Read The Firefly Letters Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
Cecilia and Fredrika live
in a hut in our garden, but they dine
in the big house with us,
and I must say that the Swedish lady
eats like a castaway
right after the long-awaited rescue
from starvation.
Fredrika tells us that her mother
never allowed her to eat her fill.
She was expected to be as thin and graceful
as a ballet dancer,
even though her natural shape
is sturdy and strong.
Hunger drove her to steal
strawberry cream cake from the pantry.
Anger made her toss her gloves into the fire.
Once, after writing a poem about the moon,
she burned it, because she knew
that nothing she did could ever be good enough
to please her stern mother.
On the coldest, darkest night
of Sweden's long winter,
I used to dress up as the Queen of Light,
with pine branches and candles
balanced on my head.
I walked carefully
to avoid setting my hair on fire
as I carried the traditional gift
of saffron buns to my parents.
I was ravenous, but I was permitted only
to keep half of one spicy golden pastry
for myself, even though girls
in other, more humble homes
were allowed to feast
during that midwinter celebration
of hope for spring.
I knew that I could not survive
as a half-starved rich girl
for the rest of my life.
Roaming the world
has been my escape.
My husband is a young man
of my own tribe.
He was chosen for me
by Elena's father.
His name is Beni
and he is a postillion,
a skilled horseman who rides
the fancy mare that pulls Elena's
swift high-wheeled volanta carriage
down the cobblestone street
whenever Elena and her mother
go out to buy silk and pearls
for her hope chest.
Perhaps, if I had been free
to choose Beni myself,
I might know how to love him,
but he is a stranger,
and now that I am living
in a cottage with Fredrika,
I hardly see my husband at all.
Out in the garden
lit by
cocuyos
I feel unattached
if not free.
I feel like a young girl again,
unmarried and skinny,
with a flat belly
that has never
known the kick
of an impatient baby
so eager
to be born
into this world
of confusion.
If I had been free
to choose my own wife,
I would have married the girl
I loved so long ago
before I was captured
by men with guns
who carried me to this island,
a world of noble horses
and human hatred.
I ride with my back straight
and my hands gentle
so my trusting mount will know
that I am balanced and alert,
a rider who will never allow a horse
to stumble and fall.
I cannot protect myself
from the sorrows of this world,
but I can guide any horse
that is placed in my care.
Fredrika tells me she was in love
with a country preacher in her homeland.
He asked her to marry him, but she said no
because she felt certain that as a wife
she would lose her freedom to roam.
Travel is the magic
that allows her to write
about the lives of women
whose husbands think of them
as property
instead of people.
Fredrika says stories can lead
to a change in laws.
I am glad that Fredrika
has chosen to write
about Cuba
and slavery.
When Elena visits us in the cottage,
we take turns leafing
through Fredrika's sketchbook.
Some of the drawings are pictures
of famous people Fredrika met
while she was traveling in North Americaâ
poets named Emerson
and Longfellow.
Some are pictures of Fredrika's friends
in Europe: the Queen of Denmark
and a wonderful storyteller
named Hans Christian Andersen
who is in love with a famous singer,
Jenny Lind, the Swedish Nightingale,
even though he knows
that the singer will never love him.
There are pictures of slaves
in the United States.
Fredrika admits that, until she saw
the United States of America
with her own eyes,
she imagined she might find paradise
in the land of Emerson
and Longfellow.
Instead, she found the slave market
in New Orleans, with a schoolhouse
right beside it
where children were singing
about the Land of the Free
while, just outside
their classroom window,
other children
were bought and sold
or traded
like stolen cows.
Cuban fireflies are the most amazing