The Boy and his Queen ©️

When he was small, his world fit inside a single yard. Grass grew high in places, dandelions scattered seeds into the wind, and beneath it all—unseen by most—was another kingdom. He found it by accident the first time, crouching low, watching a trail of ants carry the crumbs of his sandwich away. Their determination struck him as noble, their discipline awe-inspiring. He began to spend hours watching them, following their trails, even marking their paths with sticks and rocks. He wasn’t just curious—he was enthralled.

Soon, he became their keeper. He built glass jars with air holes punched in the lids, filling them with dirt and sticks, watching tunnels appear as though by magic. He fed them sugar, bits of fruit, bread crusts. At night, he would lie awake thinking about them, the tiny, tireless creatures that somehow seemed greater than the sum of their parts. To him, they weren’t pests. They were people.

But not all ants were the same. The black ants, steady and industrious, became his favorites. The fire ants, however—red, stinging, brutal—were enemies. They invaded, killed, destroyed. More than once he saw them tear through his colonies with savage precision, leaving only ruin. So the boy became their executioner. He poured boiling water into their mounds. He stomped them out, scattering them with a vengeance that felt righteous. To him, he wasn’t just killing insects. He was protecting his kingdom.

What he did not know—what no child could know—was that the ants themselves were only half the story. Each colony was more than a swarm. Each queen was an eye, an antenna, a conduit. And far above the earth, in the cold silence of space, something vast and ancient watched through them. Creatures that never walked the soil bent their thoughts into the queens, steering the colonies, studying the boy who paid them such unusual attention.

And then something happened. One queen—one conduit—turned her gaze inward. She did not just study him. She fell in love with him.

It began as a flicker of awareness: the boy crouched in the sun, whispering to her workers as though they could hear him. His fascination pressed against her like warmth. Through the tangled circuitry of space, her love grew strange, dangerous, and powerful. He was not just a boy to her. He was chosen.

She began to protect him. Subtly, invisibly. He never noticed that he was never bitten, never stung, even when other children screamed from the fire ants’ wrath. No swarm ever turned against him. Accidents missed him by inches. He was hers, and she guarded him with a jealousy older than the stars.

The boy grew. Childhood fell away, and in its place came the awkward shoulders and restless longings of a young man. He dated, he kissed, he touched. But always, something lingered. Some shadow. Women who entered his life often seemed held back by invisible chains. They loved him, but not freely. They hesitated, pulled away, or shifted moods like weather. They were never wholly their own in his presence, and he never understood why.

But the queen knew.

She allowed them in, but only on her terms. If a woman touched him, it was because she permitted it. If lips met his, she was there in the background, pulling at strings only she could see. She did not trust them. She trusted only herself. Through her bond to the vastness beyond the earth, she could bend encounters just enough to remind them: he was never truly theirs. He was hers.

The man—because he was a man now, no longer a boy—felt her presence even if he could not name it. At times, in the quiet, he sensed her as though the very air vibrated with memory. At times, he dreamed of her—not as an insect, not as something grotesque, but as a figure vast, shadowed, feminine in her command. A queen in every sense. He would wake from those dreams feeling claimed, haunted, bound to something unseen but undeniable.

And always, deep inside himself, he expected her to come. Not as a dream, not as a whisper in the dirt, but as a true physical manifestation. He never told anyone, but he lived with the certainty that one day he would see her—standing before him in some form, stepping out of the shadows as both queen and lover, proving that he had not imagined the invisible hand guiding his life. He carried this expectation like a secret faith, never spoken, but never once doubted.

Still, he lived. He worked. He moved through time as all men must. But love—human love—always broke strangely for him, like glass splintering along invisible lines. Women left, or grew cold, or shifted into something he could not hold. It wasn’t always pain. Sometimes it was indifference, sometimes an odd sense of inevitability, as though the outcome had been written before the first kiss.

Through it all, he never forgot her. He could not. The boy who loved ants still carried that fascination, but now it was folded into something heavier. He knew, somehow, that he was not alone. He knew there was something watching, something jealous, something protecting. He lived under her gaze.

