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Queen

by Nora Nadjarian

e were having breakfast and the spoon was dripping with honey. And my husband asked: ‘Can you think of any insect other than the bee which makes something for us to eat?’ I thought of the uselessness of the fly, the ugliness of the mosquito, the terrifying industry of the ant. I said, simply: ‘No’ but felt that my secret was out.


It’s been some time now I’ve been thinking bees. Ever since Iwelost the baby, our girl, my husband and I talk to each other less and less. I take out my notebook and make untidy, haphazard notes: The queen bee is the mother of most, if not all, of the bees in the beehive. She can produce over 3000 eggs in a single day at the peak of her laying, more than her own body weight in eggs. Pheromone.


Mostly we give each other a look that hurts, an empty glance, a tense smileas if we shouldn’t smile, not after thisor a slight touch and a recoil from it. Or perhaps there’s another woman. The silence of my mouth has the smell of milk gone bad. I spit breakfast into the sink as soon as he’s gone, sick with the way my stomach churns as if she’s still inside, the way my body oozes sweat and my armpits stick to my sides when I remember.


Pheromone is gold and the queen on her sexual throne oozes with it till it dies. Before the pregnancy, my husband and I used to make love every night.


In the bee colony, life is repeated, over and over. My body metamorphoses, caught in a spasm. Thick, warm liquid runs down my legs. I give birth, I give birth.  A soft, comforting song fills my head, a collective hum. The pollen tickles my nostrils and throat. My eyelashes sometimes catch it and its smell is so pungent that I’m revived as if breathing pure oxygen.


My baby girl’s hair was bees. They buzzed around her head. They were everywhere, hovering around her face, making sunshine, lightly touching her below the almost-formed temple and cheeks, kissing her with their busy legs, making honey from her skin. They never stung her, no. They never hurt her and she welcomed them, the way I do, especially at night, when they enter my thoughts and swarm. 

W

Author's Note

I wrote this story in the summer of 2024, on a trip to the UK. By a strange coincidence, when I got home to Cyprus I found a wasps’ nest hanging next to my bedroom window. Thankfully it was outside, but I could hear the endless activity and I was fascinated and terrified to see these numbers of wasps that kept coming and going so close.

Nora Nadjarian is a poet and writer from Cyprus. Her work was included in Europa 28 (Comma Press, 2020) and National Flash Fiction Day anthologies (2020 and 2023). Her short fiction has also appeared, among others, in Sand Journal, FRiGG, Milk Candy Review, Ghost Parachute, Gone Lawn, Gooseberry Pie Lit Magazine and chosen for Wigleaf‘s Top 50 Very Short Fictions of 2022 (selected by Kathy Fish).

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