Have you been to the mountain? No no no. But I've been under the bridge, Mr. Jones. I've washed my feet in Cottonwood Creek. I've named the meadowlarks after ex-girlfriends. Suzanne. Isis. Mel-oh-dee. Some mornings I woke up in places I'd never been and on those mornings, oh I woulda killed for a pen. The fog and the steady gasp of diesels surrounded me and sang sang sang. Tall grass along the interstate and god, he didn't talk to me, but I pretended to be god and talked to myself, saying This way. This way. This way to the promised land. On what I thought to be the Fourth of July, mud dried around my knees in the Quapaw, and I stood up for four days straight before the rains came. And finally, in the golden dawn, I arrived at my childhood home. Ivy on the chimney. Rusted trike in the overgrown lawn. My father sat in his chair. Static on the TV. He said, "Haven't done yourself in yet?" My mother, in cobwebs and rags said, "He's got one classic in him, one heartbreaking work of genius before he goes." And I asked her for a title. She only pointed. I turned and that's when I saw her, the Girl at the Gate.