As the narrator is thinking they are, the female leaves the man alone in the woods. When the couple is in the woods, Atwood as said before, switches the role. As men are the ones who by society are the ones to leave the woman in this case the girl leaves the boy. “The girl covered him with his cast off shirt and kissed him on the forehead. Then she walked carefully away.” He was the one who is being left alone and being kissed on the forehead rather than him leaving the girl alone and kissing her on the forehead and covering her up. Then the boy is left being the damsel in distress when he narrator comes and bites him. The narrator “came softly towards him” (Atwood 266), bites him on the neck by accident and he sees her. Sees her running and where she runs to. He tells the villagers and they come to hunt her down. Maybe, this was her yearning for people like her. Therefore, she could have people just like her so she would no longer be alone. She would have companions to be able to be around, unlike the years of her life of people shunning her. She would finally be unshunned. She would have people to relate to her that are just like her. In the story, nothing happens to the man who is bitten. Something only happens to the girl, she gets hunted by the mob of her village. What if the case were that the man could eventually get the disease as well? But, they didn't hunt him down and accuse him …show more content…
Her sister wanting to marry, but could not because of her. Her family started slowly dying off, leaving her to fend for herself. The biting of the man in the woods. Seeing where she ran to. And now the villagers hunting her down. The story is being told in past tense. In the beginning she tells the story as if she is retelling the story and by the end she is being hunted by the villagers as she starts using the word “now” (Atwood 266). Maybe reflecting what had brought her to the situation she was “now” in. The villagers are now hunting her down for what she is. The villagers are discriminating