She resisted his desire for intercourse and marriage, leading to a series of quarrels before she disclosed her details to him.
[6] When Garfinkel first met Agnes, she possessed physiology typically associated with the social categories of "male" and "female" at the same time.
At the time of her first appearance she was dressed in a tight sweater which marked off her thin shoulders, ample breasts, and narrow waist.
There was nothing garish or exhibitionistic in her attire, nor was there any hint of poor taste or that she was ill at ease in her clothing, as is seen so frequently in transvestites and in women with disturbances in sexual identification.
Her voice, pitched at an alto level, was soft, and her delivery had the occasional lisp similar to that affected by feminine-appearing male homosexuals.