A Bug-s Life May 2026
But the blight was here. It shimmered on a rotten strawberry, a purple fuzz that pulsed faintly, like a sleeping lung.
“What if,” Pliny clicked, “the blight is not our enemy? What if it’s a teacher?”
For Pliny, a young ant in the colony Formica caesia , the universe consisted of three zones: the Nest (dark, warm, humming with the queen’s pheromones), the Forage (a perilous plain of pebbles and grass blades), and the Above—a terrifying blue void where birds turned into shadows the size of clouds. A Bug-s Life
Pliny was not a brave ant. He preferred cataloging fungus spores in the nursery tunnels to fighting wasps or hauling crumbs. But the colony had a fever. A strange, sticky blight was curling the aphids’ antennae and turning the milkweed leaves to black lace. The Queen, a pale, pulsing monument at the colony’s heart, had issued a rare command: Find the source.
So Pliny found himself on the Forage at dusk, the world reduced to a kingdom of shadows. He followed a thread of sour-sweet rot that led him away from the scent trail, past a dead beetle the size of a chariot, and into a grove of fallen marigold petals. But the blight was here
They lived in a discarded yogurt cup, its foil lid peeled back like a tattered canopy. They were smaller than Pliny, soft-bodied, with too many legs and no visible eyes. They communicated not by scent but by tapping their abdomens against the plastic—a hollow, rhythmic thock-thock-thock .
“You know its name?” Pliny whispered. What if it’s a teacher
Pliny understood then. The Queen’s fever, the blackened leaves, the sour-sweet rot—it wasn’t an invader. It was a mirror . The colony had grown so rigid, so obsessed with the scent of home, that it had forgotten how to sense anything new. The Glowrot was simply filling the space where curiosity used to live.