The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
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:45:00
What's that, Mr. Holmes?
:45:01
Huh?
:45:03
Yeah, that's a
chinchilla foot, Billy.

:45:04
Chinchilla?
:45:06
Yes.
:45:07
You know what a
chinchilla is?

:45:08
Yes, Mr. Holmes.
:45:09
It's a little animal that
grows in South America

:45:11
and its fur is
very expensive.

:45:13
Ahh, you should
remember that, Billy.

:45:14
It'll save you a lot of
money when you grow up.

:45:17
May I look at it, sir?
:45:18
Uh, yeah, yes,
certainly, Billy.

:45:23
Well what do you
make of it, Billy?

:45:24
I'd like to
have one of these.

:45:26
They must bring
you lots of luck.

:45:28
Well why do you say that?
:45:29
Well I bet in Chile or
Bolivia they carry around

:45:31
a chinchilla's
foot for good luck

:45:33
the same as we
carry a rabbit's foot.

:45:34
Ahh.
:45:35
You hear that, Watson?
:45:37
My hearing is in no way
impaired, thank you.

:45:40
And you think that
the man who lost this

:45:41
comes from
Chile or Bolivia?

:45:43
Yes, sir, cause
that's the only places

:45:44
chinchillas grow.
:45:45
Well, Watson.
:45:47
What do you say to that
for a simple deduction?

:45:48
I've listened to seashells
:45:50
that made better sense.
:45:51
Why do you waste your
time like this, Holmes?

:45:52
Half the women
in the worid

:45:54
own chinchilla wraps.
:45:55
You exaggerate, Watson,
:45:56
and half the women in the
worid wish they didn't.

:45:58
No, Dr. Watson.
:46:00
You see they make the
coats out of skins.

:46:01
Oh really?
:46:02
Yes, sir,
and the only place

:46:03
you can get a
chinchilla's foot

:46:05
will be where the
chinchilla lives.

:46:06
There Billy, there's
sixpence for you.

:46:08
Blimey me a tenner.
:46:09
Oh, thank you.
:46:11
No, thank you,
Billy, thank you.

:46:14
I don't know
why you let that

:46:15
insufferable little
brat come in here.

:46:18
I was pulling
your leg, Watson,

:46:21
merely relaying
to you through Billy

:46:23
certain observations,
:46:24
which may or may not
coincide significantly
with what I found.

:46:27
You found something?
:46:29
I think so.
:46:30
I've identified the
death music, Watson,

:46:32
the melody Miss Brandon
played for us last night.

:46:35
It's an ancient
Inca funeral dirge

:46:37
still used by the Indians
:46:39
in the remote
Chilean Andes

:46:41
as a chant for the dead.
:46:42
What on earth has
that got to do

:46:44
with Professor Moriarty
:46:45
or the Star of Deli?
:46:46
I wouldn't know, Watson.
:46:48
I really wouldn't know.
:46:49
Would you mind?
:46:52
Inca funeral dirge.
:46:56
Ahh, how do
you do, doctor.

:46:58
How are you sir.
:46:59
Holmes, how lucky
to find you at home.


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