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'''Henry Raymond''' was a {{Wiki|penny dreadful}} journalist during the mid-19th century. In 1868, Raymond and his greatest fan, the nine years old [[Artie]] (the future writer Arthur Conan Doyle), worked with the [[Assassins]] [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]] to solve murders in [[London]].
'''Henry Raymond''' was a {{Wiki|penny dreadful}} journalist during the mid-19th century. In 1868, Raymond and his greatest fan , a young [[Arthur Conan Doyle]], worked with the [[Assassins]] [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye]] to solve murders in [[London]].


Later and after their reputation of detectives had grown, the twins were summoned by [[Queen Victoria]], via [[Frederick Abberline]], in order to solve the murder of one of her guards in the palace. Conducting his investigation, Jacob discovered that the culprit was in fact Raymond, who posing as a guard tried to steal the Scepter of the Queen. His deception involved taking spider venom to induce a death-like state so he could watch the Queen enter the combination to her safe when she assumed a thief was after it, as well as left a series of false clues that the palace would be bombed. Pursuing the thief to the roof of [[Buckingham Palace]], Jacob cornered Raymond, who had taken Artie as an hostage. As Jacob was holding Raymond at gunpoint, his sister Evie climbed the facade of the palace, and reaching Raymond from behind, killed him by throwing him off on ground, saving Artie from their former friend.
Later and after their reputation of detectives had grown, the twins were summoned by [[Queen Victoria]], via [[Frederick Abberline]], in order to solve the murder of one of her guards in the palace. Conducting his investigation, Jacob discovered that the culprit was in fact Raymond, who posing as a guard tried to steal the Scepter of the Queen. His deception involved taking spider venom to induce a death-like state so he could watch the Queen enter the combination to her safe when she assumed a thief was after it, as well as left a series of false clues that the palace would be bombed. Pursuing the thief to the roof of [[Buckingham Palace]], Jacob cornered Raymond, who had taken Artie as an hostage. As Jacob was holding Raymond at gunpoint, his sister Evie climbed the facade of the palace, and reaching Raymond from behind, killed him by throwing him off on ground, saving Artie from their former friend.

Revision as of 21:58, 6 November 2015

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Henry Raymond was a penny dreadful journalist during the mid-19th century. In 1868, Raymond and his greatest fan , a young Arthur Conan Doyle, worked with the Assassins Jacob and Evie Frye to solve murders in London.

Later and after their reputation of detectives had grown, the twins were summoned by Queen Victoria, via Frederick Abberline, in order to solve the murder of one of her guards in the palace. Conducting his investigation, Jacob discovered that the culprit was in fact Raymond, who posing as a guard tried to steal the Scepter of the Queen. His deception involved taking spider venom to induce a death-like state so he could watch the Queen enter the combination to her safe when she assumed a thief was after it, as well as left a series of false clues that the palace would be bombed. Pursuing the thief to the roof of Buckingham Palace, Jacob cornered Raymond, who had taken Artie as an hostage. As Jacob was holding Raymond at gunpoint, his sister Evie climbed the facade of the palace, and reaching Raymond from behind, killed him by throwing him off on ground, saving Artie from their former friend.

Trivia

  • Raymond seems to be loosely based on Adam Worth, a famous criminal mastermind nicknamed "the Napoleon of crime" who used the alias Henry Raymond during his time in London and who was the main inspiration for the character of Moriarty in the Sherlock Holmes series by Arthur Conan Doyle.

Reference