![]() ![]() Of course, all of these changes cause him to act stranger and stranger, so his family alienates him more and more. He must try different tactics to determine how many. Some days, it's three and others, it's four. More frustratingly, he can't seem to know whether he has three children or four. Things are moves and changes just slightly from day to day and he seems to be the only one to know it. From here, the question of sanity rises again and again as he insists on noticing a variety of odd things about the house they live in. ![]() From here, the narrator provides the briefest of backgrounds about growing up, getting educated, starting a family and eventually falling out of love with his wife until an accident at work breaks his skull and sets him down a path of confusion. Yet, their presumable owner still seeks to fill their trough and the narrator is baffled by this action wondering if the man cannot see if they are dead, chooses to ignore that they are dead, or knows something about their state of living (or unliving) that the narrator does not. He first introduces an experience of wandering the countryside and coming upon four horses lying upon the ground, apparently dead. He then goes on to explain what happened. ![]() ![]() The narrator informs the reader that he is in all likelihood, the last survivor of his family and that no one could have survived the fire. ![]()
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