Little Maya summoned every bit of
strength and will power she had left. Like a
bullet shot from the muzzle of a gun (bees can fly
faster than most insects), she darted through the purpling
dawn in a lightning beeline for the woods, where she
knew she would be safe for the moment and could hide
herself away should the hornet regret having let her
go and follow in pursuit.
Gossamer veils hung everywhere over
the level country, big drops fell from the trees on
the dry leaves carpeting the ground, and the cold
in the woods threatened to paralyze little Maya’s
wings. No ray of the dawn had as yet found its
way between the trees. The air was as hushed
as if the sun had forgotten the earth, and all creatures
had laid themselves to eternal rest.
Maya, therefore, flew high up in the
air. Only one thing mattered to get
back as quickly as strength and wits permitted to
her hive, her people, her endangered home. She
must warn her people. They must prepare against
the attack which the terrible brigands had planned
for that very morning. Oh, if only the nation
of bees had the chance to arm and make ready its defenses,
it was well able to cope with its stronger opponents.
But a surprise assault at rising time! What if
the queen and the soldiers were still asleep?
The success of the hornets would then be assured.
They would take prisoners and give no quarter.
The butchery would be horrible.
Thinking of the strength and energy
of her people, their readiness to meet death, their
devotion to their queen, the little bee felt a great
wrath against their enemies the hornets. Her
beloved people! No sacrifice was too great for
them. Little Maya’s heart swelled with
the ecstasy of self-sacrifice and the dauntless courage
of enthusiasm.
It was not easy for her to find her
way over the woods. Long before she had ceased
to observe landmarks as did the other bees, who had
great distances to come back with their loads of nectar.
She felt she had never flown as high before, the cold
hurt, and she could scarcely distinguish the objects
below.
“What can I go by?” she
thought. “No one thing stands out.
I shan’t be able to reach my people and help
them. Oh, oh! And here I had a chance to
atone for my desertion. What shall I do?
What shall I do?” Suddenly some secret
force steered her in a certain direction. “What
is pushing and pulling me? It must be homesickness
guiding me back to my country.” She gave
herself up to the instinct and flew swiftly on.
Soon, in the distance, looking like grey domes in
the dim light of the dawn, showed the mighty lindens
of the castle park. She exclaimed with delight.
She knew where she was. She dropped closer to
the earth. In the meadows on one side hung the
luminous wisps of fog, thicker here than in the woods.
She thought of the flower-sprites who cheerfully died
their early death inside the floating veils.
That inspired her anew with confidence. Her anxiety
disappeared. Let her people spurn her from the
kingdom, let the queen punish her for desertion, if
only the bees were spared this dreadful calamity of
the hornets’ invasion.
Close to the long stone wall shone
the silver-fir that shielded the bee-city against
the west wind. And there she could
see them distinctly now were the red, blue,
and green portals of her homeland. The stormy
pounding of her heart nearly robbed her of her breath.
But on she flew toward the red entrance which led
to her people and her queen.
On the flying-board, two sentinels
blocked the entrance and laid hands upon her.
Maya was too breathless to utter a syllable, and the
sentinels threatened to kill her. For a bee to
force its way into a strange city without the queen’s
consent is a capital offense.
“Stand back!” cried one
sentinel, thrusting her roughly away. “What’s
the matter with you! If you don’t leave
this instant, you’ll die. Did you
ever!” He turned to the other sentinel.
“Have you ever seen the like, and before daytime
too?”
Now Maya pronounced the password by
which all the bees knew one another. The sentinels
instantly released her.
“What!” they cried.
“You are one of us, and we don’t know you?”
“Let me get to the queen,”
groaned the little bee. “Right away, quick!
We are in terrible danger.”
The sentinels still hesitated.
They couldn’t grasp the situation.
“The queen may not be awakened
before sunrise,” said the one.
“Then,” Maya screamed,
her voice rising to a passionate yell such as the
sentinels had probably never heard from a bee before,
“then the queen will never wake up alive.
