AN: Someone asked for piglatin during the previous story, can someone please explain how it works if you want me to write it. wikipedia ws not really helpfull. enjoy

Chapter 2: on the blog

The blog of John Watson

Sherlock I know you're browsing the blog because you are bored, I hope this will keep you busy, to all the other people reading this: here is apuzzle
$# $%^&*()(*&&^^%%$$## ! ##$$%%^^^&&&**(()((*&^%%$$## ! ! ##$%%^^&&*(()))((*&^^%$# ! #$%%^&&**(*())((*&&^%%$$$#### #$%%^^&&&&****(((())))(*&^%%$# # (*^%$# (AN just imagine this is written in bookdhelf symbol 7 and actually makes sense, or take a look at the picture in the story on AO3)

Sherlock Holmes
John did you just use a different letter type?

John Watson
yes

10 minutes later

Sherlock Holmes
That was amusing, slightly, the poison is in the ice. I am going to see how my experiment is going.

Mike Stamfort
It would be nice to know what the message says, even though we know the answer is ice.

Anonymous
He used Bookshelf symbol 7

Anthea
I almost have it but some symbols just don't work and I don't want to cheat.

Molly Hooper
Please tell Sherlock I have a day off, he doesn't seem to get it

Mike Stamfort
Can you give us the solution mate?

Harry Watson
comment deleted

John Watson
I told him Molly, though I'm not sure if it worked. And Harry don't be rude this is a public blog.

John Watson
The solution for everyone who doesn't have it yet:
Two girls are drinking iced tea (with cubes) in a restaurant. One drinks three glasses at high speed while the other slowly drinks hers. The second girl dies of poisoning shortly after. They both drank from the same pitcher. Why didn't the first girl die too?
Sherlock already gave you the answer.

Anthea
The punctuation threw me of.