Hi All,
Everyone seems to be assuming that if Mary was killed by the ripper, he must have set out to kill her. But could some of the questions about his MO, and the different circumstances of an indoor job on a younger, probably stronger (even if drunk) unfortunate, be answered more easily if the ripper was a habitual user of prostitutes, who left the vast majority of them alive, unharmed and unsuspecting?
If it's not a stretch to see Jack as a regular user, then is it too much of a stretch to imagine him going off with Mary, expecting his usual quick fumble down a dirty alleyway, only to be led to a room they can use? In such circumstances, who knows when and how his mind might have turned from enjoying a leisurely encounter in relative comfort with a relatively wholesome specimen, to really letting rip after weeks of impossibly hot pavements? The longer he spent in her company, the greater the chance of her making a wrong move or saying the wrong thing and setting him off.
If his MO had previously been to take only the weakest, most desperate women by surprise when he thought he had a few minutes alone with them, then this one does seem like a departure - unless Mary was in a deep, drunken slumber when he struck. But in that case would she have woken in time, or sufficiently, to see the knife coming and react to it?
So I do wonder if he might have taken himself by surprise on this occasion.
Love,
Caz
X
Everyone seems to be assuming that if Mary was killed by the ripper, he must have set out to kill her. But could some of the questions about his MO, and the different circumstances of an indoor job on a younger, probably stronger (even if drunk) unfortunate, be answered more easily if the ripper was a habitual user of prostitutes, who left the vast majority of them alive, unharmed and unsuspecting?
If it's not a stretch to see Jack as a regular user, then is it too much of a stretch to imagine him going off with Mary, expecting his usual quick fumble down a dirty alleyway, only to be led to a room they can use? In such circumstances, who knows when and how his mind might have turned from enjoying a leisurely encounter in relative comfort with a relatively wholesome specimen, to really letting rip after weeks of impossibly hot pavements? The longer he spent in her company, the greater the chance of her making a wrong move or saying the wrong thing and setting him off.
If his MO had previously been to take only the weakest, most desperate women by surprise when he thought he had a few minutes alone with them, then this one does seem like a departure - unless Mary was in a deep, drunken slumber when he struck. But in that case would she have woken in time, or sufficiently, to see the knife coming and react to it?
So I do wonder if he might have taken himself by surprise on this occasion.
Love,
Caz
X
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