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|image=002 Step Nine episode still of Gareth Lestrade and Sherlock Holmes.jpg
 
|image=002 Step Nine episode still of Gareth Lestrade and Sherlock Holmes.jpg
 
|caption=If you and I could work together just one last time.
 
|caption=If you and I could work together just one last time.
|text=Sherlock leaves and finds Lestrade in a pub by tracking down various stashes of money that Lestrade knew about. The pub was near to the last unraided stash. Holmes tries to apologize for Lestrade's addiction to fame and appeals to Lestrade to turn himself in. Lestrade indicates that if Holmes wants to make amends, he can help him prove Pendry is guilty. The next morning, Watson awakes to find no Sherlock. She and Mycroft talk about Sherlock and he's astonished that Watson and Sherlock are friends. A text from Sherlock summons her to an abandoned theatre where he is helping Lestrade. Sherlock ponders why the Pendrys have a bottle of milk when Lawrence is lactose intolerant and Mary was a devoted vegan. Watson mentions that Mycroft has invited her to dinner. Sherlock believes that Mycroft is seeking revenge and wants to sleep with her and that Watson also wants to as a transference of her desires for Sherlock onto Mycroft.
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|text=Sherlock leaves and finds Lestrade in a pub by tracking down various stashes of money that Lestrade knew about. <small>(♫ [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunken_Lullabies Flogging Molly - The Sun Never Shines] ♫)</small> The pub was near to the last unraided stash. Holmes tries to apologize for Lestrade's addiction to fame and appeals to Lestrade to turn himself in. Lestrade indicates that if Holmes wants to make amends, he can help him prove Pendry is guilty. The next morning, Watson awakes to find no Sherlock. She and Mycroft talk about Sherlock and he's astonished that Watson and Sherlock are friends. A text from Sherlock summons her to an abandoned theatre where he is helping Lestrade. Sherlock ponders why the Pendrys have a bottle of milk when Lawrence is lactose intolerant and Mary was a devoted vegan. Watson mentions that Mycroft has invited her to dinner. Sherlock believes that Mycroft is seeking revenge and wants to sleep with her and that Watson also wants to as a transference of her desires for Sherlock onto Mycroft.
 
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Revision as of 12:38, 4 August 2018

Cast

Main cast

Featured cast

Plot

"Our relationship is entirely genetic. He's an embarrassment."
— Sherlock's opinion of Mycroft
In Highgate Cemetery, London, England, a priest is reciting the final prayer for Warren Pendry, with Pendry's son, Lawrence, and other mourners in attendance. The proceedings are rudely interrupted by Inspector Gareth Lestrade of Scotland Yard, saying Warren was a scoundrel. Lawrence motions to two bodyguards standing by his Range Rover, but Lestrade brandishes a hand grenade and says he will leave as soon as he's finished his business. Lawrence, he declares to the crowd of mourners, is guilty of murdering his wife, but the elder Pendry unleashed a battery of lawyers and newspapermen, to discredit Lestrade for trying to prove it. Still holding the grenade, Lestrade approaches the casket, and says he will not let Warren Pendry be buried before someone declares what kind of man he truly was. He then addresses the casket directly, telling the deceased Warren that if he thought he had succeeded in getting rid of Lestrade, he was gravely mistaken.



S02E01-Lestrade w grenade
I'm an officer of the law!
In Washington Square Park, NYC, Sherlock Holmes is watching a flock of pigeons when an irritated Joan Watson approaches, saying she got his text message summoning her. Holmes explains that he had a breakthrough in their latest case of the murders of three U.S. Attorneys within the last year. Each one was connected to the investigation and prosecution of a syndicate of pirates. The NYPD has been unable to establish communication between the suspected assassin, Jeromir Tomsa, and the syndicate. Sherlock deduced that they have been using carrier pigeons when Tomsa appears and grabs a pigeon and extracts a message from it. Holmes gives chase but Tomsa eludes him only to run headlong into Watson, who flattens him with her single stick. As Tomsa is taken away in handcuffs, Captain Gregson and Detective Bell try to understand how Holmes made his deductions. A call on Holmes' phone results in him asking Watson to accompany him to London to help Lestrade, his old colleague.



S02E01-Watson batons Tomsa
Don't mess with Watson.
As they are packing, Holmes tells Watson his history with Lestrade. He calls him utterly adequate as a detective, but as credit for successes went to Lestrade, he began to crave the glory. Arriving in London, Holmes and Watson take a cab to New Scotland Yard and Watson asks Holmes to consider working on "Step Nine" of his recovery, making amends to those he has wronged. (♫ Oasis - Hello ♫) They are greeted by DCI Hopkins, Lestrade's superior and another old friend of Holmes. Hopkins briefs them on the Pendry case from 13 months previous. Lawrence Pendry reported that he and his wife, Mary, had walked in on an armed intruder in their home, and in the struggle that followed, the man's gun fired, killing Mary. Lestrade was assigned to the case and was convinced Pendry was the murderer and staged the crime scene. However, as a neighbor heard the fatal shot and police arrived eight minutes later, no gun was found at the scene, clearing Pendry. Lestrade refused to let go of his suspicions and due to his extreme actions was suspended. Hopkins wants Holmes to find Lestrade, not consult on the Pendry case.



