Enjambre May 2026
Then, as if a switch has been thrown, the hum changes pitch. It rises. The beard on the branch shivers, loosens, and explodes back into a cloud. The enjambre lifts, a torn piece of shadow peeling away from the world. It drifts over the fence, past the neighbor’s chimney, and dissolves into the haze above the treeline.
Inside the house, you press a palm against the window glass. It vibrates. The swarm on the oak tree outside is a fractal storm, each insect a neuron firing in a massive, unconscious brain. They have no queen here, not yet. They are an interregnum, a republic of pure instinct searching for a home. They taste the air with their antennae, sampling the pheromones of panic and pollen. enjambre
To watch a swarm settle is to witness a kind of violence. They do not land; they collapse onto the branch, each insect grappling for purchase, forming a pendulous beard of chitin and industry. The branch groans under a weight that seems impossible for such small things. The sun is occluded. The world behind them becomes a dappled, shifting darkness. Then, as if a switch has been thrown, the hum changes pitch
The word feels sticky in the mouth, a cluster of consonants that buzz against the teeth. It is not a flock, graceful and migratory. It is not a pack, bound by loyalty and fang. It is a swarm —a single mind fractured into a thousand furious bodies. Each one is negligible: a pinch of dust, a wisp of wing, a needle of intent. But together, they are a liquid. A living, churning cloud that pours itself over branches, eaves, and the forgotten bicycle in the yard. The enjambre lifts, a torn piece of shadow
And the sound. God, the sound. It is not a song. There is no melody, no soloist. It is the roar of the collective, a single, sustained note of now . It bypasses the ears and speaks directly to the ancient lizard in the base of the skull. Danger , it whispers. Safety in numbers. Run. Or stay and be consumed.
The air itself has a heartbeat.