On a languid midsummers day in the countryside, old Adam Godley, a renowned theoretical mathematician, is dying. His family gathers at his bedside his son, young Adam, struggling to maintain his marriage to a radiantly beautiful actress his nineteen-year-old daughter, Petra, filled with voices and visions as she waits for the inevitable their mother, Ursula, whose relations with the Godley children are strained at best and Petras young man—very likely more interested in the father than the daughter—who has arrived for a superbly ill-timed visit.But the Godley family is not alone in their vigil. Around them hovers a family of mischievous immortals—among them, Zeus, who has his eye on young Adams wife Pan, who has taken the doughy, perspiring form of an old unwelcome acquaintance and Hermes, who is the genial and omniscient narrator We too are petty and vindictive, he tells us, just like you, when we are put to it.