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Duffy's Army (standard:non fiction, 1143 words) | |||
Author: Lou Hill | Added: Mar 20 2002 | Views/Reads: 3505/2235 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A group of young boys play "army" in a small Vermont town during WWII | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story trees and sumac. To us it was thick tropical undergrowth filled with all kinds of exotic animals, insects, and snakes and, of course, the "enemy." Unfortunately I suffered my only "wounds" of my military career during one of those jungle campaigns, a severe case of "red rump" which may have been poison ivy or some allergy to the plant life growing in the jungle. Fortunately it responded to the calamine treatments administered by "Nurse Mom." In fact my mysterious rash was about the only real medical emergency suffered by any of the troops. That in itself is remarkable considering the duration and intensity of our activities. One of my vivid memories of the "jungle" was a mountain of empty quart oilcans piled up behind the station. Since this pile was the highest point around, it had significant tactical value. Many of our missions required scaling the heights of "Oilcan Mountain" to establish a lookout post. There was still a little oil remaining in the cans even though they were all drained in a special rack after their contents were poured into a customer's car. We would end up with liberal coatings of oil all over us after a few minutes of mock battle. This did not endear us to our mothers. On occasion we made longer treks down to the banks of the Missisquoi River and to the Central Vermont's railroad trestle spanning a small brook. There we would either blow up the trestle for the umpteenth time or engage an enemy force led by "Cookie" LaFlamme, another local boy who had formed his own troop of fighting "men". We also made forays to the point of land extending into the river below the local Electric Light Department's dam. This area was off limits to most of us by parental order and to all of us by order of the Light Department. Consequently this was a mission that fell into the "Top Secret" classification. Usually these missions deteriorated into a search for "fools gold" which used to be found in the area. As hard as I searched, I never found any. Eventually all wars must end, even play wars. Ours was no exception. The entry of the world into the Atomic Age brought the end of World War II as well as the end of our war. For Tommy and some of the older boys, it also signaled the end of youth. Some of us complained because we wouldn't have a chance to really fight Japs and Nazis. Little did we know that there would be other wars and other chances to serve in places with names that we had never heard of at that time. Places with names like Korea, Vietnam, Iraq Bosnia and Afghanistan. Revised 03/16/02 Tweet
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