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[Pixabay](https://pixabay.com/photos/search/frog%20bullet/)
Locals referred to it as the frog bullet. A modest-caliber round flew erratically across the sky, never following a straight line as good ammunition should. Though snipers voiced more sinister theories, military engineers vowed it was a flaw in production.
Possibly it was the marsh where the factory sat built over wetlands formerly vibrating with amphibian melodies. Perhaps the metal had picked up something from that swampy land, a faded recollection of monsters that jumped in erratic hops.
In Vietnam, troops claimed to have found bullets that appeared to change direction mid-flight, strike trees at impossible angles, and hit objectives meant to be safely hidden. The foe came to be more afraid of frog rounds than of traditional ones; you could know where normal bullets would go and could seek cover appropriately.
How about frog bullet? To Leave only the sound of something little and lethal toward its destination behind , they went with their own reason and erratic way across the air.