That's only if it's the guy in the car she was referring to as having killed.
"It belonged to the man I loved / it belonged to the man I killed" seems pretty straightforward to me. Unless she was in love with and killed two men, each of whom had a toy airplane.
"It belonged to the man I loved / it belonged to the man I killed" seems pretty straightforward to me. Unless she was in love with and killed two men, each of whom had a toy airplane.
Oh right - I completely forgot about that line. Oh well, there's always hope (slim though it may be) that she's only copping to killing one person (which would be in character for her - only give the information you need to for the current situation).
Did she get the plane out of a safe deposit box?
Why was it in a safe deposit box and not some sort of evidence storage?
Wasn't the toy airplane in the safe deposit box, and if so, how did it get there?
Heh, x-post.
Ddidn't she kill someone while robbing the bank?
Did she get the plane out of a safe deposit box?
Yes, but she wasn't a signatory, so she couldn't have been the one to put it there.
One thing I just noticed: Kate's name really is Kate.
She certainly shot someone at the bank. I don't recall if he died. The question is, if the plane was in the safe deposit box, who put it there. It wasn't the guy who owned it. If it was Kate, she wouldn't have needed to rob the bank to get it.
I thought that the name thing was significant too.
Also, does the fact that the plane wasn't stored as evidence suggest that the bank robbery was many years after the hospital incident?
I guess, I'm thinking that perhaps Tom's widow put it (the plane) in the bank.
Also, does the fact that the plane wasn't stored as evidence suggest that the bank robbery was many years after the hospital incident?
Not only that, but how did the plane end up in a safe deposit box in Australia? Or am I mis-remembering? Did she go to Australia after the robbery?
Grrrr. My memory is not doing too good.