| It was exactly 2:00 in the morning, on a night as freezingas all the others, with his feet deep in the mud, his bones
 hurting from the cold, and a poker-face frown - when Marco
 recalled a memory from his childhood. It crept in quietly in
 the back of his mind like a familiar face seen in the crowd:
 It was an image of himself on the floor on his 5th birthday,
 opening presents, with his parents and friends, and
 laughing. He kept walking slowly, his eyes fixed on the
 terrain ahead, his hand on the rifle expecting surprises,
 and his mind - drifting only a little - staring at his
 younger self. The memory was so real that he felt as if the
 warmth of the fireplace was burning him. "It warms if you're
 warm," he thought, "but it burns if you just came in from
 the freeze". Little Marco looked up at his parents and
 smiled like a boy that never knew any troubles. Old Marco
 smirked - he wasn't allowed anything but frowning on guard
 duty. Then, they both looked at each other. The smile
 quickly disappeared from both of their faces.
 The heat from the fireplace stopped burning, and Marco
 suddenly felt frighteningly warm and cozy, as if the memory
 has become a reality, and reality was nowhere to be found.
 His legs, that have been carrying him for a mile and a half
 against his will, stopped, and he stood paralyzed and
 baffled: He realized that he was opening presents he never
 received, in the company of family and friends he never
 knew, and speaking a language he could not understand.
 He woke abruptly. The sound of gift-wraps torn echoed away
 into the mountains; Marco heard his own heavy breathing, the
 wind whistling violently and nothing more. Around him was
 the darkness of the graveyard shift, except for thin lines
 of light describing mountains in the distance and the dim
 lights of a city. He started to feel the freezing touch of
 the metal-made M-16 against his arm. He also realized that
 his uniform was wet and had a strange stench, one that only
 uniform can have. Piece by piece, rotten reality was coming
 back.
 "Something on your mind, trooper?!" - A sharp voice attacked
 him from behind. Marco turned quickly. It was the 2 to 4
 guard coming to replace him. He was older than Marco, around
 12, and had the bitter face of one who's been here long but
 still was getting treated like a freshman. "S-4's waiting,
 trooper. Go to camp", he said. Marco did not answer.
 He was drowning in a flood of memories that were all foreign
 to him, and could not find a single known image to hold on
 to. The mental image of an unfamiliar old woman suddenly
 filled his heart with love and concern; random images - the
 woman is young now, and beautiful. A picture with the guys,
 taken at the steel factory. A trip to Spain when he was 26
 (he could have sworn he just turned 11). And the house on
 the cliff, with the machine, and the old woman again, and a
 boy soldier (couldn't be older then 10) peeping through the
 window. He could read the soldier's name tag too. The name
 was Marco.
 The events of the rest of that night will be perplexing to
 Marco's commanders and many rumors will spread amongst his
 comrades in arms. Jason, the bitter soldier who came to
 replace Marco at the patrol, will tell the investigating
 officer: "I went to replace him on guard duty at 1:55. As I
 was coming close to the patrol start point, I saw him
 talking to himself. I guess he just flipped."
 But at 1:55 that night, Marco was still himself. No false
 memories had come into his mind, as he was preoccupied with
 getting enough sleep before the training tomorrow, and with
 thoughts of cigarettes.
 "I wonder what became of Paul," he thought. "I could use
 some of Paul's cigarettes now; crazy motherfucker. S-4
 probably got him and blew his brains out in front of the
 entire squadron. Ha... code violation by far... - 'if I9m
 smart 'nuff to smuggle them in, I'm smart 'nuff not to get
 caught'. Yeah, right Paul, your brain is now splattered all
 over the concrete falcon, I bet... S-4 stuck a Marlboro in
 your dead mouth and took a Polaroid with everybody in the
 company smiling... I wonder, can you tell in the picture
 that the veins in your eyes popped, or did they put the
 sun-glasses on? The evening guards just came back from guard
 duty and they are scraping your brain together with the dry
 leaves Paul. Or maybe you didn9t get caught... Maybe you're
 watching me right now, from those woods over there... are we
 still in the same side, or are you fighting against me now,
 Paul? I hope you are on the other side now, cause I'll find
 you and I'll kill you and I'll take all your fucking
 cigarettes."
 "You're probably dead, man. I should get my cigarettes
 elsewhere."
 "You know, Paul..."
 "You know, something strange happened today. Remember that
 huge house on the cliff? (Were you even with us when we
 camped here?) Well, I was taking a minute's rest from the
 exercise in the valley, and I passed by that damn huge
 house. I sat down to sleep for a few minutes and as I leaned
 against the wall, I heard foot steps coming from below; I
 got down immediately and loaded up. I think I made too much
 noise when cocking her. I looked through a window into the
 basement, and I saw the most amazing thing: a huge machine,
 huge like a monster, with thousands of heavy metal gears and
 electrical rods and what-not. All of this was tied up with
 thin copper wires to a wooden wheel, and an old man was tied
 to the wheel. He seemed sad. No, not sad - something else.
