Douglas wears bright blue-glass spectacles. The reason for this is known only to him and to a man knifed open and killed twenty, thirty years ago. Seven murders later, one of Douglas's intended victims sees him coming. And it turns out that he's not going to permit his own death. Sherlock crossover with Ray Bradbury's macabre short story "The Man Upstairs".
After the Fall, John becomes more and more desperate. He sees Sherlock's ghost everywhere, but after too many false alarms, the Met ignores these "Sherlock sightings", and by the time the detective truly does return, it's too late.
A collection of short poems
They knew Sherlock's parents were strange, but they hadn't guessed just how much...
Kobayashi Maru: slang term for a hopeless situation; Starfleet test of leadership and character in a no-win scenario. Reichenbach Falls: series of waterfalls in Switzerland; base of name of Sherlock episode S2E3. On some unusual connections between the two trials...
John Watson is definitely not the type to run from danger. In fact, he seeks it out: danger makes him feel alive. So when he is invalided home from duty in Afghanistan, he takes a job that can recreate a part of the thrill he's begun to miss: the position of prison doctor, where he meets one unusual – and very dangerous – Sherlock Holmes. [A/N: Work abandoned indefinitely]
In the aftermath of a series of worldshaking, brutal murders, trust becomes one of the most valuable commodities. But sentiment is an odd thing: You never know who the real enemy is.
When Sherlock is expelled from the University, he and John decide to seek a new teacher: Kvothe the Arcane, long thought to be dead.