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* Seconded. These are the sort of muggles the wizarding world wants to avoid.
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Gavin had a perfect opportunity to do it. Gavin had played squash with Barry a few days before he died. Barry, of course, would have brought something to drink along to replace the fluids. It would have been very simple for Gavin to spike his drink a drug that could have provoked the aneurysm. (We might note that this is a really ineffective way to murder someone, but keep in mind Gavin's personality: paranoid and completely lacking assertiveness. He would naturally gravitated toward the most innocuous murder weapon possible, one that happened to work probably only because Barry had a condition it exacerbated.)

How did Gavin do this, but then never think about it afterwards? Simple: he doesn't remember. Gavin has a talent for dissociating. Bottling up every , dissociation is the only way he is able to act out. We see him have memory lapses several times throughout the book, and one time he explicitly fails to remember something that definitely happened: seeing Robbie right before he fell in the river. Gavin has no memory of it despite the fact that he looked directly at the child, just like he had no memory of killing Barry Fairbrother despite the fact that he did it.

Other clues include his mental slip near the end of the book. After Mary rejected him, "That's what you get for trying to take your neighbor's life." The author explicitly calls it a slip, and alert readers will realize it's not just metaphorical. Obviously some of Gavin's repressed memories slipped out there. Other clues include the fact that Colin Walls dreamt about poisoning Barry, the exact method Gavin used. This is not because Colin Walls has prophetic dreams--there's no evidence that this is that kind of universe--so much as foreshadowing the later revelation that Gavin took his friend's life. (Though it's possible that Colin unconciously absorbed and pieced together the truth from the town gossip and it worked its way out in a dream.)

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Gavin had a perfect opportunity to do it. Gavin had played squash with Barry a few days before he Barry died. Barry, of course, would have brought something to drink along to replace the fluids. along. It would have been very simple for Gavin to spike his drink with a drug that could have provoked the aneurysm. (We might note that this is a really ineffective way to murder someone, but keep in mind Gavin's personality: paranoid and completely lacking assertiveness. He would naturally gravitated gravitate toward the most innocuous murder weapon possible, one that happened to work probably only because Barry had a condition it exacerbated.)

How did Gavin do this, but then never think about it afterwards? Simple: he doesn't remember. Gavin has a talent for dissociating. Bottling up every , dissociation Utterly lacking assertiveness, going into an dissociative state is the only way he is able to act out. There is evidence for this. We see him have memory lapses several times throughout the book, and one such as not knowing who people are despite clearly being as on top of town gossip as anyone. One time he explicitly fails to remember something that definitely happened: seeing Robbie right before he fell in the river.river, which is not something a normal person is likely to forget. Gavin has no memory of it despite the fact that he looked directly at the child, just like he had no memory of killing Barry Fairbrother despite the fact that he did it.

Other clues include his mental slip near the end of the book. After Mary rejected him, Gavin thought to himself, "That's what you get for trying to take steal your neighbor's best friend's life." The author explicitly calls it a slip, and alert readers will realize it's not just metaphorical. Obviously some of Gavin's repressed memories slipped out there. Other clues include the fact that Colin Walls dreamt about poisoning Barry, the exact method Gavin used. This is not because Colin Walls has prophetic dreams--there's no evidence that this is that kind of universe--so much as foreshadowing the later revelation that Gavin took his friend's life. (Though it's possible that Colin unconciously absorbed and pieced together the truth from the town gossip and it worked its way out in a dream.)

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Aubrey Fawley is a PosthumousCharacter who bought the Sweetlove House in the 1950s. He (as well as his identically-named son and daughter-in-law) is the only character in the novel to share a surname with a Harry Potter character, one Hector Fawley, who served as the British Minister for Magic from 1925-1939. Hector Fawley’s family was one of the “Sacred Twenty-Eight” aristocratic Wizarding families in Britain which remained pure-blooded as of the 1930s. Aubrey Fawley, who shares the same name and general time frame, was “possessed of substantial private wealth.” It is possible that he was a squib who, like many squibs, was encouraged to live in the Muggle community where he would fit in better, and that his family gave him his money in order to establish himself. This would also mean that the events of the novel take place in same universe as Harry Potter, but, as all of the characters are Muggles, they have no knowledge or awareness of the existence of magic or the Wizarding world.

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Aubrey Fawley is a PosthumousCharacter who bought the Sweetlove House in the 1950s. He (as well as his identically-named son and daughter-in-law) is the only character in the novel to share a surname with a Harry Potter character, one Hector Fawley, who served as the British Minister for Magic from 1925-1939. Hector Fawley’s family was one of the “Sacred Twenty-Eight” aristocratic Wizarding families in Britain which remained pure-blooded as of the 1930s. Aubrey Fawley, who shares the same name and general time frame, was “possessed of substantial private wealth.” It is possible that he was a squib who, like many squibs, was encouraged to live in the Muggle community where he would fit in better, and that his family gave him his money in order to establish himself. This would also mean that the events of the novel take place in same universe as Harry Potter, but, as all of the characters are Muggles, they have no knowledge or awareness of the existence of magic or the Wizarding world.world.

[[WMG: Gavin murdered Barry Fairbrother.]]
Gavin had a motive, Gavin had the opportunity, and there is a reason why Gavin's own thoughts never recalled murdering him. Furthermore there are other hints as well.

