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Pain abates. A silent love zigzags through his bullet wound. He is an Indian mercenary fighting for the Allies. He was born with a rusted iron spoon in his mouth. Hunger made him a soldier. He’s fit, fights again for the alien cause. Her eyes trigger his heart. For the first time, he longs for an armistice. He seeks for her in the surgical spirit smelling reverie. A roaring war craft brings him back from that French nurse. A dumdum bullet pierces his chest just before Germany signs! Streets roar in rapture. Flags flutter above the neglected agony. The stillborn love is coffined. A war win is a celebration over a variety wounds. *World War memory - first prize winning poem in the Lest We Forget Poetry Competition, organized by Auckland War Memorial Museum. First published in The Literary Hatchet.
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