We meet in a concentration camp. It is late nineteen forty-four, and the War is almost over. He takes me by the hand and reads the future in my palm. He says I will never live to see forty-eight, that I have no will left in my thumb, that my fame-line is very faint. He does not believe my wife has been faithful to me, but says that it does not really matter. When he speaks, his voice is so low it is almost inaudible; it is almost as though there were someone else speaking to me, someone who was locked in his body. When he speaks to me, the concentration camp, our fellow prisoners, even the sky which surrounds us, all seem to disappear. The pupils of his eyes are like bowls which can contain me. They frighten me more than all the Germans I imagine I have seen, so I close my eyes and manage to awaken myself. For a brief moment I am awake, looking straight up at the ceiling, which at first glance looks like a wall on its side. But Desnos will not let me go — he grabs me back into sleep by the throat. I feel the sensation of suffocation.