Dear Cyndy, The junket to Nantucket was exhilarating and strenuous. Up at 5 a.m. - nothing unusual for you, - and back at 9:40 p.m. somewhat after your bedtime. Initially, the transition from the blackness of night to the indeterminate gray of early morning, and then miraculous as always, rhododactylus eos, the rosy fingered dawn, the most unforgettable - to me - of Homer's epithets which weaves what I see this morning into the tapestry of what mankind has perceived for thousands of years. Driving at 60 miles per hour into, and being blinded for minutes on end by the rising sun, is a reminder that even the most glorious of experiences is attended by perplexities and dangers. In time the highway once more emerged from the golden glare, and I made mental note that we had just survived another ordeal, not worth a further thought unless it had ended in catastrophe. The embarkation at Hyannis was uneventful. I had thought that some security wizard might challenge my placing on the baggage cart an obviously heavy, disreputable looking package, a box wrapped in a decommissioned mattress pad tied tightly with multiple loops of rope. The outside gave no hint as to what the inside might reveal. But the baggage handler to whom I handed the concealed computer, seemed not at all concerned, After the 135 minute crossing, Margaret and I plodded down the gangplank. The baggage cart reappeared from the freight deck, and the packaged computer once more passed into my possession. As predicted, the day was sunny, bright, cloudness and warm. The taxi driver, a middle aged woman from the Pennsylvania Poconos confided that after five winters on the Island, this was the last one she could tolerate. I entertained her with an account of my scrimmages with the Town of Nantucket. She seemed to welcome my account as confirmation of her surmise that the idyllic perfection of Nantucket was only as real as the vacationers' brochures. Our house was, as I had expected, intact; I found its somber dignity somewhat tarnished by the insolence of office and the law's delay. The ceiling joists were adorned with many delicate cobwebs, which spanned also the rungs of the ladder into the basement, reassuring evidence that for years now, as its sole occupants, the spiders, and there must be very many of them, have enjoyed an undisturbed tenancy in common. No doubt about it, 3 Red Barn Road has become a haunted house, but I make no objection, so long as the ghost that haunts it is my own. All other ghosts are kept at bay by the surveillance system: that is its purpose. The refurbished computer functions flawlessly. One of the cameras had succumbed to the salt air that blows from the ocean, but a replacement was available. A technical issue which I left unresolved is the corrosion of the fittings of the long cables that extend from the computer in the downstairs bedroom to the cameras outside in the scrub, a problem apparently ignored by the manufacturers. In Konnarock I've circumvented the corrosion by clipping the fittings and making soldered connections. Yesterday I didn't have time for such artwork. Instead I placed the fourth camera inside the house, also potentially very informative. As you can see in Picture #4 of the attached series, an intruder passing though the wide opening would need to move the wheel barrow, would certainly want to look into the barrels, and in the process move them. By comparing images from sequential days, I could infer the burglar's visit. (Of the attached images, #1 is the southern front of the house, #2 is the second floor, #3 and #4 are on the first floor.) Thank you for forwarding the letter about Jane and Morty. I can imagine a situation where a closer relationship would have developed between them and ourselves, and we would have made much effort to help them. I don't think that under the circumstances they would be willing or able to accept help from us. If you think I'm mistaken, please let me know. As for the estate tax issues, I will forward to you relevant documentations in separate e-mails. If you have questions of me, please let me know. Stay well and happy, and give my best to Ned. Jochen