Here's Part 2 of my fanfic "The Adventure of the Crimson Lady".  I have just 
one request.  Usually Sherlock Holmes adventures are printed in their 
entirety without being divided into chapters or parts (unless it's a novel 
like A Study in Scarlet or The Hound of the Baskervilles).  Could you please 
do the same with my fic?  If not, could you at least create something like a 
"Go to the next page" link at the end of every part? 

I honestly don't know how long this fic will be, but my best guess is it 
won't be more than five or six parts long. 

So, here's Part 2! 

Jaci 

"The Adventure of the Crimson Lady"
Written by Belle Book, story idea by Erin Mills

Part Two

Seconds after the bell clanged, we could hear footsteps upon the stairs.  Holmes
said, "I recognize that footstep only too well.  What has our mystery woman done
to attract the attention of Scotland Yard's finest detective?"  He was no doubt
speaking sarcastically, as his low opinion of Inspector Lestrade was very
familiar to me.

	I heard a tap upon the door, then Holmes said, "Come in, Inspector Lestrade."

	The inspector, a little sallow, rat-faced, dark-eyed man, entered the room with
an expression of complete bafflement.  Holmes would have said that Lestrade was
always in a state of complete bafflement.

	"Mr. Holmes, last night, the most extraordinary robbery occurred at the British
Musuem!" he began, then stopped at once.

	"What is it, Lestrade?" asked Holmes.  I turned to see what Lestrade was
staring at, and noticed that Lestrade seemed to be staring at the hat of the
mysterious "C.S."

	"Where did you get that hat?" asked Lestrade.

	"Oh, it was delivered to me by Mrs. Hudson.  She found it upon her doorstep. 
Somebody had awakened her, then left the hat upon her doorstep and was gone by
the time Mrs. Hudson arrived at the door.  Why should you ask?"

	"Because I interviewed the guard in charge of the museum during the afternoon,
and he said he had seen a woman dressed most peculiarly leaving the museum a
couple of hours before he closed the museuam and turned it over to the night
watchman.  He said that she was dressed in a long red jacket, with something
yellow underneath, and wore an unusual red hat.  The description of the hat fits
the description of that hat I see on your chair."

	"Indeed," said Holmes, rubbing his hands in excitement as he picked up the hat
so Lestrade could sit in the chair.  "So this mystery woman was seen in the
Britsh Museum some hours before the robbery occurred?  That is most suggestive,
considering that she left both this hat and a letter which says only 'The game
is afoot.  C.S.'"

	He handed the letter to Lestrade, who examined it.

	"So you are suggesting that this woman who goes by the initials 'C.S.' is
connected to the British Museum robbery?" he asked.

	"I am not only suggesting that she is connected to it, but also that she is in
all probability the thief," said Holmes.  "Now, tell me what was stolen from the
British Museum, and how you discovered that they were stolen."

	"Early this morning, the night watchman was making his usual rounds preparing
for the arrival of the guard.  You understand that when the guard arrives, he
opens the British Museum for the public."

	"We understand," said Holmes.  "Continue."

	"When the night watchman checked the Parthenon Gallery to see that all the
marbles in the Elgin Collection were still there, he saw that three of the
figures there were gone!  He looked everywhere in the Museum to see if they had
been stored somewhere without his knowledge, but they were nowhere to be found
in the museum!  Luckily, the constable on patrol in that area was nearby when
the night watchman sounded the alarm.  He examined the scene, then went to
Scotland Yard.  I arrived on the scene, and examined it myself. Somebody has
stolen three figures of goddesses from the east pediment of the Parthenon!"

	"Which goddesses were stolen?" asked Holmes.

	"There were three goddesses to the right of what would have been the centre
group, and the curator has informed me that the one on the left may have been
Hestia, the goddess of hearth and home; Dione, a Titaness; and Aphrodite, the
goddess of love.  However, the two figures on the right might not be Dione and
Aphrodite, but instead the personification of the Sea in the lap of the Earth,"
Lestrade added.

	"Hmm, I am going to have to ask the curator who the personification of the Sea
and the Earth are, and what Dione's connection to Aphrodite may be," said
Holmes.  I was not surprised that he would have to ask the curator both facts,
as I already knew that his knowledge of literature was nil, and these goddesses
were from Greek mythology.  "How big are these goddesses?" he asked.

	"Well the ones on the right are over 6 feet long, and when you add in the third
figure, I would say the three are nearly 7 feet long," said Lestrade.

	Holmes whistled.  "That is an extremely bold robbery," he said.  "I wonder how
she managed to commit such a daring theft without the night watchman hearing
her."

	"And why would she steal three goddesses from the Elgin Marbles collection?" I
could not help asking.  "I am certain there are other items in the museum which
she might have stolen which would have been less risky."

