When Maya awoke the next morning in
the corolla of a blue canterbury bell, she heard a
fine, faint rustling in the air and felt her blossom-bed
quiver as from a tiny, furtive tap-tapping. Through
the open corolla came a damp whiff of grass and earth,
and the air was quite chill. In some apprehension,
she took a little pollen from the yellow stamens,
scrupulously performed her toilet, then, warily, picking
her steps, ventured to the outer edge of the drooping
blossom. It was raining! A fine cool rain
was coming down with a light plash, covering everything
all round with millions of bright silver pearls, which
clung to the leaves and flowers, rolled down the green
paths of the blades of grass, and refreshed the brown
soil.
What a change in the world! It
was the first time in the child-bee’s young
life that she had seen rain. It filled her with
wonder; it delighted her. Yet she was a little
troubled. She remembered Cassandra’s warning
never to fly abroad in the rain. It must be difficult,
she realized, to move your wings when the drops beat
them down. And the cold really hurt, and she
missed the quiet golden sunshine that gladdened the
earth and made it a place free from all care.
It seemed to be very early still.
The animal life in the grass was just beginning.
From the concealment of her lofty bluebell Maya commanded
a splendid view of the social life coming awake beneath.
Watching it she forgot, for the moment, her anxiety
and mounting homesickness. It was too amusing
for anything to be safe in a hiding-place, high up,
and look down on the doings of the grass-dwellers
below.
Slowly, however, her thoughts went
back back to the home she had left, to
the bee-state, and to the protection of its close
solidarity. There, on this rainy day, the bees
would be sitting together, glad of the day of rest,
doing a little construction here and there on the
cells, or feeding the larvae. Yet, on the whole,
the hive was very quiet and Sunday-like when it rained.
Only, sometimes messengers would fly out to see how
the weather was and from what quarter the wind was
blowing. The queen would go about her kingdom
from story to story, testing things, bestowing a word
of praise or blame, laying an egg here and there,
and bringing happiness with her royal presence wherever
she went. She might pat one of the younger bees
on the head to show her approval of what it had already
done, or she might ask it about its new experiences.
How delighted a bee would be to catch a glance or
receive a gracious word from the queen!
Oh, thought Maya, how happy it made
you to be able to count yourself one in a community
like that, to feel that everybody respected you, and
you had the powerful protection of the state.
Here, out in the world, lonely and exposed, she ran
great risks of her life. She was cold, too.
And supposing the rain were to keep up! What
would she do, how could she find something to eat?
There was scarcely any honey-juice in the canterbury
bell, and the pollen would soon give out.
For the first time Maya realized how
necessary the sunshine is for a life of vagabondage.
Hardly anyone would set out on adventure, she thought,
if it weren’t for the sunshine. The very
recollection of it was cheering, and she glowed with
secret pride that she had had the daring to start
life on her own hook. The number of things she
had already seen and experienced! More, ever
so much more, than the other bees were likely to know
in a whole lifetime. Experience was the most
precious thing in life, worth any sacrifice, she thought.
A troop of migrating ants were passing
by, and singing as they marched through the cool forest
of grass. They seemed to be in a hurry.
Their crisp morning song, in rhythm with their march,
touched the little bee’s heart with melancholy.
Few our days on earth shall be,
Fast the moments flit;
First-class robbers such as we
Do not care a bit!
They were extraordinarily well armed
and looked saucy, bold and dangerous.
The song died away under the leaves
of the coltsfoot. But some mischief seemed to
have been done there. A rough, hoarse voice sounded,
and the small leaves of a young dandelion were energetically
thrust aside. Maya saw a corpulent blue beetle
push its way out. It looked like a half-sphere
of dark metal, shimmering with lights of blue and
green and occasional black. It may have been
two or even three times her size. Its hard sheath
looked as though nothing could destroy it, and its
deep voice positively frightened you.
The song of the soldiers, apparently,
had roused him out of sleep. He was cross.
His hair was still rumpled, and he rubbed the sleep
out of his cunning little blue eyes.
“Make way, I’m coming. Make
way.”
He seemed to think that people should
step aside at the mere announcement of his approach.
“Thank the Lord I’m not
in his way,” thought Maya, feeling very safe
in her high, swaying nook of concealment. Nevertheless
her heart went pit-a-pat, and she withdrew a little
deeper into the flower-bell.
The beetle moved with a clumsy lurch
through the wet grass, presenting a not exactly elegant
appearance. Directly under Maya’s blossom
was a withered leaf. Here he stopped, shoved the
leaf aside, and made a step backward. Maya saw
a hole in the ground.
“Well,” she thought, all
a-gog with curiosity, “the things there are
in the world. I never thought of such a thing.
Life’s not long enough for all there is to see.”
She kept very quiet. The only
sound was the soft pelting of the rain. Then
she heard the beetle calling down the hole:
“If you want to go hunting with
me, you’ll have to make up your mind to get
right up. It’s already bright daylight.”
