Guest Post | The Vampire’s Honey

Some days ago, The Vampire’s Honey, Within the Walls Book 7, was released. It celebrates National Pollinator Week, and is about Leonard, a vampire from the Oakmouth community. He’s tried to get out for years and hopes he can find a place in the Myrfolk community. 

Lynx is a former blood slave who was rescued last year. He’s mostly hidden inside the Myrfolk walls since then, but when he figures out Gertrude is taking advantage of Leonard’s situation, he’s furious. He might not like vampires, but he’s had it with people exploiting other people’s fears. 

Like all previous stories in the Within the Walls series, it’s about a new couple, but they’re best read in order. 

Read the first chapter below! 

The Vampire’s Honey

What price does a vampire have to pay to feel safe?   

All Leonard Badrick wants is to get out of Oakmouth and find a place where he doesn’t have to fear for his life every single day. Somewhere he can live without the threat of his neighbors telling on him. He hopes that place is the community in Myrfolk, if only he can get Gertrude to agree to take him in.   

Lynx Kot is a former blood slave. Last summer, the Myrfolk community saved him from the cage he and three other shifters were kept in. He’s been living with them since then, but he isn’t sure community life is for him. He’s contemplating hitting the road when a vampire he’s never seen before places beehives near his favorite tree.   

Leonard is willing to do whatever it takes for a ticket out of Oakmouth, but when Lynx realizes Gertrude is taking advantage of his desperation, something ignites inside of him. He might not be a fan of vampires, but he knows what it’s like to live in fear, and if Leonard isn’t going to stand up for himself, then Lynx will. Someone has to, right?

Buy links:

Paranormal Gay Romance: 60,255 words

JMS Book :: Amazon

Chapter 1

February 

Leonard Badrick wiped a palm on his thigh and gripped the phone in a tight grip. The darkness was thick outside the window, a layer of snow was on the ground, and the stars were starting to come out. 

He scrolled through his contacts until he found Gertrude Pechtold’s number. 

His heart was beating hard, but he had to try. 

In July, Leonard ran into some people from Myrfolk while leaving the Oakmouth community to find someone to feed from. Finding feeding partners had become harder for vampires, and leaving was now more dangerous, but everyone had to eat. 

Back then, he’d gone to a newly opened blood bar in Wanford. He’d been relieved when it had opened. He’d only been there a few times, but knowing there was a place he could go where he could be pretty sure no one would attack or arrest him was comforting. 

What he’d believed would be a calm night, one he’d hoped to come back from sated and ready to go for another week, had turned into a battle. 

There had been blood slaves hidden in the basement of the bar, and Leonard had helped the Myrfolk residents to free them. He’d hoped it would lead to closer contact, had dreamed that risking his life for their community’s cause would earn him a place there, or at least a plan for how to get out of Oakmouth. 

It hadn’t. 

He’d risked his life but got nothing more than Gertrude’s number, and the bar closed after Dov and Julian, two Myrfolk bear shifters, killed the owner. 

Leonard wasn’t saying the man didn’t deserve to die—he did—but now there was no bar for him to go to when he needed to feed, and the majority of the Oakmouth community were vampires. Which meant everyone was looking for someone to feed from, and Leonard wasn’t the most charming and forward vampire in the world. 

Far from. 

So he dreamed about a life in Myrfolk. From what little he’d seen, the climate there was more harmonious. 

He was sure there were conflicts and problems too, but no one had been rude to him. They hadn’t chased him away with pitchforks or anything, but once he was good to drive back, they’d waved him off without so much as an offer to connect again. 

He’d hoped, still hoped, they’d welcome him there one day. 

He wasn’t certain the Myrfolk community was better, but Jinx had fled from Oakmouth to Myrfolk to keep his daughter safe, and he didn’t appear to be regretting his decision. 

Leonard had to get out of here. 

It wasn’t safe. 

