In the middle of the night, the Governess complains to her husband that she is tired and cannot sleep. She tells him that since their marriage, she has not been intimate with anyone other than him. The Governess asks him to let her go to sleep, but he refuses, saying that he is too tired to sleep. He asks her to let him go to get water, but she refuses. He tells her that he sprained his ankle when he dragged her out of the house, and he asks her if she is acting up with him. She says that she has been trying to pretend that she does not feel pain or sorrow, but that in the end, it is all fake. She asks him if he is changing his attitude, because he is feeling bad
In the middle of the night, the Governess complains to her husband that she is tired and cannot sleep. She tells him that since their marriage, she has not been intimate with anyone other than him. The Governess asks him to let her go to sleep, but he refuses, saying that he is too tired to sleep. He asks her to let him go to get water, but she refuses. He tells her that he sprained his ankle when he dragged her out of the house, and he asks her if she is acting up with him. She says that she has been trying to pretend that she does not feel pain or sorrow, but that in the end, it is all fake. She asks him if he is changing his attitude, because he is feeling bad