're enjoying all of it!

Date: 2012-03-18 06:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wickedgillie.livejournal.com
You have no idea how much I love you for this. This is utterly snog-worthy! Your wee Sherlock is so spot on. And Mycroft is ever himself. The act of rebellion? Perfection!

Date: 2012-03-20 02:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Snog-worthy! Fantastic!

I am so delighted that you enjoyed this! I find wee Sherlock completely adorable, I can't stand it.

Date: 2012-03-18 06:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] obsessionality.livejournal.com
Oh, this is such a win! I love this mycroft! I mean, that I love young!Sherlock goes without saying, but I love this Mycroft as well, who is painfully young for all his maturity and wisdom, still just young enough to understand his brother without words. I love it! <3

Date: 2012-03-20 02:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Awww, thanks. It's funny, I do love young!Sherlock, but I find young!Mycroft more heartbreaking, because I think he comes across as slightly more easy-going here, and I think all the responsibility he takes on hardens him as he gets older.

Date: 2012-03-18 06:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] missyvortexdv.livejournal.com
Perfect Mycroft, love the interactions.

Date: 2012-03-20 02:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thanks! This was *so* much fun to write!

Date: 2012-03-18 08:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sensiblecat.livejournal.com
Did you know there's a Young Sherlock Holmes series by Andrew Lane - who's also written Who and Torchwood books?

http://www.youngsherlock.com/#

(but that's Victorian Sherlock, of course. Mycroft's in it, however)

Date: 2012-03-18 08:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sensiblecat.livejournal.com
Story's fantastic. I can hear their voices - this is absolutely the younger version of them. What happened to their parents? I can certainly buy that M's habit of taking care of S's mess-ups started young.

Date: 2012-03-20 02:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank you! I was worried this would be tricky, but I felt like I heard them, unexpectedly, *so* clearly.

In my head, their father died when Sherlock was still a baby, and their mother just after Mycroft turned 18, so he's been responsible for Sherlock basically his entire adult life.

Date: 2012-03-20 02:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
You know, I had just made up my mind to do a young!Sherlock fic--I'd written this little piece and was thinking about expanding it--and someone happened to mention the series to me, without knowing I was already considering writing one. Mine would, of course, be modern, but I think it's hilarious that there's another one out there. I BET MY MYCROFT IS BETTER, SO THERE. ;-)

Date: 2012-03-18 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beatlejessie.livejournal.com
Oh my god, this is HILARIOUS from start to finish! Love that Sherlock taught himself the Sex Pistols version of 'God Save the Queen' on violin (which I would love to hear!), love that young!Mycroft is so very young, yet still so very much Mycroft, if that makes sense, and I was dying over this line:

“I could be a genie, you just wouldn’t let me do the scientific experiments necessary!” *DEAD WITH LAUGHING*

VERY much looking forward to a whole fic of young!Sherlock, and no you're not crazy- I always seem to end up doing ridiculous amounts of research for like, one RP post or to make sure all my songs on iTunes are labeled with the right year.

And no doubt those Holmes boys could take over the world together if they tried. Hell, they're halfway there most days anyway!

Date: 2012-03-20 03:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Ha! I think it's hilarious, too, so I'm glad you agree! And I was really going for them seeming young but seeming very like themselves, so this delights me. (As for the Sex Pistols, I'm afraid that was a friend's idea, so I can't take credit, but I bet Sherlock would play it AMAZINGLY.)

It was actually really hard to give Sherlock that edge of young silliness while keeping him really smart, you know?

It's almost good for the world that Sherlock and Mycroft spend so much time fighting each other, because otherwise I think they would be unstoppable.

Date: 2012-03-18 10:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] livinglibraries.livejournal.com
Absolute perfection! Mycroft is lovely and:

“I want for you to ask me for things that you want instead of throwing fits this way. If you didn’t want to take lessons anymore, you could have just talked to me about it. Instead, you must always choose the most dramatic way of doing anything, and I suspect you are condemning me to a life spent apologizing on your behalf.”

Brilliant and Sherlock's acting out and tantrums are so spot on! Can't wait to see more young!Holmes

Date: 2012-03-20 03:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank you! I think Sherlock must have been a trying child, and I think Mycroft does the best he can, but, well, it's *Sherlock.* You know?

Date: 2012-03-18 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fuzzyboo03.livejournal.com
*snorts* Go Mycroft!

Date: 2012-03-20 03:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Indeed! Mycroft always pretty much rocks. ;-)

Date: 2012-03-19 01:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sapphire-child.livejournal.com
Ohmygod. Dude what are you DOING to me with all these awesome fics?! You've got these two and their voices just DOWN. I can totally imagine this in my head as I read along - I was laughing my way through the whole damned thing!

Date: 2012-03-20 03:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
What I'm doing right now is dancing a little jig of delight that you enjoyed this so much! These two crack me up, and they're in that phase in my head where they kind of just talk and talk, so I'm just going with it.

Date: 2012-03-20 01:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sapphire-child.livejournal.com
Do, please, it's MARvELLOUS. Also I've had a severe yen for bb!Sherlock fic recently due to all the adorable tumblr graphics going around with Asa Butterfield cast as him and fahdajlksh this was just what I was after. Magic stuff.

Date: 2012-03-21 02:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Excellent! I'm glad you enjoyed this, then! bb!Sherlock can be utterly addictive.

