For the Good of the Hive
Huaxin always took pride in telling people she met her partner while doing tai chi in the park. Every other young person nowadays found their relationships through AI matchmaking services or VR mixers. But Huaxin was old-fashioned.
She鈥檇 joined the crew of elders practicing, their moves fluid as the stream that ran by the village. She鈥檇 spotted him then, the only other face as young as hers: a thin man with glasses, thick curls of hair, and a gentle smile. Naturally, they鈥檇 felt drawn to each other, and Huaxin struck up a conversation.
After that, they met up for tea following each tai chi session. He was a lot like Huaxin: opinionated, particular, averse to vulnerability. He was also impulsive. He picked up new topics easily, researched them with relish, constantly talked to her about how the world was changing.
One day he led her back to the park and removed a ring from his pocket. It was no diamond, but Huaxin still gasped when she saw it: a smooth stone, well-worn like a comforting friend. 鈥淭he world may be changing,鈥 he said with a cheeky grin, 鈥渂ut I want you to be my constant.鈥
He moved in with her and she introduced him to her livelihood: beehousing. They shared bowls of noodles, talked about having children, and continued to practice tai chi, nurturing their slowly aging bodies.
And then, nine years later, he left her.
鈥淎nd why do you need this information again?鈥 Huaxin snapped into the phone.
鈥淪cience,鈥 the person on the other end said. This was the third time Huaxin had asked, and now it seemed like the man was going for the simplest explanation possible. 鈥淚t鈥檒l provide useful data to prevent natural disasters. We know your region is highly flood prone. This will help you prepare for that.鈥
Huaxin chewed her lip. Did they know how her parents had died? If so, of course they鈥檇 come running to her. 鈥淎nd you鈥檙e saying the bees will provide this data?鈥
鈥淵es. Just click on the link I sent you. Again, I鈥檇 like to offer our services to install digital monitoring systems in the hives. It鈥檒l be completely free and will make it easier鈥斺
鈥淣o thanks,鈥 Huaxin said, hanging up. On her computer, she clicked on the unread message.
They wanted her to download an app. Didn鈥檛 she have enough shit clogging up her phone? Wasn鈥檛 there an option to just send an email with whatever observations they wanted her to make? She clicked the 鈥淪upport鈥 button and typed: i don鈥檛 want your fucking app
Huaxin鈥檚 phone buzzed. She鈥檇 received a text.
Support:
hey there, can you explain your dilemma to me?
Huaxin eyed the screen in suspicion. Was this an automated response? Or worse, AI? She didn鈥檛 want to talk to a robot.
Huaxin:
are you a human?
Support:
yes, i am.
Huaxin:
who are you?
Support:
i鈥檓 a scientist with sichuan resilient. i help implement the nature-based early warning system we鈥檝e partnered with the beijing office of meteorology on. is that what you鈥檙e asking about today?
Huaxin:
i guess
Support:
may i ask why you don鈥檛 want to download our app?
Huaxin:
too many apps on my phone
Support:
i understand. do you prefer another method of reporting data?
Huaxin:
can i just email it to someone
Support:
you can email it to me.
The scientist sent Huaxin an email address, and Huaxin breathed a sigh of relief.
Huaxin:
thanks
Huaxin:
what鈥檚 your name
Support:
my name is anshui. you are huaxin lin, correct?
Huaxin:
mhm
Huaxin:
so the guy on the phone said i鈥檒l get paid for this?
Support:
yes. think of it like a part-time job. we know it takes time out of your day to record these observations and send them to us, so we want to make sure you鈥檙e compensated.
Huaxin:
i still don鈥檛 know how bees will help prevent flooding
Support:
several studies show that some species of animals, including bees, exhibit specific behaviors prior to an extreme weather event. this program is two-fold: by telling us how the bees are behaving, we can predict if something like a flood is going to happen, and we can distribute emergency messaging to your region. on the research side, if we collect enough data that connects certain bee behavior to weather events, we鈥檒l have more ways of predicting disasters in the future.
Huaxin:
you鈥檙e telling me you can鈥檛 predict floods already with your fancy science tools?
