| About This Author A changeling spirit, constantly evolving,
 revolving around an inner core,
 spinning forth legend and lore,
 stories and lives
 as I come to grips
 with who and what I am,
 have been and may be.
 I am a phoenix:
 rising ever above and beyond!
 
 | Brothers | I
 
 They were brothers in every way, but blood.
 One who came to this country from Germany
 with his wife to start anew. Then war.
 He'd just become an American citizen
 and they decided is was the best way to say thank you.
 
 He left his newborn son (my Uncle Bill) and his wife
 behind in New Jersey going back across the pond
 to become intimate with foxholes that never seemed deep enough.
 During endless hours he fought aside the man
 who'd become his brother.
 Three times
 they each dug bullets from the other
 and patched torn skin from bullet holes.
 They cried in each other's arms,
 spoke of wives left behind and swore
 they'd get home.
 
 Called to duty in new places
 they were torn apart to continue fighting
 in new foxholes, climbing new hills.
 
 II
 
 When the Tomb of the Unknowns
 was first dedicated, there was
 no body buried there as yet.
 They needed a soldier to play taps
 and called for a volunteer.
 The brother answered the call
 playing taps on a tarnished and dented bugle
 that had traveled the miles with him.
 A quiet ceremony without the bells and ribbons,
 but necessary and important.
 
 From Arlington he traveled to New Jersey
 in hopes of reuniting with his brother. Or,
 finding out where he was,
 if he still was.
 In a crowded marketplace just outside
 the train station in Paterson,
 he saw a man limping alongside a woman.
 He knew that face. He knew that man.
 Left arm sleeve flapping in the breeze,
 he ran to his brother.
 
 III
 
 He left his bugle to his brother.
 Who left it to his younger son,
 who left it to his son
 who left it to mine.
 
 All of us have placed a wreath
 at the Tomb. My dad after WW!!,
 my brother during Viet Nam,
 me while in the Army,
 my son during school,
 my daughter a few years before joining the Navy.
 
 We've all watched the official ceremonies,
 counted steps under our breath, and
 felt the body shiver one always feels.
 The tears that inevitably fall
 and still do
 whenever Taps is played.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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