Date: 2012-03-21 03:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sapphire-child.livejournal.com
He rather is. I just love origins stories too - someone wrote an amazing Moriarty one the other day. I just love looking into their early lives and seeing snippets of the people they are going to become.

Date: 2012-03-22 02:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Origin stories are so much fun. I think there's just so much to *play* with there, so much imagination you can just unleash.

Date: 2012-03-19 01:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kholly.livejournal.com
This story was so much fun. I can see how it tempted you into an epic young!Sherlock fic. I shall look forward to that. You really found the right balance of age appropriate and still in character.

“Then why take the lessons at all? And don’t say because I make you, we both know I never make you do anything, I merely try to make you do things.”
That is a statement that defines them through all their lives.

Date: 2012-03-20 03:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank you so much! I admit every once in a while I panic over what I'm writing now and hope it's striking the same balance. It's hard to hit that, you know? Especially with Sherlock! But I'm so far having a blast.

Date: 2012-03-19 02:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fishface44.livejournal.com
Brilliant!

Date: 2012-03-20 04:00 am (UTC)

Date: 2012-03-19 05:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cupoftea27.livejournal.com
Can I just say Sherlock and Mycroft's childhood is one of my favorite topics ever, and you did it splendidly! :D

I'm so pleased that you're writing so much Sherlock fic! I really love it and I can't wait to read more :)

Date: 2012-03-21 02:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
I have thought so hard about Sherlock and Mycroft's childhood that I literally keep forgetting that what I've come up with isn't canon.

Glad you're enjoying all this!

Date: 2012-03-19 06:07 am (UTC)
themusecalliope: Vulpes Vulpes (Violin)
From: [personal profile] themusecalliope
*hugs them both*

I always wanted to play the violin. I love how Mycroft is willing to step outside the norm to show he cares about Sherlock.

Date: 2012-03-21 02:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
You should take lessons! I took lessons as an adult and it goes pretty quickly actually!

For an observant kid, Sherlock usually misses just how much Mycroft goes out of his way because of how much he cares about Sherlock.

Date: 2012-03-19 07:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] almost-clara.livejournal.com
Absolutely delightful!

Date: 2012-03-21 02:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank you! :-)

Date: 2012-03-19 04:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] piccgirl.livejournal.com
Yes.

Just.

Yes.

(also I wish I was better than my flute professor but HA that's never going to happen *goes back to her own Bach (well, actually Genzmer) personal hell*)

Date: 2012-03-21 02:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Hee! I'm sure you're very good at the flute! I'm jealous, as I don't really play anything!

Date: 2012-03-19 04:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meralee82.livejournal.com
This. Was. PERFECT!

So, so, SO brilliant and so -them- and now I can't wait for Young!Sherlock, despite FINALLY being close to your Empty House fic.

"“You won’t let me be a pirate. Or a sheikh. Or a genie. So I suppose my new calling is to be truth-teller. Only you’re going to forbid me that, too, and then there’ll be nothing for it but to be, I don’t know, a tailor.” "

I see what you did there. ;-)

Date: 2012-03-21 02:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Ha! This will give you something to look forward to once the Empty House fic is over! ;-)

You know, I didn't even think about the "tailor" thing when I went with that!

Date: 2012-03-25 02:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lorelaisquared.livejournal.com
Ooooh! This is DELIGHTFUL! I love young and petulant Sherlock. All that genius pent up in a 12 year old boy - LOOK OUT WORLD.

I really loved Mycroft's POV here too. The trial of raising Sherlock really comes through. As does Mycroft's love for him.

Great, great job. I am eager to read the long fic that this inspired! :)

Date: 2012-03-26 03:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Thank you! Young Sherlock was such an utter delight to write, so all over the place, too clever for his own good. And I am a huge fan of Mycroft POV, I would spend all my time in Mycroft's head, there's a lot of space to stretch out in there. :-)

Date: 2012-03-27 12:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zauzat.livejournal.com
This is gorgeous, you capture both characters so well. And buried affection between the two brothers is definitely my secret soft spot. I look forward to your long story!

Date: 2012-03-28 03:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
It's my soft spot, too! I love to write it! I'm glad you enjoyed it so much!

Date: 2012-04-01 10:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] np-complete.livejournal.com
Oddly, young Sherlock reminds me of a school friend, similarly gifted on the violin, and similarly sulky, anti-social, and prone to outraging grown-ups. He was in the Cincinnati Symphony for a while (at quite a young age) and now, last I Googled, is the violin tutor at Choate-Rosemary Hall. I can only assume that his gift for truly inspired rudeness has been well suppressed.

Perhaps Mycroft should have threatened Sherlock with a life teaching ungrateful teenagers to play the violin. That might have scared him. :)

Date: 2012-04-04 03:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Hahahahaha! I didn't even *think* to threaten Sherlock with that! That would have been classic!

Date: 2012-10-13 08:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mariole.livejournal.com
> a twelve-year-old Sherlock, who was basically the equivalent of a stable of twelve-year-olds, all of them having ingested nothing but sugar for three straight days and being given loaded guns with which to play. Mycroft didn’t know what might happen if someone were to discover his secret that he had no bloody idea what he was doing.

This is the best description of parenting I've ever heard. :)

Gorgeous piece.

Date: 2012-10-16 04:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earlgreytea68.livejournal.com
Hee! Thank you! Glad you liked it!

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