I noticed a couple of interesting passages in Northern Lights that suggests Mrs Coulter's daemon has the ability to seperate from her more than a normal person.
Lyra and Pan for example can go only several yards (?) from each other (at least before Lyra goes to the world of the dead), but the book seems to suggest that Mrs Coulter can seperate much further from her daemon, possibly in the same way a witch can?
The passages in the book:
'The Cocktail Party' - (just after Mrs Coulter 'removes' Adele Starminster)
'As she said that, Lyra noticed that Mrs Coulter was alone, without her daemon. How could that be? But a moment later the golden monkey appeared at her side, and, reaching down, she took his hand and swung him up lightly to her shoulder.'
'Armour' - (at the end of the chapter)
'Pantalaimon struggled against [Lyra's] sleepiness, but it was too strong; he curled up as a mouse inside her hood. He could tell her when they woke, and it was probably a marten, or a dream, or some kind of harmless local spirit; but something was following the train of sledges, swinging lightly from branch to branch of the close-clustering pine trees, and it put him uneasily in mind of a monkey.'
I realise that both these instances can be explained away - (ie. he wasn't that far away from Mrs Coulter inside their house, and Pan was just dreaming etc.) but does anyone else think that Pullman is subtly suggesting they can seperate?
Also can anyone think of any other instances from the second or third books that also back this up?
