![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Title: To Cast Light on Each
Recipient:
tweedisgood
Author: [redacted]
Rating: PG
Characters, including any pairing(s): established Holmes/Watson, developing Eugenia Ronder/Elsie Cubitt
Warnings: This is a fix-it for “The Veiled Lodger” and a follow-up to “The Dancing Men.” As such, it references the plots of both stories and includes references to suicidal inclinations, a past suicide attempt, past domestic abuse, as well as non-graphic descriptions of physical disfigurement
Summary: Holmes and Watson are determined to offer Eugenia Ronder more than a sermon.
Disclaimer: The characters belong to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and the opening poetic quotation is Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s. The concluding song was released in 1901 by Arthur F. Tate and Eileen Newton.
( The stifling, anguished atmosphere of the veiled lodger's lonely room followed us back to Baker Street. )
Recipient:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Author: [redacted]
Rating: PG
Characters, including any pairing(s): established Holmes/Watson, developing Eugenia Ronder/Elsie Cubitt
Warnings: This is a fix-it for “The Veiled Lodger” and a follow-up to “The Dancing Men.” As such, it references the plots of both stories and includes references to suicidal inclinations, a past suicide attempt, past domestic abuse, as well as non-graphic descriptions of physical disfigurement
Summary: Holmes and Watson are determined to offer Eugenia Ronder more than a sermon.
Disclaimer: The characters belong to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and the opening poetic quotation is Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s. The concluding song was released in 1901 by Arthur F. Tate and Eileen Newton.
( The stifling, anguished atmosphere of the veiled lodger's lonely room followed us back to Baker Street. )