Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
of the beach.
Gasping for breath,
I struggle to remember
my mother's voice,
and I struggle
to forget
all the rest. . . .
I remember monkeys
swinging and screaming in the great forest
and a cobra swimming between water plants
in a river the color of coffee.
At sunset, the same river looked purple,
and in the morning it was green.
Light was the only thing
that had changed.
Now, on the far side of the world
here in Cuba â island of tormentâ
I wonder if light from my homeland
follows me at night, in waking dreams
where it is always daytime
and the river is always sky blue
and every sea breeze is sweet
and gentle
like my mother's singsong
lullaby voice.
Cecilia asks me for helpâ
Fredrika has taken to her bed
with a sick headache
that goes on day after day,
for a week. . . .
I cannot believe
that Cecilia allowed Fredrika to watch
one of the secret ships
as it dropped its cargo on the beach.
Transporting slaves is forbidden
by a treaty with Englandâ
that is why the price of each slave
is so high.
Even though ships from Africa are illegal,
Papá and the other planters
know how to keep them coming,
each with seven or eight hundred
new slaves, mostly children
who are less likely to rebel
or escape.
I remember wild animals
near the riverâ
crocodiles, hippos, and leopards
who made the night terrifying.
None of those beasts were as frightening
as people â the strangers
who came with guns
to seize children
or with goods
to buy children.
I do not remember
the ocean.
The distance
between then and now
is too vast for memory
or a calendar
or a map.
This island, with its lush gardens
and winter sun,
had me fooled.
I have always imagined
that a gentle climate would make the people
gentle too . . . but that is not the way
of the human heart
when it is lost in the selfishness
of greed.
If only I had known about the boats,
I never would have asked Cecilia
to accompany me to that same cursed
moonlit beach
where she arrived in chains
just a few years ago. . . .
In the eyes of Cecilia
and each enslaved child
I see
hopeful light.
By asking many questions,
I have discovered
that fifty gold American dollars
per child
is the price paid by planters
to silence the magistrates
who might otherwise cause trouble
when forbidden ships
bring new captives
to quiet beaches
under the radiant
dangerous moon.
No wonder Cecilia told me to cover my head
so that I would have a cloth to wipe my eyes
after witnessing a sorrow so great
that I must now think carefully
about how to describe slavery
in such a way
that my true stories
about Cuba
will be believed.
After a weeklong headache,
Fredrika is finally feeling stronger,
so we go out again, at night,
to rescue
cocuyos
.
The insects eventually grow weary of flying
and return to earth
where they are captured again,
so we have to rescue the same fireflies
over and over,
buying them from greedy children
who think we are playing a game.
When Fredrika runs out of pennies,
she spends cookies and bananas
until she is left with nothing to trade
and cannot help the fireflies who remain prisoners
too numerous to save.
Even though we can never help them all,
I feel my mind flying and glowing
along with the winged creatures
that we have rescued
as they soar away, free. . . .
Once again, I watch from the window
while Fredrika and Cecilia
run wildly in circles
setting
cocuyos
free.
A harpist comes to the window,
offering to serenade me
for a price.
I have never possessed
any coins of my own,
so I give him an embroidered
linen handkerchief
that he can trade for coins or food.
After playing three songs,
he strolls away, and I wonder
if anyone will ever
serenade me
for love
instead of money.
I sit with a row of slave women,
teaching them how to sew.
When they do extra work
on Sunday afternoons,
they can earn a bit of money
to save toward buying their freedom
from Papá.