I will miss Autumn here. The crisp days of October, startling the remnants of summer into hiding. The homely smell of hearth burned pine and smoked meat drifting from chimneys built by long-dead grandfathers. The battle fields will be beautiful. Bathed in maples, harmless blood of leaves, though the earth still bears streaks of death. The grasses, drying, dying, in the cooling air will whisper to the sojourners passing through, seeking sites of ancestors whose voices they never knew. I will not be here to slip the fallen leaves between phone-book pages or paste and sew them to handmade paper. My mother will stare at the tangled thread, the blank sheets, left untouched on my desk, and ask my father where the time went.