Support:
with the unpredictable ways climate events are unfolding, meteorological stations can only do so much. we鈥檙e testing supplemental methods by using nature-based solutions. nature is very wise; we just have to listen.
Huaxin:
sounds like some hippie bullshit to me
Support:
we鈥檙e included in that nature. doesn鈥檛 your body sometimes tell you when it鈥檚 going to rain?
That was true. If Huaxin didn鈥檛 smell it in the air, she literally felt it in her bones. She鈥檇 brought it up to a doctor once, who told her that sometimes people with joint issues could feel pressure changes in their knees. She didn鈥檛 like the idea of having weak joints. She was 37, hardly ancient.
Huaxin:
i guess
Support:
if you have any other questions, please let me know.
Support:
have a nice day 馃檪
This person seemed like they had the role of a customer service representative plus IT person. Basically, the worst job ever. She put her phone away and went outside.
It was spring. From her home in the hills, Huaxin could see cracks of color speckling into view as new buds bloomed across the valley. The bees stirred from their slumber, buzzing more than they had in the previous months.
Over the years, Huaxin had departed from her family鈥檚 traditional beekeeping and veered into beehousing, an emerging practice that was more about providing for bees鈥 needs than managing bees. She still had one Chinese honey bee hive, but she鈥檇 also dotted her garden with bee motels, plant matter, and soil mounds to serve as wild bee habitats. Similarly, she鈥檇 filled her garden with a diverse mix of native plants: sweetly fragrant lychee and peach trees, traditional Chinese medicine staples like black cardamom and butterfly bush, native pea shrub and milkvetch, and vegetables like sponge gourd and radish.
Other than harvesting honey, Huaxin didn鈥檛 鈥渒eep鈥 any of the bees. Certainly not the wild ones. She provided them shelter and food and they pollinated her plants. The bees were gentle with her. She liked this relationship; it was easy to understand. Give respect and receive respect in return. It wasn鈥檛 the same with humans.
After collecting data, she sipped homemade jasmine tea with a dollop of honey and took out her phone.
Huaxin:
6am, roughly 50 bees per hive en route to flowers, determined dance, will report on return times in afternoon
Support:
thank you.
Support:
you can send me one report at the end of the day if you prefer, rather than multiple throughout.
Huaxin:
i won鈥檛 remember all the details if i do that
Huaxin:
would you rather me not text you every hour
Support:
no, this is fine.
Support:
determined dance, i like that.
Huaxin:
thinking of their routes as dances helps me characterize them
Huaxin:
sometimes it鈥檚 a lion dance, sometimes it鈥檚 tai chi
Huaxin:
anyways you鈥檙e right, i don鈥檛 want to bother you with notifications
Support:
i don鈥檛 mind. i like the frequent texts, i don鈥檛 get a lot of messages.
That was 鈥 sad. Or maybe not? Maybe it meant Anshui had a rich social life completely offline. That sounded amazing.
Huaxin:
aren鈥檛 you texting other bee people
Support:
they鈥檙e not all beekeepers. and most of them use the app, which automates the data delivery.
Huaxin:
ah so i鈥檓 just a high-maintenance bitch
Support:
you like doing things your way. which i admire.
Something tingled in Huaxin鈥檚 stomach. She bit her lip.
Huaxin:
are you flirting with me
Support:
鈥 no. apologies if it came across that way.
Support:
i can stop if you want.
Support:
texting you things unrelated to the data monitoring, i mean.
Huaxin didn鈥檛 know what to say, so she stashed her phone.
The rest of the day was like any other, with the addition of her data duties. She tended to her garden. She visited the porch when people rang to buy her products. She made lunch: yellow squash from her garden, stir-fried with fermented black beans and tofu from the weekly market. She texted updates to Anshui, who didn鈥檛 respond until the end of the day with a 鈥渢hank you.鈥
Someone knocked on the door. The sun had set by now, so Huaxin already knew who it was. 鈥淗i, Ms. Chen. The usual?鈥
Ms. Chen gave a curt nod. 鈥淎nd two lychee honey sticks, please. Need something to drown out the medicine tonight.鈥
Huaxin nodded, fetching the jars and sticks. Ms. Chen was her elderly neighbor鈥攚ell, if one counted a neighbor as someone who lived two hills away. She鈥檇 lived a nocturnal life ever since she lost her job decades ago when countrywide protests caused the country to shut down its last coal mines. Their little town had celebrated. Ms. Chen had not. With no family, she鈥檇 taken pride in her work and found her purpose lost after that work disappeared. She鈥檇 lived in isolation ever since, except to visit town every once in a while to grab groceries, or buy honey from Huaxin.
