leading her farther into the house. “We wondered what all the bells and horns were
for.”
A housemaid took the child from the woman with the golden brown eyes, who then turned in my direction, simultaneously slipping
the rug from her shoulders and giving it to me to wear.
“Please take this for your journey home,” she said. “My aunt and I are very much in your debt.”
“Nicholas Van Tassel,” I said.
“Etna Bliss.”
Once again, she put her warm hand in mine. “How cold you are!” she said, looking down and withdrawing her hand almost immediately.
“Will you come in?”
Though I dearly wanted to enter that house, with its promise of warmth and its possibility of love (the mind leaps forward
with hope in an instant, does it not?), one knew that such was not appropriate under the circumstances.
“Thank you very much, but no,” I said. “You must go inside now.”
“Thank you, Mr. Van Tassel,” she said. And I think already her mind was on her aunt and the child and the hot bath that would
be waiting, for with that, she closed the door.
* * *
Perhaps a brief word here about my own circumstances at that time, which was December of 1899, for I believe it is important
to pass on to subsequent generations the facts of one’s heritage, information that is often neglected in the need to attend
to the day-to-day and, as a consequence, drifts off into the ether of time past. My father, Thomas Van Tassel, fought in the
War Between the States with the Sixty-fourth Regiment of New York and sacrificed a leg to that conflict at Antietam, a calamity
that in no way hindered his manhood, as I was but one of eleven children he subsequently sired off a succession of three wives.
My mother, his first wife, perished in childbirth — my own — so that I never knew her, but only the other two. My father,
clearly a productive man, was enterprising as well, and built three sizable businesses in his lifetime: a print shop, to which
I was apprenticed at a young age; a carriage shop; and then, as horses quite thoroughly gave way to motors, an automobile
showroom. My memories of my father exist primarily in the print shop, for I hardly knew him otherwise. I often sought refuge
in those rooms of paper and ink and type from my overly populated house in Tarrytown, New York, with its second and third
wives: one cold, the other melancholy, and in neither case well disposed to me, who had issued from the first wife, the only
woman my father had ever loved, a fact he did not shrink from announcing at frequent intervals, despite the impolitic nature
of the sentiment and the subsequent frigidity and sadness that resulted. I was not altogether bereft of feminine warmth during
my childhood, however, for I was close to one sibling, my sister Meritable, the very same sister whose funeral I am even now
journeying toward.
Perhaps because I was so engaged in the world of ink and broadsides, I developed an early and passionate appetite for learning
and was sent off to Dartmouth College at the age of sixteen. I can still remember the exquisite joy of discovering that I
should have a room to myself, for I had always had to share a room with at least three of my siblings. The college has an
estimable reputation and is widely known, so I shall not linger upon it here, except to say that it was there that I briefly
entertained the ministry, later abandoning it for want of piety.
After obtaining my degree, by which time I was twenty, I traveled abroad for two years and then was offered and accepted the
post of Associate Professor of English Literature and Rhetoric at Thrupp College, which is located some thirty-five miles
southeast of my alma mater. I took this post with the idea that in a smaller and less well known institution I might rise
more quickly and perhaps one day secure for myself the post of a Senior Professor or even of Dean of the Faculty, positions
that might not have been open