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Bugs In a Box

By William N. Wells

In the central highlands of South Vietnam a few clicks north of Pleiku is a hill, the top of which during my time in-country in 1968 was occupied by an American engineering battalion and a communications station. This hill I called home for a year was surrounded by forest…and rings of barbed wire studded with Claymore mines, guard towers, and machine gun nests.

These defenses were pretty effective in keeping Charley out and us in, but were of little use in keeping out anything smaller than a house cat. During certain times of the year, the visitors that came unimpeded through the barbed wire included enormous rhinoceros beetles.

In North America, we are not used to encountering insects as big as mice, but some of these tropical critters were three or four inches long. Rhinoceros beetle were formidable creatures, looking much like their namesake with multiple horns on their heads and an exoskeleton which was no doubt effective in fending off adversaries of their own fighting weight.

But not us. Despite twelve-hour shifts seven days a week plus guard duty, the days dragged on, we were young, and in the world in which we found ourselves, entertainment and compassion were in short supply.

One evening during rhinoceros beetle season, it occurred to one of our number to cut a large rectangular hole in the lid of a shoebox and tape clear plastic across the hole to form a window. He and his friends then walked around the compound, enlisting unsuspecting rhinoceros beetles for the evening’s entertainment. To their startled insect eyes, in our helmets and flak jackets we must have seemed the biggest bugs they had ever seen.

Dozens of unfortunate beetles whose numbers came up that evening were marshaled together and deposited into the box, enough beetles almost to fill it. Their captors then placed the lid onto the box of wriggling beetles, taped it shut, and gathered around to peer into the window and watch what happened next.

What we didn’t expect was the roar that issued from the sealed box, audible all the way across the compound, as the beetles fought and clambered over each over in a Black Hole of Calcutta recreated just for them,

Entranced, mesmerized, we watched the churning mass of insects through the window as the roaring continued for what seemed like hours. As for what we saw through that window, imagine a glimpse into Hell through the glass door of a front-loading washing machine.

Eventually, the roar emitting from the box began to subside as the captive beetles slew each other and exhausted themselves. And eventually, their captors untaped the lid and unceremoniously dumped the contents of the box onto the ground. Truth be told, there wasn’t much left to liberate.

The pile on the ground consisted of numerous dead beetles, hundreds of body parts, and a few luckless survivors, lurching unsteadily away on whatever limbs remained attached to them.  No bug medics appeared to carry them away to safety. No bug VA representatives showed up to hand them forms to attempt to fill out with whatever appendages they had left.

No widows or offspring came forward to claim the remains, honor the dead and give them a proper burial.

You would think that there would be some kinship and solidarity among fighting bugs, even across species. But no…for we were young, and in the world in which we found ourselves, entertainment and compassion were in short supply.

We big bugs (those of us who stayed out of kill boxes, anyway) eventually laid aside our own armor and returned to the North American nests from whence we came. As the years rolled by, we hooked up with lady bugs and did our buggy things. One of us even wrote a story about the little bugs. He hates to break it to you, little fellas, but this brief story is likely to be as much immortality as you guys will ever get.

Sorry about that.

Bill Wells spent four years in the Army and a year in Vietnam between 1966 and 1970. His father flew in B-17s over Germany during World War II and a nephew recently returned from a tour in Iraq in the Army, so encounters with military service seem to run in the family. Currently a software engineer in Bethesda, Maryland, Bill writes when he can, which isn’t nearly as often as he would like.

Call Up

By Vicki Hudson

I remember that first time, the picture fresh in my mind. A silent screen video flickers across my memory. I knew it was coming. Still, hearing the voice on the phone with the memorized phrase, “raging bull” took me by surprise. I had known that phrase for ten years. Year after year, I’d heard the training phrase, “grazing bull”; someone calling me on the phone as a practice alert. Later, as I progressed in rank and responsibility, I made the calls, or directed they be made. Each call was really just a verification of information done once a year, a random ten percent each month of those on the unit roster. We called that document the alert roster, though no one ever thought it would be used to alert anyone, except maybe when the date our weekend warrior duty would change from the annually briefed yearly training calendar. Read more

The Caregiver

By S.M. Puska

You are not to blame; it is not your fault.
You are doing your best to help them through.

You cannot fix this with a few calls and visits.
You cannot Google the cure or demand correction.

They are afraid, too. They do not hate you.
They do not seek to drive you crazy or make you sad.

Their days are patchworks of light and dark.
Be stubbornly patient in your love for them.

Comfort and reassure them; help them feel safe.
Fight like a mother tiger for their care and rights.

They may criticize you, or fail to thank you,
They may not remember you, or try to hurt you.

Don’t take it personal; it’s the body, not the person.
Stay strong and faithful to your love for them.

Care for yourself, too; get the help you need to
Persevere through the uncharted way ahead.

And don’t forget the other people in your life;
Ones who are well and need your love and time.

Don’t assume it will always be, things change in a flash.
Make time to thank, and love, and listen and laugh.

Susan Puska enlisted in the Women’s Army Corps in 1975 and was commissioned in 1977. She served as the U.S. Army attache in Beijing, China from 2001 to 2003, and retired in 2005. She is an avid traveler and photographer.

