# After the Emergency **by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg** You sit in a brown Adirondack chair on a steep slope looking east between the pines so tall they were surely here, large even, before you were born. The storm chased out the humidity and now, a month before autumn, and still in the heavy grasp of katydids and one insistent bird that changes trees too fast to see, you are safe. Free from the worst you imagine. In the distance, tourists with phones and not enough light still try to catch the old church’s round roof while one slim beetle that can fly lands on your forearm, stays. This is what you told yourself you wanted: a quiet evening, a chair with a view, a breeze, the rumble of motorcycles fading to a line on the horizon. But if you’ve learned anything from the long drives to the hospital or letters from the lawyer, phone calls that aren’t wrong numbers at 2 a.m., and that tone in his voice, her face when there’s something to say that will shake away the Etch a Sketch of your life for a moment, it’s that nothing will be the same. There is no emergency. There is only emergency. How can it be any other way, the pages of the sky, each one in slow motion or fast, keep asking you.