Fallen Angels

by Walter Dean Myers

Fallen Angels: Chapter 22 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Perry strains his ears for the sounds of a firefight, but he can only hear chirping insects. When Peewee calls out his name, it startles Perry half to death. They don’t know where their adversaries are, or if anyone knows they’re there. Perry thinks they should open fire to let the squad know their position, but Peewee points out that the squad must already guess it. They decide to stay quiet and “shoot the shit” out of anything that approaches them. Perry clicks the safety off on his gun. He and Peewee draw closer and hold hands in the darkness. Perry remembers that Kenny fears the dark. Everyone, he muses, does.
Perry and Peewee seem to have somehow, miraculously, slipped past the Vietcong below them on the hill unnoticed. Shooting, as Perry suggests, might draw the squad’s attention, but then, for all he and Peewee know, their friends might already be dead. And it would certainly draw the attention of the Vietcong on the hill with them. Perry and Peewee now find themselves facing a hidden enemy practically alone, their plight replicating how the soldiers have generally been abandoned by their country and their military leadership.
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Perry’s mind races. He can’t imagine the “Congs” overrunning the squad or outgunning Johnson. He mentally recites the Lord’s Prayer. Then, he hears Vietnamese voices approaching from the direction of the stream. He and Peewee open fire, causing confusion among the Vietcong. They take advantage of this and retreat down the back side of the ridge. The VC send up a flare, showing their position to Perry and Peewee; they haven’t yet crested the ridge, so they can’t yet see the American soldiers. Perry and Peewee back into an overhang on the ridge, where they find a spider hold. The VC forces certainly know about it, but it provides some cover.
The use of flares telegraphs the Vietcong fighters’ confidence; they wouldn’t risk betraying their position if they didn’t believe that they had far superior numbers and firepower. The fact that Stewart sent one tiny squad to patrol an area rife with Vietcong fighters suggests either that he has underestimated the Vietcong presence in the area or that he doesn’t care about the squad’s soldiers at all. In a way it doesn’t matter if he sent them in unknowingly or callously, as the result is the same: the squad feels betrayed by a leader who wants them to risk their lives so he can get promoted.
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The Vietcong send up another flare. In its light, Perry can see dozens if not hundreds of soldiers. Voices drift past the spider hole, but no one stops to investigate it. Perry and Peewee crouch in the hole until their arms and legs fall asleep. Perry tries to keep his mind blank, but he can’t stop his thoughts. He worries about stories he’s heard of VC soldiers cutting off fingers and hands to steal American soldiers’ watches and rings. He takes his watch off, then slides it back on his wrist. He imagines kids playing in the parks of Harlem. But that world doesn’t feel real to him anymore. Only waiting for death in the hole with Peewee feels real.
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Quotes
Perry hears artillery in the distance, but he can’t tell what direction it’s coming from. He hopes that the company has realized that the squad hasn’t come back. Peewee wriggles uncomfortably and complains that he needs to relieve himself. This sends him and Perry into giggling fits. Perry tries to stay alert and tries not to think. And slowly, almost imperceptibly, dawn arrives.
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Outside, the Vietcong forces begin to stir. Peewee cautiously peers out and says they look like they’re about to move out. None are headed their way…yet. But he prepares a frag grenade, just in case. He peeks out again, then jerks his head back in; a VC fighter is headed their way. The VC investigates the hole, first poking the barrel of his gun around inside, then returning a few minutes later with a knife tied to a pole. It slices Peewee’s hand but then stabs into the dirt wall and emerges wiped clean of blood. Finally, the VC soldier throws his rifle into the hole then starts to climb in after it.
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Perry shoots the fighter, then Peewee helps pull the body into the hole. Perry’s shot wasn’t fatal, and the fighter struggles wildly until Peewee and Perry strangle him to death. Then, they pull him the rest of the way into the hole. Perry realizes he’s just a kid, even younger than himself. But before he can think about this too much, he and Peewee scramble out into the sunshine and fresh air.
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Outside of the hole, it’s a beautiful, bright morning. A Vietnamese farmer in the rice paddy below the ridge turns towards them, ducking under the water when Peewee raises his rifle. Peewee and Perry retreat down the stream side of the ridge. They cross it and are on their way back to the landing zone when Peewee collapses. Perry refuses to abandon his friend, helping him up and supporting his weight as they limp back toward the landing zone.
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At the landing zone, they find Monaco sitting beneath a tree with his head in his hands. Peewee suspects a trap that Perry couldn’t imagine, and after a few minutes, they realize that Vietcong fighters are hiding behind two clumpy bushes, waiting to ambush any helicopter that comes back to check for what’s left of the squad. They make plans to kill the fighters when the noise of the helicopter provides them some cover. Perry marvels at Peewee’s desire to fight back, despite his injuries. What kind of men are soldiers, he wonders. Is he one? And if he is, will he ever be able to go back to being anything else?
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Quotes
Perry, Peewee, and Monaco all sit silently under the shadow of death. Perry wonders what Monaco is thinking about. Then, when they hear the approaching chopper, he and Peewee open fire on the first suspicious bush. By the time the Vietcong realize what’s happening, the chopper has spotted and opened fire on them. Perry and Peewee take out the fighters in the bush nearest Monaco. The chopper hits the dirt, and Perry and Monaco shove Peewee into it, scrambling up after him. As hands pull Perry inside, he feels a searing pain in his right leg. He’s been shot. But as the helicopter careens into the air, one single thought fills Perry: he is still alive.
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