Remember when every American had an anthrax scare in the Reichenbach Falls
fucking John
└ Joan and Sherlock meet
This is the only genderbend I’ve ever seen that looks super accurate, woah. Like, Sherlock wouldn’t be a beautiful, curly haired temptress that I’ve seen her drawn/cast as. She’d be like this, hair in a messy ponytail (to get it out of the way of experiments) and modest clothes. And just look at Joan, what a cutie. Super average sense of clothing, practical haircut. Aaaah good fan-casting makes me happy.
(Source: notsosilentwallflower)
Frankenstein ‘verse (I am what you want me to be) now has some amazing fan art made by anonymouslyyours! She is a great artist all around, and I am very flattered that she made art of my work! It’s here:
Part two of my Frankenstein AU Sherlock fic is now up and running.
It is here: http://biohazard-girl.livejournal.com/988.html
Warnings for this chapter: Character death, disturbing treatment of and creepy attitudes towards corpses, dissection, fire, ambiguous suicide attempt, drug usage, morally grey behavior
Edit: Oh, also, I wrote a Voldemort/Giant Squid crack fic called “The Dark Magic of Tentacle Love” just for shits and giggles. That’s here: http://biohazardgirl.dreamwidth.org/538.html
And I put it up on my livejournal. It’s a part of a (hopefully eventually) canon compliant fusion of Frankenstein and Sherlock, so if you’re into that sort of thing, the link is here.
http://biohazard-girl.livejournal.com/526.html
I’m fairly new to fiction writing in general, so comments and concrit are welcome and appreciated if you do end up reading it.
Hooray for self promotion!
Just used the drabble-matic for the first time. I sure feel like I know how to write an extended simile.
“I’m dreaming of a shiny Christmas/ just like ointment that consistently soothes and heals even the hardiest of rashes.”
Also, unknowingly I picked just the right terms and I had Sherlock and John wanting to “love each other’s hands” a lot.
I think that might be my new favorite term for a handjob…forever.