	"There is only one way to find out," said Holmes.  "Do you have a hansom
waiting outside, Lestrade?"

	"I do, indeed," said Lestrade.

	"Then let us go to the British Museum at once," said Holmes.  "As the
mysterious 'C.S.' might say, the game's afoot!"

_____________________________________________________________________________

The British Museum, nearly 10:30 AM

	We took Lestrade's hansom from 221B Baker Street, passing by Regent's Park,
traveling along Euston Road till we turned left onto Gower Street.  Finally we
reached Bloomsbury Street and turned right onto Great Russell Street, where the
front entrance to the British Museum was located.

	Lestrade ordered the driver to pull up a few feet from the front entrance at
Holmes's request, and Holmes disembarked.  He leisurely walked up toward the
British Museum, carefully checking the road.  Lestrade and I followed.  Lestrade
was sneering, but I knew enough of Holmes's methods by now to realize that he
was carefully searching for clues.

	Finally, we reached the front entrance of the British Museum, where Holmes
suddenly whistled.  He examined the stretch of road immediately outside the
entrance and leading past the front entrance with great interest, giving a cry
of excitement at one point.  He then returned and carefully examined the front
steps, then the keyhole of the door.  Finally, he stood up and said, "Let's go
inside and see if there are any more clues to be found there."

	"And have you found anything important from examining the road?" Lestrade asked
with barely concealed sarcasm.

	"There was a wagon here last night," said Holmes.  "It had been parked close to
the curb.  See how close the wheels are.  It cannot have been a private carriage
or a cab because of the wide gauge of its wheels.  A wagon is considerably wider
than either of these means of transportation.  In all probability, our
mysterious thief drove the wagon and left it outside while she went inside and
stole the statues."

	"How can you guess that?" said Lestrade.

	"I never guess," said Holmes.  "The horse had wandered on in a way which would
have been impossible had there been anyone in charge of it.  The driver must
have been inside the museum, since the wagon had been left there.  Again, I
seriously doubt any sane man would carry out a deliberate crime under the very
eyes, as it were, of a second person, who would be sure to betray her."

	"What else can you deduce?" I asked, curious to discover how much Holmes knew,
while hoping to prevent another argument from Lestrade.

	"Our thief wears high-heeled size 7 shoes and is probably between five feet six
inches and five feet eight inches," said Holmes.  "That would mean she is above
the middle height.  There is no mystery about it," he added, looking at our
surprised faces.  "I had her stride as walked toward the museum.  The stride
indicates that she was about six feet tall.  Yet the footprints consistently
reveal that the woman's heel is elevated.  Therefore, she wears high heels, and
her height is between five feet six inches and five feet eight inches.  The toe
of her shoe indicates that she wears size 7 shoes, and is too small for a man's
shoe in the same size.  Therefore, the owner of the shoe is a woman."

	"Is there any more evidence?" asked Lestrade.

	"Just that the woman used either a wire or maybe a hairpin to force her way
around the key," said Holmes.  "You can see the scratches on the outside where
pressure was applied.  However, the woman had enough sense to lock the door
before she left.  Let us go inside and see if we can find any more information."

	Once inside, we met the curator of the British Museum, who gladly volunteered
to take Holmes through the museum.

	"Lestrade mentioned that the two statues to the right are either Dione and
Aphrodite or the personification of the Sea and the Earth," said Holmes.  "Could
you explain Dione's connection to Aphrodite and tell me what the personification
of the Sea and the Earth are in Greek mythology?"

	"In the Iliad, Dione is Aphrodite's mother, while the Greek goddess of the Sea
was Thalassa," said the curator.  "The Greek goddess of the Earth was Gaea.  Now
let's go to the Parthenon Gallery."

	Along the way, Holmes was carefully examining the floor, but there were no
exclamatory cries indicating that he had found anything.  Nor were things much
different when we arrived at the location of the Elgin Marbles in the Parthenon
Gallery.  All the statues were left in place except for the ones that were
stolen, of course.

	As Holmes carefully examined the location of the missing statues without any
seeming success, Lestrade looked more and more smug.  Finally, he seemed to be
no longer able to restrain his glee and said, "The great Sherlock Holmes unable
to make any brilliant deductions concerning the thief?  That is a first!"

	Holmes looked up and said, "The thief is obviously very clever.  While she used
a wagon to transport the statues, she does not seem to have used a device with
wheels to carry it out of the museum.  There are no wheel marks.  Also, she
stood at the doorway, where she removed the mud from her shoes with the aid of a
scraper.  There were footprints at the door, but not through the museum."

	"Are you suggesting that this woman used a device with no wheels to carry the
statues out of the museum?" asked Lestrade, clearly dumbfounded.

