Katya, a Polish Jew whose parents sent her to New York before the Nazi occupation, prepares to host Passover Seder for her family. She lives with her husband in New York. She's uneasy with her aging self, suspicious of the workers fixing a hole in the roof, and anxious. She keeps the things she's picked up during her life in a limestone ostracon, which she obsessively revisits. Her husband, Joe, worries that she is losing her mind. She has lost a grip on the finances, which she has always handled, and she's exhibiting odd behaviors such as writing in indecipherable script. One thing that particularly worries Katya is the camera. She must find the camera so that people will remember the Seder. Without documentation, she wonders, who will remember? Most of the documentation of Katya's own life has been destroyed over the years. Her children and grandchildren come for Passover, but she is unable to find the camera.