Orion Magazine

Shape of the Wound

BEFORE THE STORM, my children and I carried the potted plants indoors. We emptied the linen closet onto the floor and hauled the contents to the yard, where we wrapped the citrus trees in sheets and covered the cactus with a thin blanket. My husband wrapped the trunk of the peach tree in a sleeping bag. That evening, we played a board game and ate stew. My children went to bed excited that—for only the third time in their lives—they might wake up to a little snow.

In the morning we indeed had a little snow on the ground, a “skiff” as we would have called it back home in Missouri. The light was thin and gray, the sky a little overcast, and because the power had gone out during the night, the house was already cold. The cell phone towers were also out of commission, so we had no cell service and very little information. The

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Orion Magazine

Orion Magazine7 min read
Nice Monsters
I WONDER IF you’ve been called nice before, that placeholder of a word. “She’s nice”: a whitewash with a certain generic sheen, coats of primer applied a few too many times, announcing its intention to ward off attention or suspicion. Nice people or
Orion Magazine4 min read
Resurrection Biology
George Church has a beard like God’s.Each whisker contains helices of DNAthat curve like mammoth tusks. Church and his team work to resurrectthe woolly mammoth, or rather, to createan approximation of it—an elephant cousinadapted to the Arctic. The m
Orion Magazine1 min read
Probably Something About The Grass
Considering softness,considering each leaf a brief and lonelylyric, considering, especially, the bladeswhich have browned with a sun-sweet leisureand thirst for time, what is a gentle wayto imagine this reckoning? We who speakthe language of home kno

Related Books & Audiobooks