When he’d bought his house, it had been a small community with potential. It had been before the humans’ war on supernaturals had started—it hadn’t been problem-free, but he could go into town without risking his life. Then, as the climate had hardened, more and more shifters had moved away. 

Leonard wasn’t sure why. 

It wasn’t until Czar, their current leader, took over that he felt the need to move on, but then it was too late. Czar didn’t allow anyone to leave. He surveyed everyone, and if he suspected, only for a moment, someone going against him, he dealt with them. 

Oakmouth had become a place where everyone monitored everyone and reported back to Czar. One wrong move, and your life turned to hell. 

Which was why his heart threatened to escape his body as he dialed Gertrude’s number. If Czar knew he called another community leader, he’d most likely be killed in the square as an example of what happened if you went behind his back. 

Several signals rang through, then the call connected. He sucked in a breath as he waited. 

“Gertrude speaking.” 

Leonard cleared his throat. “Eh… hello, Gertrude, it’s Leonard Badrick from Oakmouth.” He winced at his stilted words. 

“Leonard, how are you?” She didn’t sound annoyed, which allowed him to take a breath. Czar could get annoyed simply by someone interrupting him, but then he’d get angry if someone failed to report something too, so there was no winning. 

“I’m… eh… okay.” 

“Yeah?” She sounded amused. “Are you sure?” 

His heart raced in his chest. From what he’d seen, Gertrude was different from Czar, but he wasn’t sure he could trust a community leader to joke with him. 

“Yes.” He straightened his back and wiped his free hand on his jeans. “I… eh…” 

Silence fell. He didn’t know how to continue. 

“What can I do for you?” Gertrude’s voice was hesitant, and he didn’t blame her. 

He took another deep breath and steeled himself. She couldn’t hurt him from where she sat, unless she called Czar and told him Leonard had reached out to her, but he doubted she would. They weren’t on speaking terms as far as he was aware. 

“I have a few bee hives, but I suspect all but one colony has died.” 

“Oh.” 

“I fear there isn’t enough to feed them here. I’ve fed them extra, of course, but last season I couldn’t harvest any honey, and I think it’s because there are no flowers for them to feed from, or few flowers, I should say. Bees are phenomenal at finding flowers, but…” He rubbed his forehead. 

Oakmouth mostly consisted of paved surfaces and lawns. There was little to no diversity. There were some trees, but those that bloomed only did so for a short period, not the entire season. 

Gertrude most likely didn’t want to hear about bees, though. Whenever he started talking about them, people looked around as if they were waiting for someone to come save them. 

Gertrude waited. 

“The cabin I stayed in back in July, is it still empty?” Maybe one of the blood slaves they’d saved had moved in or planned on moving in. 

“It is.” Her voice gave nothing away. 

“I knocked on the hives today, and I only heard a buzz in one of them. I hope I’m wrong, but I suspect it means only one colony has survived the winter, and I was thinking…” Here came the tricky part. “You have a lot of plants within your walls. If I could put a hive by the house I was staying at, it would be away from where people move around, but the bees would still find their way to Rue and Chaton’s garden.” And there was a small forest and a meadow along the wall. He hadn’t seen it, but Gilbert had told him there was a meadow they never cut, which hopefully meant it had loads of native flowers for pollinators to feed from. 

“You want to place a beehive in Myrfolk?” Her tone still didn’t reveal any emotions. 

“Yes.” He squeezed his eyes shut and waited. 

“Isn’t it a lot of work to move bees? And then you have to drive for four hours, one way, every time you need to tend to them. Don’t they need looking after regularly during summer?” 

They did, or there was a risk they’d swarm, and he’d lose them all, or half of the bees and most of his harvest. 

“Yes.” He didn’t elaborate. Driving four hours and then four hours back simply to check on them was insanity. The gas money would eat up any profit he’d get from the honey, but it was a price he was willing to pay if it allowed him a chance, however slim, to strengthen his relationship with the Myrfolk community. 

