"Don't be daft, Mike. You know why I'm here." - Episode tag. Spoilers for 3x03.
I may have very slightly over-estimated how fine it would be. - A double drabble. Episode tag to Johannesburg.
"Good night, my Captain," he murmurs under his breath, a reluctant smile creeping to his lips. "And good luck."
On her way to the hospital she stopped at a florist's. - Spoilers for 3x03. An episode tag of sorts.
She's always there to catch him when he falls. - A 221B ficlet. Spoilers up to 3x03.
Where do they all belong? - A drabble. Episode tag to 2x03.
That's what friends do. - A 221B ficlet. Spoilers for 3x03. Written for Friends will be friends, a multifandom friendship fic (and art) fest on DW. The title is a reference to the song Hero by Chad Kroeger.
I live in hope of the right case. - Set after 3x03.
Airline captain – that wasn't such a bad idea after all.
That was just the way of the world, and nobody would ever convince her otherwise; there was no 'special someone' awaiting for her, and even if there was she wasn't sure she would want to meet him. - Soulmates AU, sort of.
She paused after disconnecting the call, briefly considering how to break the news to her boss. - A 221B ficlet. Spoilers for 3x03. A missing scene from His Last Vow. Written for Let's Write Sherlock Challenge 10 on tumblr. (Apparently Andrea is Anthea's real name, so that you know.)
Heathrow airport, just another foggy Saturday evening. - Spoilers up to Yverdon-les-Bains. Written to celebrate AO3 reaching 1 million fanworks today.
"Ms Somers," Mycroft Holmes acknowledged her, his voice betraying the faintest trace of surprise. "I believe I sent you home hours ago." - For solrosan.
I see of no reason / Why Gunpowder Treason / Should ever be forgot. - A collection of six-word stories.
"May I ask what's going on here?"
Don't ask me the name... - Inspired by The Legend of 1900.
The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
It's not a common occurrence for Mycroft Holmes to be rendered utterly speechless. - A double drabble.
She's Agatha, and Georgia, and Mary - and many more. - A double drabble. Title borrowed from the namesake novel by Luigi Pirandello.
She's his wife in anything but name. - A drabble. For solrosan.