Sarah is self-described as "comely" (271). She views everything Edward does with disdain and contempt, a view that stems from the blame she places on him for their baby's death. His thrifty spending exasperates her: they travel via bus, stay in cheap hotels and instead of going to a "perfectly nice [restaurant] in the village where they were staying" (HASF 275) he insists they go to a "seedy, linoleum-tiled hutch" (275). Edward bores her with his so-called obsessions; he never sticks with them (except the birds). She too "had once herself been one of his obsessions" (271). Sarah views Edward as a "total idiot" (272), given the fact that he always appears to fall for her bird trick, which in turn insults, yet even more so, confuses Edward. "For someone [Sarah] so devious, she was often incredibly stupid" (272). Sarah represses her festering emotions by being curt and contemptuous, creating a starched, barely functional relationship.
Sarah's continuous belittlement of Edward drives him to be continuously occupied. Subsequently he appears to be an on the go, eager to learn man, busying himself with his job as a Grade 6 teacher and his ever-changing hobbies. He cannot face the emotional pain of the loss of the baby either, but more so, he does not know how to deal with Sarah's emotional nastiness. Vulnerable and weak, Edward succumbs to Sarah's