Hi Jan, excellent post imo.
I do think we have to be careful to not put too much belief into what is a possibility. As you say in any intensive work situation generally everyone supports each other. It may have been that Nevill told JB to go home and he would do the last load. That is a natural action of a father to a son who has maybe worked hard that day with another busy day to come. We cannot assume JB just dumped Nevill with the last load and went home or any of the other theories which are all possibilities but unproven.
I also agree with you about Sheila's relationship with June which may have been exacerbated by June's apparent forthright approach to life and her own mental health struggles but could also have some bearing on Sheila's P.S. symptoms. It is common that sufferers of Paranoid Scizophrenia do often scapegoat a member of their family and this is very often the mother.
I agree it is very sad that as you say there is no one to speak up for June who struggled so hard herself and had such a dreadful death.
We simply do not know the truth about June, much of what Colin writes is from Sheila's perspective but we have to remember that Sheila was mentally ill and possibly began to develop her illness long before her trip to Japan and the birth of the twins.
Mental illness is never the sufferers fault neither Sheila or June were responsible for their own illness as far as I can see. We have no idea what may have caused June's particular illness and shouldn't make assumptions imo.
Wasn't it Robert Boutflour who blamed both Sheila and Jeremy for June's illness? Strange really when Sheila wasn't even around the first time she became ill. On the second occasion June was so ill she couldn't speak to Robert within the confines of the Northampton hospital but settled for talking inside his car in the hospital car park to avoid the eavesdropping from the nurses.
We will never know the true relationship between mother and daughter, but as Sheila blossomed into a beautiful young woman is it too much to argue that June felt that she was competing for her husband's affection and upbraided her at every turn: the Devil's child remark, the refusal to let her marry in the local Church, the "
who's a clever girl?" quip at the hospital bedside and the inadvertent lack of tactile affection which had blighted their relationship all those years?
The plain fact is that Sheila never did strike back, cocooned in her own reality but sensible enough to ascertain her mental health fared better outside the reach of June, who in those last months did have a change of heart as she realized she may have exacerbated both her children's insecurities over the many years they were under her guardianship and from which both children wished extrication. Unfortunately it was too little too late as she tried to make amends with the written apology, when what both needed was a tactile admission that her parenting skills had been lacking as they had taken second place to her charitable works.
With Sheila's illnesses brought to the fore the Bambers thus took their eye off the ball as far as Jeremy was concerned and maybe the pressure on him was ratcheted up just when he needed solace and comfort from the loss of Suzette. The case of Jeffrey Pyne springs to mind, or Jeremy Bamber without gloves as I maybe too irreverently call it, and though not an exact parallel shows what can happen manifestly as pressure mounts on a family with no outlet from which it can escape.
https://youtu.be/ZzD0gbShdVg