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Well yes, I was just trying to take it a bit deeper.
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We have been discussing medical metas, both for and against a "surgery shot". There are arguments to be found for all kinds of scenarios. For me, however, what matters most is what I see and hear in the show:
- Sherlock: What was directly behind you when you were murdered? / I’ve not been murdered yet.
- John saying "We are losing you".
- Inner Moriarty = Sherlock himself telling him he is dying.
- The doctors turning away from the operation table.
- The light being dimmed.
And between this and the 221B scene there is virtually nothing that explains why Sherlock should have changed his opinion. Apart from the fact that there is a killer with a loaded gun in the room and he is bleeding internally and tries to keep John as safe as possible.
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If I understood it correctly, the meta nakahara posted earlier also says that Mary did not aim to kill Sherlock - but points out that she did it for selfish reasons. Again.
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Partly selfish, though thank goodness she at least didn't want to kill him.
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besleybean wrote:
Partly selfish, though thank goodness she at least didn't want to kill him.
Why only partly?
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Because she was right in knowing that the truth about her past would cause John pain.
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The worst pain John has suffered was losing Sherlock.
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I think he's about to face the worst pain of all.
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nakahara wrote:
Very good meta explaining why Mary didn´t shoot Sherlock into the head no performed "surgery" on him, but injured him the way she did:
I remember one of the people here came up with the theory that Mary only injured Sherlock so that John would have to stay with him, giving her time to escape. I think it makes sense, but what's missing from the post above is that Mary called the ambulance (if we believe Sherlock's deduction), which showed she wanted him alive. If she wanted to kill him (or didn't care if he lived or died), there'd be no reason to keep him alive (as her shot had served the purpose of delaying John), and every reason to want him dead (to keep her secret). And yet, again, at the hospital, although she threatens him, she doesn't kill him.
I think Sherlock is correct that killing both of them would have been the best for Mary - she would have eliminated Magnussen, and there would be no chance of her being exposed. I don't see that John would guess that it was her from her perfume (or even remember the perfume - he doesn't guess until Sherlock sets up the clue). At least he wouldn't have any more chance of guessing if Sherlock was dead, than in any other scenario.
Now, why Sherlock changed his opinion - I think, again, that the ambulance contributed to that (information possibly from John, records, etc.).
Last edited by Liberty (August 11, 2016 7:22 pm)
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besleybean wrote:
I think he's about to face the worst pain of all.
And I think you're right. There can be nothing more painful than losing your whole family.
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And I think it's quite possible that Mary thought of that, although it tends to get dismissed. I'm not making her out to be a wonderful, caring person at all, but I think that for most people losing their partner (especially while expecting a child) would be a bigger deal than losing their best friend. It always seems to be assumed that Mary believes that losing Sherlock would be worse for John, and still goes ahead and takes that risk, but actually it would be reasonable for her to assume that losing her and the baby would be even worse for him.
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Quite so.
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That sounds like she only had two options: making John lose Sherlock or making John lose her and the baby.
I deeply disagree with that. She also had the Option to trust Sherlock to help her. AND she could have believed that John's love for her was deep enough to forgive her the past. Apparently she dismissed that option.
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Yes, she made a mistake.
Thankfully, not a hanging offence.
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besleybean wrote:
Yes, she made a mistake.
Thankfully, not a hanging offence.
Though, she could easily do hard time for assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill....
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Schmiezi wrote:
That sounds like she only had two options: making John lose Sherlock or making John lose her and the baby.
I deeply disagree with that. She also had the Option to trust Sherlock to help her. AND she could have believed that John's love for her was deep enough to forgive her the past. Apparently she dismissed that option.
But again, you're assuming that she believed Sherlock would help an assassin, and help her hide her identity from John. I think that because Sherlock did eventually help her, we assume that of course he would help Mary. But before it happens, I don't think that was actually obvious at all. Who would have thought that he would murder Magnussen? Who would have thought that he'd accept Mary into the fold, and even encourage her and John to be together, knowing she was an assassin? I, as a viewer, wouldn't have bet on that. So why do you think that Mary assumes that?
And about John's love, plenty of people here argue that it goes against his character to accept Mary. It's not just Mary.
This is what I'm trying to say, that people often seem to be working on the premise that
(a) Mary believed that Sherlock would help her, but chose not to engage him
(b) Mary believed that it would be easier for John to lose her and the baby than to lose Sherlock.
That makes assumptions about Mary's beliefs that just aren't backed up by anything we see. In fact, it makes sense for Mary to think the opposite - that Sherlock would not help an assassin who lied, that it would be devastating for John to lose her (she thought she was the best thing that could have happened to John, after all). We don't know if she assumes these things either of course. We've only got her actions to tell us. And to me, she acts as if she believes Sherlock wouldn't help her.
Last edited by Liberty (August 12, 2016 7:31 am)
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I fully agree with you. I also believe that Mary thought she couldn't trust Sherlock.
It's only that my feelings for her are influence by that fact.
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Oh, I understand that! She does actually misjudge both of them, it seems (Sherlock does help her, John is not broken and he stays with her). They are much more on her side than she expects or deserves.
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Possibly she has been damaged by her past, too.