Soon, however, the little bee’s
despair yielded to a definite resolve. It was
as though she once more called to mind that she was
a bee.
“Here I am weeping and wailing,”
she thought, “as if I had no brains and as if
I were a weakling. Oh, I’m not much of an
honor to my people and my queen. They are in
danger. I am doomed anyhow. So since death
is certain one way or another, I may as well be proud
and brave and do everything I can to try to save them.”
It was as though Maya had completely
forgotten the long time that had passed since she
left her home. More strongly than ever she felt
herself one of her people; and the great responsibility
that suddenly devolved upon her, through the knowledge
of the hornets’ plot, filled her with fine courage
and determination.
“If my people are to be vanquished
and killed, I want to be killed, too. But first
I must do everything in my power to save them.”
“Long live my queen!” she cried.
“Quiet in there!” clanged harshly from
the outside.
Ugh, what an awful voice!
The watchman making his rounds. Then it
was already late in the night.
As soon as the watchman’s footsteps
had died away, Maya began to widen the chink through
which she had peeped into the hall. It was easy
to bite away the brittle stuff of the partition, though
it took some time before the opening was large enough
to admit her body. At length, in the full knowledge
that discovery would cost her her life, she squeezed
through into the hall. From remote depths of
the fortress echoed the sound of loud snoring.
The hall lay in a subdued blue light
that found its way in through the distant entrance.
“The moonlight!” Maya
said to herself. She began to creep cautiously
toward the exit, cowering close in the deep shadows
of the walls, until she reached the high, narrow passageway
that led from the hall to the opening through which
the light shone. She heaved a deep sigh.
Far, far away glimmered a star.
“Liberty!” she thought.
The passageway was quite bright.
Softly, stepping oh so very softly, Maya crept on.
The portal came nearer and nearer.
“If I fly now,” she thought,
“I’ll be out in one dash.” Her
heart pounded as if ready to burst.
But there in the shadow of the doorway
stood a sentinel leaning against a column.
Maya stood still, rooted to the spot.
Vanished all her hopes. Gone the chance of escape.
There was no getting by that formidable figure.
What was she to do? Best go back where she had
come from. But the sight of the giant in the doorway
held her in a spell. He seemed to be lost in
revery. He stood gazing out upon the moon-washed
landscape, his head tilted slightly forward, his chin
propped on his hand. How his golden cuirass gleamed
in the moonlight! Something in the way he stood
there stirred the little bee’s emotions.
“He looks so sad,” she
thought. “How handsome he is, how superbly
he holds himself, how proudly his armor shines!
He never removes it, neither by day nor by night.
He is always ready to rob and fight and die....”
Little Maya quite forgot that this
man was her enemy. Ah, how often the same thing
had happened to her that the goodness of
her heart and her delight in beauty made her lose all
sense of danger.
A golden dart of light shot from the
bandit’s helmet. He must have turned his
head.
“My God,” whispered Maya, “this
is the end of me!”
But the sentinel said quietly:
“Just come here, child.”
“What!” cried Maya. “You saw
me?”
“All the time, child. You
bit a hole through the wall, then you crept along crept
along tucking yourself very neatly into
the dark places until you reached the spot
where you’re standing. Then you saw me,
and you lost heart. Am I right?”
“Yes,” said Maya, “quite
right.” Her whole body shook with terror.
The sentinel, then, had seen her the entire time.
She remembered having heard how keen were the senses
of these clever freebooters.
“What are you doing here?” he asked good-humoredly.
Maya still thought he looked sad.
His mind seemed to be far away and not to concern
itself with what was of such moment to her.
“I’d like to get out,”
she answered. “And I’m not afraid.
I was just startled. You looked so strong and
handsome, and your armor shone so. Now I’ll
fight you.”
The sentinel, slightly astonished,
leaned forward, and looked at Maya and smiled.
It was not an ugly smile, and Maya experienced an
entirely new feeling: the young warrior’s
smile seemed to exercise a mysterious power over her
heart.
“No, little one,” he said
almost tenderly, “you and I won’t fight.
You bees belong to a powerful nation, but man for man
we hornets are stronger. To do single battle
with a bee would be beneath our dignity. If you
like you may stay here a little while and chat.
But only a little while. Soon I’ll have
to wake the soldiers up; then, back to your cell you
must go.”
How curious! The hornet’s
lofty friendliness disarmed Maya more than anger or
hate could have done. The feeling with which he
inspired her was almost admiration. With great
sad eyes she looked up at her enemy, and constrained,
as always, to follow the impulses of her heart, she
said:
“I have always heard bad things
about hornets. But you are not bad. I can’t
believe you’re bad.”
