:19:03
Corpse?
:19:04
Well I...
:19:06
How did you know that
there was a corpse?
:19:07
Obviously he was
listening at the door.
:19:09
I'll take care of
the matter, doctor.
:19:11
I was listening too.
:19:13
Come along, Brunton.
:19:21
Remarkable woman.
:19:23
Housekeeper, I suppose.
:19:24
She's very efficient.
:19:26
Same type as
Marianne Carpenter,
:19:27
the trunk murderess.
:19:31
Extraordinary house.
:19:33
Yes, it's is indeed.
:19:35
Now Watson, if
you don't mind
:19:36
I'd like to have a word
:19:38
with your
extraordinary patients.
:19:39
Let me remind
you, Holmes,
:19:41
that my patients
are just patients.
:19:43
Quite so.
:19:45
All normal men,
:19:46
sound in mind and body
:19:48
and no sign of
psychoneurosis.
:19:50
I quite understand.
:19:51
And Holmes even
normal people
:19:52
are sometimes a little...
:19:56
Precisely.
:20:06
Hello Mack.
:20:08
Oh, I must have
taken a wee nap.
:20:13
Mack I want you to meet a
very old friend of mine,
:20:15
Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
:20:16
Captain Mackintosh.
:20:17
How do you do?
:20:18
I have heard of
you, Mr. Holmes.
:20:20
Sorry to have wakened you.
:20:21
Oh, that's
quite all right.
:20:22
See you later.
:20:23
Yes.
:20:24
Sit down Mack and go
on with your sleep.
:20:31
Poor chap.
:20:32
He got wounded in a
trench on Josher Hill.
:20:34
The German Tanks
went over him.
:20:38
Watson?
:20:39
Huh?
:20:40
Have you any idea
:20:42
how Jeffery Musgrave
met his death?
:20:43
He has a depressed
skull fracture,
:20:45
wait a minute
Holmes, it isn't.
:20:46
Isn't it?
:20:47
Why not?
:20:49
No edema, no bleeding,
no contractinous tissue.
:20:50
Precisely.
:20:51
The blow on the head was
delivered after death.
:20:53
Musgrave was killed
by a sharp instrument
:20:55
thrusted between the
base of the skull
:20:56
and the top vertebrate.
:20:57
Great Scott.
:20:59
Should we go up now?