by David Lehman

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by David Lehman
     We were smoking some of this knockout weed when
     Operation Memory was announced. To his separate bed
     Each soldier went, counting backwards from a hundred
     With a needle in his arm. And there I was, in the middle
     Of a recession, in the middle of a strange city, between jobs
     And apartments and wives. Nobody told me the gun was loaded.
     We'd been drinking since early afternoon. I was loaded.
     The doctor made me recite my name, rank, and serial number when
     I woke up, sweating, in my civvies. All my friends had jobs
     As professional liars, and most had partners who were good in bed.
     What did I have? Just this feeling of always being in the middle
     Of things, and the luck of looking younger than fifty.
     At dawn I returned to draft headquarters. I was eighteen
     And counting backwards. The interviewer asked one loaded
     Question after another, such as why I often read the middle
     Of novels, ignoring their beginnings and their ends. when
     Had I decided to volunteer for intelligence work? "In bed
     With a broad," I answered, with locker-room bravado. The truth was, jobs
     Were scarce, and working on Operation Memory was better than no job
     At all. Unamused, the judge looked at his watch. It was 1970
     By the time he spoke. Recommending clemency, he ordered me to go to bed
     At noon and practice my disappearing act. Someone must have loaded
     The harmless gun on the wall in Act I when
     I was asleep. And there I was, without an alibi, in the middle
     Of a journey down nameless, snow-covered streets, in the middle
     Of a mystery——or a muddle. These were the jobs
     That saved men's souls, or so I was told, but when
     The orphans assembled for their annual reunion, ten
     Years later, on the playing fields of Eton, each unloaded
     A kit bag full of troubles, and smiled bravely, and went to bed.
     Thanks to Operation Memory, each of us woke up in a different bed
     Or coffin, with a different partner beside him, in the middle
     Of a war that had never been declared. No one had time to load
     His weapon or see to any of the dozen essential jobs
     Preceding combat duty. And there I was, dodging bullets, merely one
     In a million whose lucky number had come up. When
     It happened, I was asleep in bed, and when I woke up,
     It was over: I was 38, on the brink of middle age,
     A succession of stupid jobs behind me, a loaded gun on my lap.