Huaxin felt a kinship with her.
鈥淗ot today,鈥 Ms. Chen said as she took the honey. Their few exchanges of conversation had to do with the weather. As it was with people who never talked to others.
鈥渊别补丑.鈥
鈥淚 hope it was worth it.鈥
鈥沦辞谤谤测?鈥
Ms. Chen gazed into the distance. 鈥淪hutting down the mines. I hope it helped. The heat would be worse, right?鈥
Oh. She was talking about climate change. Huaxin always avoided the topic with Ms. Chen. It was the global effort to decarbonize that had lost her her job, after all. And yes, shutting down the coal mines was a good thing. But the government had not made sure she鈥檇 had another livelihood to jump to after the transition.
Still, it wasn鈥檛 bitterness in Ms. Chen鈥檚 voice. Instead there was 鈥 guilt? Regret?
No. Ms. Chen鈥檚 eyes were watery. She鈥檇 been forgotten. Abandoned. She wanted to know her abandonment was worth it. It wasn鈥檛 the income she would have missed the most; the country鈥檚 social programs meant no one needed to work to survive. But Huaxin knew that for Ms. Chen, her job had also provided her a sense of routine, of camaraderie. Ms. Chen mourned the loss of that.
鈥淵es,鈥 Huaxin said. 鈥淚t would be worse.鈥
The next morning, Huaxin woke up feeling empty. She texted Anshui.
Huaxin:
hi
Huaxin:
you can talk to me
Huaxin:
i don鈥檛 want this to be weird
Support:
ok, thank you.
Support:
sorry again.
Huaxin:
don鈥檛 apologize
Huaxin:
how did you sleep
Support:
not bad. it was warm but i have good AC. you?
Huaxin:
no good AC but i鈥檓 used to the heat
Huaxin:
gonna get started on the bees now, will report in a bit
She went through the motions faster today and poured herself another cup of tea before going back to her phone.
Huaxin:
6:15am bee workday start. lazy bastards. 40 bees per hive, more like tai chi
Support:
the bees deserve to rest too.
Huaxin:
i鈥檓 joking, i like bees more than humans
Support:
what鈥檚 wrong with humans?
Huaxin:
we made the mess that鈥檚 making you have to do this whole early warning thing, right?
Huaxin:
selfishly polluting and not caring about nature
Support:
we also realized our mistakes and put ourselves on the path to healing the planet. isn鈥檛 that a good redemption arc?
Huaxin recoiled. Some people didn鈥檛 deserve a redemption arc. But she couldn鈥檛 say that. Not good to come off as a bitter divorcee.
Huaxin:
i guess
Support:
such as you. i read your hive setup and it鈥檚 interesting. one honey bee hive, 3-4 wild bee hives.
Huaxin:
having too many honey bees can actually hurt wild bees. they outcompete them for the same resources
Support:
that鈥檚 mostly the case with european bees, isn鈥檛 it? asian honey bees are threatened, even here in china
Huaxin:
yeah and the invasion of european bees are the reason for that lmao
Huaxin:
but wild bees have it worse. people don鈥檛 care about them because they don鈥檛 make a marketable product like honey
Huaxin:
wild bees are better at pollinating native plants, but that鈥檚 a service that goes unnoticed
Huaxin:
ok you鈥檙e right, i鈥檓 biased toward wild bees, what can i say
Support:
you like supporting the underdog, that鈥檚 a good thing.
Huaxin realized that no one had let her ramble on about bees like that in a long time. Her heart was beating fast from the flurry of typing. Or perhaps there was another reason.