The motive is obvious: he had fallen in love with Mary Fairbrother, and, furthermore, Kay Bawden had come to town and Gavin was not able to cope with it, and he desperately wanted out. He needed to get Barry out of the way so he could get Mary and ditch Kay. Especially given Kay's incorrigibility, this was enough to push Gavin to the limit and into acting out.

Gavin had a perfect opportunity to do it. Gavin had played squash with Barry a few days before he died. Barry, of course, would have brought something to drink along to replace the fluids. It would have been very simple for Gavin to spike his drink a drug that could have provoked the aneurysm. (We might note that this is a really ineffective way to murder someone, but keep in mind Gavin's personality: paranoid and completely lacking assertiveness. He would naturally gravitated toward the most innocuous murder weapon possible, one that happened to work probably only because Barry had a condition it exacerbated.)

How did Gavin do this, but then never think about it afterwards? Simple: he doesn't remember. Gavin has a talent for dissociating. Bottling up every , dissociation is the only way he is able to act out. We see him have memory lapses several times throughout the book, and one time he explicitly fails to remember something that definitely happened: seeing Robbie right before he fell in the river. Gavin has no memory of it despite the fact that he looked directly at the child, just like he had no memory of killing Barry Fairbrother despite the fact that he did it.

Other clues include his mental slip near the end of the book. After Mary rejected him, "That's what you get for trying to take your neighbor's life." The author explicitly calls it a slip, and alert readers will realize it's not just metaphorical. Obviously some of Gavin's repressed memories slipped out there. Other clues include the fact that Colin Walls dreamt about poisoning Barry, the exact method Gavin used. This is not because Colin Walls has prophetic dreams--there's no evidence that this is that kind of universe--so much as foreshadowing the later revelation that Gavin took his friend's life. (Though it's possible that Colin unconciously absorbed and pieced together the truth from the town gossip and it worked its way out in a dream.)
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* This is something I've thought about for a very long time. And it was probably the main reason why Mary Fairbrother never really liked the Fields, because his illegimate daughter lived there. And it was even more reason why she was upset when she realized that [[spoiler:after Krystal died]] and she would be buried next to Barry, she just wanted to leave. It makes even more sense when you look at the series.

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* This is something I've thought about for a very long time. And it was probably the main reason why Mary Fairbrother never really liked the Fields, because his illegimate daughter lived there. And it was even more reason why she was upset when she realized that [[spoiler:after Krystal died]] and she would be buried next to Barry, she Mary just wanted to leave. It makes even more sense when you look at the series.
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to:

*This is something I've thought about for a very long time. And it was probably the main reason why Mary Fairbrother never really liked the Fields, because his illegimate daughter lived there. And it was even more reason why she was upset when she realized that [[spoiler:after Krystal died]] and she would be buried next to Barry, she just wanted to leave. It makes even more sense when you look at the series.



Aubrey Fawley is a PosthumousCharacter who bought the Sweetlove House in the 1950s. He (as well as his identically-named son and daughter-in-law) is the only character in the novel to share a surname with a Harry Potter character, one Hector Fawley, who served as the British Minister for Magic from 1925-1939. Hector Fawley’s family was one of the “Sacred Twenty-Eight” aristocratic Wizarding families in Britain which remained pure-blooded as of the 1930s. Aubrey Fawley, who shares the same name and general time frame, was “possessed of substantial private wealth.” It is possible that he was a squib who, like many squibs, was encouraged to live in the Muggle community where he would fit in better, and that his family gave him his money in order to establish himself. This would also mean that the events of the novel take place in same universe as Harry Potter, but, as all of the characters are Muggles, they have no knowledge or awareness of the existence of magic or the Wizarding world.

to:

Aubrey Fawley is a PosthumousCharacter who bought the Sweetlove House in the 1950s. He (as well as his identically-named son and daughter-in-law) is the only character in the novel to share a surname with a Harry Potter character, one Hector Fawley, who served as the British Minister for Magic from 1925-1939. Hector Fawley’s family was one of the “Sacred Twenty-Eight” aristocratic Wizarding families in Britain which remained pure-blooded as of the 1930s. Aubrey Fawley, who shares the same name and general time frame, was “possessed of substantial private wealth.” It is possible that he was a squib who, like many squibs, was encouraged to live in the Muggle community where he would fit in better, and that his family gave him his money in order to establish himself. This would also mean that the events of the novel take place in same universe as Harry Potter, but, as all of the characters are Muggles, they have no knowledge or awareness of the existence of magic or the Wizarding world.
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[[WMG: Barry Fairbrother was Krystal's father.]]

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[[WMG: Barry Fairbrother was Krystal's father.]]]]

[[WMG: The novel takes place in the Potterverse.]]
Aubrey Fawley is a PosthumousCharacter who bought the Sweetlove House in the 1950s. He (as well as his identically-named son and daughter-in-law) is the only character in the novel to share a surname with a Harry Potter character, one Hector Fawley, who served as the British Minister for Magic from 1925-1939. Hector Fawley’s family was one of the “Sacred Twenty-Eight” aristocratic Wizarding families in Britain which remained pure-blooded as of the 1930s. Aubrey Fawley, who shares the same name and general time frame, was “possessed of substantial private wealth.” It is possible that he was a squib who, like many squibs, was encouraged to live in the Muggle community where he would fit in better, and that his family gave him his money in order to establish himself. This would also mean that the events of the novel take place in same universe as Harry Potter, but, as all of the characters are Muggles, they have no knowledge or awareness of the existence of magic or the Wizarding world.
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[[WMG: Barry Fairbrother was Krystal's father.]]

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