I don't think the 'little black book' no one was allegedly familiar with necessarily pointed to 'lots of lovers' these were
contacts. It was not prurient to see what the commonality was IMO. It seems they were exclusively male, we know who two were, these were identified and written about. One a latterly well known man who said he knew her from an exclusive gym in Chiswick, one SL allegedly belonged to, (expensive?) the other, said she was considering buying a car from him. When? Where? Did this ring true, I imagine so or surely it would have raised a red flag? The first account can be found in press at time, the latter in AS.
Then there were the non 'Putney Set' 'friends' who routinely rang her flat, so said, the previous female flatmate. Did SL move any sideline to her phone box outside the POW? Where no one could listen in? And one day simply left her belongings there, or whilst waiting? Simple to do so.
Escorting and hostessing, for example, was becoming common then and NOT immoral or shady, someone to show an American tourist Stonehenge or a foreigner the sites and eateries of London etc, to accompany a man to a business meeting. To impress with social 'British' grace, class elegance and panache. Something came out later to make DL say 'she did not live her life as I would have done'. Possibly even hostessing wasn't something that met with approval, times were changing and SL was 'thoroughly modern'. Many young women were going off to Japan to do just this in gap years, etc. All above board, until the terrible tragedy re: Lucie Blackman, anyway,
Lucie Blackman: The Missing Woman Who Exposed Tokyo's Seedy Underbelly
Eager to pay off debts, she took a job as a “hostess” in the party-heavy Roppongi district of Tokyo, known for wealthy foreigners and nightclubs where pretty women are paid to drink and socialize
(but not sleep with) free-spending clientele. Lucie disappeared from her job, at the club Casablanca, on July 1, 2000, provoking a frantic search within and outside of the naked city.
Anyone who has read AS will know that there are possible hints as to exactly 'this'. Shocking it wasn't, possibly even on an informal basis.
THE killing of brilliant scientist Dr Brenda Page in Aberdeen remained a mystery for more than 40 years – becoming one of Britain’s longest-running unsolved murders. Award-winning Scottish Sun jour…
www.thescottishsun.co.uk
From the article above. Brenda routinely had dinner with businessmen and was undoubtedly good company, academic, quick witted etc. A way to supplement her income and maybe even added colour and glamour to her life, not seedy:
Days after the killing, it was revealed Brenda had a
part-time job as an escort and the men she’d met before her murder had been clients. How did this bombshell affect the original police investigation, especially with the sexist attitudes at the time?
Aberdeen was teeming with businessmen, many of them Americans, who were going to functions and were happy to pay for a female companion as their guest.