Early in her career, Alice Brennan wrote nurse romances. This 1965 novel shows her transition from "nursies" to gothics, as it concerns a young nurse who gets involved in the unpleasant relationships of a family when hired to care for its dying patriarch in a house on the edge of Lake Huron. Brennan's interest in unusual names for her characters--Bena, Larcy--is on display here, as well as her use of the heroine asking herself many questions that recap the action. Brennan's love of odd secondary characters, which would become a little extreme in later books, also is on display here, in the gloriously mouthy and nasty teenager Lyn, who can be counted on to stomp around in revealing outfits, saying shocking and mean things to everyone else. The novel creates a decent amount of tension, even though the mystery really isn't much of one. There's a strange and unpleasant section at the end where the heroine is scolded and shamed by the combined patriarchal forces of her sort-of-boyfriend (about whom she's been ambivalent) and a policeman. Other than that, it's an entertaining early work by one of the bigger names in the late 20th Century revival of gothics.