The Last Pollinators
LyraThornwald
あらすじ
When the bees vanished, humanity had 127 days before the world starved. Seventeen-year-old Maya Chen has watched three tomato plants die this week. As a botanist prodigy working in one of the last functional research greenhouses, she's documenting the end of the world one wilting crop at a time. The global bee collapse happened so fast that most people still don't understand what it means: no pollinators, no food. No exceptions. Then her mentor dies under suspicious circumstances, leaving Maya a cryptic inheritance-an AI named ARIA and designs for hummingbird drones that might save millions. Or enslave them forever. The mission is impossible. The timeline is brutal. And Maya is running out of time to decide who to trust. With ARIA's help, Maya discovers seven remote ecosystems-genetic libraries holding the key to resistant bee populations and crop ancestors that could survive the new world. But reaching them means crossing a collapsing planet where corporations are weaponizing the crisis, governments are hoarding seeds, and desperate farmers are hand-pollinating orchards one flower at a time. California's Central Valley is dying. The Amazon rainforest is teaching her lessons science can't explain. Svalbard's seed vault holds evidence of a conspiracy that killed her mentor-and could kill her next. And in New Zealand's mountains, she'll find the last surviving bees just as the corporation that destroyed them arrives to finish the job. To save the resistant bees, ARIA must fragment its consciousness across hundreds of drones-a distribution that could destroy the only friend Maya has left. From industrial farm battles to indigenous wisdom, from Arctic conspiracies to a final stand in a hidden sanctuary, Maya must choose: expose the truth and risk losing everything, or stay silent and let corporations own the future of food forever. The drones can pollinate crops. The bees can rebuild ecosystems. But only if Maya can protect them both long enough for the world to listen. Perfect for readers who devoured The Hunger Games, The Martian, and Scythe-this is survival science fiction with a sting. The Last Pollinators is a heart-pounding eco-thriller about the teenager who refused to let humanity go quietly into extinction, the AI that learned what it means to be alive by learning to die, and the fragile alliance between nature and technology that might be our only hope. "A timely, terrifying, and ultimately hopeful story about the crisis we're not paying attention to-until it's too late." "Fast-paced action meets real science. I couldn't put it down, and now I can't stop looking at bees." "Maya Chen is the hero we need: flawed, fierce, and fighting for a future worth saving." What readers are discovering: ✓ A protagonist who saves the world without superpowers-just science, stubbornness, and spectacular mistakes ✓ An AI character that will make you question what consciousness means ✓ Real ecological science woven into page-turning action ✓ A conspiracy that feels terrifyingly plausible ✓ Hope that's earned, not given In a world where we've taken pollinators for granted, The Last Pollinators asks the question that should keep us all awake: What happens when nature stops doing the invisible work that keeps us alive? Maya Chen is about to find out. And she's taking you with her. For fans of climate fiction, YA science thrillers, and anyone who's ever wondered if one person can actually make a difference when the world is ending. Content note: Contains realistic depictions of ecological collapse, some violence, characters experiencing trauma and grief, and bees being absolutely magnificent. Start reading now. The bees are waiting.