He was feeling so very superior for having waked up
first that it was hard for him to be pleasant.
A few moments passed before the answer
came. Then Maya heard a thin, chirping voice
rise out of the hole.
“For goodness’ sake, do
close the door up there. It’s raining in.”
The beetle obeyed. He stood in
an expectant attitude, his head cocked a little to
one side, and squinted through the crack.
“Please hurry,” he grumbled.
Maya was tense with eagerness to see
what sort of a creature would come out of the hole.
She crept so far out on the edge of the blossom that
a drop of rain fell on her shoulder, and gave her
a start. She wiped herself dry.
Below her the withered leaf heaved;
a brown insect crept out, slowly. Maya thought
it was the queerest specimen she had ever seen.
It had a plump body, set on extremely thin, slow-moving
legs, and a fearfully thick head, with little upright
feelers. It looked flustered.
“Good morning, Effie dear.”
The beetle went slim with politeness. He was
all politeness, and his body seemed really slim.
“How did you sleep? How did you sleep, my
precious my all?”
Effie took his hand rather stonily.
“It can’t be, Bobbie,”
she said. “I can’t go with you.
We’re creating too much talk.”
Poor Bobbie looked quite alarmed.
“I don’t understand,”
he stammered. “I don’t understand.
Is our new-found happiness to be wrecked by such nonsense?
Effie, think think the thing over.
What do you care what people say?
You have your hole, you can creep into it whenever
you like, and if you go down far enough, you won’t
hear a syllable.”
Effie smiled a sad, superior smile.
“Bobbie, you don’t understand.
I have my own views in the matter. Besides,
there’s something else. You have been exceedingly
indelicate. You took advantage of my ignorance.
You let me think you were a rose-beetle and yesterday
the snail told me you are a tumble-bug. A considerable
difference! He saw you engaged in well,
doing something I don’t care to mention.
I’m sure you will now admit that I must take
back my word.”
Bobbie was stunned. When he recovered
from the shock he burst out angrily:
“No, I don’t understand.
I can’t understand. I want to be loved
for myself, and not for my business.”
“If only it weren’t dung,”
said Effie offishly, “anything but dung, I shouldn’t
be so particular. And please remember,
I’m a young widow who lost her husband only
three days ago under the most tragic circumstances he
was gobbled up by the shrewmouse and it
isn’t proper for me to be gadding about.
A young widow should lead a life of complete retirement.
So good-by.”
Pop into her hole went Effie, as though
a puff of wind had blown her away. Maya would
never have thought it possible that anyone could dive
into the ground as fast as that.
Effie was gone, and Bobbie stared
in blank bewilderment down the empty dark opening,
looking so utterly stupid that Maya had to laugh.
Finally he roused, and shook his small
round head in angry distress. His feelers drooped
dismally like two rain-soaked fans.
“People now-a-days no longer
appreciate fineness of character and respectability,”
he sighed. “Effie is heartless. I didn’t
dare admit it to myself, but she is, she’s absolutely
heartless. But even if she hasn’t got the
right feelings, she ought to have the good
sense to be my wife.”
Maya saw the tears come to his eyes,
and her heart was seized with pity.
But the next instant Bobbie stirred.
He wiped the tears away and crept cautiously behind
a small mound of earth, which his friend had probably
shoveled out of her dwelling. A little flesh-colored
earthworm was coming along through the grass.
It had the queerest way of propelling itself, by first
making itself long and thin, then short and thick.
Its cylinder of a body consisted of nothing but delicate
rings that pushed and groped forward noiselessly.
Suddenly, startling Maya, Bobbie made
one step out of his hiding-place, caught hold of the
worm, bit it in two, and began calmly to eat the one
half, heedless of its desperate wriggling or the wriggling
of the other half in the grass. It was a tiny
little worm.
“Patience,” said Bobbie, “it will
soon be over.”
But while he chewed, his thoughts
seemed to revert to Effie, his Effie, whom he had
lost forever and aye, and great tears rolled down
his cheeks.
Maya pitied him from the bottom of her heart.
“Dear me,” she thought,
“there certainly is a lot of sadness in the
world.”
At that moment she saw the half of
the worm which Bobbie had set aside, making a hasty
departure.
“Did you ever see the
like!” she cried, surprised into such a loud
tone that Bobbie looked around wondering where the
sound had come from.
“Make way!” he called.
“But I’m not in your way,” said
Maya.
“Where are you then? You must be somewhere.”
“Up here. Up above you. In the bluebell.”
“I believe you, but I’m
no grasshopper. I can’t turn my head up
far enough to see you. Why did you scream?”
“The half of the worm is running away.”
“Yes,” said Bobbie, looking
after the retreating fraction, “the creatures
are very lively. I’ve lost my appetite.”
With that he threw away the remnant which he was still
holding in his hand, and this worm portion also retreated,
in the other direction.
Maya was completely puzzled.
