[s2e2] The Hounds Of Baskerville May 2026
As the fog rolls in, Frankland appears. He has leaked the gas again to finish Henry off. In the chaos, a common stray dog (enhanced by the gas to look like a monster) is shot by John and Lestrade. Frankland flees but wanders into a Baskerville minefield, meeting a fiery end. The Aftermath
The story closes with a chilling realization. Sherlock’s "Mind Palace" vision of in a prison cell was actually a lingering effect of the gas—a shadow of his greatest fear. As Henry finally finds peace, the episode ends with a teaser: Mycroft releasing Jim Moriarty from a holding cell, where the villain has written "SHERLOCK" all over the walls. O.U.N.D. project?
Sherlock realizes the drug isn't in the sugar or the water—it’s in the of Dewer's Hollow. [S2E2] The Hounds of Baskerville
The investigation centers on , a top-secret military research base nearby. Rumors of genetic mutations and "super-dogs" swirl among the locals. Using Mycroft’s high-level security clearance (stolen, of course), Sherlock and John infiltrate the facility. They encounter Dr. Stapleton , a geneticist with a missing glowing rabbit, and Dr. Frankland , a friendly scientist who was a close friend of Henry’s father.
They rush back to the Hollow to find Henry on the verge of suicide, driven mad by the gas. Sherlock explains the truth: Henry didn't see a monster twenty years ago; he saw in a gas mask and a "H.O.U.N.D." t-shirt, murdering Henry's father over the secret of the gas. Henry’s child-mind interpreted the mask and the red goggles as a demon dog. As the fog rolls in, Frankland appears
The story begins with , a man haunted by a twenty-year-old memory. As a child, he watched his father torn apart in "Dewer’s Hollow" by a monstrous, red-eyed hound. The trauma has festered into an obsession, drawing Sherlock Holmes and John Watson away from the boredom of London and into the eerie, mist-laden landscape of Dartmoor.
The chemical is a volatile, aerosolized fear-gas developed at Baskerville (Project H.O.U.N.D.). It targets the brain’s fear centers, turning a suggestion—a "hound"—into a vivid, lethal hallucination. Sherlock’s Mind Palace reveals that "H.O.U.N.D." was an acronym for the scientists who created the gas in the 1960s. The Confrontation at the Hollow Frankland flees but wanders into a Baskerville minefield,
Back at the inn, the unthinkable happens. Sherlock Holmes—the man of pure logic—is trembling. He confesses to John that he saw the hound. For the first time, Sherlock cannot trust his own senses. This doubt leads to a breakdown of his "Mind Palace," nearly destroying his friendship with John as he lashes out in fear.