For the first time this year, the cold has frosted over the windows of my little campus suite. I live with three people my own age here, none of whom I know very well or see very often.

One of my them plays the violin. I've seen its case, slung under her arm or resting against the storage room wall, but I've never seen the violin, or heard her play it. Music majors, she tells me, have practice like I do lecture, have recitals like I do exams.

She wanted, once, to read a poem I'd written. Easy to accomodate, and impersonal: in this building, take this paper. To ask somebody to accept your silence and appreciation in return for their time and their gift, though, feels too intimate.

Of violinists I have known, she is the second, after a Sarah in high school who'd perform during morning services. I'd listen for her instrument beneath the piano and the choir, my hymnal left unopened as I caught and held its sounds. I remember, too, our graduation ceremony, when she played alone. Beneath the stage lamps, the sequins of her red dress threw light against her noise.