Holmes persisted. At one point, he let out an âaha!â when he discovered what appeared to be a strand of light-coloured hair. Picking it up with tweezers, he carefully placed his trophy in a small envelope he had produced from his pocket. But since white-haired Terrence Leonard also lived in this house, the alleged prize seemed unimportant to me. At last Holmes rose and observed the scene in its entirety. Then he carefully walked over to the cherry-wood desk and lifted from it a foot-tall metal statue of a woman in some sort of long toga affair. Finally, he closed the heavy drapes that were currently bunched in the spaces between each of the three sets of windows.
Instantly, the room was completely enveloped in darkness. Actually, it was almost completely enveloped in darkness because, as soon as the curtains had been drawn, three lances of daylight, like the beams from three well-focused bullâs eye lanterns, immediately shot across the room some five feet above the floor, the result of a trio of small horizontal holes inches apart in the white velvet.
âAs I expected,â Holmes murmured cryptically. Reopening the damaged curtain to flood the room with brightness once more, he began inspecting the wall behind the now gathered cloth at the corresponding height of the hole in the velvet. To Billyâs and my great amazement, we watched Holmes discover a tiny cavity in the plaster.
Taking out a small blade from another of his pockets, Holmes pried out of the hole what looked to be a bullet. Dropping the missile into another envelope, he said enigmatically, âI thought there wasnât enough blood.â
Holmes placed the envelope back in his coat and looked round the room once more. Apparently satisfied, he patted his pockets for reassurance. âWe can go now,â he said with an air of finality. âThereâs nothing here left to be discovered.â
âBut what have you learned, Mr. Holmes?â Billy asked. âWhat do you know that the police donât?â
âOther than the fact that Terrence Leonardâs wife was not bludgeoned to death - that, in fact, she was shot in the head and then beaten with a small bronze statue of the Roman figure Pyramus - not much.â
âHolmes!â I ejaculated. âHow - ?â
âWatson, you can see the blood stains. Certainly, there is no spatter large enough to suggest the woman had her skull stove in. And what do you make of the spots a few feet distant from the body?â
I looked round the floor where his spiral crawl had ended, but saw no blood. âThere are no blood spots a few feet distant of the body,â I stated.
âPrecisely,â he said. âWhen someone is bludgeoned to death, the repeated strikes create a cast-off pattern. After the initial blow that causes the victim to bleed, each successive hit will cause the weapon to pick up blood and fling it behind the killer as he prepares to strike again. Since, besides a few random drops, there is no such pattern to speak of, one must conclude that Sylvia Leonard must have been dead before the blows were administered.â
âBrilliant!â Billy said.
But Holmes wasnât finished. âI imagined a bullet had done the job; the regularity of the stain at the centre of the carpet suggests she bled while lying on the floor. Because the police found no bullet in the poor ladyâs skull, any simpleton could conclude that there must be a bullet hole somewhere else - in the place where the bullet, after passing through her head, eventually ended up - that is, behind the bunched up folds of fabric. Since the authorities never thought to close the curtains - let alone to look for a bullet - the damage made by a single missile passing through the folds and ending up in the wall went undetected.â
âFantastic, Holmes,â I offered.
âBut I donât follow,â Billy said. âIf there was only one bullet, why are there
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