They might not allow him to join them this year, but if he were there frequently enough, they’d hopefully soon begin to see him as part of them, and maybe, he’d be able to transfer at some time in the future. 

The people in Myrfolk faced the same hardships they did in Oakmouth—more hardships when it came to food, since Oakmouth always had access to meat. But he’d give up meat in exchange for being able to go outside without looking over his shoulder to see who was watching him. He’d be willing to starve a little if it meant he wouldn’t have to fear getting killed and tortured on a whim. 

Czar wasn’t sane, but sadly, the majority of the people living there supported him. Leonard didn’t believe there would be any change coming in a long time. 

“What do I get?” 

He jumped at Gertrude’s voice. His mind had run away with him before he’d managed to implement the first step of his plan—to gain access to the Myrfolk community. 

“What do you want?” 

“How much honey does one hive generate?” There was a rustle, as if she was curling up on a couch or something. He could picture it. He’d been in her living room. She’d served tea. It had been so at odds with how Czar acted, he hadn’t been sure it hadn’t been a dream. 

“These last few years, next to none.” 

“But you want to move them here because you believe the bees will do better within the walls.” 

“Have you seen Oakmouth?” 

She huffed. “It’s not a place I frequent often, for obvious reasons.” 

He found himself smiling. “No one keeps a garden here, and there isn’t much point in keeping bees when I have to feed them all the time to keep them alive.” 

“So because we have gardens, you believe they’ll do better?” 

He nodded despite her being unable to see it. “A normal yield is forty to sixty pounds of honey, but eighty to a hundred isn’t unheard of. It all depends on the health of the colony.” 

She was silent, and he waited while his heartbeats thudded in his ears. 

“Okay, I want twenty-five pounds of honey for every hive you put on community land.” 

His heart somersaulted. “What?” 

“If you have a low yield of forty, you still get some honey for yourself, and if you have a high-yield, you’re still doing better than you have these last few years.” 

“I need money to pay my bills and the tithe to Czar.” His house was paid off. He’d bought it a long time ago when the world had been a better place. 

“Are you a full-time beekeeper or do you have another income?” 

He rubbed his forehead. Could it be called full-time when it didn’t generate any money? “I fill in at times when they need someone to deliver meat, but yes, it’s my full-time…occupation.” He gave a mental cackle. A full-time beekeeper with one hive. Pathetic. 

“How have you paid your bills and the tithe? Or is the tithe ten percent of what you make?” 

“It’s a set number, ten percent of the average monthly salary.” How much was the tithe in Myrfolk? Was it ten percent of every person’s salary? It was favorable to Oakmouth, but maybe he wouldn’t be able to afford to live there even if his bees thrived, and he somehow managed to get out. 

Jinx hadn’t said anything about how the community worked. Leonard didn’t blame him. They both knew he risked his life simply by talking to Jinx, and now that he was firmly out of Oakmouth, they had no reason to. It was he who sometimes called Jinx when he needed a reminder of there being a world outside the community, but he never asked Jinx to risk his or Ximena’s safety by asking questions that could get them in trouble. 

Gertrude was quiet for a few seconds. “How have you been able to pay the tithe?” 

He didn’t want to talk about this. “I had some money saved.” 

Had, as in it’s gone now?” 

“I’m sure you’re aware of how expensive everything has grown lately.” 

She made a snuffling sound. “I have a community to feed. I’m well aware of the prices.” 

Leonard almost laughed. A community to feed? She had a community to feed her. He didn’t think any community leaders suffered greatly. But from what he’d seen, Myrfolk was still the better option. 

“I need my hives to make a profit this year, or I’ll be in trouble.” Ice filled his veins. He wasn’t lying. He might have some money tucked away, but it was dwindling fast, and without a steady income, he wouldn’t last much longer. 

There was no help to be had in Oakmouth. Czar wouldn’t take pity on him if he couldn’t pay his way, and no one would feed him if he couldn’t afford groceries. 

