Nuisanceposter
Remembering Little Miss Christmas
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2005
- Messages
- 1,399
- Reaction score
- 24
Excellent first post, and welcome!
I agree, the very length of that note indicates Patsy much more so than John, plus it's too bizarre and outlandish to have come from the mind of a CEO. That was pure fantasy whipped up by an overly dramatic and panicked woman. I doubt John was part of the RN writing, but I really have to wonder about his claims that he took it to the hall and got on his hands and knees and read it on the floor spread out in front of him.
What? I can't name a single man in my sphere of relationships that would get down on the floor on his knees to read a three page letter. Men lean over a table or a counter, they don't get down on the floor.
And why did he allow Patsy to call friends over if he thought the RN was real? He had to have gotten to "if you talk to a stray dog, she dies" by the time Patsy was done calling 911. Why, if he hadn't been part of the staging, RN writing, etc, would he allow Patsy to jeopardize their daughter's head being attached to her body by calling over friends to come commiserate? Why would he allow Burke to leave the house, not knowing where these kidnappers were or what they might do, if he thought the RN was real?
He had to have known it wasn't.
I agree, the very length of that note indicates Patsy much more so than John, plus it's too bizarre and outlandish to have come from the mind of a CEO. That was pure fantasy whipped up by an overly dramatic and panicked woman. I doubt John was part of the RN writing, but I really have to wonder about his claims that he took it to the hall and got on his hands and knees and read it on the floor spread out in front of him.
What? I can't name a single man in my sphere of relationships that would get down on the floor on his knees to read a three page letter. Men lean over a table or a counter, they don't get down on the floor.
And why did he allow Patsy to call friends over if he thought the RN was real? He had to have gotten to "if you talk to a stray dog, she dies" by the time Patsy was done calling 911. Why, if he hadn't been part of the staging, RN writing, etc, would he allow Patsy to jeopardize their daughter's head being attached to her body by calling over friends to come commiserate? Why would he allow Burke to leave the house, not knowing where these kidnappers were or what they might do, if he thought the RN was real?
He had to have known it wasn't.