I read the paragraph I’d just typed and noticed a comma
where a comma shouldn’t be. I moved the cursor up to delete it. The comma
wriggled down to the next line.
Odd.
I peered closer. The ‘comma’ was a tiny insect. I tried to blow it away. I tried to sweep it off with a sheet of paper. It didn’t budge. I leaned even closer and saw that it wasn’t on the surface of the monitor but inside, under the glass.
Odd.
I peered closer. The ‘comma’ was a tiny insect. I tried to blow it away. I tried to sweep it off with a sheet of paper. It didn’t budge. I leaned even closer and saw that it wasn’t on the surface of the monitor but inside, under the glass.
A thunderfly.
I’d never encountered these little beasts until we moved here. Our house faces fields mainly used for growing wheat and barley, which is where they (correct name is cereal thrips) spend most of their lives. The locals call them thunderflies because they swarm in the kind of hot, still weather that triggers thunderstorms.
Fortunately, they don’t bite, sting or spread disease. Their
big nuisance factor is their size, or rather, lack of size. It enables them to
get everywhere. And now one had got into my monitor and I wanted it out.
“It’s got two choices,” said the resident computer expert.
“It either finds its own way out or it’ll die in there.”
Poor little thing!
This was odder still. I hadn’t felt sorry for all the
hundreds, thousands (millions?) of thunderflies I’d brushed out of my hair,
shaken from my clothes, wiped away or sucked up the vacuum cleaner, but seeing
a lone individual wandering around right in front of me awakened my caring
instincts. Was it male or female? Was it trying to escape the strange
environment it found itself in, or was it enjoying its exploration? Was it
hungry? Thirsty? Lonely?
Suddenly, it was a complete character with a name, history
and lists of likes and dislikes. I began making up his first adventure while I
went to get a cup of coffee. When I came back – he was gone.
Now I was even more concerned. I searched along the edges of
the screen. Had he escaped and rejoined his little friends? Had he wriggled
deeper inside? He couldn’t have (gulp) gone to that big barley field in the
sky, could he?
I kept looking but I haven’t seen him again.
So if you find yourself in a cloud of black dots that makes you
feel itchy all over, please pause a moment before waging war on them. One of
them might be my thunderfly. His name is Timmy.
4 comments:
Love it! How easily we are distracted, and how near the surface our maternal instincts are.
Nevertheless, I shall continue to anihitlate every cockroach that dares to put a foot indoors.
I think even I would find it hard to empathize with a cockroach (shudder!)
Alas, poor Timmy, but in his short life he did make me smile. I've heard of Thunder flies before but I don't think I've seen them and I can imagine getting attached to one that comes so close. I love that vision of him as a comma in the wrong place. Hope the invasion is over now, especially as the weather's got cooler.
Thanks, Anne. They're only around for a few days each summer but because they are so small closing doors and windows is no defence - they get in everywhere!
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