[From keen memory, a clear call and response riddle:]
'Whose was it?' 'His who is gone.' 'Who shall have it?' 'He who will come.' 'Where was the sun?' 'Over the oak.' 'Where was the shadow?' 'Under the elm.' 'How was it stepped?' 'North by ten and by ten, east by five and by five, south by two and by two, west by one and by one, and so under.' 'What shall we give for it?' 'All that is ours.' 'Why should we give it?' 'For the sake of the trust.'
Well, perhaps it is obvious that the riddle is but a set of instructions. So, 'over the oak', where a shadow was cast 'under the elm'. The issue being that there was no elm to speak of any longer!
But, taking in the angle of the sun, and the height of the oak, one could ascertain where the elm used to be, and count one's paces from there.
[Does she want an explanation regarding TRIGONOMETRY? She is getting one. I'm not typing it out.]
Because he had looked and found nothing. The trees, you see, is where it ended for him. And so, for years, he considered it nothing more than a strange ritual of the family, something simply to be recollected and recited out of tradition rather than practicality.
Well, I knew that the servants would not have gone missing for nothing — that there must have been a connection.
So, from there, we were led to an old, stone house. There was nothing, until I recalled part of the riddle again — “and so under”.
And beneath us, there was a cellar. And in that cellar, there was a stone slab covering a hole. One would call it a hatch were it not so impossibly heavy. Can you guess at what we found beneath? I had to call the Yard in to assist at this point.
Consider the weight of the stone slab, Ms Vaux. The fact that I had to call in help even to lift it. Do you believe the butler found the treasure on his own, knowing this?
Either betrayal or accident. Regardless, she had left him there to die. The contents of the box had been found in the nearby lake, presumably where she had run off, evidenced by her footprints in the area. In an old, soggy bag, there were bits of dirt-covered metal and stone.
Upon further inspection, it was found to be pieces of gold and gems, instead.
'Whose was it?' 'His who is gone.' 'Who shall have it?' 'He who will come.'
That was referring to the treasure itself. The old crown of a king, I suspect. Yes, yes, my adventures are always quite thrilling — the ones worth publishing, anyhow.
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Go on.
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'Whose was it?'
'His who is gone.'
'Who shall have it?'
'He who will come.'
'Where was the sun?'
'Over the oak.'
'Where was the shadow?'
'Under the elm.'
'How was it stepped?'
'North by ten and by ten, east by five and by five, south by two and by two, west by one and by one, and so under.'
'What shall we give for it?'
'All that is ours.'
'Why should we give it?'
'For the sake of the trust.'
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Well, perhaps it is obvious that the riddle is but a set of instructions. So, 'over the oak', where a shadow was cast 'under the elm'. The issue being that there was no elm to speak of any longer!
But, taking in the angle of the sun, and the height of the oak, one could ascertain where the elm used to be, and count one's paces from there.
[Does she want an explanation regarding TRIGONOMETRY? She is getting one. I'm not typing it out.]
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And how did our eminent Mister Musgrave not realize these instructions himself?
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Because he had looked and found nothing. The trees, you see, is where it ended for him. And so, for years, he considered it nothing more than a strange ritual of the family, something simply to be recollected and recited out of tradition rather than practicality.
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So, from there, we were led to an old, stone house. There was nothing, until I recalled part of the riddle again — “and so under”.
And beneath us, there was a cellar. And in that cellar, there was a stone slab covering a hole. One would call it a hatch were it not so impossibly heavy. Can you guess at what we found beneath? I had to call the Yard in to assist at this point.
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Oh, that is elementary. The police force in London, of course!
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[ alive or dead! ]
This is my guess.
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And we also found a box that, when wrenched open, contained nothing at all. A treasure hunt gone completely awry, hm?
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Either betrayal or accident. Regardless, she had left him there to die. The contents of the box had been found in the nearby lake, presumably where she had run off, evidenced by her footprints in the area. In an old, soggy bag, there were bits of dirt-covered metal and stone.
Upon further inspection, it was found to be pieces of gold and gems, instead.
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My, my, Herlock. You found yourself in quite impressive adventure.
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'Whose was it?'
'His who is gone.'
'Who shall have it?'
'He who will come.'
That was referring to the treasure itself. The old crown of a king, I suspect. Yes, yes, my adventures are always quite thrilling — the ones worth publishing, anyhow.