Sunday, March 24, 2024

Pratik Noir Issue Highlight: American poet DAVID LEHMAN's "The Double Agent: A Screenplay for Michael Caine"

 

DAVID LEHMAN

The Double Agent:

A Screenplay for Michael Caine

 


1.

It was going to snow and then it didn't snow.

He loved her like a dying man's last cigarette.

 

2.

The dog was planning his next betrayal.

It was, he reasoned, in the nature of dogs

to betray their bitches. The man at the bar

was wearing a dark suit and tie as thin

as the excuses given by an unfaithful mate

to her homicidal husband on the phone.

 

3.

“You want results, you have to pay for them.”

“All right, but are you sure this is the guy?”

“This is the guy.” And in he walked, wearing

eyeglasses and speaking with a Cockney accent.

He had made his bones when he killed his wife

with a lightbulb in the cellar, made it look like

an accident, got away with it, and celebrated

by pushing a man in front of a speeding train.

 

4.

The assignment was to convey a private message

by public means, as in the headline of a news story

of seeming insignificance whose secret meaning

only his London controller would understand. 

 

5.

The dog was dead. That was the message.

 

6.

Lights out. His name on a list. And beside

his name, a sum: fifty thousand dollars.

They had lied to him, put his life in danger,

only to test him. Yet he delivered, though

it meant he had to cross from West to East

Berlin and back in the back of a hearse

in a dark tunnel, a live body inside.

 

7.

In that second, he had to make up his mind:

was he bluffing, or would he pull the trigger?

“Three men have been killed for those papers,”

the chief barked, indignant at the cost

of this little operation. “Sorry, boss.”

The agent held up four fingers.

The chief crushed his cigar. “Four!”

 

8.

“Enlighten me, Mr. Lane, if that is indeed your name.

Why didn't you leave at once when you could?”

“Loyalty,” he replied with sarcasm so thick

you could be sure he was carrying a false passport.

 

9.

The man reading the paper in the hotel lobby

heard every word. There was a short silence.

Suddenly he put the paper down.

“I am the stranger of whom you speak,” he said

in the formal English of a Spaniard

in a Hemingway novel. That was the tip-off.

 

10.

Even the girl was a ruse.

Only the money was real.

 

11.

He could see it from the balcony:

freedom; there it was, across the river,

in the brown haze of dusk:

a row of dead birches like the bars of a gate

with blue water and green hills behind it.

 

12.

Was it worth it? You didn't ask yourself.

You just grabbed your case and went.

You didn't even know the date, the month

and year, until you got there. Afterwards,

if you were lucky, there would be time

to remember. Well, he would have to do

the remembering for the whole unit. And once

a year, in a hotel room in Switzerland,

he would take out the girl’s photograph

and shake his head.

 

 

Born and raised in New York City, American poet David Lehman is Series Editor of The Best American Poetry anthology. He is the author of The Mysterious Romance of Murder: Crime, Detection, and the Spirit of Noir. In 2019, he and Suzanne Lummis engaged in a season of exchanges on noir for The Best American Poetry blog, for example: https://blog.bestamericanpoetry.com/the_best_american_poetry/2019/08/the-images-of-noir-by-david-lehman-and-suzanne-lummis.html

 

 

 

 

Now Available on Amazon India, USA, UK & Canada

 


Amazon USAhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CMDGKY9P?ref=myi_title_dp

Amazon Indiahttps://www.amazon.in/dp/B0CMDGKY9P?ref=myi_title_dp

Amazon Canadahttps://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0CMDGKY9P?ref=myi_title_dp

 

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