Golden leaves loosen their grip, spinning once—then settling into a damp pillow on the path. The air smells of woodsmoke and the last brave roses. A child kicks through a pile of crisp remnants, each crunch a small percussion marking the change. Sweaters emerge from cedar chests, still holding last winter’s quiet. Light slants lower now, gilding everything briefly before retreating. There’s a pause in the world—not the inert pause of winter, but the alert pause before a held breath releases. Apples thunk into waiting baskets; geese stitch the sky into chevrons heading south. Fall asks nothing of us but to notice: that endings can be beautiful, that letting go is a kind of harvest, too.