He served two deployments in Helmand Province. He came home. He applied for twenty-three jobs. He followed every rule. Every month, on the twenty-second, the card runs out. This is what the next ten days feel like.
After eight years in the Marines, the only battle he cannot win is the one at the end of the month.
With a 30% VA disability rating, a knee that cost him his last three jobs, and an EBT card that runs out ten days before it reloads, he lives on the precise edge of the American safety net. The SNAP program provides $291 a month. In Boston, that buys twenty days of food. The remaining ten days are not covered.
Hot food not covered. That is what the machine says when he slides his card for a six-dollar rotisserie chicken he can technically afford to buy. Federal rule: food must be cold. Convenience is not a necessity. The logic does not account for a body that has no effort left to give.
20 Days Fed is a literary novella told across a Prologue and seventeen chapters with the unflinching precision of a field report:
Running beneath every chapter is the same pattern: the recruiter's promise, the discharge ceremony, the first of every month when the card reloads and the oxygen tank is briefly full. And then the valley.
For readers of Nickel and Dimed, Maid, and The Things They Carried.
He served. He starved. The math did the rest.