Wrong is the creator-owned magazine of uncanny and disturbing stories.



Tuesday, 23 December 2025

The Last Tree

by John Hagan 

At the ends’ beginning, dreamt I she stood with me,

There at the forest’s furthest edge, beside the final tree,

As snowflakes gently fell, white in her dark-brown hair,

I joked to see her silver-touched, whom centuries would spare.

 

She took my hand as we regarded, the snow-fields awesome spread, 

As dipped towards the horizon, the sun in cloaks of red, 

And the shadows of the trees, wrote long words upon the ground,

That oldest of our alphabets, that not in books is found. 

 

“Make a wish upon this tree”, she pressed my hand upon its bark,

“The final one that stands, before the polar arc;

There’s magic in its wood, nourished by aurora’s rays,

That sees it through that Winter’s night, that lasts a hundred days.” 

 

For this sunset red, blue, gold, was the last that would be seen,

Whilst into depths of space, the North did tilt and lean;

And we lingered as by twilight, one by one the stars were found,

The rules of day undone, and its secrets were unbound.

  

“Taiga, Taiga, burning bright,

‘Neath the Aurora, in days of night!”

(I murmured so in rhyme- 

And she looked at me with that look, that takes me out of time)

 

Home through darkling woods we crept - beware the tracks of beasts, 

The forest a vast cathedral, and wolves its hungry priests, 

Until hand in hand we ran, joyful-scared of monster’s tread,

Returning to our tower, and the warmth of hearth and bed. 

 

Oh, there’s something to be said, for days of endless night,

When our only lantern is, the rippling Northern light,

And the only music needed, is the crackling of the fire,

That seems to dance in harmony, to the beats of our desire. 

 

Now shines upon our skin, the fire’s reflected glow,

As outside lunar light, leaps and shimmers in the snow,

And nightfall like a cloak, enchants this forest world,

As the awful, awesome cosmos, above us is unfurled. 

 

I close my eyes and know, that I have all I need,

And for the cares of ‘morrow, I will take no heed,

Let the sun be gone, and banished all its beams,

For warm beside me lies, the Princess of my dreams.

 

 

*  *  *

 

At the end’s beginning, I awoke alone,

Grasping for a fading world, that fading dreams had shown,

Grimacing as my boots, sealed round my aching feet,

Buckling on my uniform, I rose to blistering heat.

 

Above the July sky, stretched immaculate blue,

Blinding every single star, from our mortal view, 

In the trench we gathered, as if to spring up from our graves,

And charge the treeless plain, we cowards and we braves. 

 

Down from the Heavens, sunstroke like a mace,

Beat unremitting, on my pale and fearful face,

And I thought of my lost love, a girl of the Fay,

And the garden where we’d danced, on a Midsummer’s Day. 

 

Another dance we’d promised, when Midwinter came,

But she’d vanished from my life, and I knew not her name, 

No way back to our garden, here only barbed-wire bloomed,

Flowering with stinking corpses, the flesh- fruit of the doomed.

 

Our Captain did offer me, his last bottle of wine,

A libation he joked; which I did decline,

I looked at my brothers, as we readied our arms,

Thinking of families, our towns and our farms. 

 

The roar of our cannons, reached its final end,

The barrage was lifting, all us boys to send, 

Now the whistles were sounding, and there was no more time- 

 

Until I felt on my cheek, a stray flake of rime.