The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The question is incomplete and there is no specific question on it. However, we can say that it is true that Edna's husband is alarmed by what people might think of Edna moving into the Pidgeon house because he is primarily concerned about what others will think about.
We are referring to a moment in the story "The Awakening," written by American author Kate Chopin in 1889. In chapter XXIX, Edna decides to move to another house, although her husband Léonce, is not aware of this. The new house is around the block and the servitude calls this house "the pigeon house" because it is too small. WHen Léonce knows about the move, he is concerned about the opinion of the New Orleans society of the time, that was very conservative compared with the femininity and unorthodox views of Edna.