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Issue Winter 2025

The Kraken Waketh

By Climate fiction Dystopian

With the enormous eye as a reference point, they could resolve the shape’s features: a fin, a long barrel of mantle, a splay of serpentine arms. As the crowds milled and jostled for a view, the Doctors Sen watched the creature’s vast form fade to the ghostly white of cephalopod senescence. A cephalopod of an order that had already used up superlative names—giant, colossal—without anticipating how much size remained to classify. Only legend and myth could provide a name.

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Mother, Do Not Grieve

By Dark Fantasy

“Scrawny,” she says, prodding her this way and that, pinching her ribs, sparse as sitar strings. “Far too scrawny. But your hair,” the Grieving Mother touches the end of her braid, long and dark, the last remnant of her mother. She shies away, afraid the Grieving Mother might chop it all away. But the Grieving Mother only shakes her head, drawing the ends of her white odhni over her bald head. “Well. I can do something with that.”

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The Fig Tree

By Dark Fantasy

Her grandmother’s house tugs at her. She doesn’t know if it’s nostalgia or a way of missing her mother and even her grandmother. Ankita longs for familiar skin, the sheen of sweat behind their ears, hair glistening with sweet hibiscus oil. The heat-and-lotion smell she’s grasped for all her life.

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The Curse of Kala Sagar

By Dark Fantasy

It is a Friday again and the citizens of Kala Sagar have gathered for the local Kavi Sammelan, the Festival of Bards. The townspeople chime in with their own stories, lore passed by time that has been picked up by the wind. Curses are everywhere, they proclaim loudly: in cotton-eyed flowers that lull kids into drowning, in false moonlight that conjure images and lead one to waste away, and in shoes that can swallow someone’s whole being.

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Here Comes Your Man

By Horror

The phone is in her hands. She doesn’t want to switch it on for fear of this coffin-like space keeping her safe and trapped, she doesn’t want to see Aditya’s face in that pale blue glow, the blood marking out a crimson grin in a ghost mask, she doesn’t want to see that he’s not Aditya at all, but something else, that ancient god behind dead eyes, animated by the rutting of horrible men from across time.

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