
Vietnam jungle fatigues in a Salvation Army
By Hannes Duncan
I’m sitting in the bed of a U.S Army truck
with my rifle between my legs and I’m measuring
the distance between the muzzle and my throat.
We sit in a cloud of chemical rot
with our backs pressed
up against piercing metal
dirt in our eyes
and a stranger’s pulse
in the threads of our jungle fatigues.
Our rapid heartbeats are synchronized
in a song that will keep me up at night
for the rest of my life.
The thought of my death being
the end of my family’s name
has kept my bullets as generous as the God
I used to pray to
before I realized I’m beyond repair.
The boy next to me kisses his rosary
& I white-knuckle my dog tags.
I could use a rapture.
The truck’s gears whine under the weight of
our nineteen-year-old shadows
as it delivers us to another village in need
of pacification.
About the Author...
Hannes Duncan is in 12th grade studying creative writing at Douglas Anderson. He is an avid writer and enjoys poetry of all kinds. His work has also appeared in UNF's literary magazine, The Talon Review.
About the Artist...
Jasmine Walker is a 12th grade Visual Artist at Douglas Anderson School of the Arts. Her favorite mediums
are printmaking and painting.
