Beth A. Fleisher
Hour 9
Prompt 9: Write a poem containing at least five of the following ten words. If you want it can include all ten words. If this prompt seems at all familiar, it is probably because we do it every year, just with different words. XFirefly. XBottle. XMask. XPorridge. XZoom. XLethargy. XTreeline. XHeat. XStrange. XCottage
Strange Firefly
Pandemic, Day 146
I’ve been at my Grandmother’s cottage
since Day 1. What started as a weekend visit
has become a trudge of endless days.
At least I don’t have to worry about wearing
a mask here, like I see all my friends doing on Zoom.
Grandma Jeannie lives by herself on a small
private island off the coast of Washington state.
Her A-frame cottage stands in a small, natural meadow,
surrounded by a treeline of old growth Douglas fir.
Contact with the outside world is limited to
the red dinghy that arrives the first week
of every month with her supplies.
I normally love being here, but today, lethargy
overtook my normal good spirits.
Surprising, because it was Supply Day,
and Grandma had ordered two giant pizzas
from town, one Classic Pepperoni,
the other, a Meat Lovers Special, both my faves.
But to me, it might as well have been
tasteless porridge.
After trying to get me to eat, with no success,
even Grandma Jeannie was done with
my “lazy yellow dog” attitude.
“Here,” she said, handing me a large glass bottle
with a pointed top, “Go catch some fireflies.”
I looked into her snappy brown eyes.
She didn’t look crazy, but who knew?
She held the bottle out to me, shaking it insistently,
and I reluctantly took it. And almost dropped it
because of the heat radiating from the glass to my fingers.
Whoa, what the..?
After a second, the heat diminished to a comforting
warmth, and I went outside.
I knew what fireflies were and what they looked like.
Hadn’t I been coming here my whole life? But I’d never
tried to actually catch any until tonight. When we were kids,
my brother Bob did that, but not me. I thought it was dumb.
I sighed deeply. I knew Grandma Jeannie well enough to know
I couldn’t go back until I had caught at least one firefly.
There were dozens dancing through the air, blinking on and off,
putting on quite a light show. Should be easy, I thought.
Then I saw this one totally strange firefly. And I mean strange!
It was probably three times bigger than any of the others,
and it separated from the bunch? Flock? Whatever… and
flew right up to me. It lit on the very top of the bottle,
bright green light flashing on and off, wings folded.
Why hadn’t I taken the top off the bottle?
The strange, green firefly looked at me … winked, and smiled.
That’s when I knew that life was about to get
much more interesting at Grandma Jeannie’s cottage.