infinitelystranger: Sherlock concentrates looking into a microscope. (dull routine of existence)
Sherlock Holmes ([personal profile] infinitelystranger) wrote in [community profile] taxonomites2013-07-15 09:47 pm

[location: Central]

First A. Then D, E, and G, in perfect fifths. Sooner or later, life does have to go on.

Sherlock Holmes raises the pitch pipe to his lips and blows D, E, and G, shrill and pronounced in the summer air. He prefers to tune those in relation to one another and to A, generally, not by the pipe, but it never hurts to check his strings against them.

He fusses minutely with the fine tuners, leaned against the wall. His case is at his feet. Though he expects only Extras' custom today, the look of the thing matters. To him, at least. Unlike most of the matters he deals in, there are no absolute truths in violin tuning: only the perfect fifth, one in relation to another. One may vary the tuning as much as one pleases, as long as one varies them all. Sometimes he experiments with a particular scordatura for a time; generally he tunes just a fraction brighter than G-D-A-E, though, for clarity of sound and because he doesn't expect company in harmony.

The truth is, as much as he likes to play his violin, he would rather be doing it somewhere else right now. Squirreled away indoors in the heart of one of these abandoned buildings, maybe, where he can practice in peace and pretend the city is empty until he gets tired or slinks off to Jeremy's for food, either/or. Saying hello to the other prisoners in Taxon is not his idea of fun just today.

But he generates all of his income busking. Besides, on some level he supposes he owes it to the others to make himself available, for questions or tirades or whatever else they see fit. So Sherlock keeps his odd hours, ignores his tablet (with exceptions), and keeps more than ever to himself: except on his usual odd-numbered afternoons and even-numbered evenings, where he sets up somewhere on the Taxon streets and plays his violin, to raucous and randomly-generated Extra applause.

[ooc: corresponding to dien's everybody come yell at jason post, here's my everybody come yell at sherlock post! fire away!]
imperial_long: (profile/black)

[personal profile] imperial_long 2013-08-10 08:31 am (UTC)(link)
Long listens, fingers laced before his chin. There is, perhaps, a slight undercurrent of relief that Sherlock is not about to have a breakdown in his direction. Long is not altogether sure what the compassionate response would be to that.

But such a thing is not threatening, so instead, he listens, and he nods once when Sherlock Holmes has said his bit, just as happy as Sherlock is to Leave it There.

"Well, I am pleased to hear it." (He marks that conversation off with a neat check mark in his head.) The ziti is left behind for the red mullets-- he cannot finish any of these dishes if he wishes to sample everything, and he does.

"Try the ziti. What do you suppose you ought have done differently, if anything; leaving aside the obvious of not having released the demon?"

(This question sounds like nothing so much as an essay question upon a written exam.)
imperial_long: (quiet smile)

[personal profile] imperial_long 2013-08-15 09:59 am (UTC)(link)
Long listens as placidly as he does most things, sampling another of his dishes while Sherlock Holmes reflects, and then speaks.

(Oh, the mussels are extraordinary. He puts a few more onto his plate before nudging the main dish to Sherlock's side of the table.)

As Sherlock finishes, he nods sagely (nodding sagely is something that Mayland Long would like to be good at) and lifts his wineglass again for another demure sip. Dab of napkin to the lips before answering.

" Irrigators channel waters; fletchers straighten arrows; carpenters bend wood; the wise master themselves." (Sherlock is probably quite used to Long's insertion of quoted truisms into conversation, by this point.)

The napkin is lowered again, and Long laces his fingers beneath his chin. "Whatever Mr. Blood's state of spiritual attainment, or lack thereof, answering fire with fire destroys the whole land."

Long straightens somewhat, and smiles, easily, casually, dismissing the weighty matters of philosophy with that gesture. "You must try the mussels, though."