:29:27
- Mr Lestrade?
- Holmes!
:29:31
It's been, what, three or four days
since your last visit?
:29:35
- This will only take a minute.
- There are no murder reports,
:29:39
- no casebooks you haven't read.
- I'm not here for research.
:29:42
- I'm on to something.
- Not again.
:29:45
- I'm certain of it.
- Really?
:29:47
Like when you thought the French
ambassador embezzled £300,000?
:29:53
- It was the Russian ambassador.
- Holmes, please!
:29:56
I don't have time for any more
of your... playpen crimes.
:30:01
Just have a quick look at these.
:30:05
- A suicide. A carriage accident.
- I suspect foul play.
:30:11
Why? They are completely unrelated.
:30:13
Wrong. Both men graduated
from the same university in 1809.
:30:17
Coincidence.
:30:19
Neither death fits their personalities.
:30:21
Bobster was a happy man, content
with his life, career and family.
:30:26
Why commit suicide?
He didn't even leave a note.
:30:29
Reverend Nesbitt is described
as loving and peaceful.
:30:33
Yet the carriage driver
insists he was crazed,
:30:36
in a panic when he ran into the street.
:30:40
A fluctuation of character
is not sufficient for an investigation.
:30:45
Keep your nose out of The Times
and into your school books.
:30:51
I appreciate your time, Mr Lestrade.
I suggest you hold on to these.
:30:57
If I were a detective sergeant
trapped in this room all day,