The contrast here is stark: Ainsley has settled into the very patriarchal norms she claimed to buck, getting engaged to a suddenly formal Fish (or “Fischer Smythe”) and looking haggard and worn-down as a result. But even as Ainsley accuses Marian of “rejecting” the very standards that make Ainsley so miserable, Marian pushes back—this is “only a cake,” after all, something made creatively and then eaten deliciously. In other words, as Marian now plunges her fork into this soft, shapely thing, she seems to have shifted her views on “production-consumption”; under the right circumstances, that cycle can be tasty and fulfilling.