“What happens if I buy one?”
The shopkeeper, a woman with lavender hair and eyes that had seen too many estate sales, didn’t speak. She simply slid a key across the counter. “The basement. Last door on the left. And Elena? Don’t touch the honeycomb.”
1972 – First Sting. Notes of clover and young regret. 1978 – The Honeymoon Jar. Wildflower, salt, and a tear that didn’t fall. 1985 – Lonely Harvest. Buckwheat honey so dark it drank the light. honey wilder collection
Elena first saw the Honey Wilder Collection in the window of a dusty antique shop on a rain-slicked Tuesday. The sign, hand-painted in faded gold leaf, sat beside a cracked porcelain doll: “One owner. All original. Not for the faint of heart.”
She never bought the collection. But sometimes, late at night, she tastes clover and regret on her tongue—and she smiles. Because some sweetness is worth the sting. “What happens if I buy one
The shopkeeper was waiting at the top of the stairs. “Everyone who opens the Queen tastes one of her sorrows. That one was the day her husband left. But you—you only cried. Most people scream.”
Elena hadn’t given her name.
Curiosity, like a sweet tooth, got the better of her.
The woman smiled, sad and slow. “Then you don’t own the honey, dear. The honey owns you. It preserves the moment you opened it. You’ll live that sorrow forever, every night, just before sleep. Sweet, isn’t it? The way pain never really expires.” Last door on the left
The glass was warm. Through it, she saw a woman—Honey Wilder herself, in a floral dress, standing in a field of goldenrod. The memory played like a silent film: Honey laughing, then crying, then holding a single bee in her palm as a storm gathered behind her. The bee didn’t sting. It climbed her finger, then flew into the dark.
The shop was closed the next day. And the next. When Elena returned a week later, the building was a vacant lot overgrown with wildflowers and buzzing with bees that seemed to know her name.