“Me having my bees there will help you. I’m sure Rue’s magic makes the plants thrive, but bees will help with the pollination and increase his yield.” He didn’t know if the other magic user they’d saved back in July had stayed in the community. If she had, they had two magic users who could make things grow. Still, pollinators would help. 

“How much?” 

He couldn’t tell if she was curious or if this was part of their negotiation. “Studies show an increase of thirty to sixty percent in crop yields.” 

“That might be, but is it our kind of crops? As you said, the land within the walls is diverse. I’m sure we already have plenty of wild pollinators around.” 

Most likely. “When it comes to berries, the increase is much larger. Some studies show a three hundred percent increase.” He didn’t know if it was true, but he’d read it was. Did they have many berries within the walls? He’d walked past Rue and Chaton’s garden a few times, and there had been beans and tomatoes, cucumbers and zucchinis, leafy greens and cabbages, but had there been berries? He hadn’t walked around the house to the back. Maybe there were berry bushes there. 

“Three hundred? Can something increase by three hundred percent?” 

“It’s what I’ve read.” 

“Hmm.” 

He waited. “Okay, twenty pounds of honey per hive.” 

He gritted his teeth. “Then I get to keep my beekeeping equipment in the house.” 

She was quiet for some time, his heart blocking his throat, then she huffed. “Deal.” 

His breath stuttered. “Deal?” He couldn’t believe it. 

“Yes, deal. You’ll give Rue and Chaton twenty pounds of honey when it’s harvesting time, and you’re allowed to utilize the house when tending to the bees.” 

Leonard was light-headed. It wasn’t the same as allowing him to stay, but it was huge. “Can I move the hives tomorrow?” 

“In the middle of winter?” 

Spring was approaching. “They’re not leaving the hives at the moment, it’s too cold, and I can’t open the silent ones to check if there is life, because then they’ll freeze. But come March, they’ll start flying around. I want them situated before then.” 

“All right. Give me a call when you’re at the gate.” 

Leonard nodded. “Will do.” 

“Okay, see you tomorrow.” 

“Yes, tomorrow. Thank you.” 

“Bye, Leonard.” He didn’t dare trust the warmth in her voice. 

* * * * 

Leonard hitched his trailer to his car and stared at his hives. He’d only had three colonies back in the fall, and now he feared he only had one. He’d move them all anyway. 

The sun had yet to rise, and he hoped he’d get out of here before anyone spotted him. He didn’t want to explain what he was doing. 

As quickly as he could, he got the honey extractor, his beekeeping suit, frames, and other equipment into the car. It wasn’t all he owned, but he didn’t think he could explain moving the honey extractor without people getting suspicious, so he wanted it out of here before anyone took notice. 

They believed him crazy to keep bees, and few took any interest, but if someone spotted him moving equipment, they’d report it to Czar. 

The fear of being caught left him weak-kneed, but he moved as fast as he could. 

He grabbed the closest hive, thankful for vampire strength as he carried it toward the trailer. He then loaded the other two as well, grabbed the stands they were on, and contemplated bringing honey supers from inside the house. 

“Are you moving?” Agatha, his next-door neighbor, was glaring at him from the edge of his driveway. 

They’d never been close, hardly ever spoke. 

Leonard did his best to conceal his fear. He would not grab anything from the house, not with her watching. “Moving the hives before they wake up for the spring.” 

“Move them to where?” 

Fuck. “To where there are more plants.” 

Her eyes narrowed, but he did his best to ignore her and reached for a ratchet strap to secure the hives. He should bring extra feed for them. 

Agatha studied him without saying a word. She looked like she planned to stand there and watch him, but he prayed she had to run off to work soon. If she peeked inside his car and saw all the stuff he’d shoved in there, he’d be in trouble. 

