My dearest Laura:

Today we celebrate two years since we got married. Don't be worried if you don't remember it, you'd just died.

Laura, I would give anything for you to see how is our cabin presently. What in the beginning was a little garden, has now grown and it extends about two klicks from where I am writing this. I prepared tea, yours is getting cold.

Last week, your room's flowers died, I told you that I cannot care for them and that you'll have to do it. But don't worry, I'm not upset. Tomorrow I'll plant more.

You would love to see the wildlife of this planet more closely, Laura. Everyday, at sunrise and sunset, I sit down in the same place I am now, and watch two mammals, a male and a female that come here, and stand or lay on the grave for a long time. After you went away, the ground around the grave was leveled out into a sort of terrace. I suppose that the level place makes a good site for these animals. From there, they have a view over the plain, and the cattle and the game on it.

I thought you would like to know it. I had to remember to tell you…

Always yours,

Bill.