Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Yes a different voice was used when the caller got through to the cafe. William calling had to have used two different fake voices because of that.
On the Radio City show, people said Parry found it amusing to use funny voices when prank calling people. I don't really think it's a case of trying to hide his identity so much if he's the caller, moreso dicking around... Had a murderer anticipated they would also need to dupe the operators with a fake voice, you'd expect the person would speak the same way throughout the call. What do they gain by using two different fake voices?
It suggests moreso that the voice to the operators was a genuine one, and the person faked their voice once put through to the cafe. It seems to lean that way in likelihood over a person knowing he had to trick the operators too, yet not disguising his voice as well when talking to them. I mean why only give yourself the minimum level of protection with only a half-assed fake voice? It's always better to be more protected at all times if possible.
Beattie would be familiar with Parry, so would Caird. Both men went to the club on Thursdays when Parry had drama club. I don't know if they spoke though. The waitress may be familiar with him, unless she was a very new employee. Parry was rather flirtatious and boisterous, I'm sure he was well known to the female wait staff.
I also thought very early on that Wallace's behavior seems to shift dramatically overnight. On the chess night he seems happy and excited about winning his chess game etc. Not like he has something as serious as murder on his mind... But his behavior the day after becomes a bit suspect, with the alleged crying, weird pestering of people for directions, and so on. Although with that said there was an incident at a later date where he did the same thing while looking for a pair of specific boots he wanted. For show maybe? But it seems pointless to do that.
I see some chance Julia was murdered that day in an incident that was completely unrelated, and perhaps even unplanned. I see some chance Wallace thought it was a real trip and went to avoid looking suspicious, and acted bizarre on the trip because he'd just killed his wife and was hopped up and anxious. I do not think that is the probable answer, but I think it's a possible one. In that scenario, the fact the call turned out to be fake would be HIGHLY fortuitous. It would make sense of how Wallace had apparently conceived of this amazing murder plot seeing all these apparent eventualities and pre-empting them, framing the perfect man for the crime in the process.. And yet, if guilty, did THE worst job of staging in the history of crime... It's also interesting all 3 forensic experts seemed to think she died at 6 PM or earlier.
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