S02E01-Sherlock Hopkins Watson at Thames
You're not here to consult.
Lawrence Pendry arrives at the Yard for an update on Lestrade and meets Holmes and Watson. Pendry identifies Holmes as the brains behind Lestrade's successes. A cab delivers Holmes and Watson to 221B Baker Street, Holmes's former residence in London. To his horror, he finds it has been totally remodelled and discovers that his brother Mycroft is living there. Mycroft introduces himself to Watson and the brothers explain the acrimony between them to her which includes Sherlock sleeping with Mycroft's fiance to prove she was a gold-digger. Watson is surprised as Sherlock never mentioned Mycroft to her. Sherlock becomes angrier when he discovers that Mycroft gave away all his possessions that were in 221B. Despite the hard feelings, Mycroft insists they stay.



S02E01-Mycroft meets Watson
I'm Sherlock's brother.
Sherlock leaves and finds Lestrade in a pub by tracking down various stashes of money that Lestrade knew about. (♫ Flogging Molly - The Sun Never Shines ♫) The pub was near to the last unraided stash. Holmes tries to apologize for Lestrade's addiction to fame and appeals to Lestrade to turn himself in. Lestrade indicates that if Holmes wants to make amends, he can help him prove Pendry is guilty. The next morning, Watson awakes to find no Sherlock. She and Mycroft talk about Sherlock and he's astonished that Watson and Sherlock are friends. A text from Sherlock summons her to an abandoned theatre where he is helping Lestrade. Sherlock ponders why the Pendrys have a bottle of milk when Lawrence is lactose intolerant and Mary was a devoted vegan. Watson mentions that Mycroft has invited her to dinner. Sherlock believes that Mycroft is seeking revenge and wants to sleep with her and that Watson also wants to as a transference of her desires for Sherlock onto Mycroft.



002 Step Nine episode still of Gareth Lestrade and Sherlock Holmes
If you and I could work together just one last time.


Another clue Holmes noticed is a photo of four bronze masks arranged over the fireplace, one of which is slightly lower than the others. What is intriguing is that in another photo, taken by Mary only a few hours before she died and sent to a friend, the masks are perfectly lined up.

Holmes asks Lestrade, who admits that he didn't notice the discrepancy, but the police did check behind each of the masks, and found no gun. Holmes says he needs to examine the living room, and Watson says Lawrence Pendry is unlikely to admit them into his house. Holmes hands Lestrade a pad of paper and a pen, saying Pendry will probably do so when Holmes tells him that he "almost" caught Lestrade, and found a suicide note in his hideout, announcing his intention to murder Lawrence before he kills himself.

In Lawrence's drawing room, he reviews the "suicide note" through a plastic evidence bag, and shakily asks Holmes if he thinks Lestrade is serious. Holmes says it is difficult to say, but Lawrence might want to take a few elementary precautions. In order to get themselves into the living room, Holmes describes Watson as an expert in home security, and asks if Lawrence would like her to take a look around.

Watson fakes her way through an examination of the house, leaving Holmes alone in the living room for a few crucial minutes. When Lawrence comes back in, he sees Holmes examining, then replacing, the nail on which the out-of-place mask was hung.

Hastily excusing themselves, Holmes tells Watson that Lestrade was right, Lawrence murdered his wife.

Part Four

At the abandoned theatre, Holmes reviews what they already know: the primary reason Lestrade was not able to make a case against Lawrence was because the police could not find the murder weapon. Holmes theorizes that Lawrence used a plastic gun, and it was hidden in plain sight the entire time. Lestrade is disbelieving, insisting that the police turned the whole house upside down, and he would have recognized any gun, plastic or otherwise. Then Watson shows him the photo of the milk, and Holmes explains what happened:

At 6:33pm, Lawrence shot his wife with his plastic gun. Then he disassembled the gun and dropped the pieces into a milk bottle filled with acetone, before calling 999. By the time the police arrived, the pieces of plastic had dissolved away, leaving only a liquid that perfectly resembled milk in the bottle.