	"It seems that way," said Holmes.  "I would like to examine the night watchman
before I proceed any further, just to ascertain whether or not he fell asleep at
any time while the thief might have been inside the museum?"

	"Of course," said the curator.  And he went to find the night watchman.

	The watchman was named Thomas Atwater, and he looked to be a nervous young man
in his mid-thirties, with dull brown hair and grey eyes.  While it was possible
he was always nervous, it was more likely that his nervousness was due to fear
that it might be believed he had fallen asleep.

	"Yes, Mr. Holmes?" he asked.

	"What can you tell us about your watch after the museum closed?" asked Holmes.

	"Well, the museum closed at about 8:00 last night, but the Great Court actually
closed at 1:30 AM," said Atwater.  "I came on duty at midnight, when the late
afternoon and evening guard let me in, then I locked the doors.  I can not
understand how the thief got in without my hearing me, as I was awake when he
must have stolen the statues."

	"What time do you go off duty?" asked Holmes.

	"9:00 AM every day," said Atwater.  "I always open the museum to the morning
guard, then go home, eat breakfast, and go to bed at 10:00.  I wake up at 6:00
PM, read the newspaper, eat dinner, and wait until around 11:30 PM, when I head
over to the British Museum."

	He yawned then.  "I'm sorry," he said.  "I'm just tired.  "It's past my
bedtime."

	"I understand," said Holmes.  "It appears then that you would have been awake
during the hours that the robbery would've taken place, which would've probably
been after 1:30 AM and before dawn.  In fact, I think it would've been between
2:00 AM, since the thief would not want to get in at exactly 1:30 AM, and while
the sky is turning gray, which would be around 5:00, since dawn comes at either
5:30 or 6:00, and our thief would not want to be anywhere near the museum at
dawn.  And you would have been awake during that whole time, but the thief
must've waited until you were patrolling another area before she struck."

	"She?" asked Atwater.

	"Yes," said Holmes.  "The thief is a woman.  And an extremely clever one."

	"How can you tell that Atwater would have been awake when the thief stole the
statues?" asked Lestrade.

	"Is Atwater prone to falling asleep on the job?" Holmes asked the curator.

	"Never," said the curator.  "I would have known if he had been.  He does not
get drunk while on the job, either."

	"And I seriously doubt a healthy man as Atwater appears to be would have been
asleep during the hours when the thief must have operated unless he was drunk,
which you claim he was not, or drugged."

	"I would have known if I was drunk or any drinks I had were drugged," Atwater
added.

	"But what about his hearing?" asked Lestrade.  "Even if he was not asleep while
on the job for any reason, he must have had bad hearing to not hear the thief."

	"That is the next thing we are going to test," said Holmes.  "I would like a
handcart brought here."

	"I will get it," said Atwater as he left, still yawning.

	"You seriously believe that Atwater is not to blame for the thief getting in
and out without him seeing or hearing her?" asked Lestrade.

	"I do," said Holmes.  "When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever
remains, however improbable, must be the truth.  Our thief would not want the
night watchman to hear her, so she probably moved quietly through the museum. 
AND the lack of wheel marks in the museum indicates that she may have used a
transportation device which didn't need wheels.  Such a device is improbable but
NOT impossible."

	"I would say it is impossible," said Lestrade scoffingly.

	"Then the handcart will test your theory that Atwater has poor hearing," said
Holmes.  "Ah, here is the handcart.  Would you kindly step into Room 19?"

	"Sure," said Atwater, puzzled as he left Room 18, where the Parthenon Gallery
was located.

	Holmes said, "Now we are going to walk this handcart from Room 18 into Room 17
and then into Room 23.  If Atwater has excellent hearing, this will prove my
theory that the woman used some kind of new device which doesn't require wheels
to maneuver.  Watson, will you move this handcart?"

	"Of course," I said as I gripped the handles of the handcart.

	"Ready ... set ... now, Watson!" Holmes yelled.

	I slowly moved the handcart toward the next room.  But before I got very far, I
heard a voice yell, "Is that the handcart I hear?"

	"Stop, Watson!" said Holmes.  I stopped, and saw Holmes turn to Lestrade with a
triumphant look, saying, "Well, Lestrade?"

	Lestrade looked stunned.  "I must admit, Atwater can hear quite well," he said
grudgingly.

	"I suggest that you allow Mr. Atwater to go home," Holmes said to the curator. 
"He can clearly hear quite well, and therefore would have heard the thief if she
was close enough to be heard OR if she didn't have a noiseless device."

	"And what will you do?" asked Lestrade.

	"Why, follow the trail of our mysterious thief," said Holmes.  "Come along,
Watson," he said as we left a completely befuddled Lestrade in the Parthenon
Gallery.

To be continued