There is, it seems, an ant of uncommon politeness. It does not storm the gates or wave a banner. It comes up quiet, borrows a coat, and says nothing at all.

At the edge of a neighboring colony, it selects a worker, no leader, no guard, just an ordinary citizen, and gives it a friendly rub. That is all it takes. In the ant world, scent is reputation, passport, and an affidavit. With the proper odor, a stranger becomes a cousin.

Thus dressed, our visitor strolls in. No alarms. No speeches. The workers pass as they always do, busy with their burdens and confident in their noses. The intruder proceeds inward with the calm of a man who was never asked a question.

When it finds the queen, it does not duel her. It does something far more efficient: it changes the story about her. A little spray, a small correction of scent, and suddenly the familiar becomes suspect. The workers, who were so certain a moment ago, discover a new certainty with equal conviction. They gather, they judge, and they act.

The queen is removed by her own.

Our polite visitor has not lifted a weapon in the usual sense. It has merely introduced a disagreement about identity and let the house settle it. Ants, like people, are industrious when convinced.

With the queen gone, the visitor sets about becoming indispensable. It produces the next generation, which naturally recognizes the scent that now governs things. In a short while, there is no visitor at all, only the future, which smells exactly like the present.

It is an admirable system if one admires efficiency. No sieges, no long campaigns, no tiresome persuading of enemies, only a careful adjustment of who counts as “us,” and a confidence that the rest will follow.

One might say the lesson is about ants. One would not be wrong. It is also about the curious power of belonging, and how a colony, any colony, can be persuaded to do its own housekeeping, provided it is persuaded about the smell of the place.

The ant, for its part, remains modest. It has done nothing, it would insist, but fit in.

Posted in

One response to “Coup”

  1. Michael Williams Avatar
    Michael Williams

    it seems we hosed a great leader in Richard Nixon because a certain group of people fell in love with their own idealized reflections. and history is repeating itself again. stay safe Tom. I guess even if we don’t take an interest in outer colony ants they, by necessity of survival, will take an interest in us. Mike

    Like

Leave a reply to Michael Williams Cancel reply