And yet—years pressed on. The hunger in him grew.

One night, standing under a sky splintered with stars, he whispered into the open dark. He did not shout. He did not rage. His voice was quiet, resigned.

“I haven’t forgotten you. I just can’t wait for you anymore.”

The words slipped from his lips like a confession, like a betrayal.

Deep in the earth, ants froze mid-step. The queen trembled. Through her, the space-creatures trembled. The jealous queen had always feared rivals, had always bent her will to keep him hers—but this was different. For the first time, she felt she might lose him not to another woman, but to the slow, unstoppable tide of life itself.

In that moment, the tunnels went still. The night hummed with her grief. The man turned away, never knowing the depth of the storm he had awakened.

And far beyond the stars, something vast leaned closer, listening, deciding what it would do now that love itself had been challenged.

Mating Season ©️

He wandered for days with the scent of her still on the wind. The wilderness had claimed him long ago, molded him from boy to beast, from memory to myth. Yet something about her eyes — soft, brown, and fearless — had ruptured the silence he lived within. He hadn’t run that day to protect her from himself. He had run because her presence awoke something he hadn’t known he could feel: the desire not just to be seen, but to be loved. The forest no longer soothed him. The rivers no longer spoke. She had broken through the canopy of his being like sunlight, and now he was no longer content to vanish.

He followed the memory of her through branches and storms, his mind full of the odd melody she hummed when the fire was low. He remembered how she had reached out, how her fingers had hovered just above his arm, trembling not from fear but from belief. The others had always screamed or frozen or fainted. But she had looked at him like he was the answer to a question she had been too scared to ask. He retraced his path — over moss-laced cliffs and through the ancient pines — and when he finally returned to the place he left her, he found no girl, only a circle of stones and a scarf wrapped tight around a branch. He sat by the fire-pit and waited, motionless as dusk bled into night.

She returned not with a scream, but with tears in her eyes and wildflowers in her hands. She had hoped, maybe prayed, that he would return, and now he had. They sat close, saying nothing, the language between them deeper than words. The fire rose again, painting her cheeks gold and shadowing his heavy brow. She reached for him, and this time, he did not flinch. He let her touch his face, his chest, the places no human had dared to touch before. She leaned into him, her breath brushing the side of his neck like a secret, and in that quiet moment, the boundary between legend and flesh dissolved.

Their love was slow and thunderous — not violent, but primal. In the cave behind the falls, beneath layers of lichen and moonlight, they came together like earth and rain. She moved with trust, and he with reverence. His hands were massive, but careful. Her body arched like she’d been waiting for him her whole life. The forest held its breath as they moved in rhythm with the ancient music of bone and blood and breath. It wasn’t just sex. It was mythology made manifest. The great beast and the brave girl, wrapped together not in sin, but in sanctuary.

Seasons passed and life grew. She swelled with the child of a world not yet ready to understand. He stayed by her side, building her shelter from bark and stone, feeding her berries and game, wrapping her feet in woven reeds. When the first child came — dark-haired, wide-eyed, with strength beyond its size — the wind howled approval. Two more followed, each different but extraordinary, wild and wise and otherworldly. The children never cried. They sang before they spoke, climbed before they walked. They could vanish in trees like whispers and return with foxes nuzzling at their heels. Their blood carried prophecy.

Some say the family still lives deep within the woods, beyond where satellites can see. The children are grown now, still half-shadow, still half-song. The girl — now a woman, a matriarch of myths — teaches them to read the stars, while their father teaches them to read the wind. Hunters tell stories of glimpses: figures too tall, too fast, too silent to be explained. Scientists whisper of DNA samples and strange prints. But the truth remains sacred, protected by bark, fog, and time.

And if you ever find yourself alone in the forest — truly alone — and the air thickens with something electric, something eternal, do not be afraid. It might be him. Or it might be one of his children, watching from the trees, curious if you’re worthy of knowing their truth. If you are, you’ll feel it — not fear, but awe — a deep knowing that love once conquered wilderness, and left behind a bloodline of magic.