At the table where we were gathered, the beekeper recounted how a bear tipped over his bee-boxes and raided them night after night after night—reaching in and tearing out the trays, having smelled the honey and the hive on a warm downwind. Any of us, I'm sure, would leave our own forest cover, climb up the gully and cross the road into alien country, intent on the scent of what lures. In one of the old Looney Tunes cartoons we watched as kids on Saturday mornings, one taste of sticky amber is enough to drive evenTaz crazy—he forces one paw in the opening, then the other, despite stings and throbbing limbs. Don't you know what you rouse out of dormancy into seething becomes the specter that can haunt you? You want to tame it, possess it; marry whatever desire has stunned you with awe or certainty or disbelief.