Well. Considering that Janet made more than half a million pounds from selling the farm off bit by bit, I think that (even if she did have an inexplicable 200K pounds worth of mortages still owed after the last sale of land), she should be pretty well set for life.
Not bad, for an initial investment of 900 pounds and ongoing payment of 10 pounds a week, which is what she initially bought into the farm for, and what I would guess gave her the legal leverage to end up owning the whole place lock and stock after Fred vanished (which left it all in legal limbo and Janet's control for 7 years..)
She also had her ample wages at the law firm, occasional periods where the farm did make money - and the 50K she stole. But lived, somehow, in abject debt and poverty for most of those years. :no:
What's really got me squinting though is how Janet winds up a victim at the end of dastardly act she admits to...
Now, I have to take into account the fact that this book is written by Janet herself, and so everything in it should IMO be taken with a grain of salt. But she seems to have a pattern of financially falling on her feet via a crime, and then justifying that position by villainising the man involved. The main message of the book appears to be: Do not get in the way of Janet getting what she wants when she wants it, or you'll lose your career/vanish/have your dad tagged as a rapist/have your family heritage sold off/burn in your beds..
The last refers to her "gay friends" who committed the awful crime of looking after her home and animals while she did time in prison for theft. She says it took her six months of effort -and- a threat to burn them alive to chuck them off the property, as they wouldn't vacate it the very moment she got out of jail (on early release).
ONOES JANET. NOT MOAR VILLAINS. :scared:
And since the farm was cursed by gypsies and all, one can hardly be surprised that Janet was so often surrounded by all these dastardly men who gave her jobs and shares in farms for next to nothing, and free caretaking, etc..
Now, as with everything in this book, I have to wonder.. What's the bet Janet didn't inform the "gay friends" that she was coming home early, and simply expected them to pack up and get out immediately.
Right now, I'm even wondering whether this book she wrote and the rape story is not her vengeance for the unfavourable light she was put in, in the booklet Fred's daughter wrote. There's a definite spite surrounding her mentions of that..