Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Mike ordered the diary on approval, on hearing whatever description he was given over the phone. Martin Earl would normally ask the customer for payment up front before the supplier sent an item out, but in some cases, as with Mike, he agreed to let him see the 1891 diary before committing himself to purchasing it.
Keith Skinner, trying to be as objective as possible, described nearly all the pages as blank, but we don't know if Martin Earl did the same. None of the pages were literally blank, so it would have been rather misleading to tell a customer, who had specifically requested a diary from 1880-90, with at least twenty blank pages, that "nearly all the pages" in an 1891 diary were "blank", if he knew there were printed dates for that year throughout, and the diary itself was tiny.
If the supplier had not provided such details to Martin Earl, or if Mike was only told it was for the year 1891, he was totally within his rights, in accordance with Martin's stated business terms, to return the diary under no obligation to purchase it. The same applied to items that were fully described - there was no obligation to buy an item unless the customer was satisfied and intended to keep it. If the item wasn't returned or paid for within a specified time it would be followed up over the phone, but Anne could still have returned it with the excuse that it was an oversight, and wasn't what her silly husband had asked for in the first place. There was zero chance of it being any use, if its purpose had really been for writing up Maybrick's rambling thoughts from February 1888 to May 1889, so even if Mike had been expecting something entirely different to arrive in the post, it would have been simple enough to return it, save themselves £25, and leave no unwanted paper trail for the transaction.
Mike claimed the diary was created in order to pay the mortgage, but I suspect everybody knows that has to be nonsense.
Would Anne have taken out a mortgage in 1988 for their move to Goldie Street, if it meant having to come up with a new and improved writing project for Mike to take on, in the hope of making some serious money this time? Four long years later, in April 1992, Mike was finally ready to take their money maker to a literary agent, but they still had to wait another 18 months to know if Shirley's book would ever clear all the hurdles and be published. Meanwhile the diary itself went to Robert for one pound.
Finally, with a bestseller on their hands in October 1993, and substantial royalties to come, their marriage was in such trouble that three months later Anne walked out with Caroline. Mike must have asked himself what was the point of paying the mortgage on a house that was no longer a home, and which he never wanted to move to in the first place.
A long con such as this would have to be one of the least effective ways to meet the monthly mortgage repayments.
Contrast this with the possibility of Mike seeing the diary for the first time on 9th March 1992 and leaping into action without a second thought, instinctively gambling on its potential: "If anyone's going to solve the mystery of Jack the Ripper - and write the book - please God let it be me!"
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