An offering of flash fiction where a natural remembrance helps a daughter recall the good that resided within her father…
by: John Brantingham
Stephanie goes out back with her morning coffee to find her milkweed bush covered with September monarchs preparing for their long flight back to Mexico. She’s instantly transported to her earliest memory of her father, back from World War II. They’re seeing each other for the first time. It was the season of monarchs then too, and they had a milkweed bush covered in butterflies like now. Her father had snapped off a branch and handed it to her. He told her it was a magic wand, that this is how you made magic wands, with the joy of butterflies, and he had her go around the house and garden making wishes. He asked her if she wanted an ice cream sundae, and she said that she did, and he said that she should use her wand, and she did, and still in his uniform, he made her one. Later, he would deal with anger and alcohol and nightmares and everything that people who have lived through war experience, but what she remembers is that at the center of him was a person who just loved his child. Today, she snaps off a wand, the butterflies rising in a cloud around her. She would wish for something, but she realizes that what she wants is this — this moment alone with her father all these decades later.
John Brantingham is the recipient of a New York State Arts Council grant and was Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks’ first poet laureate. His work has been in hundreds of magazines and The Best Small Fictions 2016 and 2022. He has twenty-two books of poetry, nonfiction, and fiction. Check out his work at johnbrantingham.com.