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February 15, 2022

The Water Dragons, By Lorraine Schein

(I-Ching, Hexagram 1, Yang--Immersed Dragon)

"Heavy rain is dragon rain," the Chinese say.

It’s not pouring cats and dogs—it’s pouring dragons today.

Gripping the clouds with their black claws,

their tails lash and rumble against the gray sky, 

releasing silver-scaled streams.

 

When I click open my umbrella,

their fiery breath pours lightning down,

burning a ragged hole where

the glistening rain pours through.

 

My hair streams with rivulets like the dragons’ manes

as they race above me, a fleet of pelting beasts.

 

O to be a rain dragon, exultant in my power!

Under the cleansing torrents of this wild maelstrom,

I forget being human and its sorrows,

I forget everything but my dragon power--

the power to heal, burst and flood away rigid paradigms.

 

Heaven is my ocean.

I growl, beat my wings, swerve up past the moon           

and join my clan snaking through the heavens.

 

An aerial flotilla immersed in waves of lizard-green,

glint-gold sunlight, polyp-red coral, lagoon-turquoise,

all glorious in the aquatic sky,

my thunder of dragons!

Lorraine Schein is a New York writer. Her work has appeared in VICE Terraform, Strange Horizons, and Mermaids Monthly, and in the anthology, Tragedy Queens: Stories Inspired by Lana del Rey & Sylvia Plath. The Futurist’s Mistress, her poetry book, is available from Mayapple Press: www.mayapplepress.com

Cover Image: Hokusai
Cover Design: Amanda Bergloff 

Twitter @AmandaBergloff

Instagram: amandabergloff 

The Wolf and The Wind, By James Dodds

 

There once was a time when birds talked as well as sang, wells granted wishes, and rainbows spied out pots of elven gold. In that time, magic, both great and small, was commonplace among mortals adept enough to believe, understand and use it.


One such person, a woman named Phaedra, dwelt at the edge of the woods, just past the tilled fields of the village, in a cozy cottage nestled under a grove of ancient trees. The villagers sought Phaedra out for cures, love potions, warding charms and her mastery of “the sight.”

 

Phaedra’s mother was ailing. Phaedra packed a basket of food and remedies, some magical, some simple herbs. Turning to her child, she said, “Daughter, take this to your grandmother as quick as ever you can.”

 

Her daughter, Morgan, wise beyond her ten years, snatched her scarlet cloak and hood from the hook. “Yes, mama.” As she turned to go, Phaedra pressed a small whistle into her hand. “In case of trouble, use this,” she commanded. “But remember, your wits are your true magic.” Her daughter nodded. She stepped out onto the stoop, surveyed the woods surrounding the path and set out at a trot. Her mother watched the forest shadows reach after the girl, dark forms that melted back into the woods as the girl hastened past.

 

Morgan paused for breath where the path forked three ways. As she pondered her choice, a big wolf sauntered up. “Lost, are you?” he asked. Grinning, he padded around the girl in an ever-shrinking circle. Morgan fumbled about in her basket. The wolf stopped directly in front of her, his hungry yellow eyes all a-glow. The girl held up a morsel of meat long enough for the wolf to get a sniff, then tossed it into the air. The wolf leapt up and snap! went his jaws. Morgan pulled another tidbit out of the basket, flinging it even higher. The wolf eagerly devoured this one too. But the clever girl had fed him one of her mother’s poultice ingredients: a bundle of shredded horseradish root!

 

The bad wolf’s eyes and nose gushed rivers. He howled in pain and dashed away, desperately seeking water. Morgan raced up the middle path. As she scampered, her hood flew back, revealing golden curls that sparkled in the sunlight.

 

Presently she came across a little house with a thatched roof. The door stood wide open. Morgan slipped inside, quickly bolting the door after her. She whirled around to find… an empty room. No one was home. Three chairs huddled around the fireplace. Three beds stood under the back window. And three bowls of warm porridge rested on the table, issuing steam that shimmered in the air.

 

As Morgan leaned over to sniff the porridge, the door rattled violently against the bolt. Outside, the wolf snarled, “Little girl, little girl, let me in, let me in!”

 

Morgan’s sudden fright turned to anger. She marched to the door and firmly said, “No! You are a bad wolf! Not a tooth, not a whisker, not even a hair of yours shall enter this house.”

 

The wolf gnashed his large teeth in rage. “Little girl,” he growled. “I can blow the leaves off the trees. I can blow the tufts off dandelions from a mile away. I will blow this door down and then gobble you up in three big bites!” He marched ten paces back from the door and began to huff and to puff.

 

As the wolf raged outside, Morgan put her mother’s whistle to her lips. She waited until a high, keening wind buffeted the door. It shook against its hinges and the bolt quivered sharply in the bolt-hole. Taking a deep breath, Morgan blew gently on the whistle. Out of nowhere, a counter-wind smothered the wolf’s effort. She heard him grunt with surprise. Here’s a surprise, she thought. She tooted on the whistle and a sharp gust knocked the wolf head over heels. He yelped as his head struck a rock.

