(urth) Cassie as the Ambassador's wife
Dave Tallman
davetallman at msn.com
Sat Sep 19 13:16:30 PDT 2009
Roy C. Lackey wrote:
> I don't know what the answer is, but Gid said the shooter was a man. He
> could be lying, but why? Transformation "up" or "down" is mentioned, but not
> sideways. That is, there is nothing to indicate that a human could transform
> himself (see, old-school pronoun) to look like another human, even of the
> same gender.
>
On page 99 "Are you aware of shape-changers? Werewolves and their
ilk?... Some human beings can transform themselves, Cassie. The cells of
their bodies rearrange themselves... Wolves, dogs and leopards are the
most common forms... The most common forms but not the only forms." It
looks to me like Wolfe has given us some leeway to have other sorts of
shape-changers, with possible multiple human forms.
> Margaret might be a werewolf but, shooter or not, if she is, where does it
> show up in the story? The only demonstrable werewolf I know of is Al, the
> fake FBI agent.
>
True, but the detailed description of werewolf traits on p. 206 invites
us to find another werewolf. Here are a few of the clues I found most
convincing, drawn from one of my theory pages on the WolfeWiki
("Mysterious Margaret"):
1. There's the clue of the werewolf's "swift loping walk, even in
women." (p. 206). Margaret bobs along (p. 59). Does any other
female character have a unique walk described?
2. She is gray (p. 54) with a colorless face (p. 57). Werewolves
"dress in wolf shades: gray, black, and white." (p. 206).
3. They are also insensitive to color (p. 206). Margaret fails to get
a straw for Cassie's drink (p. 57), indicating she doesn't care
much about lipstick. She describes a costume which shows skin in
the middle as "spring-green" (p. 107), but the costume that is
spring-green is the long missionary gown (p. 190). The costume
that shows ten inches of bare waist features a faux-grass skirt
(p. 131). This would be grass-green, not spring-green. Perhaps
Margaret can't tell the difference.
4. She avoids an obvious word when misreporting the name of Sharon
Bench as "Shirley Ladydog" (p. 86). As a werewolf female she might
be extra-sensitive to this word.
5. Werewolves have a hard time avoiding slipping back to wolf form
(p. 100). They also "want the wild and a liberation from human
morality" (p. 207). Margaret's scrupulous morality may be an
effort to avoid slipping back. Her elaborate trick with the napkin
to avoid a direct lie is an example of this (pp. 82-83).
6. Margaret always has yogurt and fruit for breakfast (p. 186). She
may avoid eating meat to keep from setting off her wolf nature.
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