But Bobbie seemed to be familiar with this peculiarity
of worms.
“Don’t suppose that I
always eat worms,” he remarked. “You
see, you don’t find roses everywhere.”
“Tell the little one at least
which way its other half ran,” cried Maya in
great excitement.
Bobbie shook his head gravely.
“Those whom fate has rent asunder,
let no man join together again,” he observed.
“Who are you?”
“Maya, of the nation of bees.”
“I’m glad to hear it.
I have nothing against the bees. Why are
you sitting about? Bees don’t usually sit
about. Have you been sitting there long?”
“I slept here.”
“Indeed!” There was a
note of suspicion in Bobbie’s voice. “I
hope you slept well, very well. Did you
just wake up?”
“Yes,” said Maya, who
had shrewdly guessed that Bobbie would not like her
having overheard his conversation with Effie, the
cricket, and did not want to hurt his feelings again.
Bobbie ran hither and thither trying
to look up and see Maya.
“Wait,” he said.
“If I raise myself on my hind legs and lean
against that blade of grass I’ll be able to see
you, and you’ll be able to look into my eyes.
You want to, don’t you?”
“Why, I do indeed. I’d like to very
much.”
Bobbie found a suitable prop, the
stem of a buttercup. The flower tipped a little
to one side so that Maya could see him perfectly as
he raised himself on his hind legs and looked up at
her. She thought he had a nice, dear, friendly
face but not so very young any more and
cheeks rather too plump. He bowed, setting the
buttercup a-rocking, and introduced himself:
“Bobbie, of the family of rose-beetles.”
Maya had to laugh to herself.
She knew very well he was not a rose-beetle; he was
a dung-beetle. But she passed the matter over
in silence, not caring to mortify him.
“Don’t you mind the rain?” she asked.
“Oh, no. I’m accustomed
to the rain from the roses, you know.
It’s usually raining there.”
Maya thought to herself:
“After all I must punish him
a little for his brazen lies. He’s so frightfully
vain.”
“Bobbie,” she said with
a sly smile, “what sort of a hole is that one
there, under the leaf?”
Bobbie started.
“A hole? A hole, did you
say? There are very many holes round here.
It’s probably just an ordinary hole. You
have no idea how many holes there are in the ground.”
Bobbie had hardly uttered the last
word when something dreadful happened. In his
eagerness to appear indifferent he had lost his balance
and toppled over. Maya heard a despairing shriek,
and the next instant saw the beetle lying flat on
his back in the grass, his arms and legs waving pitifully
in the air.
“I’m done for,”
he wailed, “I’m done for. I can’t
get back on my feet again. I’ll never be
able to get back on my feet again. I’ll
die. I’ll die in this position. Have
you ever heard of a worse fate!”
He carried on so that he did not hear
Maya trying to comfort him. And he kept making
efforts to touch the ground with his feet. But
each time he’d painfully get hold of a bit of
earth, it would give way, and he’d fall over
again on his high half-sphere of a back. The
case looked really desperate, and Maya was honestly
concerned; he was already quite pale in the face and
his cries were heart-rending.
“I can’t stand it, I can’t
stand this position,” he yelled. “At
least turn your head away. Don’t torture
a dying man with your inquisitive stares.
If only I could reach a blade of grass, or the stem
of the buttercup. You can’t hold on to the
air. Nobody can do that. Nobody can hold
on to the air.”
Maya’s heart was quivering with pity.
“Wait,” she cried, “I’ll
try to turn you over. If I try very hard I am
bound to succeed. But Bobbie, Bobbie, dear
man, don’t yell like that. Listen to me.
If I bend a blade of grass over and reach the tip
of it to you, will you be able to use it and save
yourself?”
Bobbie had no ears for her suggestion.
Frightened out of his senses, he did nothing but kick
and scream.
So little Maya, in spite of the rain,
flew out of her cover over to a slim green blade of
grass beside Bobbie, and clung to it near the tip.
It bent under her weight and sank directly above Bobbie’s
wriggling limbs. Maya gave a little cry of delight.
“Catch hold of it,” she called.
Bobbie felt something tickle his face
and quickly grabbed at it, first with one hand, then
with the other, and finally with his legs, which had
splendid sharp claws, two each. Bit by bit he
drew himself along the blade until he reached the base,
where it was thicker and stronger, and he was able
to turn himself over on it.
He heaved a tremendous sigh of relief.
“Good God!” he exclaimed.
“That was awful. But for my presence of
mind I should have fallen a victim to your talkativeness.”
“Are you feeling better?” asked Maya.
Bobbie clutched his forehead.
“Thanks, thanks. When this
dizziness passes, I’ll tell you all about it.”
But Maya never got the answer to her
question. A field-sparrow came hopping through
the grass in search of insects, and the little bee
pressed herself close to the ground and kept very
quiet until the bird had gone. When she looked
around for Bobbie he had disappeared. So she
too made off; for the rain had stopped and the day
was clear and warm.