The Adventure of the Wax Gamblers

The Adventure of the Wax Gamblers by John Dickson Carr is a Sherlock Holmes story. The story was published in the 1954 collection, The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes, a joint enterprise of Adrian Conan Doyle (the youngest son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the Sherlock Holmes creator) and John Dickson Carr.

Plot

While waiting up late one night, Holmes and Watson are visited by the night watchman of a famous waxworks and his granddaughter. The watchman has noticed that the playing cards in the hand of a wax figure in a Chamber of Horrors exhibit have changed. Holmes becomes immediately interested in this mystery and sends Watson to the exhibit to remove the cards in an orderly fashion and to bring them back to him in some envelopes. Holmes then demonstrates that the altered cards are related to the scandalous behavior of a gentleman and his wagering on horse races. [1]

" ' At the mouth of the Thames,' " he read, " ' on the island of ' "

"Holmes, my question concerned the answer to our problem!"

"This is the answer to our problem."

Two versions of the Darlington Substitution Scandal, which had been mentioned in A Scandal in Bohemia, are referenced in this story.

gollark: And they're really useful because naive multiplication is O(n²).
gollark: Logarithms are only from 1614, but the basic concept is quite simple.
gollark: Solve random open problems?
gollark: (ignoring air resistance)
gollark: Plot the paths of projectiles? That's pretty trivial mechanics.

References

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