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Russia's Call
I want the long, sloping, snow crusted hills around my family’s worn, wooden 
 House that stands on the edge of the great Russian forests, the tree’s green and snow
 Blanketed branches reaching out
 
 Instead I am given the burning, smoke choked streets of Nazi Berlin, the scorched 
 Den of monsters. I am given tattered red and black flags hanging from broken and bullet 
 Pocketed buildings. 
 
 I want grey-white wispy smoke curling from an aged, heat warped chimney, the 
 Creak of the wooden boards laid down by my long dead great grandfather. I want to see 
 My mother hunched over a stream belching pot of meat and potato stew. I want my little
 Sisters clinging to my arms, begging me to tell them stories from outside our secluded
 World
 
 But I am given a broken and bomb scarred city, burning hulks of tanks in the 
 Blood stained streets. I am given a heavy wooden rifle that I am forced to use on boy and
 Old men masquerading as soldiers. I am given the screams of wounded and dieing men. I Am given death and hell that has inhabited the Earth.
 
 I want the creak of my father’s house that I am to inherit. I want to hear the trees Outside our warm enclave, creaking in the cold, harsh Russian winds, their branches Cutting through the frozen air. I want the warm glow of the fireplace as my family gathers Around it, my parents and grandparents telling us stories of the world that died in the 
 Revolution, a world that is no longer ours. I want peace.

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