Unfortunately, previous exposure to one flu is no guaranty of protection
against the next. Those flu viruses keep..what is the term?...metamorphosing?.
New strains every year, seemingly.
CALLIE, if I'm remembering correctly, Adair first mentioned returning to
Scotland when it seemed she could never carry a child to term. She was not
happy with Montana, and her marriage with Angus had little to compensate her.
Once Varick was born, there was not further mention of Scotland, but Angus
might well have thought, as Varick grew older, that Adair might once again
thing of leaving once Varick was gone.
Since we readers are privy to Angus' inner thoughts, I wonder if either woman
realized how their remarks affected Angus?
Oh, that is a hard question, CALLIE. In general, I think women do, usually,
know how their words are affecting their men. More so than the other way around,
at least. But one never really knows. The person we're talking to may be in a
situation, just then, that means they hear something quite different from what
was intended. How many misunderstandings have come about because the people
in an argument were not really hearing what the other was saying?
I was hoping Rob could turn things around, too,SALLY. But his death was so
much in keeping with his temper and bitterness. I can so easily see something
like that happening. The circumstances that led up to it can be seen earlier
in the story, so it's not something that just jumped up out of nowhere.
We never know how a book is going to affect us. Our views about the characters
color all our perceptions. Just the other day I was reading a book in which
a character I like was behaving very badly. I was so upset I wanted to smack
him, and wound up getting annoyed with my cat!
I think you're right, BARB. There are so many possible ways to read this
segment on the talk between Angus and Anna. And certainly the book is more
than a story of Scots sheepmen and Montana. It's a story of a time and a place
and the lives of people we have really come to like.