Olivia
sighed as she pulled away form HQ. C.S.I. wasn't a job for anyone
with a weak stomach. If fact, you couldn't have a stomach.
Ah,
vacation, wonderful vaction. Her hotel room in London was going to be
pure bliss compared with the hectic traffic of New York City. She had
basicly packed everypiece of her clothing in the trunk of her
car.
She pulled on to the highway in her Mustang. Smiling
slightly, she looked at the charm bracelett her best friend and
investigation partner, Krysten Marianson, had givin her as a joke
birthday present.
Krys probably didn't think she would appreciate
it as much as she did. Having a last name of Watson could be a pretty
big detriment on your way up the scale in forensics. The little
magnifying glass, deerstalker cap, pen, and book silver charms were a
little reminder of what was in her history. Or what might have been
her history.
Recently, some people tearing down a house on Baker
street in London had found a journal. It was in the back of the
house, away from all the exhibits that now inhabited 221. It seemed
to be stuck inside a old case that they had to take to an antique
restorer to open due to the state of the case. Olivia deduced that
they probably opened it with a "nightingale", so called by
turn of the century vandals who used them to break into houses and
the sweet sound they made when they banged against eack other.
The
journals, after opened, were from about the 1890's to the 1930's. If
they were what they seemed to be, that ment. . .that Sherlock Holmes
was real.
And the piece of torn out paper with a (as she thought)
doctor's untidy scroll that she had gotten from an ancestor of hers
from the turn of the century was real.
Thus making it seem like
she was an actually, living, breathing, honest-to-goodness Watson.
This made her feel very proud.
Humming to a tune on the radio, she
payed the toll for the bridge. "Just another perfect day . . ."
she sang insync with the singer.
Except the day really
wasn't.
Olivia watched as a car switched precariously from one
lane to another, and then back. Hope this guy gets pulled over she
thought to herself as she glanced forward at the obviously drunk
driver.
And then it happened. He stopped abruptly infront of her.
She tried to swerve out of the way.
Her car slid a quarter of a
turn and straught ahead. . . and over the side of the bridge.
Watson
braced herself for the impact, knowing that she'd never have a chance
to swim. Closing her eyes, she gritted her teeth and tried to hold on
to the last few seconds of her life. "Bye, everybody, I loved
you like a sister, Krys. I love you, mom. . . ."
Thud.
She
waited . . and waited . .but nothing happened.
Opening her eyes,
she saw she was sprawled on the floor of a turkish rug and was in a
room that smelled heavily of a particularly strong pipe tobacco.
The
walls all had books, jars, and miscallanious items collecting dust on
the shelves. "This reminds me of . . "
"Why,
Watson, look at what we have hear?" A tall, lanky man rose from
a seat infront of a fireplace. His sandy-brown hair was slightly
ruffled and a pair feirce, peircing blue eyes studied her criticly as
he looked over a stong , pale nose.
Oliva stood up and smirked,
"You have Olivia," she put out her hand, "Olivia
Watson."
