[Vandover and the Brute by Frank Norris]@TWC D-Link bookVandover and the Brute CHAPTER One 4/23
Vandover's father bent over her quickly, crying out sharply, "Hallie!--what is it ?" All at once the train for which they were waiting charged into the depot, filling the place with a hideous clangor and with the smell of steam and of hot oil. This scene of her death was the only thing that Vandover could remember of his mother. As he looked back over his life he could recall nothing after this for nearly five years.
Even after that lapse of time the only scene he could picture with any degree of clearness was one of the greatest triviality in which he saw himself, a rank thirteen-year-old boy, sitting on a bit of carpet in the back yard of the San Francisco house playing with his guinea-pigs. In order to get at his life during his teens, Vandover would have been obliged to collect these scattered memory pictures as best he could, rearrange them in some more orderly sequence, piece out what he could imperfectly recall and fill in the many gaps by mere guesswork and conjecture. It was the summer of 1880 that they had come to San Francisco.
Once settled there, Vandover's father began to build small residence houses and cheap flats which he rented at various prices, the cheapest at ten dollars, the more expensive at thirty-five and forty.
He had closed out his business in the East, coming out to California on account of his wife's ill health.
He had made his money in Boston and had intended to retire. But he soon found that he could not do this.
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