The warrior looked at Maya.
“There are good people and bad
people everywhere,” he said, gravely. “But
you mustn’t forget we are your enemies, and shall
always remain your enemies.”
“Must an enemy always be bad?”
asked Maya. “Before, when you were looking
out into the moonlight, I forgot that you were hard
and dangerous. You seemed sad, and I have always
thought that people who were sad couldn’t possibly
be wicked.”
The sentinel said nothing, and Maya
continued more boldly:
“You are powerful. If you
want to, you can put me back in my cell, and I’ll
have to die. But you can also set me free if
you want to.”
At this the warrior drew himself up.
His armor clanked, and the arm he raised shone in
the moonlight.
But the moonlight was turning dimmer
in the passageway. Was dawn coming already?
“You are right,” he said.
“I can. My people and my queen have entrusted
me with this power. My orders are that no bee
who has set foot in this fortress shall leave it alive.
I shall keep faith with my people.”
After a pause he added softly as if
to himself: “I have learned by bitter experience
how faithlessness can hurt when Loveydear
forsook me....”
Little Maya was overcome. She
did not know what to say. Ah, the same sentiments
moved her, too love of her own kind, loyalty
to her people. Nothing to be done here but to
use force or strategy. Each did his duty, and
yet each remained an enemy to the other.
But hadn’t the sentinel mentioned
a name? Hadn’t he said something about
someone’s having been unfaithful to him?
Loveydear why, she knew Loveydear the
beautiful dragon-fly who lived at the lakeside among
the waterlilies.
Maya quivered with excitement.
Here, perhaps, was her salvation. But she wasn’t
quite sure how much good her knowledge would be to
her. So she said prudently:
“Who is Loveydear, if I may ask?”
“Never mind, little one.
She’s not your affair, and she’s lost
to me forever. I shall never find her again.”
“I know Miss Loveydear.”
Maya forced herself to put the utmost indifference
into her tone. “She belongs to the family
of dragon-flies and she’s the loveliest lady
of all.”
A tremendous change came over the
warrior. He seemed to have forgotten where he
was. He leapt over to Maya’s sides as if
blown by a violent gust.
“What! You know Loveydear?
Tell me where she is. Tell me, right away.”
“No.”
Maya spoke quietly and firmly; she glowed with secret
delight.
“I’ll bite your head off
if you don’t tell.” The warrior drew
dangerously close.
“It will be bitten off anyhow.
Go ahead. I shan’t betray the lovely dragon-fly.
She’s a close friend of mine.... You want
to imprison her.”
The warrior breathed hard. In
the gathering dawn Maya could see that his forehead
was pale and his eyes tragic with the inner struggle
he was waging.
“Good God!” he said wildly.
“It’s time to rouse the soldiers.
No, no, little bee, I don’t want to harm Loveydear.
I love her, more dearly than my life. Tell me
where I shall find her again.”
Maya was clever. She purposely
hesitated before she said:
“But I love my life.”
“If you tell me where Loveydear
lives” Maya could see that the sentinel
spoke with difficulty and was trembling all over
“I’ll set you free. You can fly wherever
you want.”
“Will you keep your word?”
“My word of honor as a brigand,” said
the sentinel proudly.
Maya could scarcely speak. But,
if she was to be in time to warn her people of the
attack, every moment counted. Her heart exulted.
“Very well,” she said,
“I believe you. Listen, then. Do you
know the ancient linden-trees near the castle?
Beyond them lies one meadow after another, and finally
comes a big lake. In a cove at the south end
where the brook empties into the lake the waterlilies
lie spread out on the water in the sunlight. Near
them, in the rushes, is where Loveydear lives.
You’ll find her there every day at noon when
the sun is high in the heavens.”
The warrior had pressed both hands
to his pale brow. He seemed to be having a desperate
struggle with himself.
“You’re telling the truth,”
he said softly and groaned, whether from joy or pain
it was impossible to tell. “She told me
she wanted to go where there were floating white flowers.
Those must be the flowers you speak of. Fly away,
then. I thank you.”
And actually he stepped aside from the entrance.
Day was breaking.
“A brigand keeps his word,” he said.
Not knowing that Maya had overheard
the deliberations in the council chamber, he told
himself that one small bee more or less made little
difference. Weren’t there hundreds of others?
“Good-by,” cried Maya,
breathless with haste, and flew off without a word
of thanks.
As a matter of fact, there was no time to spare.