Eric Puchner is the author of the novel Model Home, winner of a California Book Award Silver Medal in fiction, and two story collections, Music through the Floor and Last Day on Earth. His fiction has been anthologized in Best American Short Stories, 2012 and Best American Nonrequired Reading, 2012. A recipient of an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature Puchner is an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University and he lives in Baltimore with his wife, the novelist Katharine Noel, and their two children.

Brood X

A Story

by Eric Puchner

It was the summer of the cicadas. They’d been living underground for seventeen years, but now they tunneled out of the earth and climbed the trees and telephone poles, breaking free of themselves and sprouting wings. They left their translucent shells clinging to branches, like perfect glass replicas. Overnight, it seemed, the ancient oaks bubbled and seethed and turned into enormous magic crystals. Dogs went crazy, digging in the dirt and gobbling up the white nymphs by the dozens. The sidewalks shimmered like streams. Our neighbor, Mrs. Etheridge, refused to go outside without her umbrella; the bugs rarely took flight but she’d run to the car with her head ducked down, as if pummeled by rain. We collected their shells in our shirts and made necklaces that we wore around, like witch doctors. The wings of the cicadas were amazing things, veined and delicate as a fairy’s, and we harvested them from corpses or plucked them from still-buzzing cicadas in order to frighten girls.

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