Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
After a supper of boiled beans and rice,
Cecilia reveals that she has brought
a gift of butter and cake from Elena's home.
We eat with pleasure
in these peaceful surroundings
that make me feel like a shepherdess
in some ancient story of wisdom or magic.
There is no evening in the tropics.
Night simply drapes itself over the day
as if someone had lowered a curtain.
The sky glitters and moves,
filled with shooting stars and fireflies.
Out here, no one tries to catch
the soaring insects.
The
cocuyos
drift so high
that they seem to live in heaven,
like stars.
Blue doves and green parrots
surround us in the mornings.
Children play games at our feet.
This home is friendly and restful,
so why am I tired?
I cough until my lungs bleed,
making me wonder if the baby in my belly
can feel scared too, and sad â is the baby
aware of my reluctance to leave
this tranquil farm
and return to the life of a slave
at the mill,
translating for American engineers
as they shout at me in English
and I shout at others in a mixture of Spanish
and several African languages,
as if the entire world can be found
trapped inside one Cuban sugar mill
and trapped inside
my own voice?
I ask Cecilia to walk with me
toward the sound of drums.
We find ourselves following a long trail
to a distant plantation, where slaves dance
in front of the windowless barracoons
where they must sleep at night
in chains, behind locked doors.
I sketch the dancers
until an overseer notices me
and seizes my notebook
and tears out the pages.
He uses his whip to end the dance.
He chases me away, with Cecilia
at my side, coughing and weeping.
I am ready to leave Cuba,
but how can I go â how can I abandon
this sick girl who has worked so hard
to help me understand
this beautiful island
with its hideous ways?
When I am sent to fetch my wife
and the foreign lady
from the remote farm
where they have been staying,
I notice that Cecilia looks ill,
and I begin to wonder
if she will live long enough
to be a mother to our child.
We arrive in the city
under stars.
Cecilia's head is uncovered,
and I feel angry
because perhaps my wife
has been weakened
by roaming with a foreigner,
her head unprotected,
exposed to the rays
of Cuba's moon.
They are back!
Oh, how I wish I could have gone
with them out to the countryside.
I have missed them, and I have missed
the excitement of Fredrika's stories
about adventures in faraway places.
I have missed seeing her sketchbook
filled with unfamiliar views
of this island where I have lived
all my life,
without seeing much at all
beyond the four walls
of my own room.
I have even missed Cecilia,
with her strong spirit
and the way she whispers
a comforting lullaby
to the restless baby
as it kicks and rolls
inside her huge belly.
I don't know how or why
it happened,
but somehow
I have begun
to think of Cecilia
as my best friend.
I have decided to postpone
my departure from Cuba.
I cannot bear to think of leaving
until I feel certain
that I can somehow
offer help to Cecilia
and Beni
and their baby.
For now, there is the delightful prospect
of watching as freed slaves dance
to raise money
for helping orphans
of all colors.
Elena and Cecilia are both so excitedâ
they refer to the upcoming charity dance
as the Ball of Free Blacks.
They tell me that even the wealthiest nobles
attend the dance, and donate money
to help freed slaves
feed orphans.