Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
of rotting tropical vegetation,
a smell that releases a bit of sorrow,
like the death of some small wild thingâ
a bird, perhaps, or a frog.
I am eager to see the city
and then set off on my own,
exploring the beautiful countryside
with my translator, Cecilia,
a young African girl
with lovely dark eyes.
With her help
I will see how people live
on this island of winter sun
that makes me dream
of discovering Eden.
I find the Swedish lady's freedom to wander
all over the island
without a chaperone
so disturbing
that I can hardly bear her company.
I hide in my room, embroidering
all sorts of dainty things â pillowcases
and gowns with pearl-studded lace ruffles
for my hope chest.
Cecilia and I are not quite the same age.
I am only twelve,
but I feel like a young woman,
and she is at least fifteen,
already married and pregnant.
Too soon, I will reach fourteen,
the age when I will be forced to marry
a man of my father's choice.
The thought of marriage
to some old frowning stranger
makes me feel just as helpless
as a slave.
When I asked the Swedish Consul
to place me in a quiet home
in the Cuban countryside,
I expected a thatched hut
on a small farm.
Instead, I find myself languishing
among gentry, surrounded by luxury.
The ladies of Matanzas
rarely set foot outdoors.
Enclosed in marble courtyards,
Elena and her mother move like shadows
lost in their private world
of silk and lace.
If I'd wanted to endure
the tedious life of a noblewoman,
I could have stayed home
at Ã
rsta Castle, where my mother
never allowed me to speak to servants
and if I wanted to greet my father
I had to wait
while a footman
rolled out a carpet
and a hairdresser powdered
my father's pigtail.
There is no place more lonely
than a rich man's home.
Fredrika's visit is touching my life
in ways I could never have imagined.
She has asked Elena's father
to give us a little house in the big garden
where the two of us can live in peace,
surrounded by
cocuyos
â fireflies â
instead of chandeliers.
Together, we walk over hills and valleys
to see sugar plantations and coffee groves.
We visit fields owned by wealthy planters
and tiny patches of corn and yams
that belong to freed slaves
who live in little huts
that look like paradise.
We ride across rivers in small boats,
carrying bags of cookies and bananas
to share with all the children, dogs, goats,
and tame flamingos
that follow us wherever we go,
begging for treats, and hearing stories
about the North Star.
The huts of the freed slaves
make me think of my lost homeâ
I remember a ghostly mist
rising over the river
after a boy drowned
trying to escape
from the slave traders.
The mist was silent
but the water sang softly,
telling its own
flowing story.
If I had known
that my father would trade me
for a stolen cow,
I would have run away
into the forest
to live in a nest
made of dreams
and green leaves.
Cecilia is a fine translator,
floating back and forth
between English and Spanish so easily,
yet I feel certain that she is homesick
for Africa, and sadly, she suffers
from the lung sickness.
Walking tires her, so we often stop to rest
in lovely places, beside stream banks
or at the small farms of free men
who used to be slaves.
When I ask Cecilia about liberty,
she lists the prices:
Five hundred gold dollars
would buy the freedom of a slave
who works in the fields,
but she has been taught the art
of translation, so she is worth a fortune,
and her husband is a skilled horseman
valued at more than a thousand
gold dollars.
Fifteen dollars would be enough
to purchase liberty
for their unborn child.
The price will double
on the day of its birth.
How strange the laws are
on this beautiful island whereâ
if not for slaveryâ
I could think of the palm trees
and winter sun
as true evidence
of Eden
rediscovered.