Originally posted by Bridewell
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As far as I can tell, it includes the following extreme improbabilities: someone entrusted five alcoholic women who would do pretty much anything for a shilling with a highly guarded secret, then, after they had demonstrated that they could manage to keep it, decided to kill them anyway, and in such a way as would implicate themselves, rather than cover their tracks.
The heir to the throne could get married on a whim, and instead of just annulling it, as having been illegal, as it's my understanding that all spouses of heirs to the throne have to go through some sort of approval committee, the government decides to cover it up, and to cover it up with murder; however, not the expedient murder of the bride in question, but of the women who know something. I mean, if the bride is dead, the prince is off the hook; even if she is murdered, as long as he can't be implicated, the situation is over and done with. However, I'm not sure why the marriage isn't simply invalid. Even if the woman had a child, she wouldn't be the first royal mistress to have a child out of wedlock.
But I'm an American. Maybe it's a British thing I just don't get.
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