Death is following at my heels. Take me to the
queen! Take me to the queen, I say!” Her
voice was so wild and wrathful that the sentinels
were frightened, and obeyed.
The three hurried together through
the warm, well-known streets and corridors. Maya
recognized everything, and for all her excitement
and the tremendous need for haste, her heart quivered
with sweet melancholy at the sight of the dear familiar
scenes.
“I am at home,” she stammered with pale
lips.
In the queen’s reception room
she almost broke down. One of the sentinels supported
her while the other hurried with the unusual message
into the private chambers. Both of them now realized
that something momentous was taking place, and the
messenger ran as fast as his legs would carry him.
The first wax-generators were already
up. Here and there a little head thrust itself
out curiously from the openings. The news of
the incident traveled quickly.
Two officers emerged from the private
chambers. Maya recognized them instantly.
In solemn silence, without a word to her, they took
their posts, one on each side of the doorway:
the queen would soon appear.
She came without her court, attended
only by her aide and two ladies-in-waiting. She
hurried straight over to Maya. When she saw what
a state the child was in, the severe expression on
her face relaxed a little.
“You have come with an important
message? Who are you?”
Maya could not speak at once.
Finally she managed to frame two words:
“The hornets!”
The queen turned pale. But her
composure was unshaken, and Maya was somewhat calmed.
“Almighty queen!” she
cried. “Forgive me for not respecting the
duties I owe Your Majesty. Later I will tell you
everything I have done. I repent. With my
whole heart I repent. Just a little while
ago, as by a miracle, I escaped from the fortress
of the hornets, and the last I heard was that they
were planning to attack and plunder our kingdom at
dawn.”
The wild dismay that the little bee’s
words produced was indescribable. The ladies-in-waiting
set up a loud wail, the officers at the door turned
pale and made as if to dash off and sound the alarm,
the aide said: “Good God!” and wheeled
completely round, because he wanted to see on all sides
at once.
As for the queen, it was really extraordinary
to see with what composure, what resourcefulness she
received the dreadful news. She drew herself
up, and there was something in her attitude that both
intimidated and inspired endless confidence. Little
Maya was awed. Never, she felt, had she witnessed
anything so superior. It was like a great, magnificent
event in itself.
The queen beckoned the officers to
her side and uttered a few rapid sentences aloud.
At the end Maya heard:
“I give you one minute for the
execution of my orders. A fraction of a second
longer, and it will cost you your heads.”
But the officers scarcely looked as
if they needed this incentive. In less time than
it takes to tell they were gone. Their instant
readiness was a joy to behold.
“O my queen!” said Maya.
The queen inclined her head to the
little bee, who once again for a brief moment saw
her monarch’s countenance beam upon her gently,
lovingly.
“You have our thanks,”
she said. “You have saved us. No matter
what your previous conduct may have been, you have
made up for it a thousandfold. But go,
rest now, little girl, you look very miserable, and
your hands are trembling.”
“I should like to die for you,”
Maya stammered, quivering.
“Don’t worry about us,”
replied the queen. “Among the thousands
inhabiting this city there is not one who would hesitate
a moment to sacrifice his life for me and for the
welfare of the country. You can go to sleep peacefully.”
She bent over and kissed the little
bee on her forehead. Then she beckoned to the
ladies-in-waiting and bade them see to Maya’s
rest and comfort.
Maya, stirred to the depths of her
being, allowed herself to be led away. After
this, life had nothing lovelier to offer. As in
a dream she heard the loud, clear signals in the distance,
saw the high dignitaries of state assemble around
the royal chambers, heard a dull, far-echoing drone
that shook the hive from roof to foundation.
“The soldiers! Our soldiers!”
whispered the ladies-in-waiting at her side.
The last thing Maya heard in the little
room where her companions put her to bed was the tramp
of soldiers marching past her door and commands shouted
in a blithe, resolute, ringing voice. Into her
dreams, echoing as from a great distance, she carried
the ancient song of the soldier-bees:
Sunlight, sunlight, golden sheen,
By your glow our lives are
lighted;
Bless our labors, bless our Queen,
Let us always be united.