CHAPTER 33
pretty ories,quot; I said. quot;About t;
quot;Did ell you about Opa Josef? ill a baby w I remember ;
quot;t?quot;
S back in ing t;It is a sad, sad story, t family.quot;
quot;Sad? In ;
quot;t married, ages ago. e kept tic. O y, maybe one and rave about t t, as if someto get tering about av, claiming t really all and t tav olen aer. If I remember, ter died on t plunged to grief. And till imagining spirits after all t;
to feel unusually omac.
quot;Let me t kno t Gettysburg. But til y, and t brot one. Suc;
quot;Idiot? do you mean, idiot?quot;
quot;ts not no back ts on and on about it rick of t t savant. Gustav and extremely introverted. Maybe istic, if t;
to my o feel faint.
quot;Or maybe rung. But after t opped playing tely of o be an old nun too. t mad opped playing tarted to let t drift rig out to see titution, poor dear. You could tell Lord only knoo live in tle 1934, I t ;
S over to album and flipped to t of ted to a middle-aged man in a gray fedora. quot;ts crazy Joes son. a girl.quot; ted to a ;Gustav.quot; For a brief moment, I t t tograpion at all. Beneatc;La belle dame sans merci. Gone ime, but not for oget ting oday, ;
quot;But,quot; I stammered, quot;but o go on after so mucune?quot;
quot;t all of us do. t I on after losing t, you o let go of t, son. Be open to life to come. Back in ties, o talk about going off to find o say, ill I ever knoo be? Sucions