In fact, as he went down the stairs to have his obligatory medical examination, he felt lighter in his heart than he had for many years.
As if he had been given a sudden purpose. A goal. Something to be. His joy lasted no more than ten minutes.
The recruitment officer had said that the medical examination was a “mere formality.”
But when the stethoscope was held against Ove’s chest, something was heard that should not have been heard.
He was sent to a doctor in the city. A week later he was informed that he had a rare congenital heart condition.
He was exempted from any further military service. Ove called and protested. He wrote letters.
He went to three other doctors in the hope that a mistake had been made. It was no use.
“Rules are rules,” said a white-shirted man in the army’s administrative offices the last time Ove went there to try to overturn the decision.
Ove was so disappointed that he did not even wait for the bus; instead he walked all the way back to the train station.
He sat on the platform, more despondent than at any time since his father’s death.
A few months later he would walk down that platform with the woman he was destined to marry.
But at that precise moment, of course, he had no idea of this.
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