Invasion, by Erik Amundsen
When the lake gets low, you can see the heads of the swimming gods. They’re made of some white stone that does not stain or erode and repels the creeping … Continue reading →
Ever Changing, Ever Turning, by Yukimi Ogawa
Shino felt the air in the shop shift as the young woman walked in. People stared—people who were used to being stared at. They just couldn’t help it. The woman … Continue reading →
Wax Names, by Evelyn Deshane
“The word?” he asked. Through the slot in the doorway, I saw the black line, made from soot and ash, across his eyes. The King wanted this feature on all … Continue reading →
The Problem with Thunderstorms, by Dennis Mombauer
There was thunder in the distance, and a fine veil of concrete dust rained down from the ceiling. The people who had fled from the storm into the subway cringed, … Continue reading →
A Million Future Days, by Charles Payseur
“I’ve been here before,” says a me from two years from now, from a world covered in ash and darkness. “This is how it starts. This is how it all … Continue reading →
Tiny Guns, by Steven Earnshaw
The dogs were homeless dogs and not liked and the parish meeting agenda was dominated by the problem of anarchic pariahs. In general the dogs were well-behaved, shitting in obscure … Continue reading →
On the Occasion of the Treaty of the Thousand Rivers, A Visit to the Gallery, by Wren Wallis
Ah, you flatter me, General. I suspected you would enjoy my little collection; you are plainly a man of discernment. That one? A gift, a treasured gift to me from … Continue reading →
The Transfigured Knight, by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro
(Content warning for torture and sexual assault) Chapter One The Knight awoke from the longest sleep of his life and found that his armour had become too heavy to bear. … Continue reading →
The Automatic Prime Ministers, by Kate Heartfield
Flora embraced Maryam under the gaze of their respective security details. The alien spacecraft was on the wrong side of the Earth to be watching, but somehow Flora felt its … Continue reading →
“Contra Gravitatem (Vita Genevievis)”, by Arkady Martine
Vega Septemiensis 273. “CONTRA GRAVITATEM” a LIFE of the apocryphal SAINT GENEVIEVE preserved in Late English (w/ some Greek characters), anonymous, 23rd century CE, acid-etched on lead sheets. St. Genevieve the … Continue reading →