Drama Fantasy Fiction

Ants have no names. They live as one body, a superorganism, and each ant is a cell inside it. They recognize each other by scent, not by name. When they meet, they touch antennae to “smell” each other. If the scent matches, they know they are family.

That is why when our protagonist, whom we will call Hana, got lost and ended up alone in a cold, almost empty room with no ant smell around at all, she was terrified. She had never spent a single night away from her community before.

Hana, a queen in her colony, was subjected to a strange incident recently. During one of her short naps, a sudden powerful vibration sent her flying. A flower petal broke her fall. For a moment she could not move. The shock made her tiny legs quiver uncontrollably. The air smelled different, thin and sharp, carrying no trace of her kind. She pressed her body close to the petal, trying to steady her breath. The vibration came again, heavier this time, like a distant storm. Could it be the wind? Or a creature too large to comprehend? She did not know. All she could feel was the pull of instinct: hide, survive. She tucked herself beneath the curved edge of the petal and waited, trembling, until the tremors faded.

When she finally dared to move, she climbed to the edge and looked around. The world had changed. The familiar tunnels and patterns of scent were gone, replaced by an expanse of light and strange odors. Fear crept through her fragile body. She climbed down the flower as fast as she could and immediately left pheromones on the ground, hoping a nearby ant would smell them through its antennae and rush toward her.

When pheromones failed, Hana began drumming softly on the ground, hoping the vibration might reach a member of her tribe. Each tap echoed back like a question with no answer. She remembered how just hours before they were all living normally, the workers working, the nurses nursing, the hum of life weaving through their tunnels. No danger had been anticipated. A few days ago, some ants from her colony reported finding a large red cockroach nearby. They had spent days carrying it into their area and feasting on it. Little did she know, a disaster was on its way. She found herself wondering anxiously what could have happened to the others.

Those feelings were new to Hana. She had never thought of herself as “I.” The word weighed down on her like a rock falling from nowhere to crush her tiny heart. She was always part of a whole. She had always been the queen in her colony. What does being alone make her now? What remains of her identity if there is no one around to recognize it? She was completely unsure how to react to all those new feelings flooding her.

Suddenly she felt a surge of hunger. She strolled through the soil, hoping to find something to eat. She decided to search for flower nectar, but as she approached a blossom, she felt a small vibration from a nearby creature. A spider had spotted her and started crawling toward her.

Hana’s antennae quivered. Her legs went numb with fear. She froze, wishing her army were still there to protect her. The memory of their scent jolted her into action. She released a sharp toxin, then an alarm pheromone that sliced through the air. As she fled, the spider caught the toxin’s trace, sensed danger, and retreated.

She felt relief for a moment; however, the dread of loneliness and hunger returned. A strange emotion washed over her, one she had never known. Grief wrapped around her heart, dimming the warmth of the scents of home.

As she walked, she finally found some seeds lying on the ground and a nearby flower where she climbed to drink its sweet nectar. She felt refreshed and continued on, searching for a safe place to rest.

She reached a set of stairs and climbed them, leaving pheromones behind her, a faint trail of hope. She went through a big door into a huge room. The air conditioning hit her with a coolness she had never felt before. Her body ached with fatigue. She dragged herself toward the wall and fell into a deep sleep.

When she woke up, she was startled to remember where she was. The cold, scentless air surrounded her heart until a faint, familiar trace reached her. Happily, she gathered all her energy and started running around, searching for one of her own.

She ran and ran until she reached her, another lost, lonely ant. They were both ecstatic to find each other. They touched antennae excitedly, exchanging familiar scents. A forgotten warmth flooded through her. For the first time since the incident, she felt home again.

Some time later, the door opened and a few women and men entered the studio.

Salma had been coming to this class for a month now. It had become her favorite, a place where she swayed freely in a meditation-like movement to the rhythm of the music. Every dance was a journey to free both her mind and body.

The music started, slow and soothing at first. Salma closed her eyes and felt her feet on the ground. She began a soft dance, her hands swimming slowly through the air and her feet tracing circles on the floor. She felt a slight vibration travel from the music through the floor and up her body.

She opened her eyes and looked around. She glimpsed the bright greenery of the mountains between white curtains that swayed gently, as if to the music. The melody grew deeper. She sliced the air with her hands and stepped firmly on the ground. A surge of joy slipped into her heart, as if she were flying.

Beneath, Hana reached out for her companion’s antennae one last time. Her life journey flashed before her in scents from her home.

It could just be the wind, she thought. At least I am not alone.

Posted Oct 23, 2025
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