The Fireflies Returned Last Night
A quick note from the cottage porch: This journal entry contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. If you use these links to gather your supplies from Amazon or Walmart, a small commission floats back to the cottage to keep the kettle boiling, at no extra cost to you.
New to Moonbeam Cottage?
Last week, Maeve spotted the season’s first fireflies drifting through the lantern flowers, and summer began arriving one tiny light at a time.
Start with: The First Fireflies
Last night, the fireflies returned to Moonbeam Cottage.
Not all at once.
Just a few at first.
Tiny lanterns drifting through the garden as twilight settled over the cottage and the evening air began to cool.

I nearly missed them.
I had every intention of spending the evening being responsible.
There was a list involved.
There is almost always a list involved.
The plan was simple enough: make tea, tidy the kitchen, answer a few things I had been avoiding, and perhaps organize the stack of books currently pretending to be a side table.
Instead, I carried my tea onto the porch and noticed a single flash of gold near the herb garden.
Then another.
And another.
Before long, the garden was blinking with tiny lights.
The fireflies had returned.
Naturally, all productivity was canceled immediately.

The tea went cold beside me.
The list remained exactly where I had left it.
The books continued their side-table impersonation without interruption.
I sat on the porch steps and watched the garden glow.
Some moments feel far too small to matter until you are standing inside them.
A warm evening.
A quiet garden.
Tiny lights drifting through the dusk.
The distant sound of crickets beginning their nightly orchestra.
Nothing remarkable happened.
And somehow it felt important anyway.

Smokey joined me eventually.
By “joined me,” I mean he appeared from somewhere mysterious, sat down heavily beside the porch railing, and spent several minutes staring at the fireflies with profound suspicion.
He seemed unconvinced that insects should glow.
To be fair, he may have a point.
Still, he stayed.
Which I believe counts as an endorsement.
The longer we sat there, the darker the sky became.
The lantern by the door flickered softly behind us.
The first stars appeared overhead.
The tea became increasingly decorative.
The fireflies continued their quiet little celebration.
There is something comforting about seasonal things returning.
The first fireflies.
The first porch evenings that stretch a little later than planned.
The first reminders that summer has arrived whether or not you’ve finished all the things you thought you would finish by now.

The garden never seems particularly concerned about unfinished to-do lists.
The fireflies certainly aren’t.
Perhaps that is part of their magic.
They arrive carrying no expectations at all.
Just light.
Just wonder.
Just a gentle reminder to look up from whatever feels urgent for a little while.
Eventually the fireflies drifted deeper into the garden.
The stars grew brighter.
Smokey decided the evening had gone on long enough and headed indoors in search of a more reasonable activity, such as sleeping.
I followed a few minutes later.
The tea was cold.
The list was unfinished.
The kitchen remained exactly as I had left it.

And somehow the evening felt wonderfully successful.
Firefly Season has officially begun at Moonbeam Cottage.
I suspect the tea will continue going cold for the foreseeable future.
And honestly?
That seems perfectly acceptable.

