People tell me they don’t have stinkbugs. Is this true? This can’t be true. Is the situation worse here? Is it because we live in the woods?
They
seem to travel in pairs. A little stinker will be lurking under a leaf
of my Aloe vera, just its antlers and kneecaps visible. I’ll look around
for the other, and, sure enough, it’s plastered against the window,
deep in meditation.
I’m reading,
late, and out of nowhere one will dive-bomb through the lamplight, past
my head. In the yawning, early sunlit hours one comes stepping across
the covers toward my pillow. Like it has the right.
Many lie dead around the house, except sometimes when I pick one up its legs wave weakly.
My
husband, who knows these things, says the bugs are non-native. In the
objective, unbigoted sense of the word, they’re aliens, truly. And in my
mind, wherever they came from, they’re spying. They’re collecting data.
Beneath their hard little armored shells, they’re plotting.
In
the days ahead I will speak of small disdains and large—and the
sublimity nevertheless. But these insects? Where’s the good? What place
have they on God’s green earth?
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