
Katherine Quevedo was born and raised near Portland, Oregon, where…
My grapes glisten obediently upon trained vines,
But you cannot be trained.
The water channels I’ve shaped duly irrigate my cave,
But your troth cannot be drained.
Ambrosia and nectar have been bested by meat and wine,
For you, Odysseus, my would-be slave,
Resist the divine.
Who’s truly captive when they captivate the captor?
Go on, chop down my tree.
Here. Augurs for your raft. Bore holes in the wood,
Like you have done to me.
Who flees an immortal’s embrace and thus has trapped her?
You, Odysseus, moving on for good,
Ending my chapter.
Previously published in NonBinary Review.

Katherine Quevedo was born and raised near Portland, Oregon, where she works as an analyst and lives with her husband and two sons. Her poetry has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and the Rhysling Award, and her debut mini-chapbook, The Inca Weaver’s Tales, is available from Sword & Kettle Press. Her poems have appeared in Asimov’s, HWA Poetry Showcase, Apparition Literary Magazine, Heroic Fantasy Quarterly, and elsewhere. Her debut fantasy novella, Thrice Petrified, is forthcoming from Of Metal and Magic Publishing.