Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
and slaves.
If I can help her,
and if this plan works,
then I will finally
be able to leave Cuba
with new faith
in the future
of all women,
all girls . . .
I am surprised by the friendliness
of the foreign lady.
No free person has ever treated me
like an equal.
Even the freed slaves
keep their distance.
Fredrika stands beside the carriage
and talks to me,
as if I were a neighbor
instead of a servant,
while Cecilia translates
with a smile on her face.
Fredrika tells me that when she was young
her family took a grand tour of Europe,
riding all over France and Italy in a carriage.
When the carriage got stuck in deep mud,
she was not permitted to get out.
She had to stay inside, in the heat,
bored and sweaty,
simply because her mother
did not want her to speak
to the kind of people
who live in small houses
and walk
or ride swaybacked mules
on quiet country roads,
looking happy.
I am so excited
about Elena's ingenious plan
that it is hard for me
to keep the wonderful secret,
but I know that somehow
I must.
I show Beni my sketchbook.
The drawings are simple.
I am not a good artist.
I simply sketch to fix the images
in my mind
so that, later, I can write them
and bring them back to life.
Beni smiles when he sees
that Cecilia and Elena
have taken turns
sketching each other,
filling many pages of my notebook
with dreams and wishes
of their own.
Beni says he is amazed
that they have managed to learn
how to see each other
as friends.
Each time Elena speaks
of her secret plan,
I grow quiet.
Will I be blamed
for sharing
her daydreams
even though I do not know
what they are?
We take turns sketching
the view from her window.
Freedom is a wall. I cannot climb it.
Once my mind begins to picture liberty,
I am like Fredrika with her sketchbook,
frenzied, unaware of anything around her
beyond that one little paradise,
a single hut, with a few trees
and children at play
pretending that green leaves
are wings.
Elena's marvelous plan
is changing her
from the inside out.
She no longer wears
the pasty white makeup
that causes so many Cuban ladies
to look ghostly.
Her natural skin color
is the hue of wheat, the color
of men and women from southern Spain,
a land ruled by Moors
for seven hundred years.
Who will marry her
without her white makeup?
What will she be
without her parents'
illusions?
I am finished.
My hope chest is full.
My plan will soon be complete.
Only Fredrika can help me now,
but I cannot tell her the real purpose
of my secret.
What will I do
if she refuses,
and what will happen
if my parents find out?
Will they blame Cecilia
even though
she is not involved
and knows nothing
about my scheme?
My mind soars
and whirls
in a dance
of wild fear
and graceful hope.
Helping Elena
makes me nervous,
but I struggle to stay calm
and confident.
Secrecy troubles me,
but how could this plan work
any other way?
Soon, I will leave Cuba,
and Elena will stay in her room,
embroidering flowers
over and over
like a poor farm girl
in a fairy tale,
spinning straw
into gold.
Secrecy
does not surprise me.
I am accustomed