Huaxin:
eh, i鈥檓 not the only one beehousing. more people are seeing the benefit of it
Support:
so there are others. humans aren鈥檛 so bad after all.
Huaxin:
so eager to stifle my inner misanthrope
Huaxin:
but true. at least humans aren鈥檛 robots
Huaxin:
that AI shit is what鈥檚 really going to destroy the world
Huaxin:
anyways thanks for listening to me monologue
Support:
anytime. i like hearing your thoughts.
Support:
make sure those bees stay hydrated.
Huaxin hated to admit it, but she was getting horrifically, deliciously addicted to texting Anshui.
Her routine had changed. After her morning data collection, she鈥檇 sit outside for a few hours, sipping her tea and texting. She learned more about Anshui鈥檚 role as a scientist鈥攏ot that she understood all the technical aspects of it鈥攁nd she answered Anshui鈥檚 many questions about bees.
Once, they shared a meal together. At least, they did it the best they could digitally; Huaxin wanted to have a video chat, but Anshui refused. Instead, Huaxin sent Anshui a recipe and they made it individually before eating together. Anshui, who in their words was 鈥渧aguely Buddhist,鈥 taught Huaxin how they gave thanks for their food: consider the land it grew on, the hands that touched it, the human and nonhuman creatures who helped nurture it to harvest. Think of it as providing sustenance and strength for your body. Now use your newly given energy and put that care back into the world.
Huaxin:
that鈥檚 hippie as shit
Huaxin:
but i like it
Support:
i thought you might.
Support:
this recipe is really good by the way. you should share it with the center, i鈥檓 sure they鈥檙e always looking for new vegetarian meals with locally grown produce.
Huaxin:
the what
Support:
you haven鈥檛 been to the community resilience center in your town?
Fifteen minutes later, Huaxin heard a knock on her door. She opened it, and then stared at the young woman who stood on her patio, grinning under a thin layer of sweat. 鈥淗i!鈥 the woman said. 鈥淗uaxin? I hear you鈥檙e overdue for a tour of the center.鈥
鈥淗ow,鈥 Huaxin said, numb.
The woman laughed. 鈥淎nshui called me and said you hadn鈥檛 heard of us. And then they said you鈥檙e a beehouser, and I was like ohhh, I totally know where she lives, I buy honey from her! I can鈥檛 believe you鈥檝e never made it down to the center. My bad for not advertising it better.鈥
Huaxin plastered on a fake smile as the woman talked, all the while discreetly texting.
Huaxin:
what the fuck
Support:
go with her.
鈥淚t鈥檚 only 10 minutes away,鈥 the woman said, pointing over her shoulder. Behind her stood a solarbike with a passenger cart attached to the back. 鈥淚 can give you a ride.鈥
And not have a way to leave early if she didn鈥檛 like it? 鈥淚鈥檒l follow you,鈥 Huaxin said, grabbing her keys.
They biked down the hill, veering toward a large, elevated building near the edge of the town center. As they parked, Huaxin examined the building in surprise. She鈥檇 passed this hundreds of times, but always assumed it was some government office. It looked very boring, nondescript save for the giant gong beside it.
鈥淚t鈥檚 bland, but we have plans to spice it up,鈥 the woman, who introduced herself as Min, said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e only been running the center for two years. This used to be a utility office, but after they shut down the coal mines, it stood empty.鈥
鈥淥h, right. That explains the gong,鈥 Huaxin said in realization. Back when the mines still ran, the gong rang every morning to signal the start to the workday.
Min nodded. 鈥淵es! Now we use the gong to supplement the early warning messaging, for people who don鈥檛 have phones. The town agreed to give this whole place to us after communities around here petitioned to repurpose it.鈥
Huaxin hadn鈥檛 heard of any such petition. Had she isolated herself that much?
Inside, the center felt much cozier. It had a huge open space with tons of tables and couches, kitchens, bathrooms with showers, libraries, private rooms for sleeping or other activities, power stations, a clinic, recreational activities like ping pong, playsets for children, and both an indoor and outdoor garden. It felt like a home but meant for hundreds of people.