Lestrade is amazed - "and all this from a photograph of a pint of milk." Holmes corrects him, a pint of milk and a nail. Lestrade is confused, and Watson explains further: because plastic firearms are illegal, Lawrence could not have bought his gun, he would have to make it himself using a 3D printer. Such a homemade gun needs a single piece of metal to function: a nail to act as the firing pin. Since Lawrence could not destroy the nail the same way he melted the rest of the gun, he hid it in plain sight, using it to re-hang one of the masks in the living room. He had to do so in a hurry, before the police arrived, which is why it was out of alignment. Holmes examined that nail and found charring on the tip, from where it struck the bullet.

Lestrade is elated - he was right after all, even if he didn't know how to prove it. He is all for going to Hopkins immediately, even if Lestrade must face punishment for his actions at the funeral. Holmes gently reminds him that their only physical evidence is a nail with a blackened tip, which is explicable in any number of ways - Lawrence would have disposed of the phony "milk" months ago, and any gunshot residue on his hands would have faded away.

Later, Holmes leads Watson into Trafalgar Square, carrying two large poster boards. Watson asks what they are doing, and Holmes responds that since London, like New York, lives in constant fear of a terrorist attack, it is one of the most heavily monitored cities in the world, and there is always someone watching. If they are going to expose Lawrence Pendry, they need to trace the ownership of his 3D printer, and the means by which he made his plastic gun.

Holmes holds up the posterboards to a surveillance camera, announcing his name and asking for a list of 3D printers sold in the last year and a half. Now, he tells Watson, all they have to do is wait. Two hours later, Watson is still skeptical, until a random passerby "accidentally" bumps into her, secretly inserting a printout of names into her handbag.

That evening, Watson meets Mycroft at one of his restaurants, which has been closed for the occasion. After an uncomfortable pause, Mycroft admits that he lied to her and Sherlock when they first met. The first thing Sherlock noted was that his brother had slimmed down from the "Fatty" he had once been. Mycroft claimed he had lost weight through exercise, but the truth is... Joan interrupts, saying she already noticed the scars on Mycroft's wrist, characteristic of a bone marrow transplant. She guesses it was leukemia. Mycroft says she is right. He almost died, and while he was dying, he realized that his one great regret was his poor relationship with Sherlock. The brothers were so estranged that Mycroft never thought to tell Sherlock he was sick, much less ask him if he might be a donor match. After Mycroft recovered, he promised to himself that he would make amends, but, when they appeared unexpectedly at Baker Street the day before, he found himself reverting to old habits. What Mycroft wants to know is "how does one become Sherlock Holmes's friend?" because as far as he can see, Joan is the only person who has ever managed it.

On a bench by the Serpentine, Holmes asks Lestrade to review the list. While he is doing so, Holmes again attempts to apologize for turning Lestrade into a glory hound, which doubtless had a poor effect on his career. Lestrade says he isn't sure what Holmes is talking about: he remembers the days of their partnership as some of the best days of his career, and his life, not so much for the glory of their successes, but just the satisfaction of being a good policeman. Awkwardly, Holmes begins to read from a written list of things he is sorry for, but Lestrade interrupts, recognizing one of the names on the list: Nicholas Gint, a handyman who worked for the Pendrys. Lestrade said that he was suspicious of Gint, but the man had a solid alibi for the night of Mary Pendry's murder.

The two men go to Gint's flat, and there is no answer to their knock. While they are waiting, Lestrade says that if Holmes really feels that he needs to make amends for anything, he should let Lestrade take credit for this case, if they succeed.

Impatiently, Lestrade kicks open the door, and they turn on the light to see Gint lying against his open refrigerator, with a kitchen knife sticking out of his chest.

Part Five

Holmes and Watson look on while Scotland Yard crime scene techs are photographing the scene. Gint was killed earlier that day, and Holmes ruefully says that Lawrence Pendry is tying up loose ends, obviously spooked by Holmes's examination of the nail. Watson mentions that she passed DCI Hopkins, who is understandably peeved that Holmes is assisting Lestrade instead of turning him in. Holmes says he prefers not to turn Lestrade in until they have made his case against Pendry - and yet, with Gint's death, their best lead has been closed off.

Watson asks if Holmes found a 3D printer in Gint's home, and Holmes dismissively says that Pendry must have destroyed the printer months ago - because, if he still had it, he would have undoubtedly made another gun to kill Gint, who is taller and stronger than Pendry.

Watson remarks that it seems odd: Lawrence Pendry is the sort of man who plans his crimes well in advance, so why would he stab Gint with a knife from Gint's own kitchen, instead of bringing a weapon of his own? Moreover, the position of the knife clearly shows that it was made with the stabber's left hand, but Pendry is right-handed. Sherlock realizes what happened and drops to the floor, looking carefully around. Noticing a dimple in the skin of an apple in Gint's fruit bowl, Sherlock bites into it and extracts a small splinter of plastic. He admits that he was wrong: Lawrence still has his printer, and used it to build another gun.

