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The first perpetual motion machine
was a mother who could
put her arms around you
endlessly.

She will never need fuel,
the engineers said smugly.

They put quilting on her
metal limbs so that we could nuzzle
into her embrace. We were
starved monkeys glutting on a love
they promised would never run dry.

Energy is conserved and redirected without a net loss,
the engineers began,

and we
stopped listening, and we
buried our faces in the comfort
of a true isolated system, and we
never gave her fuel, or thought, or
gratitude, or a name, or
any say in the matter,

and she
cradled us forever, in defiance of
all laws of thermodynamics, and she
never spoke, and never stopped, and
never lost, and never gained.



Natasha King is a Vietnamese American writer and nature enthusiast. Her work has appeared in Clarkesworld, Nightmare Magazine, Uncanny Magazine, and elsewhere. In her spare time, she enjoys thinking about the ocean. She can be found on Twitter as @pelagic_natasha.
Current Issue
10 Nov 2025

We deposit the hip shards in the tin can my mother reserves for these incidents. It is a recycled red bean paste can. If you lean in and sniff, you can still smell the red bean paste. There is a larger tomato sauce can for larger bones. That can has been around longer and the tomato sauce smell has washed out. I have considered buying my mother a special bone bag, a medical-grade one lined with regrowth powder to speed up the regeneration process, but I know it would likely sit, unused, in the bottom drawer of her nightstand where she keeps all the gifts she receives and promptly forgets.
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