Not trying to say anything, but she's a prostitute. You don't have to sneak up on her in the woods to spy on her.
2 Reviews
Changing Times for Matthew and Myra
skipperkd19 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Myra has a gift for numbers, so she takes a job as a teller at the bank. Horace struggles with this because he doesn't think his wife should work outside the home. In the end, he puts on a happy face because he just wants Myra to be happy.
Meanwhile, Matthew (the new town sheriff) falls hard for Emma, one of Hank's girls introduced in a previous episode.
The writers already used the freed prostitute trope once, with Myra and Horace, and in their case, they have continually glossed over all the scorn and ostracism that would be the social norm in that era. It would dog their footsteps long into their marriage.
I don't expect the writers to handle the Matthew-Emma relationship any better in future episodes.
Meanwhile, Matthew (the new town sheriff) falls hard for Emma, one of Hank's girls introduced in a previous episode.
The writers already used the freed prostitute trope once, with Myra and Horace, and in their case, they have continually glossed over all the scorn and ostracism that would be the social norm in that era. It would dog their footsteps long into their marriage.
I don't expect the writers to handle the Matthew-Emma relationship any better in future episodes.
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