Beloved, men in thick green coats came crunchingthrough the snow, the insignia on their shouldersof uncertain origin, a country I could not be sure of,a salute so terrifying I heard myself lying to avoidarrest, and was arrested along with Jocko, whose tearhad snapped off, a tiny icicle he put in his mouth.We were taken to the ice prison, a palace encrustedwith hoarfrost, its dome lit from within, Jocko admiredthe wiring, he kicked the walls to test the strengthof his new boots. A television stood in a block of ice,its blue image still moving like a liquid center.You asked for my innermost thoughts. I wonder will Iever see a grape again? When I think of the vineyardwhere we met in October—when you dropped a clustercustom insisted you be kissed by a stranger—how afterthe harvest we plunged into a stream so icy our palmsturned pink. It seemed our future was sealed. Everyonesaid so. It is quiet here. Not closing our ranksweakens us hugely. The snowflakes fall in a featurelessbath. I am the stranger who kissed you. On sunny dayseach tree is a glittering chandelier. The power ofmindless beauty! Jocko told a joke and has been deadsince May. A bullethole in his forehead the officerscall a third eye. For a month I milked a barnful ofcows. It is a lot like cleansing a chandelier. Wipeand polish, wipe and polish, round and round you go.I have lost my spectacles. Is the book I was readingstill open by the side of our bed? Treat it as a bookmarksaving my place in our story.(here the letter breaks off)