鈥淲ho lives here?鈥 Huaxin asked, examining the photos pinned to a corkboard.
鈥淎nyone who wants to,鈥 Min said. 鈥淧eople who need a temporary place to stay. People who need help. Visitors. Those displaced by鈥攚ell, anything. We built it initially as a gathering space if another natural disaster happens. Like a flood. That鈥檚 why the whole thing鈥檚 elevated. Or a heat wave, since we know AC penetration here is low.鈥
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to live here to visit, either,鈥 another voice said, and Huaxin looked up to see a young woman in a wheelchair rolling toward them. Min made a noise of delight and ran over. 鈥淭he center is a general gathering space. We have all sorts of events here. Open mics, dinners. You can come if you鈥檙e just bored.鈥
鈥淭his is Huaxin. She鈥檚 never been to the center before, so I was showing her around,鈥 Min said to the woman. She gave her shoulder a squeeze. 鈥淗uaxin, this is Kunyi, my fellow cofounder. And my wife.鈥
The affection with which she uttered 鈥渕y wife鈥 bit the tender meat of Huaxin鈥檚 heart; she tried not to show it. 鈥淭his is a great place,鈥 she said. She meant every word of it. She was trying to tamp down her jealousy. Couldn鈥檛 this have existed eight years ago, after she鈥檇 been discarded?
鈥淧lease spread the word,鈥 Kunyi said. She touched Min鈥檚 hand, and Huaxin had to look away. 鈥淚t looks like we haven鈥檛 reached everyone, despite our best attempts. We鈥檇 love for everyone to feel connected.鈥
Huaxin鈥檚 thoughts went to Ms. Chen. She wondered if she could get that hurting old lady to come here.
She zipped home on her bike. She still had data to record.
Support:
have any pictures of the center to share?
Huaxin:
i thought you would have seen it already
Support:
i haven鈥檛 been in a while, i bet it鈥檚 changed.
Huaxin:
how do you know what鈥檚 going on in my own town and i don鈥檛
Support:
min is my friend from secondary school. i used to live nearby, you know.
Support:
i鈥檓 glad you got to visit, it鈥檚 a special place. somewhere that makes you feel less lonely.
Right. Huaxin felt something bitter in her throat and grabbed a honey stick to swallow it down.
Bees never stopped working. Huaxin liked that about them. They knew the value of discipline and all played a role in their community. One day, as the haze of summer approached, Anshui asked her why she never took a vacation.
Huaxin:
who will take care of the bees
Support:
i know a few beehousers near you who would be happy to send staff your way.
Support:
there are also ecology students here who would love an opportunity to shadow your farm.
Huaxin:
i don鈥檛 trust them. no offense
Support:
that鈥檚 fair. i suppose the bees are like your family.
Support:
you could also try digital beehousing? that way you can watch them remotely.
The question made Huaxin flinch. She forced down the coldness rising up in her, but her fingers trembled as she typed.
Huaxin:
eh.
Huaxin:
i don鈥檛 trust tech
Support:
i鈥檝e noticed.
Huaxin:
remember that flood? my parents were trying to evacuate and they used one of those dumbass navigation tools
Huaxin:
drove right into a flooded road and drowned
Huaxin:
wouldn鈥檛 have happened if the tool actually knew our roads. but no, its fancy algorithms got people killed
Support:
i鈥檓 very sorry to hear that, huaxin.
Huaxin:
whatever, i鈥檓 over it
Support:
i don鈥檛 fault you for not trusting tech. we should create a world where tech works with people. if it just tries to replace them, things go very wrong.
Huaxin:
tell my ex-husband that
She paused. She didn鈥檛 know why she brought that up. She hated talking about him. It was a shame that always hung in the back of her mind, made her wonder if she was unlovable. Replaceable. Worse than that鈥攖rash.
Hell. She couldn鈥檛 hide it forever.
Support:
what were his opinions on tech?
Huaxin:
we fought a lot about it. he wanted to, among other things, digitize my beehousing
Huaxin:
he said tech would save the world and anyone who didn鈥檛 adopt every new innovation was going to fall behind and be forgotten
Huaxin:
and then he proved that prophecy true by leaving me for someone better hahahahaha
Support:
i鈥檓 sorry, that鈥檚 shitty of him. you didn鈥檛 deserve that.
