Cauldron Anthology Issue 4: Seasons Cauldron Anthology - Seasons | Page 28

A Dread Queen’s Winter Ellen Webre First published by Calliope Literary Magazine The daughter of spring is a barren field, a pitch black wreath of shadows from the day her lover lay her down and did what men and gods do. That is what they say at Summer’s prompting, so that no mortal will offer milk and honey to half-dead children. If Hecate is a songbird, then Persephone can be pregnant, wiping red pollen from her breasts in Poseidon's garden. Her uncle is fond of her, as she brings messages from a brother long buried beneath salt and seashells. Her footprints make anemones on the shores of Cythera, Infants cannot be carried for six months of a year, so over and over the unborn are baptized in the river Styx, glaze-eyed ghosts in the arms of a dark sister. Persephone does not mind this, knowing well that their shrieks of laughter comfort her husband when she is away. None will ever feel sunlight, so she captures its fire in her hair, wrapping them around the clamor of youth who drink it in like bull blood. They are garnets blooming inside themselves, these poppies of silk sheet unions, these pomegranate seeds made flesh. 28 Cauldron Anthology