The Governess wakes up in the middle of the night and asks her husband how he's doing. He's fine, she says, and they're going to go their separate ways. She's worried that the Governess's son is going to cling to her as soon as she lets him go, and she's afraid that he won't be able to stand her. She tells him to calm down, and he does. She wants to be next to her wife, but she can't stand the thought of sitting next to a "childish guy" .
The Governess wakes up in the middle of the night and asks her husband how he's doing. He's fine, she says, and they're going to go their separate ways. She's worried that the Governess's son is going to cling to her as soon as she lets him go, and she's afraid that he won't be able to stand her. She tells him to calm down, and he does. She wants to be next to her wife, but she can't stand the thought of sitting next to a "childish guy" .