Once he was satisfied with how he’d secured the hives, he looked at her. He should go inside and grab sugar fondant for the still living bees, but he didn’t know if he dared to while she was watching. He couldn’t leave her near his car where she could peek in through the windows. There might be some feed in one of the boxes he’d already put in the car. Hopefully. 

Thank heavens it was still dark. He hoped it meant she wouldn’t be able to see all the things he’d packed. 

She crossed her arms over her chest and gave him a challenging look. Nope, he wouldn’t grab any sugar fondant. He needed to go, now, before she called attention to what he was doing. He’d have to go back to Myrfolk in a few days if he couldn’t find sugar among the things he’d packed. 

The most important thing was to get out of here before anyone could think of stopping him. The rest would have to come later. He’d grabbed the big things. 

He hoped Gertrude wouldn’t get annoyed with him showing up too frequently. He had to keep it at a good level. Not too often, but not so seldom people forgot about him, or the bees got out of hand. 

“Have a nice day.” He opened the door to the driver’s seat and slipped in without giving Agatha a second look. He needed a believable story in case she reported him to Czar. 

Where could he say he’d moved the hives? 

So far, Czar hadn’t cared what he did with them. As long as he paid the tithe, he didn’t care, but if he moved them outside the community, he might. He didn’t like anyone being where he couldn’t keep an eye on them. 

His hands trembled as he drove toward the gate. The Oakmouth community wasn’t surrounded by a wall like Myrfolk, but all roads had boom barriers operated by guards. They hadn’t before, but Czar had installed them after the whole Jinx debacle. 

He slowed as he neared the barrier. Drystan, a fellow vampire who always wore black clothes and sported a scowl along with several scars both on his hands and arms, walked up to his window. He might have scars in other places too, but Leonard had never seen him without clothes. A black T-shirt was the most undressed state he’d seen him in. 

Drystan looked at the trailer with narrowed eyes. “Where are you going?” 

“I’m moving my hives to their summer placement before they wake up for the spring.” He kept his face blank. Normally, he liked talking about bees, but now he hoped he’d be waved forward. 

Drystan frowned, then he shrugged and pressed a button to open the boom blocking the road. Leonard didn’t waste any time. He got the car rolling while his heart banged frantically in his chest and drove toward Myrfolk. 

He’d been too nervous to eat any breakfast, and when he reached Wanford, which was about halfway, his stomach was growling. He didn’t want to waste money on fast food, and he didn’t dare walk into a grocery store. He did in Oakmouth, but there he was pretty sure he wouldn’t be attacked. Here, he didn’t know how people would react. Wanford didn’t have a community, so people weren’t as used to supernaturals. 

He didn’t think anyone would know he was a vampire on sight, but once he’d used his card, they’d be able to see since he was registered. 

He might as well get used to starving, with Gertrude demanding twenty pounds of honey. He went cold. He hoped she wouldn’t demand sixty. What had she said? Would he owe her sixty pounds if he put all three hives in Myrfolk, even if only one colony was alive? 

Fuck, he’d been too nervous to think straight. 

The gnawing hunger in his gut was replaced by worry. 

Maybe he should turn around. 

No. If he owed her sixty pounds, he’d simply have to give her sixty pounds. If he could scrape sixty pounds together. 

This was a long-term plan. He’d survive until he could get out of Oakmouth. 

About two and a half hours later, he could glimpse the walls of the Myrfolk community and called Gertrude. 

“Good morning, Leonard.” 

He was surprised by the amused tone. “Eh… good morning. I’m outside.” 

“Already? You must’ve driven in the middle of the night.” 

“Early morning.” 

She snorted. “I’ll meet you at the gate. Bye.” She hung up before he could reply, and he blew out a shaky breath. Calm down. He didn’t want to walk out there smelling of nerves. 

He parked outside the gate, doing his best not to block anyone’s way. 

When he got out, he stretched and winced. 