Don’t Cheat Him at Cards

By Casey Collier

Terp erred only for himselfish wayed.
He toiledin faraway spots, in homelands where this business had grownup.
We called to him somename, or whether he was thereatall.
No armor for ol’ Terp.
He walksin like it’s onlyonce.
See if it ain’t foragingfor assassination.
Maybe concord with the localitariate.
No pushing for Terp.
He likes he canwear his homescarf correctly.
“We want to go,” says Terp.
Indeed, it smacks of easierthings than original sin.
That’s whatthey’ll put on him, ol’ Terp.
The violation.
They’ll hangit onhim like his scarf for himto wrap around his face.
“USA-OK”
Pommegranitrees don’tmake what the monsters do.
Arghandab Terp canbe trusted in everyway.
Not tobe confused with- although mostly of allofus, is Terp.
No guns for Terp, theshame ofit.
Just words for Terp, heknows how they’ll be met.
We follow incase, unless hesays, “wait.”
Sometimes Terp needsto bealone.
Don’t cheathim atcards. He ain’t toogood yet.

Casey A. Collier is an Active Duty military Servicemember, stationed out of Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He served for one year in Southern Afghanistan from 2009-2010, where he wrote poetry and short fiction. He is an avid fan of cooking, reading, and listening to music.

Cold War Canoe Club

By Jeffrey Hess

In 1989, we were sea-going sailors. Not brave, just doing our jobs – jobs that happened to be aboard great steel ships, risking our lives in the invisible oceans between home and the Soviet threat.

We were single and married and divorced with two kids who hated us because we were gone six months at a time. We wore khaki shorts, or Levis, or Z-Cavaricci’s and got haircuts every two weeks. We shined our shoes and ironed our uniforms and took the test for the next pay grade every time we were eligible. Some of us turned screwdrivers, others of us drove the boats, some were locked away in the bilges tending to boilers, diesel engines, or nuclear reactors. We called the Navy the “canoe club.” We called each other squid, snipe, air dale, deck ape, wingnut, and worse, but would take offense if a non-Sailor did the same.

We called our ships boats, but would correct anyone else who did the same. Read more

Ignorant Men

By William Burkholder

Ignorant men speak of war as though it were a necessity.
Exclusivity waved under biased banners.
Power, the watchword of the hordes.

Ploughshares banished, smelted into swords,
Instead of humanity,
Hateful searing words.

With broken wing, The Dove of peace lingers,
Providing solace and hope, in place of down-trodden despair.

Lack of Peace…
It begins with the mindset of approved diatribes.
And grows to violence, under billows of cordite wisps.
And end at the graves of the guilty and innocent alike.

William Burkholder joined the U.S. Coast Guard in 1980 and spent the next 17 years proudly serving his country. Inspired by the fields and streams of his boyhood home along Lake Erie, William has been writing, poetry mainly, for the better part of his life. He now resides in Detroit, Michigan with his wife, Nancy.

Hey-U: Murder Prevented

By Elihu Carranza

Hey-U eyes look like giant light
at the sight
of one finger on the trigger
down the barrel
his eyes follow
the barrel into the flash suppressor,
hearing then
he is going to kill him
because
the one drunk soldier called chief,
Chief!
Chief!
The words smoking with provocations of war.

Hey-U eyes shoot back down the barrel
to the chamber of the M-14
7.62mm
ready to enter the temple of a fellow soldier
when hey-u moves the rifle away.

 

A Journey

By Eric Hobson

Cam Rahn Bay, Long Binh
Nah Be and Saigon
Thank you Vietnam

Phu Loi, Bien Hoa
Lai Khe, and the Parrot’s Beak
Thank you Vietnam

Nui Ba Den (Black Virgin Mountain)
Tay Minh, Tet offensive
Thank you Vietnam

One oh fives, one five fives
The shelling of Saigon
Thank you Vietnam

Diabetes, Hypertension
Kidneys failing
Thank you AGENT ORANGE

Eric Hobson was in-country Vietnam from the Tet Offensive until January ’69. On his return to ‘the world’ he returned to university and completed teaching and counseling degrees. Eric is currently retired and an active member of VVA who writes poetry to help handle his PTSD.

A Mother’s Fear

By Brad Whanger

The warm sun shining down on the hillside and the cool western wind whispered through the large boughs and fan-like leaves of the great yewlo trees. Momentarily pulling me into a world all my own, its soft caressing touch continued to swirl across the clearing. It enveloped me as it ran its deeply scented fingers through my world to which I did not wish to return. I inhaled deeply, enjoying the evanescent reprieve until a small voice yanked me back into a less peaceful reality.

“Momma?” My daughter, Aninea held a purple flower in her chubby hand. “It’s yucky!” Read more

Pillar of Salt

By Bryan Blanchard

Raining fire, burning steel,
And now I see haunted

Images of headless
Bodies bathed in bloodstained

Sand; of a mannequin
Head with a swollen face

And lifeless eyes pleading
Back; of an explosion,

A disfigured Humvee,
Staggering down the road,

A charred and gaping door,
A torso hanging out—

Bryan K. Blanchard, a native of Glens Falls, New York, and a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, holds a B.A. in criminal justice from SUNY Plattsburgh. After serving for nine years in the United States Army Reserve, he now writes essays, poetry, and fiction. He lives in Melrose, New York with his wife, also a veteran, and children. Follow him on Twitter: @BryanKBlanchard.