axis
Fair Use Notice
  Axis Mission
 About us
  Letters/Articles to Editor
Article Submissions
RSS Feed


The Day of the Cicadas Printer friendly page Print This
By Dady Chery, Axis of Logic
Axis of Logic
Thursday, Jul 1, 2010

The Day of the Cicadas
By Dady Chery
(photos below)

Mind you, this was subtle.  But somehow I noticed the small turquoise mass oozing from the car's front tire like a line of toothpaste.  It was roughly cylindrical, about half an inch wide and one inch long, tucked behind the tire, near to the ground.  So easy to kill, but a coincidence had prepared me for it.  A week ago, while I watched a Monarch and a Queen butterfly cavort around each other in a public garden, a woman next to me talked about a friend who collected marvellous photos of insects and was awash with excitement during their last phone conversation, because she had discovered in her garden what I just found behind the car's right front tire.  I had listened then, amazed, half wishing that I might make a similar discovery and half knowing that I probably never would.

Once my husband knew what I was observing, without a word he brought me my rolling gardener's bench.  I would be a while.  It should have been a morning like any other, but this was no more true for me now than for this cicada emerging from his shell.  The first things one could discern were the large eyes that popped out of the animal's downturned head.  This is obviously someone who relies too much on his sense of sight.  So human, I thought, though this kin hardly looked it.  Patience... patience.  After the head came the torso.  Initially this appeared to be a solid mass with ridges, but gradually it gained the aspect of a sturdy chest with several pairs of limbs.  These long, articulated, turquoise legs slowly began to reach for something.  Yes, there it was:  the hollowed leg of the spent exoskeleton, now held with such tenderness as to remind me that I was intruding on a solemn moment.  Dear mother... I thought.  Perhaps this being, who had faded and returned in ways men can only fantasize about, was saying thank you and goodbye to another life - remembering and letting go.  Had there been friends?  Pleasures?  There would be flight now, the sun, and love.

The abdomen and wings would be last.  The wings started small and somewhat crumpled, but slowly they smoothed out into a pair of clear, turquoise-veined leaves.  Would he fly soon?  The thought had barely passed my head when another, more mature, black-veined cicada buzzed in a nearby patch of grass, as if to practice his flight muscles.  I offered him a twig.  The speed with which he accepted this surprised me. "What took you so long?  Yes, just the thing." he might have said.  The wings, clear of the grass on their next effort transported him yards away and up onto a high branch of a large oak.

I extended the same stick toward my turquoise friend.  He too took it, but slowly, and he did not fly.  There would be yet more preliminaries to this first flight.  I placed him gently in the grass, well away from the car's dangers.  Again, he reached for something.  I brought him his shell.  Then I kept still.

Mind you, this was subtle.  But somehow I noticed the small turquoise mass oozing from the car's front tire like a line of toothpaste.  It was roughly cylindrical, about half an inch wide and one inch long, tucked behind the tire, near to the ground.  So easy to kill, but a coincidence had prepared me for it. 

It should have been a morning like any other, but this was no more true for me now than for this cicada emerging from his shell.  The first things one could discern were the large eyes that popped out of the animal's downturned head. This is obviously someone who relies too much on his sense of sight.  So human, I thought, though this kin hardly looked it.

Initially this appeared to be a solid mass with ridges, but gradually it gained the aspect of a sturdy chest with several pairs of limbs.  These long, articulated, turquoise legs slowly began to reach for something.  Yes, there it was:  the hollowed leg of the spent exoskeleton, now held with such tenderness as to remind me that I was intruding on a solemn moment. 

The abdomen and wings would be last.  The wings started small and somewhat crumpled, but slowly they smoothed out into a pair of clear, turquoise-veined leaves.  Would he fly soon? 

READ HER BIO AND MORE BY HAITIAN AUTHOR, DADY CHERY

© Copyright 2014 by AxisofLogic.com

This material is available for republication as long as reprints include verbatim copy of the article in its entirety, respecting its integrity. Reprints must cite the author and Axis of Logic as the original source including a "live link" to the article. Thank you!


Printer friendly page Print This
If you appreciated this article, please consider making a donation to Axis of Logic. We do not use commercial advertising or corporate funding. We depend solely upon you, the reader, to continue providing quality news and opinion on world affairs.Donate here




World News
AxisofLogic.com© 2003-2015
Fair Use Notice  |   Axis Mission  |  About us  |   Letters/Articles to Editor  | Article Submissions |   Subscribe to Ezine   | RSS Feed  |