Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
little creatures I have ever seen.
They flock to me at night,
resting on my fingers
so that, while I am sketching
and writing letters,
I need no other lantern,
just the light
from their movements.
I skim my hand across the page
while the brilliant
cocuyos
help me decide
what to write â there is so much to tell.
How can I describe this shocking journey?
I must speak of Cecilia's homesickness
and her lung sickness
and the way her baby
is doomed to be born
into slavery.
I must describe Elena's loneliness
and her longing for a sense of purpose.
Somehow, I must show my readers
the bright flowers and glowing insects
that make Cuba's night
feel like morning.
When we visit the little huts
where freed slaves live without masters,
Fredrika asks them if they are happy
even though she already knows
the answer.
I believe she simply enjoys the chance
to hear free men and women
describe their little farms
as bits of paradise.
When she asks me if I long
for my birthplace in the Congo,
I tell her that I miss my mother,
and I ask her to put my words
in her letters, so that others will know
what it is like
to be a slave
so far from home.
Cecilia has just explained
Los Cuatro Consuelos,
“The Four Comforts” required
by Cuban law
as consolation
for slaves.
They have the right
to buy freedom
and the right to marry
and the right to own property
and the right to petition
for transfer
to a new owner
if the first one turns out
to be cruel
or unfair. . . .
Of course, none of this seems
adequate or logical
because how can slavery
ever be fair?
When I ask Cecilia
if wealthy planters
honor these laws,
she smiles in a wistful way
that helps me understand
why my question
is foolish.
We go out at night
to rescue fireflies.
Children catch the friendly
cocuyos
and pull off their wings
or put them in bottles
to make little lamps
where the insects glow and fly
until they starve.
Women tie living
cocuyos
onto their ruffled dresses as ornaments
and girls weave them
into their hair
like flashing jewels.
Fredrika and I
feel like heroines in a story,
following people around
buying captive fireflies
and setting them free.
I notice Elena
peering down from her window,
smiling as she watches
us rush around in circles
rescuing hundreds of small bright creatures
from the sad fate of all
living captives,
even those
with wings.
How disturbing it feels
to envy Cecilia,
a slave.
She is free,
at least for now,
to run and shout
out in the open
with Fredrika,
talking to strangers
and splashing
in mud puddles
just like a man
or a boy.
How I wish
that I could go out with them
tonight, to the beach!
In a moment
of hesitant courage
I ask Mamá
to let me venture outdoors . . .
but she scolds me for wishing
to have muddy shoes
and a chance to run
faster and faster
in circles
beneath the light
of the eerie,
dangerous moon.
Cubans believe moonlight
is harmful.
Cecilia covers her head
with a blue turban. She warns me
that I should protect myself
from the moon,
although she cannot say
exactly why.
The beach is so lovely
that I feel like a flying fish,
as if I am soaring
up into the starlit sky.
When Cecilia suddenly runs away
from a few small boats
that are bobbing on the waves,
I am perplexed.
How can anything
as beautiful as a moonlit night
be dangerous?
I try to warn her,
but she will not listen.
She jumps up and down
in the roaring waves
like a happy child.
The boats are close nowâ
I cannot stay!
The memory of arrival
and loss
is too fresh.
Fredrika does not see their faces yet,
all the children from a slave ship
riding in those small boats,
gliding toward this lonely shore
in chains.
I run and run
until my lungs ache
and I cough
and then I collapse
in the muddy road
that leads away
from the soft sand