Just watched a crime movie and I deduced who the killer was halfway through it.
Sherlock Holmes, be proud of me.
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Just watched a crime movie and I deduced who the killer was halfway through it.
Sherlock Holmes, be proud of me.

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It was the second Saturday of April 1894 when a small matter from a respectable Bayswater address brought us out before noon — Mrs Anstey, lately widowed by the wreck of the Glamorgan off the Cape, now besieged by a man who claimed to be her husband. "He arrived on Tuesday evening, Mr Holmes, with a beard, much weathered, the right look of my Edward. He knew the drawer in the morning-room; he knew Mary's nickname for the cat. My brother-in-law and our solicitor swear it is not him. The will is to be read on Monday. Sir, I cannot say." As we turned out of Bayswater Terrace I observed a thickset man in iron-grey at the corner, who watched our hansom turn — broken-nosed, knuckles scarred, very still beneath a low hat — and was gone before we reached the next gate. I did not mention him. Holmes had already seen. https://the221bdaily.com/case/2026-06-20?utm_source=tumblr&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=221b-daily&utm_content=20260620-2026-06-20
It was the third Sunday of October 1893 when the Reverend Tresham of St Anne's, Lambeth, sent his churchwarden up to Baker Street between matins and luncheon. Twelve months' subscription to the mission-school fund - eight hundred and forty pounds at the quarter's close, four hundred pounds short upon the auditor's count this morning. The architect was to be paid on Monday at noon. We took a hansom across the river. At the gate of the parish church a barrow had been set against the railings, and a sing-song carried down the lane - violets, two pence the bunch, fresh this morning. The vestry was small and panelled, the books open upon a deal table; the curate sat with his head in his hands, the parish treasurer at the window with a businessman's anxious composure. "His confession is full of grief and meagre of detail, Watson - and the detail it lacks is the substance of the spending. Which is always the giveaway of a confession made to shield."
Isn't it sad that Sherlock Holmes is the only spirit Conan Doyle successfully brought back from the dead, and that was against their will ?

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It was the second Thursday of May, and Mr Henry Tarrant came to Baker Street with a confession in his hand and an unsatisfied conscience. Two hundred pounds had gone from the Tarrant trust at the offices of Falkner & Mann in Gray's Inn. The junior partner — twenty-six, engaged to the senior's daughter — had walked into the clerks' room on Wednesday morning and laid down a written confession he had composed the night before. The senior partner believed him. Mr Tarrant did not. We took a hansom east. At the corner of Holborn and Gray's Inn Road a thin man in a worn grey ulster stood reading a folded copy of the Pall Mall Gazette; he coughed once, deeply, and was gone before our hansom turned the corner. Holmes did not remark upon it. He seldom does, until the hour is right. The chambers lay above a bookbinder's, and smelt of leather and ink. Mr Davies's confession was three pages long. It described in exact detail the cheque, the bank, and the route of the cash. It said nothing whatsoever of what the £200 had bought. "There is a quietness here, Watson," Holmes said, "which is not the quietness of innocence." Read today's case: https://the221bdaily.com/case/2026-06-11?utm_source=tumblr&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=221b-daily&utm_content=20260611-2026-06-11
It was the third Monday of January 1894 when Mrs Frith of Notting Hill brought to Baker Street a will, a confession, and a great unhappiness. Her husband had died at Christmas. The will, drawn by Mr Pickering of Lincoln's Inn the March before, left the substance of three thousand pounds to a cousin she had never met. The young clerk who attended the signing had walked into Bow Street of his own accord and confessed to forging the dead man's hand. "The case is to be heard at the magistrates' on Wednesday and the boy will go to gaol for it," she said. "But, sir — I cannot believe that he is the man." We walked across to Lincoln's Inn through a clear winter morning. A flower-seller's barrow stood at the gate as we passed, the woman calling violets in a tuneful sing-song; she was missing a front upper-left tooth and gave us a sharp, unhurried glance. Holmes paused a half-step at the kerb. Then he went on, and said nothing of her. Read today's case: https://the221bdaily.com/case/2026-06-08?utm_source=tumblr&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=221b-daily&utm_content=20260608-2026-06-08
It was the first Sunday of June 1894 when Mr Hugh Lockyer of Lockyer & Tarrant sent a brougham for us at half past nine. His elder brother had been drowned ten years before in the wreck of the Cape steamer Phoebe — the loss attested, the firm passed to Hugh alone. On Tuesday, by the South African mail, a letter had arrived in Edmund's hand, postmarked Cape Town, claiming he had lived these years quietly in the Karoo and now demanded the restoration of his share. We walked across to Bishopsgate through a quiet Sunday morning. On the opposite pavement stood a thin man in a worn grey ulster, a folded copy of the Pall Mall Gazette in his right pocket, who paused to a deep dry cough as we crossed and tipped his hat in the smallest acknowledgment to my friend. Holmes did not speak of him, and I knew better than to ask. He had the letter in his note-case and a magnifying glass in his pocket, and I knew that look upon his face. https://the221bdaily.com/case/2026-06-07?utm_source=tumblr&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=221b-daily&utm_content=20260607-2026-06-07