 Tense maybe."
 "He was talking to his old fat wife. She was walking around
 the basement and checking the machines. He called her name,
 I don9t remember what it was, and then they both just looked
 at me. 'My god, can't be older than 10', he said to her. It
 was so strange that I forgot I had the rifle aimed at the
 old man9s brains. They saw me and they saw the rifle, but
 they didn9t do anything; their faces were sealed, like they
 weren9t really there, and then they just went about their
 business. The fat old woman went back to the machine and the
 old man turned his head back to the ceiling. I think he
 looked at my name tag though."
 Marco shuddered; he saw the old man looking at him, as if
 from the old man's eyes, but the vision suddenly seemed a
 little too real... "He looked sad like he was about to die,
 but also happy, like he was going to heaven. The woman
 seemed really sad."
 
 "Then she told him it was all working right. He said do it,
 do it right now and on the now she pulled on an iron lever.
 Then everything started to move and make noise; the gears
 started rotating quickly, one jump-starting the other, and
 suddenly a huge bolt of electricity started flowing in the
 rods and into a helmet on the old man's head. I thought she
 was electrocuting him; it was kind of funny for a moment;
 but then the weirdest thing happened. Pictures started
 popping out of his head. I know it sounds weird Paul but you
 gotta believe me, I didn't flip yet; it's all real. And all
 these images of peoples and places, they popped out of his
 head and got sucked into this huge metal pipe that was right
 next to him. The pipe started shaking and making these
 noises like it was about to explode any minute, and I had to
 move away because I felt the ground move, because the pipe
 was right under me, so I got up and walked back a little.
 The noises went on for a few more seconds, and then it was
 all silent again. The pipe was still rattling though, and a
 second later it spewed something out, right outside where I
 was standing. It looked like a strange piece of meat, and it
 was shaking, and it looked like it was crying or something,
 little drops of water kept coming out of it. I looked in the
 window again and the old woman was hugging the old man, but
 she didn9t cry, so I knew he didn't die."
 "Then he opened his eyes. He looked at her, and asked her
 who she was. She said, 'I'm your wife, and this you're home
 - don't worry. Don't be afraid.' I don't know what happened
 later; I heard the company marching again so I took that
 meat thing on the floor and ran back to camp. I touched it
 on my way back. It was very soft. It stopped shaking too,
 and looked like it died. It actually looked a lot like plain
 ol' food once it stopped shaking."
 "I... I ate it, Paul. I know it sounds gross but I was so
 hungry I could eat anything, and I swear to god it looked
 like food. It was pretty good actually. Definitely better
 than military steak. Now isn't that weird, Paul?"
 The alarm in Marco's watch went off. It was exactly 2:00 in
 the morning, and his shift had ended. But Marco didn't hear
 the alarm. He was thinking it would have been funny if the
 old woman actually electrocuted her husband to death, and
 that he couldn't understand how they could be with each
 other so long anyway. He wondered if his parents are still
 together and how old they were now. It was a long time, he
 thought, since he saw his parents. Probably not since his
 5th birthday. Oh, yes, he thought - my 5th birthday...
 "Something on your mind, trooper?!" - A sharp voice attacked
 him from behind. Marco turned quickly. It was bitter Jason
 coming to replace him. "S-49s waiting, trooper. Go to camp",
 he said. Marco didn't answer. He was flooded with new
 memories that once belonged to the old man and were now his.
 He remembered a trip to Spain at 26, and a new job at the
 steel factory. He remembered moving to the coast, and the
 war, and living in fear of the war and of those animals, the
 boy soldiers. And finally, he remembered accepting old age,
 and death; but only because of the machine. He was scared
 that morning, for a minute, when he saw the boy-soldier
 peeping through the window; but then he lay back on the
 wooden wheel, and relaxed. In a few minutes the machine will
 erase almost of his memories; the war will have never
 existed. He can be killed now by the machine, or ha can die
 in a month or a few years - death is certain. But whatever
 many days he has left to live, he will live them in
 ignorance and bliss. Everything will be new to him again -
 like a little boy.
 "Have you flipped, trooper?! Answer me!!!" - Bitter Jason
 yelled at Marco. "No, I haven't..." he said.''I only..." -
 but there was no point. "I know this argument already",
 Marco thought. "I have it ten times a day. He plays his
 part, I play mine, we go to sleep for three hours and wake
 up again, to fight with everyone else and each other." Marco
 could not go to sleep and could not go back to camp. His
 mind turmoil with happy memories and the frustration that
 they were not his. His was the camp, the war, the S-4's and
 a concrete falcon. He looked back at the camp, and could see
 behind it the dim lights of the city. He couldn't move - his
 body, like his legs, was still paralyzed.
 Then, without a thought, he threw the rifle and his
 back-pack to the ground, and ran to the city.
 
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