QUEEN BEE
She looks good all gussied up
fluttering seductively, piping and tooting,
combing her hair as she sedately waits
on her throne for a favorite drone.
Her emerald green eyes mesmerize
lines of young bees with amorous ideas
they’re not yet ready to consummate
with this promiscuous lady.
Frenzied with the heat of youth they
don’t have to see her bare waggle dance
or succumb to her odorant receptors,
or swill of royal jelly to want to fly
in her direction.
All she has to do to snag 2000 mates is
lower one fine shoulder showing supple
skin soft as new-spun silk for them
to discover quivering filaments
that can hold ecstatic moments
encapsulated in a cushioned warp of time.
When workers see her sensual silhouette,
slender as a mermaid’s backside,
they’re consumed with envy, hating their
bodies hidden in shapeless housecoats
as they slave away each day to keep
the hive in order.
Like undocumented domestic workers
they keep their feelings to themselves.
The only thing that keeps them going
is knowing a day will soon arrive
for the hive to survive they must get busy
balling the queen, gathering around her
so she can’t breathe, smothering her
to death. When asked why they perform
this task without apparent remorse, they
reply: “because it is necessary.”