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She keeps telling me she is [   ], not [   ], and I say nothing,
since I have never been either myself. They do not cover this
in the book on allyship. She gets braids for a second time, streaked

with blonde. She says colours are a cry for attention, a neediness,
but the wheat tone is pleasing. She says they are heavy but
you get used to them. Especially when you are expecting

the way they pull at the scalp. My husband does not recognize
her in the picture. I shrug, one shoulder tilting beneath my purple bob,
uneven in the balance. A set of scales is something you can hold out,

to let the person most concerned with calibration / exchange /
transformation figure out what it all means, the measurement
and the feather on the other side. I am a point in time. A crux.

A pivot. The trick to remembering is to know that we do not become
a solid thing until we die. Up to that point everything is
an active becoming. The way certain crustaceans can keep shedding

their last confinement until they carry around so much mass
they can no longer stand to be tender, they can no longer manage
to escape. I cannot give anyone answers, so I become a small

chip of flint, a small silence in a conversation, a small carving in the rock
face. I become an absence so small it can’t be seen from the ground but
it holds a toe long enough for you to press yourself flat against the climb

and rest. We are not all built to be beautiful, we are not all built to rampage.
Fossilization is the kind of change I can be in this world, come daybreak.



Shana Ross is a recent transplant to Edmonton, Alberta and Treaty 6 Territory. Qui transtulit sustinet. Her work has recently appeared in Augur, The Deadlands, Radon Journal, Paranoid Tree, and more. She feeds the magpies in her backyard diligently, but friendship apparently takes more time and peanuts.
Current Issue
18 May 2026

Maybe we overestimated ourselves, I thought, watching the ferries hum against the wine-dark sea. Even if we floated above it, we were still bound to the ocean, engulfed in all its weight and inescapable history. To believe otherwise was a kind of hubris. But we had believed otherwise anyway, and so each of us had become something smaller, less human, suspended in a brittle net of want and memory. And then she appeared. At the wrong time, in the wrong place. My Scylla, my monstress, my deathless siren of anglerfish light. Longing, in that empty, unmoving ocean, for things that had not existed for centuries. How could anyone blame her? The only alternative was to grieve. 
My grandmother slit my father’s bones and let them fly with yeast.
the nightingale was caught in a net / and brought to a lab for further study.
Wednesday: Loss Protocol by Paul McAuley 
Friday: The Midnight Shift by Cheon Seon-Ran, translated by Gene Png 
Issue 11 May 2026
Issue 4 May 2026
Issue 20 Apr 2026
By: Athar Fikry
Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 13 Apr 2026
Issue 6 Apr 2026
Issue 30 Mar 2026
Issue 23 Mar 2026
Issue 16 Mar 2026
Issue 9 Mar 2026
By: Lio Abendan
Podcast read by: Jenna Hanchey
Strange Horizons
2 Mar 2026
Strange Horizons invites non-fiction submissions for our March 30 special issue on “Fungi in SFF.”
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