 

Twice more the wolf attacked and twice more the girl beat him back. The third time, she spun in a circle, blowing the whistle as hard as she could. A whirlwind descended on the wolf, picking him up and flinging him against a tree.

 

Morgan opened the door and peered out. The big wolf lay face down, groaning and gasping for breath. “Oh, Mr. Wolf!” she called. “You won’t be dining on me today, but there is some nice porridge here you might enjoy.” She skipped on up the path until she was out of sight. Wanting to see what the wolf did next, she ducked into the forest and crept back to the little house.

 

Not feeling at all big or bad, the wolf crawled into the cabin. Famished, he gulped down the porridge, licking the bowls clean. Exhausted, with a full stomach, he curled up on the biggest bed and fell fast asleep.

 

The girl was about to continue on to Grandmother’s house when three enormous shadows loomed across the path. She shrank back and fearfully watched a family of grouchy bears lumber past. Papa Bear grumbled about how hungry he was. Baby Bear couldn’t stop whining. Mama Bear cuffed Baby Bear and gritted her teeth at Papa Bear.

 

Snarling at each other, the bears shoved through the door. Silence fell as they gazed around their home. Crouched outside the window, Morgan felt their anger spiral up until Mama Bear saw the muddy wolf on her clean bedsheets and shrieked, “You filthy beast!” The hungry bears fell on the wolf and gobbled him up.

 

Shortly thereafter, Morgan let herself into her grandmother’s house. There, on the loom, was a half-finished love blanket, with the letters M O R already woven in. Grandmother sat up in bed and grinned at her daughter’s daughter.

 

“Oh Grandmother, what a big smile you have!” said Morgan.


James Dodds has been published in 2100: A Health Odyssey and The Avenue magazine. He bides his time on a quiet plot of land just west of Spokane, Washington. He collects original Oz books and never wavers in his search for the perfect fried chicken recipe.

Cover Image: John Everett Millais
Cover Design: Amanda Bergloff 

Wings, By Jordan Hirsch

  

Wings of spun sugar,

wrapped up in paper:

a gift from the god

who lived down the river.

 

His increasing favor

had grown even greater,

intentions made known

with sprawling curled letters:

 

“It’s true, you are sweeter

than all other creatures.

My bird, won’t you sail

through my sky on these feathers?

 

But when there is thunder

or the sky’s clouded over,

go home right away

where you’ll be warm and safer.”

 

So when skies were clear,

I’d don crystal feathers,

eyes on the horizon

for clouds taking over.

 

I’d soar, and I’d hover

over meadows of clover

leaves of forest below

like waves of the water.

 

But when I’d stray farther

than I had ever,

I’d hurry back home

as blue skies turned grayer.

 

It never did matter

just how nice the weather

was before leaving;

it always turned sour.

 

One day I discovered

with my candy feathers,

a place more beautiful

than my mind could muster.

 

Landing with a bluster,

I entered the cavern

and there in the dark found

the nest of some creature.

 

Off over my shoulder

I heard distant thunder,

but there was plenty of time

to fly home, I figured.

 

Her wings were of ochre;

they spread from her shoulders.

She guarded her eggs

with the strength of a mother.

 

Her eyes burned with fervor

at my wings made of sugar,

and I saw in her gaze

questions I couldn’t answer.

 

The thunder boomed closer,

calling for my departure,

so I took to the sky

as the wind became quicker.

 

I flew with on vigor

and just a few prayers

to bring me home safely

as the storm quickly gathered.

 

But soon came the downpour,

and I landed in terror

as my wings began melting

into puddles of sugar.

 

I walked home in slippers

then my cheeks grew redder

embarrassed to find

in my cabin, a visitor.

 

“You can’t fly in this weather--

did you not remember?”

His words rang out harshly

as his eyes shaded darker.

 

“I’ll make you a new pair,”

he said through his temper.

“But you have to stay grounded

during inclement weather.”

 

So I smiled sweeter

than any smile prior,

and I promised obedience

while crossing my fingers.

 

Then alone by the fire,

my soul burned with anger,

for he is the god

who sends rain on the farmers.

 

Six rainy days later,

new wings wrapped in paper

arrived at my door,

fragile feathers of sugar.

 

Veiled gifts from a lover--

no, gaslighting imprisoner.

Sugar wings are a cage,

just a gold-gilded tether.

 

I waited till after

his eyes seemed to wander

And then I flew off in the sun

to revisit the creature.

 

She bid me come closer

letting me study her:

grown her eggs and her wings

both apart from another.

 

Maybe that was the answer

to my gold-gilded tether.

Cut it myself--

then it started to thunder.

 

Lifting up in the air,

candy wings beating faster,

I now knew what to do

all thanks to my teacher.

 

Feet landing on clover

it started to downpour,

and I doffed candy wings

throwing them in the river.

 

Reaching for my interior,

I felt waiting, a flutter

--something bold and alive

that’d been with me forever.

 

I gasped out in labor,

but the pain was an anchor

as they sprout from my back--

something harder than sugar.

