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For My Son, In Iraq
![]() Frances Richey's son, Ben, is a 33-year-old army captain who was deployed twice to Iraq and remains on active duty. "Ben's graduation from West Point in 1998 was a huge celebration," Richey recalls. "These young men and women were ready to serve." She hesitates. "We had no idea what was coming." Now she finds herself unable to turn away from the ever-present news coverage and horrific images coming from the war zone. The poetry editor of the Bellevue Literary Review, a journal of fiction and nonfiction affiliated with New York City's Bellevue Hospital, Richey began writing these poems after Ben was called to action. "This is how I keep myself together," she says. Her poems are blunt, and Ben has read them all. "They tell him how I feel without my saying, 'I support you, but I'm scared you may never come home.'"
The following is a poem from Richey's collection The Warrior which will be published by Viking/Penguin in April 2008. Kill School By Frances Richey That was the summer he rappelled down mountains on rope that from a distance looked thin as the dragline of a spider, barely visible, the tension he descended into the made-up state of Pineland with soldiers from his class. They started with a rabbit, and since my son was the only one who'd never hunted, he went first. He described it: moonlight, the softness of fur, another pulse against his chest. The trainer showed him how to rock the rabbit like a baby in his arms, faster and faster, until every sinew surrendered and he smashed its head into a tree. "They make a little squeaking sound," he said. "They cry." He drove as he told me: "You said you wanted to know." I didn't ask how he felt. Maybe I should have, but I was biting off the skin from my lips, looking out beyond the glittering line of traffic flying past us in the dark.
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