Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
For the first time, Elena sneaks out
to help us rescue
cocuyos
.
Dogs and goats follow Fredrika
while she ransoms captive fireflies
and turns them loose.
Elena tells Fredrika that animals
follow her because she feeds them
from her bag of bananas and cookies,
but Fredrika insists
that friendly creatures follow her
simply because they know
that she believes
all animals have souls.
Without even trying to be a teacher,
Fredrika is teaching us,
showing us how to see things in new ways
instead of always thinking
the same old tired thoughts
that have been passed along by strangers
day after day, year after year
without any spirit of amazement
or wonder.
I embroider until my eyes turn red.
I sew with excitement and energy.
My fingers hurt, and my shoulders ache
from bending over my embroidery hoop,
pretending to feel great enthusiasm
for my hope chest.
Mamá is delighted.
She had worried that I might
become lazy
as the year of my marriage
grows closer.
If she knew my secret plan,
she would slap me, or weep.
Fredrika will soon know my plan.
I need her help.
We must work together.
She cannot refuse.
Poor deluded Mamá.
She loves me, but her dreams
and mine are like two islands
separated by the waves
of a deep sea.
I won't be in Cuba much longer.
There was a time when I imagined
that I would be happy
living in any land
blessed with winter sun,
but now I know
that even though I still think of this island
as one of the outer courts of Paradiseâ
an Eden of natural beautyâ
I could not bear to stay here
in the presence of slavery's
dreadful sadness.
Isn't life sorrowful enough
in places without slavery,
where so many men
treat the women
of their own families
like possessions of wood or stone,
useful objects
without souls?
Each embroidery stitch feels
like a step,
as if I am walking outdoors
in sunlight.
To buy more cloth and thread,
I ride in the swift
volanta
carriage
with Mamá.
She makes me sit up front
right behind Beni and his horseâ
in the
niña bonita
seat â the “pretty girl” seat
where rich men can see me
and fall in love.
Mamá does not allow me
to set foot on the street
where my satin shoes
would get dirty.
So we stay in the carriage
while shopkeepers rush out
with an array of silver trays
bearing samples
of colorful fabrics
for us to see
and touch.
I choose silk
that feels like water
and linen that looks
like morning light
and satin as shiny as stars
and an exotic cloth
with sparkly threads
that make me think
of fireflies.
I ask Mamá to let me buy
pearls and jewels
so I can sew them into the centers
of all my embroidered flowers.
She is thrilled at the chance
to spend money so freely,
buying luxuries
the way other people
buy precious handfuls
of beans and rice.
Elena tells me she has a secret plan.
I have no idea what she means,
and she will not explain.
She knows I cannot read,
so she reads out loud from her journal
where she has written about Fredrika,
who told her that if she owns slaves
when she grows up
she will always have to live
with the temptation
of taking out her temper
on those who do her no harm.
Elena is rich, so I cannot imagine
how she could ever avoid
owning slaves.
She would have to run away with a poor man
and live in a hut, sweeping the dirt floor
and hoeing weeds
in a garden of wildflowers
and hunger.
Today I will explain
my thrilling plan
to dear Fredrika,
and I will boldly
ask her to help.
I wonder what she talks about
when she is alone with Cecilia
wandering outdoors so freely
like men
or boys?
Do they know that I feel
like I could go mad
cooped up in this house
like a songbird
in a cage?
Am I selfish
to long for the freedom
to explore?
Shouldn't I just be thinking
about helping Cecilia
who has no freedom
at all?
Elena's idea
is enchanting!
She has learned
how to dream
of a magical world
without masters