The noise of battle awoke Maya out
of a brief sleep. She jumped up and straightway
wanted to dash out to help defend the city, but soon
realized that she was too weak to be of any help.
A group of struggling combatants came
rolling toward her. One of them was a strong
young hornet, an officer, Maya judged by his badge,
who was defending himself unaided against an overwhelming
number of bees. The struggling knot drew nearer.
To Maya’s horror it left one dead bee after
another in its wake. But numbers finally told
against the giant: whole clusters of bees, ready
to die rather than let go, hung to his arms and legs
and feelers, and their stings were beginning to pierce
between the rings of his breast. Maya saw him
drop down exhausted. Without cry or complaint,
fighting to the very end, neither suing for mercy
nor reviling his opponents, he went down to his brigand’s
death.
The bees left him and hurried back
to the entrance to throw themselves anew into the
conflict.
Maya’s heart was beating stormily.
She slipped over to the hornet. He lay curled
up in the twilight, still breathing. She counted
about twenty stings, most of them in the fore part
of his body, leaving his golden armor quite whole
and sound. Seeing he was still alive, she hurried
away to bring water and honey to cheer
the dying man, she thought. But he shook his
head and waived her off with his hand.
“I take what I want,”
he said proudly. “I don’t care for
gifts.”
“Oh,” said Maya, “I
only thought you might be thirsty.”
The young officer smiled at her, then
said, not sadly, but with a strange earnestness:
“I must die.”
The little bee could not reply.
For the first time in her life she seemed to comprehend
what it meant to have to die; and death seemed much
closer when someone else was about to die than when
her own life had been imperiled in the spider’s
web.
“If there were only something
I could do,” she said, and burst into tears.
The dying hornet made no answer.
He opened his eyes once again and heaved a deep breath for
the last time. Half an hour later he was thrown
down into the grass outside the hive along with his
dead comrades.
Little Maya never forgot what she
had learned from this brief farewell. She knew
now for all time that her enemies were beings like
herself, loving life as she did and having to die a
hard death without succor. She thought of the
flower sprite who had told her of his rebirth when
Nature sent forth her blossoms again in the spring;
and she longed to know whether the other creatures
would, like the sprite, come back to the light of life
after they had died the death of the earth.
“I will believe it is so,” she said softly.
A messenger now came and summoned
her to the queen’s presence. She found
the full court assembled in the royal reception room.
Her legs shook, she scarcely dared to raise her eyes
before her monarch and so many dignitaries. A
number of the officers of the queen’s staff
were missing, and the gathering was unusually solemn.
Yet a gleam of exaltation seemed to light every brow as
if the consciousness of triumph and new glory won encircled
everyone like an invisible halo.
The queen arose, made her way unattended
through the assemblage, went up to little Maya and
took her in her arms.
This Maya had never expected, not
this. The measure of her joy was full to overflowing;
she broke down and wept.
The bees were deeply stirred.
There was not one among them who did not share Maya’s
happiness, who was not deeply grateful for the little
bee’s valiant deed.
Maya now had to tell her whole story.
Everybody wanted to know how she had learned of the
hornets’ plans and how she had succeeded in
breaking out of the awful prison from which no bee
had ever before escaped.
So Maya told of all the remarkable
things she had seen and heard, of Miss Loveydear with
the glittering wings, of the grasshopper, of Thekla
the spider, of Puck, and of how splendidly Bobbie had
come to her rescue. When she told of the sprite
and the human beings, it was so quiet in the hall
that you could hear the generators in the back of
the hive kneading the wax.
“Ah,” said the queen,
“who’d have thought the sprites were so
lovely?” She smiled to herself with a look of
melancholy and longing, as people will who long for
beauty.
And all the dignitaries smiled the same smile.
“How did the song of the sprite
go?” she asked. “Say it again.
I’d like to learn it by heart.”
Maya repeated the song of the sprite.
My soul is that which breathes anew
From all of loveliness and grace;
And as it flows from God’s own face,
It flows from his creations, too.
There was silence for a while.
The only sound was a restrained sobbing in the back
of the hall probably someone thinking of
a friend who had been killed.
Maya went on with her story.
When she came to the hornets, the bees’ eyes
darkened and widened. Each imagined himself in
the situation in which one of their number had been,
and quivered, and drew a deep breath.
“Awful,” said the queen, “perfectly
awful....”
The dignitaries murmured something to the same effect.
“And so,” Maya ended,
“I reached home. And I sue for your Majesty’s
pardon a thousand times.”
Oh, no one bore the little bee any
ill will for having run away from the hive. You
may imagine they did not.
The queen put her arm round Maya’s neck.
“You did not forget your home
and your people,” she said kindly. “In
your heart you were loyal. So we will be loyal
to you. Henceforth you shall stay by my side
and help me conduct the affairs of state. In
that way, I think, your experiences, all the things
you have learned, will be made to serve the greatest
good of your people and your country.”
Cheers of approval greeted the queen’s words.
So ends the story of the adventures
of Maya the bee. They say her work contributed
greatly to the good and welfare of the nation, and
she came to be highly respected and loved by her people.
Sometimes on quiet evenings she went for a brief hour’s
conversation to Cassandra’s peaceful little room,
where the ancient dame lived now on pension honey.
There Maya told the young bees, who listened to her
eagerly, stories of the adventures which we have lived
through with her.