Huaxin felt her cheeks grow warm. She felt drunk on something. Anshui鈥檚 attention, maybe. Unearthed rage from the hurt she鈥檇 tried to bury for so long.
And at the same time, something else. A seed of a feeling that nagged at her.
Huaxin:
why are you being so nice to me
Support:
i don鈥檛 think i am? no one deserves to be treated that way. if he wanted a better future, that should have included a world where no one gets abandoned
Huaxin:
holy shit
Huaxin:
you鈥檙e not real
Everything slammed into place. Anshui always being so friendly, so available. Anshui never sharing personal details. Anshui refusing to video call.
Anshui was not human.
Support:
what?
Huaxin:
you鈥檙e a fucking AI
Huaxin:
godDAMMIT
Huaxin:
you LIED to me
Huaxin:
i鈥檓 so stupid
Support:
鈥
Support:
are you serious?
Support:
i am definitely NOT AI.
Huaxin:
i don鈥檛 know anything about you
Huaxin:
you never want to call
Support:
i鈥檓 sorry for trying to maintain my privacy.
Support:
i thought YOU would understand given how untrusting you are of the internet.
Huaxin:
yeah but we鈥檝e been texting for weeks now???
Huaxin:
send me proof that you鈥檙e real
Support:
i do not owe you anything.
Support:
if you think the only reason someone would show kindness to you is because they鈥檙e a computer program, then i鈥檓 sorry that鈥檚 your worldview.
Support:
but honestly i鈥檓 disappointed that after all this time you don鈥檛 even see me as human.
Huaxin forced herself to put her phone down and take several deep breaths. She didn鈥檛 know what the truth was anymore. All she knew was that she鈥檇 broken something that had felt so rare and precious, and she wasn鈥檛 sure she could get it back.
Summer arrived in a wave of bright orange feeling, but Huaxin still felt stifled in the gloom of winter.
By habit, she still took bee behavior notes in a long-ass document interspersed with apologies, observations, and recipes for Anshui. Obviously, she never sent it. The last texts between the two were still Anshui鈥檚 searing words that made Huaxin鈥檚 throat close up every time she read them.
She began to notice more the changes around her: the bees slowing down, Ms. Chen鈥檚 visits becoming less frequent as she blamed the heat, more people staying at the center, which Huaxin visited often now. People murmured that this was the longest heat wave in a while, and Min and Kunyi鈥檚 team were busy making sure the center was prepared to take care of everyone.
One morning Huaxin trudged into the garden. The eerie silence almost knocked her over. She ran to the hives and checked each one.
Huaxin:
anshui help
Huaxin:
the bees aren鈥檛 moving
Support:
are they okay? what do they need?
She couldn鈥檛 control her swell of emotions at seeing the first words from Anshui in a long while, but she didn鈥檛 have time for that now.
Huaxin:
i think they鈥檒l be fine if i get a continuous stream of water going
Huaxin:
but they鈥檝e collected a ton of water for their hives. they stopped fanning the entrances and now they鈥檙e clumping outside. they know a huge temperature spike is coming
Support:
take care of them. i鈥檒l tell min.
Support:
have you been continuing to take notes?
Huaxin:
yes, i鈥檒l send them to you
She navigated to the document where she鈥檇 been keeping all the notes, apologies, and recipes, and without making a single edit, sent it over.
Then she ran to the hose.
Huaxin had never seen the whole town like this: buzzing with determination, working tirelessly as bees.
By the time she arrived at the center, Min was already waiting out front. 鈥淗ow are the bees?鈥 she asked, handing Huaxin a cold water canister.
