Her adventure with the spider gave
Maya something to think about. She made up her
mind to be more cautious in the future, not to rush
into things so recklessly. Cassandra’s prudent
warnings about the greatest dangers that threaten the
bees, were enough to give one pause; and there were
all sorts of other possibilities, and the world was
such a big place oh, there was a good deal
to make a little bee stop and think.
It was in the evening particularly,
when twilight fell and the little bee was all by herself,
that one consideration after another stirred her mind.
But the next morning, if the sun shone, she usually
forgot half the things that had bothered her the night
before, and allowed her eagerness for experiences to
drive her out again into the gay whirl of life.
One day she met a very curious creature.
It was angular and flat as a pancake, but had a rather
neat design on its sheath; and whether its sheath
were wings or what, you couldn’t really tell.
The odd little monster sat absolutely still on the
shaded leaf of a raspberry bush, its eyes half closed,
apparently sunk in meditation. The scent of the
raspberries spread around it deliciously. Maya
wanted to find out what sort of an animal it was.
She flew to the next-door leaf and said how-do-you-do.
The stranger made no reply.
“How do you do, again?”
And Maya gave its leaf a little tap. The flat
object peeled one eye open, turned it on Maya, and
said:
“A bee. The world is full
of bees,” and closed its eye again.
“Unique,” thought Maya,
and determined to get at the stranger’s secret.
For now it excited her curiosity more than ever, as
people often do who pay no attention to us. She
tried honey. “I have plenty of honey,”
she said. “May I offer you some?”
The stranger opened its one eye and regarded Maya
contemplatively a moment or two. “What
is it going to say this time?” Maya wondered.
This time there was no answer at all.
The one eye merely closed again, and the stranger
sat quite still, tight on the leaf, so that you couldn’t
see its legs and you’d have thought it had been
pressed down flat with a thumb.
Maya realized, of course, that the
stranger wanted to ignore her, but you
know how it is you don’t like being
snubbed, especially if you haven’t found out
what you wanted to find out. It makes you feel
so cheap.
“Whoever you are,” cried
Maya, “permit me to inform you that insects
are in the habit of greeting each other, especially
when one of them happens to be a bee.”
The bug sat on without budging. It did not so
much as open its one eye again. “It’s
ill,” thought Maya. “How horrid to
be ill on a lovely day like this. That’s
why it’s staying in the shade, too.”
She flew over to the bug’s leaf and sat down
beside it. “Aren’t you feeling well?”
she asked, so very friendly.
At this the funny creature began to
move away. “Move” is the only word
to use, because it didn’t walk, or run, or fly,
or hop. It went as if shoved by an invisible
hand.
“It hasn’t any legs.
That’s why it’s so cross,” thought
Maya.
When it reached the stem of the leaf
it stopped a second, moved on again, and, to her astonishment,
Maya saw that it had left behind a little brown drop.
“How very singular,”
she thought and clapped her hand to her
nose and held it tight shut. The veriest stench
came from the little brown drop. Maya almost
fainted. She flew away as fast as she could and
seated herself on a raspberry, where she held on to
her nose and shivered with disgust and excitement.
“Serves you right,” someone
above her called, and laughed. “Why take
up with a stink-bug?”
“Don’t laugh!” cried Maya.
She looked up. A white butterfly
had alighted overhead on a slender, swaying branch
of the raspberry bush, and was slowly opening and
closing its broad wings slowly, softly,
silently, happy in the sunshine black corners
to its wings, round black marks in the centre of each
wing, four round black marks in all. Ah, how
beautiful, how beautiful! Maya forgot her vexation.
And she was glad, too, to talk to the butterfly.
She had never made the acquaintance of one before
even though she had met a great many.
“Oh,” she said, “you
probably are right to laugh. Was that a stink-bug?”
“It was,” he replied,
still smiling. “The sort of person to keep
away from. You’re probably very young still?”
“Well,” observed Maya,
“I shouldn’t say I was exactly.
I’ve been through a great deal. But that
was the first specimen of the kind I had ever come
across. Can you imagine doing such a thing?”
The butterfly had to laugh again.
“You see,” he explained,
“stink-bugs like to keep to themselves.
They are not very popular, so they use the odoriferous
drop to make people take notice of them. We’d
probably soon forget the fact of their existence if
it were not for the drop: it serves as a reminder.
And they want to be remembered, no matter how.”
“How lovely, how exquisitely
lovely your wings are,” said Maya. “So
delicate and white. May I introduce myself?
Maya, of the nation of bees.”
The butterfly laid his wings together
to look like only one wing standing straight up in
the air. He gave a slight bow.
“Fred,” he said laconically.
Maya couldn’t gaze her fill.
“Fly a little,” she asked.
“Shall I fly away?”
“Oh no. I just want to
see your great white wings move in the blue air.
But never mind. I can wait till later. Where
do you live?”
“Nowhere specially. A settled
home is too much of a nuisance. Life didn’t
get to be really delightful until I turned into a
butterfly. Before that, while I was still a caterpillar,
I couldn’t leave the cabbage the livelong day,
and all one did was eat and squabble.”
“Just what do you mean?” asked Maya, mystified.
“I used to be a caterpillar,” explained
Fred.
“Never!” cried Maya.
“Now, now, now,” said
Fred, pointing both feelers straight at Maya.
“Everyone knows a butterfly is first a caterpillar.
Even human beings know it.”
Maya was utterly perplexed. Could such a thing
be?
“You must really explain more
clearly,” she said. “I couldn’t
accept what you say just so, could I? You wouldn’t
expect me to.”
The butterfly perched beside the little
bee on the slender swaying branch of the raspberry
bush, and they rocked together in the morning wind.
He told her how he had begun life as a caterpillar
and then, one day, when he had shed his last caterpillar
skin, he came out a pupa or chrysalis.
“At the end of a few weeks,”
he continued, “I woke up out of my dark sleep
and broke through the wrappings or pupa-case.
I can’t tell you, Maya, what a feeling comes
over you when, after a time like that, you suddenly
see the sun again. I felt as though I were melting
in a warm golden ocean, and I loved my life so that
my heart began to pound.”
“I understand,” said Maya,
“I understand. I felt the same way the
first time I left our humdrum city and flew out into
the bright scented world of blossoms.”
The little bee was silent a while, thinking of her
first flight. But then she wanted to know
how the butterfly’s large wings could grow in
the small space of the pupa-case.
Fred explained.
“The wings are delicately folded
together like the petals of a flower in the bud.
When the weather is bright and warm, the flower must
open, it cannot help itself, and its petals unfold.
So with my wings, they were folded up, then unfolded.
No one can resist the sun when it shines.”
“No, no one cannot one
cannot resist the sunshine.” Maya mused,
watching the butterfly as he perched in the golden
light of the morning, pure white against the blue
sky.
“People often charge us with
being frivolous,” said Fred. “We’re
really happy just that just happy.
You wouldn’t believe how seriously I sometimes
think about life.”
“Tell me what all you think.”
“Oh,” said Fred, “I
think about the future. It’s very interesting
to think about the future. But I should
like to fly now. The meadows on the hillside
are full of yarrow and canterbury bells; everything’s
in bloom. I’d like to be there, you know.”
This Maya understood, she understood
it well, and they said good-by and flew away in different
directions, the white butterfly rocking silently as
if wafted by the gentle wind, little Maya with that
uneasy zoom-zoom of the bees which we hear upon the
flowers on fair days and which we always recall when
we think of the summer.