Mothonthemantel wrote:
Yes liberty Sherlock wanted to do his showing off for John. It is unclear if Sherlock expected just John or both of them together because of the different texts. He seemed surprised to see Mary alone.
I think I lean towards him thinking John was bringing more back up for sure , Mary would have had little chance of revenge with the crowd there.
The improbability of a secretary who was never a field agent killing someone with one shot though , likely quite rightly was written off!
As I pointed out in another thread, Norbury seemed very devastated at the end of Sherlock´s seemingly arrogant deduction and showed signs of surrendering without any protest. But when Sherlock raised his hand, demanding a gun from her, she shot at him quite gleefully - despite the fact that the shot could not make her situation any better. She acted quite irrationally, with the sole purpose of harming somebody.
Sherlock, who probably intended to crush her into submission with his well-aimed words, just didn´t calculate this irrational behaviour into his plan - which is quite understandable in such a rational man.
I agree with your point about the moralistic problem here, Moth.
On the other hand, I see another personal dilemma here. Mary, the former assassin/agent, faces here the person directly responsible for the screw-up at the embassy that cost the lives of massacred hostages and AGRA members, including AJ (which was something like her former family). She could not prevent any death that preceded this. But she could at least prevent this last attempt at somebody´s life and thus prevent the betrayer to have her triumph over her again. And so her sacrifice was in some way a victory over her enemy.... even if it cost her own life.
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I cannot live without brainwork. What else is there to live for? Stand at the window there. Was there ever such a dreary, dismal, unprofitable world? See how the yellow fog swirls down the street and drifts across the dun-coloured houses. What could be more hopelessly prosaic and material? What is the use of having powers, Doctor, when one has no field upon which to exert them?