“Hey, man!” Arnou, a wolf shifter he’d gotten to know a little back in July, waved at him from the other side of the gate. 

“Hey.” 

“What’s going on?” He neared the gate but made no move to open it. Gabriel, one of the few vampires in the community, watched them from on top of the wall but didn’t make any motion of wanting to join the conversation. Leonard gave him a wave anyway. He hadn’t spoken to him, but he too had been there when they’d freed the blood slaves. 

“I’m moving my bee hives here.” 

Arnou widened his eyes. “Bees? Are you insane?” 

Maybe. Before he had time to answer, Gertrude came walking. She looked at the trailer and nodded. 

“Three?” 

“I think there is life in only one, but one can dream, right?” And if they thrived here, he might be able to get a nucleus hive, though he didn’t dare hope for it yet. 

Should he ask Gertrude if his having three hives meant sixty pounds of honey? No, not when there was an audience. 

“Okay. There are no vehicles inside the walls, so…” She pursed her lips. “Are they heavy?” 

“Eh… they’re not light. Can I unhook the trailer from the car and pull it with me?” 

She looked at the gate. There was a door in the iron fence meant for people to walk through, but he believed the entire section could be opened. 

“Sure, let’s open it and we’ll pull the trailer.” 

While Arnou got started on the gate, Leonard opened the car and placed the honey extractor and the other things he’d hidden in the trunk and backseat on the trailer. 

“Wow, that’s a lot of things.” Gertrude walked closer to him. 

“I have more left in Oakmouth. I didn’t bring any honey supers, and I have more frames and things, but I didn’t want anyone to get suspicious, so I’ll simply have to sneak out a few things at a time.” 

Gertrude narrowed her eyes. “I see why you wanted use of the house.” 

He forced himself to appear relaxed. If she had any idea of why he wanted access to the cabin, she most likely wouldn’t be as accommodating. 

He wanted that cabin, didn’t see how he’d ever afford to buy it since he didn’t think he’d be able to sell his house in Oakmouth, but he wanted it. Jinx’s house was still untouched from when he’d moved out over a year ago, and Czar wouldn’t allow anyone to go near it. He was pretty sure he’d suffer the same fate if he ever managed to leave, but he wanted the cabin here. 

There were no visible neighbors. Julian, Dov, and Gilbert lived nearby, but their houses were hidden behind trees. It was a slice of paradise as far as Leonard was concerned. 

If it were his, he’d fill the garden with flowers for the bees. Or maybe he would grow vegetables like Rue and Chaton and have something to eat during summer, since he soon would be out of money. 

Vampires could survive without solid food. It wasn’t pleasant, and it wasn’t pretty, but he didn’t need to eat to exist. 

He’d be a danger to everyone around him, but he’d survive. 

Arnou appeared by the side of the trailer. “What’s that big thing?” He pointed at the honey extractor. 

“It’s to get the honey out of the frames. You fasten them inside and spin them, so the honey is forced out. Then you pour it from the tap.” 

He nodded but looked a little confused. “Are you sure they won’t sting you?” 

“They’re locked inside the hive at the moment, but I have the beekeeping suit on when I mess around with them.” He gestured at the suit he’d placed next to the extractor. “They don’t want to sting you. A bee dies after having stung someone, so it’s not like they’ll attack without reason.” 

Arnou snorted. “My experience is they’ll attack.” Then he shrugged. “All right, so where are we taking this?” 

“You’re on guard duty.” Gertrude sounded exasperated. 

Arnou whined like a discontent child, which had Leonard staring. Had someone done that around Czar, they would likely lose a limb… or their head. 

Leonard grabbed the handle by the coupler and carefully pulled the trailer with him. Better to get moving before any blood flowed. 

Gertrude fell into step next to him, and together they walked through the open gate. 

“So they’ll wake up soon?” 

He nodded. “Yeah, they’ll normally start flying on the first warm days in March.” 