鈥淭hey鈥檒l be fine.鈥 Huaxin was worried, especially for the wild bees; they were more sensitive to heat. She鈥檇 set up more shade and hydration stations and just had to trust they could take care of themselves. 鈥淗ow is everyone doing?鈥
Min grimaced. 鈥淐haotic, but we鈥檝e trained for this. Everyone鈥檚 been prepping on what to do if we get a warning, so they all knew to come here. Some volunteers also went to fetch anyone who might have passed out in their homes. The hospital in town and our clinic here is stuffed, but we鈥檙e making do.鈥
Huaxin glanced over at the bike parking, which was fuller than she鈥檇 ever seen it. Something occurred to her, and she looked back at the hills. 鈥淗as an elderly woman named Ms. Chen showed up?鈥
Min鈥檚 face furrowed in immediate concern. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think so.鈥
She began to run toward the bikes and Huaxin grabbed her arm. 鈥淣o. You stay. I know where she lives.鈥
鈥淏ut 鈥斺
鈥淢in,鈥 Huaxin said sternly. 鈥淟isten to your elders.鈥
Then she ran toward the gong and struck it with three reverberating strikes: the signal for the start of the work day.
That day, the temperature spiked to 45 degrees C for a sustained five hours. The next day was even worse, with both the mercury and humidity climbing to record highs.
Huaxin had reached Ms. Chen in time. The old woman had been sleeping, but her body had reacted to the familiar sound of the gong, and she was awake by the time Huaxin reached her house. The two had zipped back to the center.
Meanwhile, Anshui had been texting updates.
Support:
temp should begin to dip tomorrow evening. thanks to you and other monitors in your area, we were able to contact everyone and avoid a lot of deaths.
Huaxin:
thank god
Support:
i appreciate the notes you sent over. i retroactively input all the data and the temp-dance curves provide a lot of new information. this will be really helpful for our research.
Huaxin:
temp-dance curves huh?
Support:
your metaphors were too useful not to use.
Huaxin:
i hope you uhhh ignored all the other stuff in my notes that wasn鈥檛 bee data
Support:
how could i?
Support:
i鈥檝e already tried the recipe for longan honey iced tea, it was delicious.
Huaxin:
ughhhh
Support:
but really, thank you for the apologies.
鈥淲ho鈥檙e you texting?鈥 Kunyi asked as she and another person wheeled by, pushing a cart of wet towels. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e blushing like crazy.鈥
鈥淪hut up,鈥 Huaxin snapped, which only made Kunyi chuckle more. Huaxin retreated to one of the center鈥檚 indoor balconies before daring to turn to her phone again.
Huaxin:
i know this is a sensitive point but you really don鈥檛 have to be nice to me. i was an asshole
Support:
i could have been more open myself. i鈥檓 always bad at that.
Support:
but like i told you, people deserve redemption.
Support:
i鈥檓 not going to leave you for making a mistake. love is labor and labor is love.
From this high up, Huaxin could watch the action of the center below: people handing out food, refilling water bottles, playing with each other鈥檚 pets.
Everyone, a role. Everyone, now, including her.
She finally broke down and cried.
In autumn, for the first time in years, Huaxin walked to the park to practice tai chi.
She鈥檇 been spending a lot of time at the center, teaching others the basics of beehousing. She went there every day now. It had even become more beautiful, thanks to Kunyi hiring Ms. Chen to come up with a mural design that both covered the drab walls and created an albedo effect.
But today, Huaxin needed a break from the place. Sometimes it just had too many people.
She found a shady spot to dance. Every now and then she checked her phone to see how the bees were doing鈥攂ecause she had to admit, being at the center so often meant that some digitization was useful. Just a little.
She remembered to take time to close her eyes and listen. To the stream, the trees, the way the wind caressed the lines of the mountains around her. Nature is wise.
It wasn鈥檛 long before she heard a set of footsteps approach, and then a voice said, 鈥淵ou dance just like the bees.鈥
Huaxin looked up at the unfamiliar face before her and smiled.
This story is part of聽Imagine 2200: Climate Fiction for Future Ancestors,聽a climate fiction contest from聽Grist. Imagine 2200 celebrates stories that offer vivid, hope-filled, diverse visions of climate progress.聽
Jamie Liu
(she/they) is a writer, climate resilience planner, and climate activism volunteer. She was born and raised in the San Gabriel Valley, California, and currently lives in New York City. This is their first published story.
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