# Who is At the Door Now? **by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg** Just the wind reeding through, a token of the thunderstorm in the tree tops, two thirds of the way up an Arkansas mountain of maples just starting to drop its first leaves, August-dead arrows slung into the future, which is now when I open the door even if the rain is running sideways, and the birdsong is hidden and present at once in time’s infinite foliage. Thunder hurts the horizon, I’m cold and wet in a collapsed cloud blurring distinctions between now and later, inside and outside, but then something red breaks through: a summer tanager singing fire.