 

They were longer and stronger

than any god’s favor.

The wings of my flesh

shook and flung off the water.

 

With my own wings unhindered,

my feet left the clover

lifting me in the air

without even a stutter.

 

That god up the river

called me his bird, only sweeter.

What he didn’t realize

is I’m some other creature.

 

I have grown my own savior

from deep in my shoulders.

Now I fly untethered

in sun or in rain.



Jordan Hirsch writes speculative fiction and poetry in Saint Paul, MN, where she lives with her husband. Her work has appeared with Apparition Literary Magazine, Octavos, and other venues. Find her on Twitter: @jordanrhirsch.

Cover Design: Amanda Bergloff 

A Heart of Diamond, By Rachel Nussbaum

 

They say long ago when this land was still barren and dry, there was a girl who was born with a heart made of diamond. Her skin was like that of frosted glass, and as her mother gazed down at her daughter, she could see it clear as day. A diamond heart, shimmering as it pumped liquid gem blood throughout the newborn's body. The midwives and the clerics who assisted with the birth were awed by the sight, and word quickly spread. Soon, people all across the land knew about the little baby girl with a diamond heart. 


But word travels across all circles, good and bad. When bad men heard the stories, many of them spoke of finding the girl and cutting out her valuable heart. Whispers carried back to the child’s mother and father, who were very worried for their daughter. They prayed to the Gods in the Sun and the Moon to protect their baby girl. The gods heard the parent’s prayers, but gods have a reputation for being merciless and absolute, and the Gods in the Sun and the Moon were no exception. 


Gods are powerful, and although they could not take away or change the girl's heart because it was a part of her, they could give her the power to defend herself. They came down to the baby girl one night and they filled her with poison. 


“Her diamond heart is far too pure for her to ever willingly use this, even against those who wish to harm her.” The God in the Sun said. 


“Then we will give her sharp nails and teeth that will excrete the poison, and we will turn her skin into poison as well. And anyone who will touch her will die a horrible, painful death,” the God in the Moon nodded. 


So the little girl grew up, but as she grew, she changed. Her fingers split open into poisonous barbs, and her teeth grew into long fangs that dripped venom. Her skin became like sandpaper, coarse and sharp, every inch of it poison to the touch. 


The tears that poured from the girl's eyes when her mother could no longer hold her were poison. And the cold sweat that dripped from her pores as she rocked herself to sleep alone at night were poison. And she looked up at the sky at night and begged the God in the Moon to take the poison away, and she’d look up during the day and beg the God in the Sun the same, but the Gods couldn’t take away or change her poison because it was a part of her now. They turned their backs on the girl, content that if nothing else, she was now safe from the bad men who wanted to steal her heart. 

The bad men who came for her died, but so did her friends that reached out to comfort her, and her lovers who were desperate to hold her. She lived a life of sadness and longing, and she cursed the gods for afflicting her with a poison that took everything from her. 

One day when the loneliness was too much, the girl threw herself down into a stony creek, and she broke her neck on the rocks. And all that poison she was filled with trickled out of her eyes along with her tears. 


Yet even after death, even after rot, her tears still trickled out. And when they evaporated in the light of day and weighed heavy in the clouds above, those same tears rained back down to the lands, harder than any storm we’d ever seen. 


Finally free of the poison that plagued her tears in life, in death, the girl’s tears hit the earth far too pure to cause any harm. Instead they quenched the barren soil and breathed life into it. Soon grass grew, and then trees. Then forests, stretching for hundreds of miles, tall and full of life.


They say it’s the girl's spirit in her tears that makes the towering trees of this land twist to block out the Sun and the Moon, the Gods that cursed her and turned their backs on her. And they say that somewhere at the bottom of the swamp, her poisonless body still cries, cradling a heart of diamond no one ever knew.



Cover Design: Amanda Bergloff 

The Wizard and The Wiser, By Ryan E. Holman

 

I wandered in the desert

until I found my way 

to an astrologer.

She told me to seek a Virgo;

instead, I seem to have found virga.

 

Impressive clouds race toward me

sweeping up my senses

stoking my anticipation

until at last rain falls 

toward the cracked, impatient ground.

 

But then it stops.

 

Halfway down the sky

the rain evaporates

hanging like ribbons

tauntingly close

yet still out of reach.

 

I tire of building walls

on which to stand

to try and quench my thirst.

I tire of wandering

with my eyes wanting an oasis

so badly that I hallucinate;

I tire of the tantalizing mirage,

lush and green yet

having neither depth nor substance.

 

If you want me, I will be here, 

continuing to chart my path 

by the positions of the stars and moon.

But I will not spend energy to scale walls

that will never reach your raindrops

regardless of how much I desire to drink.













Ryan E. Holman has published poetry in the Silver Spring/Takoma Park Voice and was featured thrice in the Third Thursday Takoma Park Reading Series. In 2016 and 2021, she won third prize in the Baltimore Science Fiction Society’s poetry contest. Ryan lives in the Washington, DC area.


Cover Design: Amanda Bergloff 

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