# Where the Cicadas Sing **by Anna Robertson** We live where their shells litter the land, where their songs spice the hot air. Roaring and deafening little insects sweetening our summers like lemon to cold, bitter tea. This is where we are from, you and me. But up where the corn scrawls across flat fields, where fat firs and thin pines thrive, it is so quiet one could sense the clatter of a pin against cracked concrete, the unfurling of a patterned quilt, the wind’s soft sighs of frustration. No cicadas sing in this northern town. Only when we returned to the rocks, the hills, and the heat did we notice their absence those three long and dreadful days. Is it right? The truck rattles like a thousand cicada wings, cliffs crawl beneath armies of old oak trees. Finally, familiarity is what we see, for our hearts hound the hum of many dying bugs calling us back home.