September 9, 2024

Parasite

By L. Acadia
Photo by Владимир Кондратьев on Pexels.com

Watch her three-legged coil and pounce. Freeze. Her shake, flicking pendulant hound ears zinging into eyes blinded by kill drive, tells me she’s caught a bug—or to Milou, BUG! A neon lime flash between her chestnut and grey flews indicates a mantis she would (probably) relinquish if asked, were my thinly-soled foot willing to stomp its suffering. Instead, I shudder through her neck-snapping jerk. Chomp. Convulsive shiver against strange taste.

I watch a soul leave the fresh insect corpse in an unfurling black twitch, stiff like coarse hair slowly twisted from both ends. It is constrained until it flaps free of the mantis, shiny segments recoiling. Gathering. Seeking.

Milou curiously noses forward. I stop her, not yet aware it is Chordodes formosanus, which adopt only mantis hosts, whose nervous systems their psychotropic protein secretions control. The parasites pilot the insect to a final, fatal dive into fresh water to disgorge itself for aquatic dioecious reproduction and sacrifice its host, although mantis can swim.      

When I die, what will twist out of me? Shame, ambition, capitalist greed, puritan guilt, my parents’ dreams, my exes’ criticisms, algebraic equations, “Erlkönig” among other memorized poems, my great-aunt Bee’s crêpe recipe, aichmophobia, fantasies so repressed my living self has forgotten, earworms, bias, and patriarchy?

The river ebbs a few human steps away, across a field I now imagine springs with healthy mantis.

About the Author

L. AcadiaL. Acadia is a visiting professor at Heidelberg University, an assistant professor at National Taiwan University, Taiwan Literature Base  2024–2025 Writer-in-Residence, and best-of-the-net-nominated member of the Taipei Poetry Collective. She has published in New Flash Fiction Review, New Orleans Review, Strange Horizons, trampset, and elsewhere. Connect on Twitter and Instagram @acadialogue

Related Flash
Tree House

Candy Loving

By Len Kuntz

We were trailer park kids who stole things. Middling shit. Squirt guns. Bazooka Joe. Saltwater taffy. Licorice. Playboy magazine. Gordie was always sore. His dad tooled belts. Used them on Gordie. Buckle end to the back and shoulders. My dad was still doing years in Walla Walla. DWI. Vehicular Homicide.
Tehran skyline during an orange sunset

A fire of her own

By Pegah Ouji

“When Fatimah tugs at the peeling bark of a one-hundred-year-old eucalyptus tree, one jagged edge pierces her supple thumb, one drop of blood, red and round as Tehran’s setting sun streaking the sky red

white lily flower

A Weekly Arrangement

By Mizuki Yamagen

“I know your order by scent before I see you—lilies, always lilies, that quiet kind of white, the kind used for altars, for memorials, for weddings when people still believed in vows holding through worse.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This