She nodded. “And what will they eat then? There are no flowering plants in Rue and Chaton’s garden right now.” 

“Any early spring bulbs?” 

“Maybe a few crocuses and snowdrops, but not much until there are daffodils.” 

“Alder and hazel?” 

She gave him a clipped nod. “I’m bad at trees, but I know there are a few hazel trees. Chaton picked nuts last year.” 

“Good, they bloom now and will provide early food for the bees.” 

It was strange to walk through the community with Gertrude by his side. A few people peeked out their windows at them, but it was a cold, gray day, so there wasn’t much activity. He wondered what they did all day. In Oakmouth, people worked in the meat industry. Myrfolk had always had restaurants and nightclubs, but they’d been forced to close all but a few, so what did people do? No one hired supernaturals these days, so unless they had some business Leonard didn’t know about, he suspected the unemployment percentage was high. 

They passed Namir’s and Jinx’s house, and Leonard looked longingly toward it. Jinx had gotten out. He was sure Czar would kill him if he ever got close to Oakmouth, but he was safe while inside the walls. 

He glanced at Gertrude. He didn’t think Gertrude had it in her to hurt a child, and Jinx had Ximena. Czar had no qualms about using children, but he didn’t think Gertrude would. 

They came up to Rue’s garden, and Leonard wanted to linger and look around, but Gertrude kept going. He spotted cabbages and kale, but nothing flowered. He couldn’t see any berry bushes either. 

“Do they have berry bushes?” 

She shook her head. “I think there might be a current bush or two toward the edge of the property. Jagger might have some, though I think there are mostly fruit trees in his and Ty’s garden.” 

Leonard nodded. “Bees like fruit trees.” He didn’t know Jagger or Ty, and he didn’t know where they lived. Next door, maybe? The house ahead of them looked deserted, so most likely not there. 

They passed a few more houses, then the square, and then they entered the small forest. Soon, the cabin came into view. 

“Still here.” Gertrude smiled at him, but it looked a little forced. 

He pulled the trailer over the frozen grass before letting go of the handle and looking around. It looked like he remembered it. A slice of land framed by trees. Perfect. 

“They want the entrance facing south or southeast to get morning sun.” He grabbed his phone and opened a compass. “So facing this direction.” He pointed south-south-east. 

“Okay.” She nodded. 

Leonard grabbed the stands and placed them in a row. Some people kept colorful hives, but his were made of cedar wood. He found them prettier, they looked more like they belonged in nature than something red or blue or yellow. 

He undid the ratchet straps and reached for the first hive. Was there a faint buzz? He leaned closer. Vampire hearing was good, but he didn’t dare believe what he was hearing. He’d been sure this colony was dead. 

“How’s your hearing?” Did tigers have better hearing than vampires? 

Gertrude walked closer. “What are we listening for?” 

“A buzz.” 

She too, leaned closer. “I think there is a low buzz.” 

He let go of the hive and knocked on the one he knew there was life in. 

“Much louder there.” 

Hope still sparked. “Do you have any insulation, Styrofoam, something?” He couldn’t open the hive; it was too cold, but if he could save the ones still alive, it would help a lot. 

Gertrude stared at him as if he’d lost his mind. “Why?” 

“If the queen is still alive, they can recover, but with few bees, they won’t be able to keep warm enough.” 

“Huh. We can… Jasper might have something. He often builds things.” 

Leonard was aware there were wrappings one could buy to keep on hives during winter, but he didn’t have any. 

He carried the hives to the stands, checked so everything looked okay, and made sure the small entrances to the hives were open in case any bees wanted to get out. It was too early, but soon. 

“Is Jasper home?” He looked at Gertrude and prayed they’d come up with some solution. If the queen were dead in the hive, there wasn’t much he could do, but if she was still alive and some of the worker bees were too, then maybe he could save them. 

“Let’s check.” Gertrude turned to walk back the same way they’d come, and he hurried to follow. 

Leave a comment