In daily life, Peter does everything he can to appear proper and well-kept. But as Marian pictures him hunting, she sees a carnal, violent side to Peter that frightens and profoundly upsets her, as it confirms all her worst suspicions about him. Crucially, Marian’s realization that she is crying is dissociative, as if she is no longer in her own body. This dissociation foreshadows the novel’s central structural shift, as Marian’s first-person storytelling will eventually give way to disembodied third-person narration.