Just In Case

by Holly Day

If one was not familiar with this part of Kansas, one might suspect 
that the women here long for summertime all year long. One might mistake 
the gigantic, bright-colored butterflies adorning the faded houses 
their wingspans reaching over three feet across at times 

as an homage to the real butterflies so rarely seen this far from the countryside 
fondly remembered by those who grew up on farms, or old enough to recollect 
that once there was not a town here. They might not suspect that the gigantic butterflies  
are there to both hide great swaths of peeling exterior paint and as a tribute 

to a transmorphic deity who also emerged from a cocoon of flesh 
whose name is whispered constantly under breath  
by huddled housewives convinced the end is coming any at moment.