Neil Gibson, magnate of a large mining industry, who, convinced that the money gives him permission to behave with extreme arrogance, asks the help of Sherlock Holmes to exonerate from
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Neil Gibson, magnate of a large mining industry, who, convinced that the money gives him permission to behave with extreme arrogance, asks the help of Sherlock Holmes to exonerate from the charge of murder Grace Dumbar, governess of his children, blamed of the murder of the landlady, Mrs Gibson. The evidence is all against her: a handwritten note is found in the victim's hands and the murder weapon is found inside her wardrobe, a revolver missing a shot. The merit will once again be the incomparable Sherlock Holmes, which, not letting in any way to influence the events too obvious, will discover thanks to a scratch found on the wooden bridge of Thor, apparently meaningless, that there is no murder and that Mrs Dunbar is guilty only of being a nice and pleasant teacher. It is suicide, this is the verdict of Holmes: the wife of the rich magnate, jealous of the woman, stages her murder so as to send her rival in jail forever so as not to allow her to end up in her husband's arms.