Talk:Lady Tremaine/@comment-4098886-20130504213036/@comment-26194791-20160308041549

Yes, the fact Lady Tremaine gloated as she watched her last husband dying is suspicious. However, the narrator's language and tone suggest mere opportunism in revealing her actual personality.

It wouldn't surprise me if Tremaine had grown to resent her new husband on account of his marvelous daughter, and the fact she thus had to conceal her true thoughts and desires. Maybe other unspecified reasons emerged? (In other words, she may have started feeling her latest marriage wasn't actually worth the things she sought to gain from it, and she merely found relief in his demise despite not anticipating it.)