I don’t think that Constable Serjeant actually advised Wallace to look at a directory. I think Wallace actually asked him where he could see one and Serjeant mentioned that he could try the Police Station or the PO. Serjeant told Wallace categorically that there was no MGE confirming what he’d already been told and yet Wallace persisted in his search. Let’s face it, who is more likely to know the streets than a policeman on the beat. Wallace, at the end of his search, said that he’d started to become concerned. Why only then and not when he’d been told 3 times that MGE didn’t exist?
We’re never going to agree on the issue of Wallace avoiding the Parlour but I’d say that if someone is searching they would look in the order of the locations that they came too. Wallace saw that the cupboard door was ripped of so all hope of an innocent explanation would have vanished. I just can’t believe that a man, desperately concerned about his wife’s safety, would have reached the kitchen door with the Parlour door within reach and then made a decision based upon percentages regarding which rooms were used the most. It just doesn’t make sense. I’m convinced that a guilty Wallace deliberately left the Parlour until last.
We’re never going to agree on the issue of Wallace avoiding the Parlour but I’d say that if someone is searching they would look in the order of the locations that they came too. Wallace saw that the cupboard door was ripped of so all hope of an innocent explanation would have vanished. I just can’t believe that a man, desperately concerned about his wife’s safety, would have reached the kitchen door with the Parlour door within reach and then made a decision based upon percentages regarding which rooms were used the most. It just doesn’t make sense. I’m convinced that a guilty Wallace deliberately left the Parlour until last.
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