<p>I speak of magic Mr. Holmes.</p><p></p><p>Poor Mr. Percy Simmons leader of London's Theosophical Order of Odic Forces stands upon the hearth rug of 221B Baker Street slowly mangling his hat brim&nbsp;in&nbsp;ill-concealed distress&nbsp;and fully aware that his is not a case which Mr. Sherlock Holmes would ordinarily take up.</p><p>These are not ordinary times&nbsp;however.</p><p>For something&nbsp;some unquiet demon&nbsp;within Holmes&nbsp;stirs&nbsp;into&nbsp;discomfiting&nbsp;wakefulness&nbsp;under the occultist'swords.&nbsp;This&nbsp;unassuming&nbsp;Mr. Simmons&nbsp;has-in addition to his more fantastical of claims-spoken&nbsp;of good and evil with the sort of pure conviction&nbsp;and sincerity of soul that&nbsp;Sherlock&nbsp;yearns for.&nbsp;Something Holmes&nbsp;sought&nbsp;for himself&nbsp;during the three years&nbsp;in which&nbsp;the world thought him dead.&nbsp;While for all intents constructions and purposes he was dead.</p><p>But six months ago&nbsp;Sherlock Holmes&nbsp;gave up that chase.&nbsp;He&nbsp;returned to Baker Street declared himself alive to friend and foe alike took up his old rooms his profession&nbsp;and his partnership with Dr. J. Watson. Only to&nbsp;find himself&nbsp;haunted&nbsp;still&nbsp;by the questions which had&nbsp;followed&nbsp;him&nbsp;out&nbsp;of the&nbsp;dreadful&nbsp;chasm of&nbsp;Reichenbach&nbsp;Falls:</p><p>Why?&nbsp;Why had&nbsp;he&nbsp;survived when his enemy had not?&nbsp;To what&nbsp;end?&nbsp;And had&nbsp;there&nbsp;ever&nbsp;truly&nbsp;been&nbsp;such a thing as&nbsp;justice?&nbsp;Such a thing&nbsp;as&nbsp;good&nbsp;or&nbsp;evil?</p>