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Picture autumn of the year; the creek
runs marrow-thick. The air breathes feral,
yellow milk on doorsteps left like children
to curdle past noon. There's a reason
no one in these parts writes about wolves
anymore. There's a reason the stars
hang low. Behind shut doors,
I speak moonblood, deathsong, dusk
settling under my floorboards. A stake
is raised in the square before dawn,
and iron is the price for a soul.

Harvest
is a study in snapped branches. By this,
I mean it reeks of things that no longer think
to step softly. After dark,
a half-shadowed hunger comes down
to the waterside to drink. Armor is not enough
in those hours of night, no matter
how unpierced, how cruel carmine.
Wooded paths are no friend to pale ankles
and a flower chain worn against
a white white neck.

Look closely now: I contradict
the gaping gray stillness, little more
than a crow's frame and a tightening
of the eyes. In two blinks, gone.
In two mouthfuls, a mess of color
to drape over the teeth. I make a lattice
of my fingers as a house for my heartbeat.
See how I quiver with my smallest
of faiths. How my small face
beckons to the grasping trees.
How my small feet leave no prints
for the morning. How quietly
I am asking to be caught.




Christina Im is fifteen years old and attends high school in Portland, Oregon. She has been recognized both regionally and nationally by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in several publications, including Words Dance and Rose Red Review.
Current Issue
12 May 2025

You saw her for the first time at your front door, like she wanted to sell you something or convert you. She had light hair and dark eyes, and she was wearing fatigues, which was the only way you knew that your panicked prayers of the last few minutes had not come true. “Don’t freak out,” she said. “I’m you. From—uh, let’s just say from the future. Can I come inside?”
Time will not return to you as it was.
The verdant hills they whispered of this man so apt to sin / chimney smoke was pure as mountain snow compared to him.
In this episode of Strange Horizons at 25, editor Kat Kourbeti talks to Naomi Kritzer about her non-linear writing journey, imagining positive futures, and how to deal with the world catching up to your near-future specfic.
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