(If you haven't read it, perhaps stop reading. Or better yet, don't even bother)
Harriet was always alive, and wanted to let her uncle know that she was ok, and that's why she sent a pressed flower every year on his birthday. She supposedly did not know that everyone thought she was dead, and her death had tormented her uncle for 40 years.
How could she not know that they all thought her dead? She was in contact with Anita at least once a year, and Anita, although not living in Sweden, still has regular contact with her sister Cecilia, and Cecilia and the uncle were close. Cecilia knew that the uncle considered Harriet dead, and was obsessed with finding out what happened. It is inconceivable that Cecilia would never mention this to Anita, and equally inconceivable that Anita wouldn't alert Harriet in Australia of the fact. In which case Harriet would certainly have found a way in 40 years to let her uncle know she was ok.
Hence the whole story collapses before it even begins. Absolute rubbish. Not bothering with the rest.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Location:The bar
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