For OP's story to work, RS has to remain silent in the loo as a tactical choice after OP shouts "Get out of my house! Reeva, ring the police!" (or something in that style). Presumed reason for her silence being that she doesn't want to alert the intruders to her presence in case they take an interest in her. You don't date a bloke whose ammo of choice is the Winchester Black Talon just so you can draw the burglars' fire upon your unarmed self.
Not mad on it myself, for much the same reasons as discussed elsewhere on here. Also:-
She wasn't short of phones in there. Even if she didn't want to reveal her presence to intruders by shouting to OP that it was her that was in the loo, wouldn't she at least make the call, as discreetly as possible? What would stop her? I think it could only be the fear that the intruders were closer to her than they were to OP.
Well in OP's version it was RS who opened the bathroom window. And now she was in the loo directly adjacent. I really think she'd have a pretty good sense that there could have been no invaders lying in wait at the foot of the ladder just hoping that the window might get opened, at 3:00 a.m., and if they'd suddenly materialised in the bathroom (by whichever route) she'd have heard it.
Since, in real life, there were no intruders, she'd have heard nothing going on in the bathroom. If OP heard her opening the bathroom window after he'd closed the balcony doors, curtains and blinds, then she'd have heard the balcony doors, curtains and blinds being closed - so she has no reason to fear intruders that might have entered from the balcony.
The only intruders that RS can immediately, instinctively, have feared - prompting her silence - are those that may have entered through the bedroom door. I think it's implausible (though not impossible) that OP can have locked the door without her knowledge when they went to bed and to sleep at 10:00 p.m. What if she got up in the middle of the night - or even just an hour after going to bed, say - and wanted to fetch something from another room or from her car, and she finds she's locked in the room. Or she's first to wake in the morning and can't even escape the bedroom to put some coffee on. (I think the key must be kept elsewhere, for OP to use the locked door as justification for feeling trapped). It would seem quite sinister, and imprisoning.
So, particularly since she'd have known aboout OP's security paranoia - and he'd have known she knew - the bedroom door-locking probably wouldn't have been kept from her. So I find it very difficult to believe that she'd instinctively feel the need to lay so low from any intruders that she wouldn't even quietly call the police. Or even get the number dialled in ready.
Take more than that to get a conviction, of course, but maybe the sort of questions that Nel -apeing Roux - could put to OP: "Can you help me to understand this?" ... "Why do you think she would have done that?" ... etc.
Not mad on it myself, for much the same reasons as discussed elsewhere on here. Also:-
She wasn't short of phones in there. Even if she didn't want to reveal her presence to intruders by shouting to OP that it was her that was in the loo, wouldn't she at least make the call, as discreetly as possible? What would stop her? I think it could only be the fear that the intruders were closer to her than they were to OP.
Well in OP's version it was RS who opened the bathroom window. And now she was in the loo directly adjacent. I really think she'd have a pretty good sense that there could have been no invaders lying in wait at the foot of the ladder just hoping that the window might get opened, at 3:00 a.m., and if they'd suddenly materialised in the bathroom (by whichever route) she'd have heard it.
Since, in real life, there were no intruders, she'd have heard nothing going on in the bathroom. If OP heard her opening the bathroom window after he'd closed the balcony doors, curtains and blinds, then she'd have heard the balcony doors, curtains and blinds being closed - so she has no reason to fear intruders that might have entered from the balcony.
The only intruders that RS can immediately, instinctively, have feared - prompting her silence - are those that may have entered through the bedroom door. I think it's implausible (though not impossible) that OP can have locked the door without her knowledge when they went to bed and to sleep at 10:00 p.m. What if she got up in the middle of the night - or even just an hour after going to bed, say - and wanted to fetch something from another room or from her car, and she finds she's locked in the room. Or she's first to wake in the morning and can't even escape the bedroom to put some coffee on. (I think the key must be kept elsewhere, for OP to use the locked door as justification for feeling trapped). It would seem quite sinister, and imprisoning.
So, particularly since she'd have known aboout OP's security paranoia - and he'd have known she knew - the bedroom door-locking probably wouldn't have been kept from her. So I find it very difficult to believe that she'd instinctively feel the need to lay so low from any intruders that she wouldn't even quietly call the police. Or even get the number dialled in ready.
Take more than that to get a conviction, of course, but maybe the sort of questions that Nel -apeing Roux - could put to OP: "Can you help me to understand this?" ... "Why do you think she would have done that?" ... etc.