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Without a Clue
Without a Clue
Once, approximately nine years before the events described in the film, Dr. Watson treated inspector Scotland Yard. He spoke with the patient not only about his illness, but also about his work, and, after listening to the facts of one very confusing case of murder and comparing them, helped to find the killer. At that time, Watson was waiting for the appointment of one very conservative medical college in the staff of one, whose leadership would not approve his deductive hobby, so he attributed the disclosure of the crime to a fictitious person, a non -existent detective - Sherlock Holmes. Watson never received his posts, and Scotland Yard did not forget about him and his mysterious detective friend, constantly turning to their (more precisely, to his-Watson) help in the disclosure of crimes. At his leisure, Watson began to write detective stories about the alleged adventures with Holmes, which the Strand magazine eagerly published. And then the moment came when an enthusiastic audience demanded that she show her living Sherlock Holmes.