Lawrence opens his door to Holmes, Watson, Hopkins and a pair of police constables. He trails them to the living room, angrily calling his solicitor on the phone. Holmes looks behind the mask, and is not surprised to see that the incriminating nail has been replaced. However, that is not what they came for.

Holmes explains what happened: after Holmes examined the nail, Lawrence unearthed his 3D printer, made another plastic gun, and went to kill Gint. Unfortunately, Lawrence was in a hurry, so he used a .22 long-caliber bullet, instead of the .22 short he used when he killed Mary. The higher velocity bullet caused the gun to explode in his hand when he fired it at Gint's back. In the struggle that followed, Lawrence grabbed a knife with his uninjured left hand and was lucky enough to fatally stab Gint. After the murder, Lawrence cleaned the pieces of plastic from Gint's home - except the one Holmes found. DCI Hopkins has a warrant that gives him the right to examine Lawrence's hand for injuries.

Lawrence is silent, and Holmes advises that when his solicitor calls back, Lawrence can tell him he is being taken into custody. As Lawrence is lead out of his house, Lestrade is standing by, grinning smugly.

Deciding he needs to take a firm hand with Lestrade, Holmes approaches him and says that Lestrade cannot take credit for this case's solution; if he does, he will simply be perpetuating his "addict cycle," and Holmes will speak up if necessary to prevent him from doing so.

The next morning, at Baker Street, Holmes and Watson are packing for their return journey, while watching Lestrade being interviewed on the news, "modestly" claiming credit for Lawrence Pendry's arrest, explaining that he always knew Pendry was guilty, but it wasn't until "he" made the connection with "recent advances in 3D printing" that he realized how to prove it. Sherlock concedes that Lestrade called his bluff, knowing Holmes prefers to maintain his anonymity. Holmes admits to experiencing a cocktail of emotions he can't quite explain - frustration, anger, mixed with worry. "Welcome to caring about an addict," Watson explains. Then Sherlock receives a text from Mycroft.

The two brothers meet on a bench outside a storage unit, where Mycroft admits that he lied, and Sherlock's things are in storage there. Sherlock snipes at his brother's deception, and Mycroft, controlling his temper with difficulty, refuses to rise to the bait. He takes out a small remote, and says that when he asked Joan for advice on getting through to Sherlock, she said one must begin by "making sure you're listening." Mycroft triggers the remote, and an explosion blows out a window of the storage space. Among Sherlock's things, Mycroft found a series of books on building homemade bombs, and has put the knowledge to use by destroying all of Sherlock's possessions. Mycroft hands the remote to his brother, and says they are even now, but asks Sherlock to remember that "things are different between us."

Sherlock meets Joan at Victoria Station and says that he believes he and Mycroft have reached a rapproachement. Mycroft's use of the bomb has revealed to Sherlock that he is not quite the indolent layabout Sherlock always took him for, and in fact the two Holmes brothers have more in common than Sherlock was ready to believe. "Art in the blood, Watson," he remarks, as he and Joan board the train to Heathrow Airport.

Music

  • Hello by Oasis plays during Sherlock and Joan's taxi ride to New Scotland Yard.
  • The Sun Never Shines on Closed Doors by Flogging Molly plays as Sherlock surprises Lestrade at John Harrington Pub.
  • Follow Follow by Tunng plays after Mycroft blows up Sherlock's possessions and when Sherlock and Joan board the train.

Trivia

  • Holmes refers to one of his and Lestrade's past cases as "The Case of the Norwood Builder", which shares its name with one of Conan Doyle's short stories.
  • Sherlock's quote, "Art in the blood, Watson, it takes the strangest forms" is taken from the short story, "The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter", which also introduced Mycroft. It is also the title of Episode 23 of Season Two.
  • Holmes fails to explain how Lawrence would have disposed of the shell casing from the bullet that was fired from his plastic gun, since, like the nail, it could not have been dissolved away in the acetone.

Gallery

Episode Stills

Behind the Scenes

Video

Promo

2x01_promo_1

2x01 promo 1


Behind the Scenes

CBS's_Elementary_Heads_to_London

CBS's Elementary Heads to London


Elementary Season Two Episodes
Step NineSolve for XWe Are EveryonePoison PenAncient HistoryAn Unnatural ArrangementThe MarchionessBlood Is ThickerOn the LineTremorsInternal AuditThe Diabolical KindAll in the FamilyDead Clade WalkingCorpse de BalletThe One Percent SolutionEars to YouThe Hound of the Cancer CellsThe Many Mouths of Aaron ColvilleNo Lack of VoidThe Man With the Twisted LipPaint It BlackArt in the BloodThe Grand Experiment

Elementary-poster-CBS-season-2-2013

Season OneSeason TwoSeason ThreeSeason FourSeason FiveSeason SixSeason Seven