A study in pink pill game
Yoon: 'Ms. We will take up every person and analyze the statements over all of them one by one. Case 1: Ms. Gwyneth is lying Our first guess itself was right but let us confirm our analysis by analyzing the statements over others.
Case 2: Ms. Britney is not lying As per the conditions, three statements had to be wrong but here, we have two statements right which clearly contradict the condition. Case 3: Ms. Gwyneth is lying She did not do it as all the statements are false.
Case 4: Ms. Gwyneth is lying All four statements are false in her case as well thus she did not do it. Therefore we have proved that Ms. Difficulty Popularity Anne was found dead in the central park of London. Sherlock, then, chose the right pill, though what the driver or even Moriarty would have done had he taken the pill is unknown. Adrienne Tyler is a features writer for Screen Rant. She is an Audiovisual Communication graduate who wanted to be a filmmaker, but life had other plans and it turned out great.
Adrienne is very into films and she enjoys a bit of everything: from superhero films to heartbreaking dramas, to low-budget horror films. Every time she manages to commit to a TV show without getting bored, an angel gets its wings. As you can see, although Jeff was based on Jefferson Hope, they can be quite different, not only character wise.
Another difference: The word Rache was present in both versions. In the original story, Inspector Gregson thought it was the unfinished word for Rachel. Anderson thought that the word Jennifer Wilson carved was Rache revenge but Sherlock proved that it was actually Rachel, the name of her stillborn daughter and password to her email address and phone tracker.
And this marks the end of my post for today. Overall, I find both the story and the TV series highly fascinating, with them both being unique and original. You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account. You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email.
Home About. I must have blacked out. Please Come," to Jennifer Wilson's phone number. Meanwhile, Sherlock retrieves a small pink suitcase from the kitchen and opens it, adding sarcastically to a surprised John that despite the suitcase and the text message, he is not the killer.
Then Sherlock explains to John that he deduced that the killer drove the woman to Lauriston Gardens but made the mistake of driving away with the suitcase, a very colourful one pink which will draw attention especially on a man. He had to have gotten rid of it quickly, so Sherlock searched for potential dump sites near the crime scene located in areas accessible by car but isolated and found the right skip in less than one hour.
There is one thing missing: her mobile phone. A serial adulterer would be careful where she leaves her phone, so it is possible that the killer has it, on purpose or by mistake. The text message that John sent could only have meaning to the killer, so when John's phone rings, Sherlock realises that the hunt is on and asks John to come with him.
John tells Sherlock about Donovan's warning, that Sherlock gets off on this, to which Sherlock replies that he said "dangerous", and John is here, proving that he is just as bad. Sherlock and John walk to a small Italian restaurant overlooking 22 Northumberland Street, where the owner, an old "friend" of Sherlock, insists on serving him and his "date" a nice free dinner. John tries unsuccessfully to explain that he is not Sherlock' date, but eats the dinner anyway while Sherlock ignores the food and watches the street.
John profits for the moment by asking Sherlock some private questions. After an extraordinarily awkward conversation, in which it is established that John is straight and Sherlock "married to his work", Sherlock says he believes that the killer is someone who can stalk and approach victims on the streets of London without arousing any suspicion.
At that moment, a taxi stops in front of 22 Northumberland Street and the passenger in the back looks around but does not get out.
Sherlock leaves the restaurant in a hurry, and John follows, his cane forgotten by the chair, at the same time as the taxi moves away.
John memorizes the number plate but Sherlock visualises in his head the route in an overhead grid view of the streets, showing traffic lights, one-way streets, and detours that the taxi must follow to reach the closest main street and sees an alternative route via the alleyways and rooftops that will allow him to intercept it.
He pursues it with John close to his heels but when they reach the taxi and meet the passenger, Sherlock realises that he is just an American tourist newly arrived from Los Angeles, judging from his teeth, his tan, and a tag on his luggage that has the initials "LAX" and "LHR"; meaning, the killer did not make it to the rendezvous point.
Sherlock and John run back to Baker Street and, while still at the entrance hall, the doorbell rings. It is the restaurant owner, with John's cane. Sherlock texted him to have it sent back as a housewarming gift to John, since Sherlock had little doubt now that John would be staying with him in Baker Street.
Mrs Hudson greets them, panicking, because the police are upstairs and Sherlock and John go up to find their living room being systematically savaged by Lestrade and his people on a pretend drug bust. Lestrade wants to make a point too, plus recover the evidence from the suitcase that he was sure Sherlock would find. John laughs at the drugs excuse but Sherlock asks him to be quiet, indicating that Sherlock might have had some problems of that kind in the past.
Anderson is all for arresting Sherlock as the murder suspect, but Lestrade wants Sherlock's insights. Sherlock is dubious, and asks why the victim would have carved her daughter's name as she was dying, pondering outloud the probable connection to the case, she was obvious trying to pass on crucial information. Mrs Hudson enters and tells Sherlock that his taxi has arrived. Annoyed, he says he did not order one. Mrs Hudson is told about the drug search, and she complains about the mess. Sherlock explodes, shouting for everyone to shut up so he can think.
The clues begin to gel for Sherlock. Mrs Hudson asks "What about your taxi? As she did not have a laptop, the word she tried to scratch on the floor, "Rachel," was the password to her smartphone's account, which enabled those who knew it to activate the GPS and discover who had the phone. Mrs Hudson again insistently mentions the taxi driver.
Sherlock gets up from the laptop, and John sits down, discovering that that the phone is indicating it is at B Baker Street. Having just come up the stairs to the edge of the room, the cabbie, , waits patiently. It dawns on Sherlock the cabbie fits the profile of the killer, and that he has the missing phone.
Seeing the message, Sherlock decides to follow cabbie outside without telling anyone. Downstairs, the cabbie confesses to the murders but warns that if Sherlock calls the police now, he will surrender quietly, but he will never reveal how his victims died.
Sherlock will know the details only if he gets in the cab and goes with the cabbie. Sherlock enters the taxi while John, looking through the window, dials the victims phone. It rings unanswered in the cab. Lestrade and the police quit the apartment search, since the victim's phone is clearly ringing, but it is not ringing in the apartment.
The cabbie admits to Sherlock that he recognised him when he chased his cab. He had been warned about him and he read his website. Sherlock asks him who gave the warning, but gets no answer. The cabbie drives to an empty school building and briefly threatens Sherlock with a gun, but it is unnecessary since they both know that Sherlock will see it to the end. John, still standing next to the laptop logged in to the victims account, hears it beep as it updates the GPS location of the victim's phone, and he rushes off in pursuit.
Sherlock and the cabbie sit face-to-face in a large study room at the Roland Kerr Further Education College , where the cabbie challenges Sherlock to a supreme battle of wits, to the death. The cabbie puts on the table two bottles, each containing a large pill, explaining that one is quite harmless, but the other is deadly poison.
When Sherlock selects the pill that he deduces to be safe, the cabbie promises that he will eat the other pill at the same time, and they will then find out who the "proper genius" is, and who is dead. Sherlock ensures that both of the bottles are identical, to which the cabbie verifies this fact. Sherlock has deduced the correct choice to make, and the cabbie asks Sherlock for his best game.
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